But while these
Apes & all their pranks were shown,
A
Silken Ape came in and put them downe;
His breath was nought but perfume, and his skin
As sleeke and smoth as any Ladies chin;
Ranke-set with gold and pearle was his coat,
As if hee had beene one of speciall note.
Yet when hee had shewne all that hee could show,
One whispring in mine eare; said hee, I know
This gilded Trunck, this rotten painted Tombe,
And how of late hee 's to this glory come.
"This Cinnamon Tree, quoth he (for his proud hide
"Is better worth then all the bulke beside)
"Tooke first plantation in the Ile of
Wight
"From whence he, forc'd w
th famin, took his flight;
"But ere this
wagg did to a beard aspire,
"Hee was by fortune made an
Applesquire
"To a right active
Lady, who 'tis sed,
"Advanc'd him from the
Basket to her
Bed.
"Since which auspicious fate, hee did resort
"Like one of
Cynthia's followers, to the
Court,
"Where he remains as spruce, you see, as may be,
"Fed onely by reversions from his
Ladie.
"Yet note this
Court-Ape, and you shall obse
[...]ve
"More state in him, then those who best deserve!
"Rich is his Robe, his presence scornefull too,
"For hee on better men will scarce bestow
"Least semblance of respect, so proud is hee
"To those where hee should most respective bee.
"Yet what are his deserts, that they should seeme
"Worthie such congies or so great esteeme?
"Perchance this
Ape can court; admit hee can,
"This makes him not a compleat Gentleman.
"Dare hee with resolution enter list
"With his Opponent or Antagonist?
"Dare hee contend for honour in the Field,
"And yeeld up life before one foot hee yeeld?
"No, dainty
milk-sop, these would soon out dare him
"Hee must not fight, his
Lady cannot spare him.
This said, this
Court-Ape thought he was displayd
By that long private whispering we had made;
So, as one conscious of some special crime
Which this neat Youth had acted in his time,
He streight retir'd; To stay, none could intreat him,
Till that the
Citie-Ape
[...]y chance did meet him.
Who after due salutes in seemly sort,
"As, Brother
Ape, when will you come to
Court
"To see a
Maske; or, if you think not fit
"To come your self, your wife may visit it.
With equall thanks, his curt'sie to requite,
The
Citie-Ape did tender him the like;
"If he unto the
Exchange would but repair,
"And make his choice of such rare knacks were there.
The
Court-Ape took his leave, his leave was light,
While th'
Citie-Ape displaid him in my fight:
In comely habit, and of grave aspect;
Yet was there one thing I did disaffect,
Which to my view, was represented there,
And long ere this had cost the
Citie deere.
For still me thought this
Ape could ne're finde any
To consort with, though there were
Consorts many,
But that same
Ape of Honour, who did look
As if he meant to get into his
Book;
Which was his aime, and therefore did embrace him
As his dee-rbosome friend; For so to grace him
Would, as he thought, be th' way to tye him to him;
To
tye him! No, but rather to
undo him.
Yet see this credulous conceited
Ape,
He credits the protestations he doth make,
And to the utmost of his State he proffers
To give him trust, and he accepts his offers.
Nor skils it much what gain he means to reap,
"He that will never pay, gets ware good cheap.
The Ape of Honour.
I Must, and will; and as my rank is best,
In formost rank I'le make my self exprest.
Since I plai'd
tricks it's now the 13
th Sūmer,
In which my aime was still to purchase
honour.
Where e're I
[...]aw one held in more esteem
Then I my self, I vented streight my spleen
Upon his person, and would labour too
(As much as lay in me) his overthrow.
I could not brook
Corrivals; yea my heart
Did swell with grief to see men of desert
Respected where I sojourn'd, for I fear'd
My fortunes should be raz'd, if theirs were rear'd.
This caus'd me plot and practise some device
To move the
State, their service to despise;
Suggesting how these men were Popular,
And though their course of life seem'd regular,
Their studie was but how to broach division,
And gain them titles suiting their ambition.
Or else, I made a shew of love unto them;
And told them, this retirement would undo them;
It were more fit for them to be imploy'd
In State-affairs, in which all good men joy'd,
Then burie those choice parts w
ch
Nature gave them
In airie hopes, which quickly would deceive them.
Now if they chanc't to follow my advice,
My
taske was still to crosse their enterprize
By undervaluing what they had effected,
That by the State they might be lesse respected.
Thus did my
Honour take more true delight
In thwarting of some rising
Favorite,
Whose blooming hopes were now to ripenesse growing,
Then if my own Estate were overflowing;
"For, like to
Jacks mov'd in a
Virginall,
"I thought ones rising was anothers fall.
But now, secure of these, my
Coach I took,
Where I perus'd a little Table-book,
Wherein such
Citizens recorded be
As were to lend me Coine, or credit me
For such commodities as I did want,
And these my
Honour hugg'd, these did I hant.
Having now got my purpose, straight I'de flee them,
And though they knockt, my Lordship would not see them.
My
Honour was my
Sanctuary made,
And by
Protection all my debts were paid.
For if I grant
Protection to another
To Conicatch, or to defeat his brother,
My shallow Sconce is run on no such Shelfe
As to neglect
Protection for my selfe.
And yet some
Apes I had were my delights,
And these were
Sycophants and
Parasites,
Who would so humor me, as I protest
No meat without them could I well digest.
From these I had directions for my
pace,
Look, habit, speech, to adde a greater grace
Or lustre to my
Honour; so as I
Would set my Count'nance to look scornfully
On these inferiour
Vulgars, whose estate
My
Honour scorn'd once to commiserate:
For I have ever held it derogation
To men of place, to harbour this compassion.
In forain
Courts I ever
Leaguers had
Who did inform me, were they nere so bad,
What projects
States-men use to gain esteeme,
And eagerly I still observed them.
For this same Idol
Honour was the Saint
Which I ador'd, and for whose Shrine I meant,
Rather then by my weaknesse it should fall,
To hazard Body, State, Renown, and all.
For my
She-Ape, I mean my plumed
Ladie,
Our loves were both indifferent as may be;
For either heat of Summer, or for hate
To Nuptial servitude, or for more state,
Though we did plead distemper of the wether,
Seldome or never lay we both together.
For this my
Leaguers told me forain States
Observ'd, and this my
Honour imitates.
Yet did my
Lady play me once a trick,
Pretending on a day, that she was sick,
So as a Doctor might be sent for streigh,
(
Lucina rather, for to make her light)
For first news that I heard, God send me joy,
My Fates had blest me with a goodly Boy;
Yet might I eaten all my part of him,
without committing any mortal sin.
But yet I seem'd to joy much in the Lad,
As if he hed been mine, and I his Dad;
Whereas in truth, I probably could gather,
My
Page, and not my
Honour, was his Father.
All these could I dispence with as light Crimes,
Being scarce held for errors in these times,
Provided that my
Lady look unto it,
And thenceforth sought more secretly to do it.
For well I knew, if I divorce did wish,
I could procure't for lesser faults then this;
But much I doubted, she would turn flat Rorer,
And doe as other some had done before her,
Taxe my
debility since she was wedded,
Which foul aspertion would have split my credit.
But now the
Wagg is grown a Boy of prize,
Inur'd to ev'ry
Lordly exercise;
Though in the height of all his hopes I doubt
Such
Bastard-slips will never take deep root.
Now must I shew, to make my self displaid
In
Ʋniversity, what tricks I plai'd.
If any
Dunse had but desire to skip
To the preferment of a
Fellowship,
Were he ne're so uncapable of it,
I was a means that he the place might git;
Provided that his
Parents made him way,
And for his insufficiency would pay.
Then thick as haile-shot did my Letters go
To such a
Doctor and
She-Doctor too,
That as he tendred the respect I bore him,
He should prefer none to this place before him
Whom in my Letters I had so commended,
Thus was my Suit effectually ended.
And reason good they had to yeeld consent,
And in my Suits to give me all content,
For now and then some notice would I send them
Of such a late fallen Living, or
Commendam,
Which I resolv'd, such was my zealous care,
To give to them whose lives most blamelesse were.
Though all my aimes were rather to procure
Gaine to my self, were th' means nere so impure,
Then place such men, whose life and conversation
Deserv'd my love with choicest approbation.
In
Country too, had I my
Tarriers laid,
By whose Intelligence such tricks were plaid,
As I may swear, when I doe think upon them
I needs must laugh, so nimbly have I don them.
When I did heare One had desire to get
Unto the title of a
Baronet,
Or that his itching humor did aspire
To leap to
Knight before he was
Esquire;
By these my
Tarriers I made known unto him,
I'de doe him all the kindenesse I could do him,
But for the price of
Honour, it was more
By means of some occurrents then before;
Besides, he should have some additions granted,
Which all his former honour'd Neighbours wanted.
And thus I soakt my spungie
Knight, that he
Might
honour gain to cope with Beggerie.
Again, if any one within our Nation
Had a desire to get a
Toleration
In matters of
Religion, I'de procure
He might enjoy his
Conscience so secure
As none should trouble him; provided, he
Did but observe and keep true touch with me.
And yet would I, enforc't sometimes by want,
Practise right closely with a
Pursivant
To ferret him, and get a composition,
And yet this Act ne're mov'd me to Contrition.
But much abridg'd our profit now of late is
Since
Papists may have
Tolerations gratis.
Have
Tolerations! no, that time is past,
Since hope to match with
Spain is wholy dasht:
Anselme and
Wright are now return'd again,
And left the
English pale to visit
Spain.
Yea, our
State-Agents carefully have sought
That th'
Spanish Legat to account be brought,
Whether he hath (for this they seek to know)
Exceeded his
Commission, or no.
If this report be true,
Shavelins adieu,
The State intends but little good for you.
But I doe heare a motion like to be,
Which, I confesse, doth much distemper me;
But
[...]ather then the State consent unto it,
I will by all means labour to undo it.
And it is this, Some
Protestants complain,
But their complaints, I hope, will be in vain,
That they are almost weary of their lives,
They pay so much for th'
Conscience of their wives.
The light of Protestancie darts upon us,
And drives two hundred fiftie five
* Priests from us.
Which to redress, they crave (as doth become them)
The
State would take commiseration on them:
Which, in good sadnesse, I must needs confesse,
Deserves, in each mans judgement, due redresse:
For it doth little stand with Conscience,
That th'
husband he should pay for th'
wifes offence,
Seeing among them there's scarce one of seven,
That by their
Husbands will be lead or driven.
But what's all this to me, though they fare worse,
I aime not at their
Conscience, but their
Purse.
In brief, were he
Monopolist, or any
Who to enrich himself undoeth many;
Were he
Engrosser, who, if he may serve
His own base turn, cares not how many sterve;
Were he
Forestaller and
Regrater too,
Whose use is all our
Merkets to undo,
Made he recourse to me, he might alledge,
By vertue of my powerfull priviledge,
His Liberty, whats'ever should befall,
In spite of any
Justice of them all.
Thus like a nimble
Honour-prizing Ape,
I have transform'd my self to ev'ry shape;
That by this means I might insinuate
By secret paths, into anothers state,
And so support mine own, which would decline
If others were not props to bear up mine.
Now when I'me dead, some by my
Tombe will pass,
And say perchance,
Here lyes Pherecidas,
Venting aspersions on me as they please,
As that I di'de some lousie vile disease,
Or of some
State-Impostume swoln so big
It had no cure but dy a
Spanish Fig,
Or scorcht with some
outlandish Tinder-box,
Di'de eaten by the
Bubo, Piles, or
Pox.
Thus must my
styles and
titles be forgotten,
And rot on Earth, as I on Earth was rotten.
Thus all lifes pleasure's but a
bussing game,
Which leaves us liqu'risher then when we came:
Some glim'ring raies of
honour we may get,
Which once obscur'd, streight is our
Summer set.
But this I seldom think on, I've no time,
Mine aime is to advance these
Imps of mine,
Whose shade shall spread so broad, as none may doubt
But they're derived from a spatious root.
Now I referre it to
your self to show
Whether your
Ape deserve not praise or no.
The Ape of Pleasure.
IS it not strange to heare this
Cock-horse Lord,
Who has a
Branched forehead
on my word,
Thus magnifie himself, when I his
Page,
And at that time scarce sixteen years of age,
Was more respected by his youthfull
Madam
For two yeaes space, then all the time she had him!
What
Masks, what
Shews, what
Enterludes could be
Contenting to her self withouten me?
What late
Reere-bankets could delight afford
Without her
Page, farre deerer then her
Lord?
And yet this burnish'd
Idol, whose esteeme
Consists in this, That he doth precious seeme
In eye of
Vulgars, whose conceits appeare
In prizing men by th' Garments which they weare,
Preferres that
Fame which
Fondlings have of him
Before that place of
Honour he is in.
But what concerns this me? 'tis my delight,
And in this doe I glory, that the night
Hath spread her Curtains close, as one at leasure
To tender all content to th'
Ape of Pleasure.
See, See, young
Messalina how her eye
Assures me shee affects varietie!
Her once admired
Lord grows out a date,
So as her love is turned into hate.
"For choicest cates may minister delight
"At first, but after, cloy the appetite.
But l
[...]st those
tricks which I have plaid, should seem
Weake in respect of what this
Lords have been,
Though I be young and want experience,
As one directed by a youthfull sense;
I can as
Apish bee as others are,
Yea and for honesty as little care
As any
Suburbs trader, whose sole aime
Is by pollution to inhance their gaine.
For three whole Yeeres I have imploy'd my time
In reading baudie
Boccace, Aretine,
With those ripe
Sibaritick merriments,
Which our
Court-Ladies hold for ornaments
Of an unvalued price, they are so wittie,
And these I read in
Country, Court and
Cittie.
But in the
Court when I a Comment made,
More they conceiv'd then I discours'd or said;
For a grave
Lady standing by the pew
Where I my Lecture red, did forthwith shew
More grounded
Rules for th'
Subject that I chused
Then all my wanton
Consorts ere had vsed.
So as desiring much to know her name,
Shee haughtily replyed, "Of publique fame,
"Whose Love-attractive Beauty had obtain'd
"More high priz'd booties then ere woman gain'd.
"Nor be my hopes extinguish'd by my age,
"For I have
One (quoth shee) my prety
Page,
"Who would be loath for to degenerate
"Eyther in heat of love or height of State.
"And though her Honour, Lustre, and Esteeme
"Be not so great as sometimes it hath beene,
"Yet her experience with my discipline
"Hath train'd her so in postures of this time;
"As scarce that Lady is in
Europe bred
"Who by her Lecture is not bettered.
"This I admir'd, which shee observing told me,
"While shee about my middle did enfold me,
"That if I sought employment in that kind,
"Shee could a place of entertainment find,
"So I would secret be and not discover
"The slie effects of some intrusive Lover.
"For wee (quoth shee) who feed
imagination
"With
hope, till meanes bring
hope to recreation,
"May in our sleepes our waking thoughts disclose;
"Now Boy (said shee) if you were one of those
"Who publish to the world what they doe heare,
"You might destroy our reputation cleare,
"And make our names such
Emblems of disgrace,
"As wee might seeme unworthy of our place.
"For what if I should send to such a
Lord,
"That in the Ev'ning hee would keepe his word,
"And in th' appointed place or arbour seat him,
"Where I resolv'd assuredly to meete him;
"While you, corrupted by some
friend of mine,
"Acquaints him with this meeting, place, and time?
"Would this shew well in you, seem fair to him,
"To see one weare the
prize which he did win?
"Again, we Ladies many
secrets have,
"Which in our
Pages secrecy doe crave;
"For we have
Chamber-motives of delight,
"
Powders to cause men love us at first sight,
"Amorous
Broths, and cordial
Receits,
"Love-drawing
Lures, and fancy-forcing
baits,
"That our unbounded
pleasures may be fed
"With same
desire as they were nourished.
"Again perhaps, such may our humors be,
"(Sith want of change begets satietie,)
"Wee'l daigne sometime our
Pages to be tasters
"Of such choice
Cates are due unto their
Masters.
"Now would not this your secrecy deserve
"When you may
them enjoy, whom you doe serve?
This proffer tendred; "
Madam, replyed I,
"You need not doubt your
Pages secrecy,
"(If you so please to terme me;) I have bin
"For Ladies Secrets ever train'd therein
"Since my fi
[...]st infancy, and was thought fit
"(So present and so pregnant was my wit)
"To carrie divers messages among them,
"Yet was I never taxed once to wrong them.
"Oft by a private
Entrie have I brought
"One to my
Lady, yet suspected nought;
"For, in a Night-Gown, womanly arraid,
"I took him for some Ladies Chamber-maid,
"So as I took in hand at all aventer
"To ope the dore, that he might freely enter.
"Among the rest
One was I sometime toward,
"Who was so peevish, testie, and so froward,
"As shee in nothing took more free delight
"Then to become her Husbands opposite.
"If he at any time should make resort
"Unto the
Countrey, she was for the
Court;
"Were he for
Court, she to the
Countrey went,
"For contradiction was her Element.
"Yet, which is rare, this peevish willfull thing
"Was much addicted still to wantoning,
"So as, amidst the heat of all her rage,
"Nought could allay her furie but her
Page.
Thus I the progresse of my life did tell,
Which this grave
Lady liked passing well;
Wherefore, concluding with one joynt consent
To leave the
Court, I with my
Lady went,
Where I presented was some sennight after,
As a rich bootie, to her lovely
Daughter;
Who did so much affect me, she thought meet
To lodge me nightly at her own bed feet.
None would she suffer scarcely to approach,
Or take her hand to bring her to her Coach,
But only I; none would she else admit
To hold her chat, or in her Coach to sit:
I was her
Ingle, Gue, her
Sparrow bill,
And in a word, my
Ladies what you will.
How many Ev'nings Coached she and I
With Curtains drawn, that none might us espie?
But now grown weak, when I should be rewarded,
For want of strength I was by her discarded.
Meane time, had I occasion to remain
Here in the
Citie, hoping to regain
That estimation which I late had lost,
But
[...]y a litle
Monkey was I crost,
Who in short time into such credit crept,
As ever since he with my
Lady slept.
But see my
fate! through my too sumptuous port,
While I remain'd in presence of the
Court,
Hoping my Love-sick
Lady would supply
What ere I spent by prodigality,
I was attach'd, and in the
Counter throwne,
Yet lesse disgrac'd, because I was not knowne.
Where I sojourn'd some fortnight space and more,
Till a rich
Drapers wife did me restore,
Whose former knowledge me enfranchised,
With whom I shortly after married:
For having solemniz'd her Widow rites
By space of fifteen tedious winter nights,
It pleas'd her to make choice of such an one
Th
[...]t might supply the place of him that's gone.
And now I live as free from thought or care
As those who have in fortune highest share:
My
pleasure is my
treasure, whose delight
Extends it self from morning unto night.
Sometime I hunt the
Hare, sometimes I spare
The
earth, to take my pleasure in the
aire,
Where my skie-soaring
Falcon makes his way,
Lessning himselfe till he has got his pray.
Sometimes my
House and
Garden use to yeeld
As much content as doth the spatious Feeld,
For there at
Bowles, at
Tables, or at
Chesse
My wearied spirits use I to refresh:
Yea in an
Arbor have I made a Caul,
Wherein's an
Ape I brought from
Portingal,
A nimble thing, so tutord and so tame
As it can play at any kinde of Game.
At
Chesse it knows where th'
Bishops place should be,
With all the
Grooms that keep him companie.
And it will laugh, so wittie is the Wagg,
To see them put together in a bagg,
Wondring that He who held a
Bishops roome
Should play Check-mate with his inferiour
Groome.
Thus doe I sport, thus doe I passe the time,
For
pleasures are those
purchases of mine,
Which I the most affect and most admire,
To feede with oyle the flame of my desire.
Onely my
Wife, since her rich
Draper dide
To me espous'd, seeks to be
Ladifide;
Which honour I have got her, with a
Crest
To make mine honour anciently exprest:
Wherein I hold the
Herald did me right
In finding for my Coat a
Marmosite,
Whose nature is, (so farre doth lust prevail,)
For want of better food,
to eate his taile.
Thus have you heard my whole discourse at large,
How I have wasted been in
Pleasures Barge,
Where I have fed and feasted on such store,
As Surfeits make me I can feed no more.
For as variety begets delight,
Delight begets a moving appetite:
So
pleasures tride, like snow-balles melt to nothing,
And end their longing with an endlesse lothing.
The Ape of Vaine-glory
DIsplay, display those
Annals and
Records
Of time renouned
Heroes, Peeres and
Lords,
Their Actions, their Designes; and you shall see
These
Apes are imitators but of mee.
For what have they by resolution won,
What Conquest have they got, what have they don?
Hath
Fame erected
Trophies in their praise,
Or girt their Temples with triumphant Bayes?
Are
Statues rear'd to memorize their worth,
With all those Acts Antiquity brought forth?
Trophies, Bayes, Statues adde no longer time
To their exploits then
Fame hath done to mine.
In
Court while I reside, I shew such State
Even in my Nod, my Countenance and Gate,
As there is none that casts their eye upon me
But sayes that Garbe doth properly become me.
If at the
Justs I chance to breake a speare,
Methinks the
Ladies eyes are fixed there;
Whose approbations gaine me more renowne,
Then Leaves can make exprest, or Colours showne.
Among my
Consorts, Letters doe I show
From State of
Venice and from others too,
To me directed, as one whom they deeme
Of choyce, select, and principal esteeme.
Though I to
Venice never travell'd yet
But caus'd these Letters to be counterfet.
The great
Mogol that Title cannot crave,
Which on my selfe conferr'd I would not have;
For as my aymes are onely popular,
So is my substance meerely titular.
With
Ladies of accomplish'd qualitie,
Ranke, and descent, I hold concurrencie:
From whom if I a
favour chance to git,
I glory in the purchasing of it,
Vowing and vanting, not the wealth of th' Land
Should ransome such a bootie at my hand.
If I doe any worke, as few I doe,
I'de have the world take notice of it too.
In publique
Entertainments I would be
Observ'd sole Heire of liberalitie;
Which to expresse, this onely taske is mine,
To make our
City-Conduits run with wine,
Scramble
Cakes, Wafers, Suckets in the streete,
And tread whole carts of
Bisket under feete.
Farre more affection have I to bestow
My bounty on some publique Antick show,
So I may have my name endors'd at large,
That it was reared at my proper charge,
Then building of a
Church, or any use
Which simple people terme religious:
These works I hate, and all that doe begin them,
For their hot zeale show too much Conscience in them.
Like
Jove in
Danaes lap my gold I shoure,
When I invite some great
Embassadour,
Where at one
Supper I doe more bestow
Then to defray, my
Lordship knoweth how.
And by this meanes I seeke to gaine esteeme
Where this great
Legate and his
Lords have been;
Though they perchance deride mee and my aymes,
And with a
french-frump gratifie my paines.
Of all, there is no act delighteth us
So much as that of brave
Herostratus,
Who to gaine glory made himselfe exemple,
In setting fire upon
Dianas Temple.
Neither shall
Nero's glory e're expire,
Who playd on's Lute while
Rome was all a fire,
Sending wild beasts into the publick streete,
Such to devoure as they withall should meete.
So as, 'twixt fire and feare, amaz'd they run,
Feeling the one, while they the other shun.
In all my time, I never have desir'd
(Such my ambition was) to live retir'd,
For that I thought would gaine mee no respect,
The only object which I did affect;
So as my choice was ever to resort
Neere to the
Sunne, the Mansion of the
Court;
Where others correspondence kept with mee,
As self-conceited too as I could bee.
Yet for exchange, because I had desire
That vulgar eyes my presence should admire,
Unto the City daign'd I to approach,
Never without six
Jennets in my Coach:
Where, if encountring any, I use ever
To presse salutes with motion of my Bever.
To breath the common ayre, or walke the streete,
Or entertaine discourse with those I meete
I hold it derogation; yet to show
I prize my friend, I'll give a nod or so;
For hee that will not on his postures stand,
And prove his education from the
Strand
By carriage of his bodie, I doe hold
(How os'ere he be in
Honors-booke enrol'd)
Hee's but a
Goard that doth his Leaves display
By one nights growth, and withers on the day.
Yet in the entertainment of a friend,
Though I seeme nice, if he have pow'r to
lend,
Or yeeld supply to my necessity,
I will admit him my Society.
Though from
familiarity exempt,
For that begets in us too much contempt.
Now th' practise I have ever used, when
I would perswade some wealthy
Citizen
To lend mee money to supply my want,
With ayrie hopes I feed my
Cormorant;
Telling him how by reason of my place,
I ev'ry day have
Offices in chace;
Which if he free the
Bonds that I am in,
I will not stand much to bestow on him.
Againe, 'mongst all my
retinue, no knave
But knowes the styles and titles that I have;
For such my pleasure is, that ev'ry Rogue
Within my
Sculrie have a Catalogue
Of all my Titles; which, they doe pretend
Were given to mee for some especiall end;
Whence these obsequious
Shadows that attend mee,
Perswade my
Creditors great sums to lend mee;
Alledging how by reason of my power,
It is a credit to my Creditor
To gain esteeme with such an one as mee,
Whose many Styles proclaim his dignitie.
Besides, if any injur'd by my men
By taking up
commodities of them,
Shall sue their Bonds for payment such a day,
Which, I'm resolv'd, they never meane to pay,
With number of my
Styles they so apall
Their
Creditors, they let their Action fall;
For so upon my
greatnesse they doe stand,
They feare no right is gotten at their hand.
Nay more, their
Creditors may seeme so fond,
That they will plead an
Error in the Bond:
For, as it may by specialty appeare,
They unto such a
Lord retayners were;
Which Style, as now it seemes, is wholly drownd,
And higher Titles for his
Lordship found;
Whose Style being chang'd, avoids their former state,
"Their
Master is not same as Bond beares date.
So as his
Title eyther must bee same,
Or else there is an
Error in their claime.
Thus doe I flourish, and my followers too,
As free from debt as those that nothing owe;
Nor owe wee ought, wee may bee bold to say,
For they are said to owe that meane to pay.
But that I may ith'
City keepe a quarter,
Ile promise them for to enlarge their
Charter
With this addition; Any Citizen,
Having so many yeers a free-man been,
Though he be able for estate, may breake,
And have
Protection granted if hee seeke;
Provided that he pay yeerly revenue
To me, to mine, or one of my retinue.
Thus doe I lure my
City-birds unto 't,
With hope of that I nere can bring about.
Somtime, for change, the
Country ayre I chuse,
Where my well-seated ancient
Mannor-house
Joyes in my
presence; I've no sooner shown mee
Then all the
Country-Gentry come upon mee;
Whose presence choice of presents straight begets
Of
Phesants, Pigeons, Pluvers, Caponets,
All which come to my
Cooke humbly beseeching
They may supply provision of his
Kitchin.
Next day a stall-fed
Oxe sent by a knight,
And hee resolves to suppe with mee at night,
Which, though it were discourt'sie to deny him,
Yet when he comes, seen am I scarcely by him:
For strangeness sutes with
greatnes, which may seeme
To gain to us more popular esteeme.
Now for my
house, delightfull is the Site,
The
base-Court pav'd with colour'd
Porphyrite,
Where two faire
Statues curious as may be,
One for my selfe, another for my Ladie
Erected are, with Columns reered high,
Which force an admiration to the eye
Of the Beholder, and their state is such,
The
golden-Calfe was nere ador'd so much.
As for my
House, it's open unto all,
And they for
Beere or any thing may call;
Yet have I so provided, though they crave it,
My Buttry hatch is
shut, they cannot have it.
In
Country-Musters, it's some Taske of mine
To take survey of all their discipline,
And teach them what those
martial-postures be,
Traines, Stratagems, and feats of policie;
Though, for my knowledge, I doe freely grant,
That I in these am wholly ignorant;
For I may sweare I never yet conferd
With any one of all th'
Artil'ry-yard.
Yet joy I much to heare the vulgar say,
A braver
Leader never did display
His
Colours in the field, for I'm the man
Would seeme more to the world then I am.
In my discov'ry further to proceede,
Excuse mee
Fellow Apes, I shall not neede,
For few or none in
Albions-Court there are
But they doe know my fashions to a hare:
Nor am I such a
Snake to cast my slough,
My
Titles make mee
Great, and that's enough.
The Ape of Fancy.
DOe but admire me, it is all I crave,
For as I love my selfe, so would I have
All ravish'd with my
presence, w
ch obtain'd
I have attain'd the Port at which I aym'd.
For if
Narcissus, selfe-conceited Elfe,
Did love himselfe by looking on himselfe,
I cannot see, my beauty beeing such,
But I may like and love my selfe as much.
But that yee may the better understand
My education, Race, Descent, and Land,
Where I was borne, where bred, and how I came,
I will acquaint you briefly with the same.
Some will not stick to call mee forraine brat,
But I were mad if I'de be mov'd at that,
For I doe know I am no Forrainer
But a right nat'ral
English Ilander;
For even my disposition tells me so
Through
selfe-conceite which I am subject to.
Yea I'le tell truth, how ere ye wonder at me,
A
Courtier of a
Succubus begat me,
From whom such secret
night-works have I learn'd,
As what I doe can never be discern'd.
In a
Court-entry darke of purpose made
Fit for encounter am I oft-times laid,
Where I enjoy a
prey as
rich as may be,
And for the
Maid encounter with her
Ladie;
Which she, such rare humility suites honour,
Receives as freely as is put upon her.
I must make one in every
Maske and
Show,
Or our
Court-ladies care not for 't a
Stro;
For I 'me their
Ape of Fancy, whose delight
Doth please them more then any
Marmosite.
If I finde any
Lady discontent,
I can prescribe a cure incontinent,
And with an active application too
Use farre more art then other Apes can doe.
For bee 't
Green-sicknesse, which few
Madams have,
Or
Honours Phrensie, which will make them rave,
Bee't the
Scotoma, or the
Night-mare ride them,
Their cure's soone wrought if I may lye beside them.
Pills have I store and choice
Confections too,
Which on my
Patients freely I bestow,
Not like our base impostur'd
Mountebanke
Whose ayme 's to sell for gaine and not for thanke.
Free is my bounty and so well approv'd,
As in
Court, City, Country I am lov'd,
The Trophies of whose favour I doe weare
About my wrest, my Hat-band and my eare.
For be she
Lady conversant in
Court,
To her as to my Shrine I make resort,
And with such
Apish complement accost her,
As she 's surprized with my Courtly posture.
To th'
Cent we goe, where we at
Cent-foot play,
By which our hidden meanings we bewray.
Her Feather for a Favour doe I carrie,
While she protests if she were now to marrie,
The
Ape of Fancy should enjoy her heart,
And this contenteth me, and so we part.
Againe, sometimes unto the
Burse I go,
Of purpose there to take a turne or two;
Not to make choyce of any new thing there,
But to survey what beauty might appeare
Most gratefull to mine eye; and there I find
A pliant nature sorting with my mind.
A
Widow-Wife, whose absent
Husband gives
Accesse to world of
Suiters, and she lives
No lesse observ'd then fancied; yet her wit
So smoothly and demurely carries it,
As she preserves her fame so unsuspected,
As more she acts the more she is respected.
All which proceedes, as probably may seeme,
In that she trades with men of choyce esteeme,
Who
ferret-like still sport them in her
Burrow,
With whom she revells it the ev'ning thorow.
Though I confesse ingenuously my shame,
That on a time I lay upon her name
Such deepe aspersion, as it did surpasse
The compasse of redresse, and thus it was.
"Upon a day withouten companie,
"I went to cheape a rich commoditie;
"Heere and there sought I this, but in a word
"Not any shop in
Burse could like afford
"As this faire
Curtezans, who seemed nice,
"As if shee would not sell't at any price;
"For know (quoth shee)
this stands not here for Sale,
"But only set to grace the Shop withall.
"This answer did not please me, for my fortune
"Did promise me, that if I would importune
"Or press my suit, hows'ere her brest seem'd steel'd,
"By hot assault she could not chuse but yeeld.
"On this foundation grounded, I did show her
"How much respect I ever tendred to her,
"So as no
fancy could be more exprest
"Then th' faithfull service I to her profest.
"And know (deere Love)
such is my present state
"As I will buy this Gem at any rate,
"Rather then lose what I esteeme so much,
"The boundlesse limits of my Love is such.
"Besides, it will no derogation be
"To cast the eye of your respect on me,
"For I may grace you more then any other,
"Both by my own means and my high-priz'd brother,
"Whose rising-fortunes gaine him that esteeme
"As blest are they that may but follow them.
"So moving was this lovely Rhetorick,
"A
[...] it began to touch her to the quick;
"Silent shee was, Silence implies consent,
"Whence I perceiv'd my profer gave content:
"For there was noughr that wrought so much upō her
"As when I gave her notice of mine
honour,
"And that my
Lordship would reward her more
"Then all her
Silken-guls had done before.
"For these
Court-punies, What could they effect
"That might deserve the height of her respect?
"These are but
great-mens-shadowes at the best,
"Who sute themselves with shreds of interest,
"Learne to looke big, and keep their postures too,
"But which of these has money to bestow
"On his affected Mistresse, whose repaire
"Must not rely on Castles in the ayre?
"Yea, which of these, how ere they seeme to prate,
"Dare whet their knife neer to the
Counter-gate?
"Such gilded Puppets are these
Courtly-Apes
"Who gull faire
Idols with deceiving shapes.
"Having obtain'd my Suit, I made exprest
"By bounteous gifts, the Love which I profest,
"So as 'mongst all paid tribute to her beauty,
"I was the man to whom shee tenderd duty
"With most observance; But behold my
fancy
"Grew in the end distempred with a
Phrensy,
"So as I could not any thing conceale,
"But 'mongst the rest told how I had to deale
"With this fresh amorous
Bursan, and what rate
"Shee priz'd the traffick of her body at;
"So as in briefe (so far had reason crost me)
"I told my
wife how deere that pleasure cost me.
"Shee, though I was distemperd, did apply it
"To her conceit, and thought in time to try it;
"Which on a day, her
Lady-mother being
"Of her opinion, and in one agreeing,
"With jealous thoughts, they to this
Sempster go,
"To try if this report weee true or no.
"The Shop descride, these subtle
Syrens take
"Their walk by her, Shee asking
what they lack,
"Little suspecting (simple Soule) that they
"Should in those shapes her secret crimes display.
"Shew us some Ruffs, quoth one,
of choicest fashion,
"Spanish, Italian,
or some other nation,
"As the Venetian;
where no Country can
"Compare in State unto their Curtezan.
"Chiefest & choycest of her
Ruffs she shows them,
"For she presumes (so perfectly she knows them)
"That none would give content but such were best,
"Though worse would serv for such a thankles guest
"Choice doe they make of such as best doe like,
"And at a price they now begin to strike;
"What shee demands they give,
but pay, they said,
"Was more then needs, Shee was already paid.
"By whom (said she?)
By such a noble Lord,
"Who hath engag'd his honor and his word,
"That such a time and place, what would you more?
"Just to this Sum he paid you long before
"Shee
(modest Matron) guilty of the Bill,
"Stood as a Statue, silent, husht and still;
"Yet with Vermilion tinctures shee displaid
"That such a Sum had beene by mee defraid:
"Which they observing, left her sore perplexed
"Through my distemper, thus impeach'd & vexed.
After, by meanes of Physick and good diet,
My
Phrentick humor grew to be more quiet;
So as when they did any time upbraid
Or tax mee now with that which I had said,
I straight recanted that which I had spoken,
But
femal spleen is not so soon forgotten;
For those aspersions though I did disclaime,
Imputing them to th' weaknesse of my braine,
My
Lady-mother will not let mee gad,
But keeps mee still restrain'd, as I were mad;
So as the cause why I can scarcely know
My friends, is this, my
Lady makes mee so.
One have I heard speak in my forlorne roome,
"A madder Lord is not in
Christendome,
But hee may thanke his
genius for it
And not his
honour, if he have more wit.
Now all the tricks which I must henceforth play
Are few or none, for I poor
Ape must stay,
Like to a starved
Snake or drouzie
Drone,
With
house-Baboons and
Marmosites at home;
Unlesse I goe sometimes unto a
Wake,
Where I such
Stoicks for my
Consorts take,
As
Rumford, Ratcliffe, Hallowell can show,
For these are farthest
Wakes I goe unto,
My
Tutors be so strict, unlesse by chance,
About a
May-pole I dare hardly dance,
Or give a wench a green-gown on the grasse,
So much the time is chang'd from what it was.
Only
(kind-Bearward) rests it in your pow'r
To make mee free as any Emperour;
Whereby you may redresse my present wrong,
And make mee merry as the day is long.
The Ape of Fashion.
FAshion thou art mine
Idol, Pride my
Prize,
My
glass, my
globe, my
corpse, my
Sacrifice,
Which I one day must offer to the
Mace,
For cloath a silver, scarlet and gold-lace.
Twelve yeers and more I have a
Trav'ler been
In
France and
Italy, where I have seen
Variety of
fashions, whose rich fraught
I now, at last, have to my Countrey brought;
For I was he that did the first discover
Your
Saffron yolkie band, & brought it over;
Your
paned doublet, and
penurious breech
Were undescride, till I began to teach
The rudiments of
Art, nor have I lost
All by my voyage, though it deerly cost.
For now admires each
Gallant my invention,
And gratifies mee with a standing Pension;
Four
Spanish-Mares have I to carrie me,
With all accoutrements so properlie,
As in more state himselfe he cannot beare
Who may dispend ten thousand pound by yeare.
Now to acquaint you where I make resort,
My residence is for most part at
Court;
Where I such tricks as I bring over, show
To such, whose dispositions I do know
Most itching after novelties, and these
Ile pawne my life, that I shall quickly please.
For give these noble
Courtiers their due,
If th'
fashion I present them with be new,
They care not how ill-favord it appeare,
For they would be observed what they weare;
Nor is it decency that they respect,
For we shall see a kinde of strange neglect
In our apparell gaine us more esteeme,
Then those who in their clothes more punctual seeme.
As for example, let our cloaks fall downe
Upon left shoulder, or go sweep the Roome
In a neglectfull
fashion, with sleeves drawne
Up to the elbow, to descry the Laune
Or Cambrick shirts wee weare, unbutton'd too,
That our lac'd Linnen may more neatnesse show,
With points untruss'd, as if wee did not care
For pride so much as for the subtle ayre:
And wee, by this, shall more observance git,
Then if, with ginger pace wee minsed it.
Of all those servants that I entertaine,
A
Tayler and a
Broker bee the men
I most esteeme, and where I most relide,
Though I have many hangers on beside;
For th'
one with new-clothes still renues my state,
The
other broaks such clothes are out of date.
And howsoere some people doe condemne
These
Brokers for unconscionable men,
I know them to be bounteous and kind,
For if you leave in paune your Suit behind,
You shall be sure, so freely will he show him,
To find more on it then you gave unto him.
Nor is my
Tayler such a man of sin
As some young cheated-gulls would make of him;
For what's the cause they beare such hate unto him?
'Tis this forsooth, he hath his
Hell below him.
If this procure their hate, it doth behove them
To finde out some that have their
Hell above them.
I must confesse hee will od-shreds conceale,
But that's a small fault in our Common-weale,
For, in our State, some
greater-Theeves there bee
Whom none dare tax, yet steale far more then hee.
Hee one Command'ment breaks and so doth fall,
But these
State-sharks infringe not one, but all.
Now for the place where I do most frequent,
Court, City, Country, are my continent;
Where, to the garbe of every place I live,
And such a forme of
fashion use to give,
As there is none who would not imitate
The
fashion I affect at any rate.
Which joyes mee much to see an humerous Lord,
Whose formal habit only doth afford
A personal esteeme, so mad to bee,
As in an
Apish garb to second mee.
But I in change can vie with none of them,
Which makes mee curry favor with their men,
Who set their
Lordships-wardrope at a sale,
From whence I hooke some Suit bee't nere so stale,
Which I reduce to
fashion by my wit,
And this their Lord admires and followes it.
For little knowes he, when he notes my
fashion,
That from his
Wardrope it receiv'd
translation;
Where if hee knew what to my selfe is knowne,
Hee would be loth to imitate his owne.
I have likewise a
Venice dame brought over,
Whom our
Court-Ladies eye, and eying love her;
For choyce attyres shee labours to invent,
Mixing with
English Venice complement:
So as no
Curtezan observeth there
Ought worthy note, but's nat'ralized here.
Rounding of haire, short-wasted doublets too,
Steeletto-pockets are stale
fashions now;
"Inventions Mint must goe both night and day,
"No matter though our money-Mint doe stay.
Long was I bringing of a work about
A Looking-glasse, to view from head to foot,
Before, behind, so as my very Spur
Could scarcely move but I might see it stur.
And this invention gain'd mee much esteeme,
Chiefly 'mongst such who most deformed seeme,
Whose crooked shapes, if they perfection lack,
I could applie a levell to their back;
Whose equall feature by th' reflecting-glasse,
Made them admire themselves as they did passe.
And to some
Ladies much deform'd, of late
I have prescrib'd another choyce receite,
Which now for modesty I will omit,
Because
Cornelius-tub produceth it.
Nor is my
Venice-urinal so brittle,
Though she felt once the furnace of the
Spittle,
But shee demurely can observe all times,
And with her Saintly outside cover crimes.
So as the
City beares her such affection,
Shee's only thought the first to give direction
For matters of discourse, attyre, behaviour,
Striving among themselves who may receive her
With most extended bounty; yet will shee
Requite their boundlesse liberalitie
With Husbands ruine (she has vow'd to do't)
And with excesse of Charge to
bank her out.
For goe they but to
Rumford to a feast,
Their clothes proclaim them
Ladies at the least,
Though all that while, their
wronged-husbands spare it,
And satisfie their hunger with a
Carret.
Nor only there, but on the
Country too,
Some
fashions out a date doe I bestow;
Where shee and I marching some fortnight after,
Are like to burst our selves (I sweare) with laughter.
For in a
Country-Church you there shall see
The May-pole wenches weare my liverie;
But in their forme of
fashion so displaid,
None can discerne the
Mistrisse from the
Maid.
Yet they'r perswaded what they weare is new,
And that their
fashion is but known to few
Save to themselves, which makes them to appeare
Scornfull to such who goe in Country weare:
Yet if they knew as much as I, they'd say
Themselves were out of
fashion more then they.
Thus have I liv'd, and thus am I belov'd,
For State appointed, and by States approv'd,
Where of no Law I doe so much complaine
As of one late-enacted now in Spaine,
Touching
restraint of all excessive 'parell,
Which I'm resolv'd would make our
gallants quarel;
And reason good; for would one think it fit
To reave them that they more esteeme then wit?
Surely the
Task were hard, the
Law severe,
Yet this they doe who strip them of their weare.
For these are they who descant on one straine,
And with no care disturb their giddy braine,
Save only how they may in
fashion git,
And be the first that may encounter it.
These are they whom I love, with whom I live,
And unto whom this
Legacie I give;
They who prefer a
Coate before a
Pate,
Shall die without a
Coate, Wit, or
Estate.
The Ape of Observation.
THat I
Sites, States &
Natures might descry,
Columbus hath not travel'd more then I;
In Princes Courts I have a lodger beene,
And there
observ'd whats'ever I have seen:
Which to compile it did mee highly please,
Entitling it my
Ephemerides.
I have b
[...]en present at late wars of
Rhine,
Though I to neither party did incline;
I heard th'
Electors sing a dolefull dirge,
At winning of renowned
Heidelberge,
Redoubling thus the subject of their care,
"Our neighbours House a fire, bids us beware.
I follow'd warlike
Tillie at the rayle,
When with streight siege he closed
Frankindale;
To
Berg'apsome I did my progresse make,
Where I much muz'd how
Spynola could scape,
When in his Campe hee was so gyrt about,
As feare got in, but nothing could get out.
"Though plots seeme deepe, one may their bottom sink,
But I were mad if I 'de speake all I think.
Nor is my
observation so restrain'd,
As if it earthly objects only aim'd;
More high Mysterious
speculation's given,
To view those
Signes and
Wonders are in heaven,
Prodigious formes and figures in the ayre,
All which
impressions lately frequent were
Neere sieged
Prague, and other Cities too,
Who have sustain'd what foe or fate could doe.
At
Turein, two miles from
Egeria
Within the kingdome of
Bohemia,
Next to a
Stew, where I with others stood,
I saw a
Table and a Form sweat blood;
Which I
observ'd, and forthwith did divine
There would succeed a blood-effusing time.
From whence dislodg'd no sooner did I come
Unto the famous City
Lintium,
Then there appeared a fear-increasing vision,
Which ore the City shewd this apparition;
Two Swords stood pointing one against another,
With furious Armies skirmishing together;
All which I made th' inhabitants beleeve
Would some impressions in their City leave;
Assuring them, to make mine Art more knowne,
These ayrie
Armies would surprize the Towne.
This caus'd a strict watch to be duely kept,
And I did laugh at this while others wept;
For it was far above my element
To know what these strange
Apparitions meant
Though my conjectures were esteem'd more t
[...]
Then th' unknown
Palmistry of any
Jew.
But lest the
Statute bring me into question,
This is the least I use in my profession,
Unlesse in forrain Countries where there be
So few that practise this same Mysterie,
As they will lodg a Wizard in their brest.
But ever prize
North-Britain Wizards best.
Thus I've inrich'd my selfe with
Observation,
And gaind me such renoune within this
Nation,
That be my weekly
Corrants nere so strange,
They passe for
current-novells on th'
Exchange:
So as upon my knowledge their esteeme
Hath staid the vent of better labors cleane.
Yea, there be divers
Stationers in the Citie,
Who had been broke (the more had beene the pitie)
Had not my high priz'd travels been brought hether
Which kept them up from going down the wether.
And now
these are, which seems to mee most rare,
Held by our
Stage-gulls for oracular.
Not any story or occurrent passes,
But is authentick truth with these
sage-Asses,
Who neighbourly confer upon a bench
Of such a
Rampire, Palisado, Trench;
Of such a
Conquest, such a
Battaile lost,
And what a world of
Christian lives it cost.
This they peruse, which they perusing send
Into the
Country to some speciall friend,
Who may p
[...]take these
news without delay,
And these become as credulous fools as th
[...]y.
For though, to give my thriving-works their due,
Scarce among twenty one relation's true,
Yet on their truth not one of them will stand,
But sp
[...]ead their fame abroad from hand to hand.
Nor bee my
Corants only
Alehouse talke,
Nor for
Duke Humfries Knights, who
Pauls doe walke;
For I have seene the very
Pulpits smooke
With some extractions rifled from my booke,
Which howsoere they could not well beare water,
Yet would they serve for want of better matter.
But there's no place so highly prizeth mee,
As where our
Ordinary-Gallants bee;
For there am I admir'd, and to my grace
Preferred ever to the highest place:
Where my loose glibbrie tongue is prating still
Travels more strange then those of
Mandevill.
Yea, you sh ll see some score of
Gallants stand,
Each with a
Table-booke within their hand,
To take
observance of such speciall heads
As from the
forge of my discourse proceeds:
Which they relating duely, now and then,
Makes them esteem'd for most accomplish'd men.
Now what may you imagine I deserve,
When these extract but that which I observe?
And gaine such praise, as those
Land-gulls who hear them,
Account them highly blest who neighbour neer thē?
But now because I'm to my
Country come,
Ile shew you what I have
observ'd at home,
And in each sev'
[...]all place where I have beene,
Briefly unfold what I have heard or seene.
In
Court I liv'd, and living felt no scant,
But bravely surfeited on others want;
It was my ayme, and I did ayme aright,
To winde me in with some
Great-favorite,
Whose gracefull count'nance might support me still
In all my courses, were they good or ill.
Where I
observ'd, more good might be effected
By meanes of
One who was in
Court respected,
Were his Cause ne're so faultie nor so weake,
Then a good Cause, if he no friends could make:
The reason was, though
Justice bore ev'n hand,
From some of
these there came a countermand,
Which, cause he was a
great-Antagonist
They durst not his authority resist;
Or else his meanes advanc'd them to that place,
Which mov'd them veile to him in any Case.
[...] this I held a grounded
observation,
[...]ustice to Greatnesse ever had relation;
[...]or some of
these oft get a place worth chusing,
By being married to a
great-mans Cousin:
So firm's the linke of mutuall allyance,
Against all opposits it pleads defiance.
For other
silken-Apes who spend their time
In making their seer-bodies brisk and fine,
I hold it needlesse here to make report,
Because ther's su
[...]h an
Ape, just now, in
Court;
Who will describe himselfe in every lim,
Which makes me leave that labor unto him.
For our
Court-Ladies, very few I know
Who racket it with their
Comradoes now;
Our spritely
Lords doe either Treasure lack,
Or else they want agility of back,
So as amongst a number ther's scarce one
But shee is eyther
mortifide or gone.
"One did I heare of but the other day,
"Who now has throwne her
lighter Roabs away,
"And by a firm-friend whom she well approv'd,
"Sent to the
wife of that same
Lord she lov'd,
"How she resolv'd her good esteeme to win
"By wearing of a
mourning-gowne for him.
"But what's the answer shee return'd to her?
"I wish, quoth sh
[...],
your Lady may not weare
"But what becomes her best in publique sight,
"Her Suite must sute her selfe, her selfe is light;
"But if with mee shee'll keepe a mourning part,
"Shee must not mourn in Habit, but in Heart.
And so no question doth shee; for long since
Shee lost the
eye of her
concupiscence,
Which makes me hope the eye-light of her mind
Is cleerer far, since th'outward eye was blind.
Thus be our
Ladies matchlesse
Converts held,
To whom no Suiters make but are repeld;
Though
One I know, nor was old
Lais liker
Unto her selfe, then shee is to a striker.
In
City likewise I remain'd a while,
Where I
observ'd how
Trades-men did beguile,
And in some darke part of their shop tooke care
How they might vent their most deceitfull ware.
Here did I stay farre longer then I need,
That I with laughter might my humor feed;
For here I might
observe a Country-gull,
Whose fathers death had made his pockets full,
Mount
Ludgate-hill to buy a
Spanish felt,
Pull out his money, bid the Knave go tel 't.
Notes from
Black-fryers I presently might gather,
For now this
Cornish-Chough mourns for his fathe
in a
Carnation-feather, wherewithall
Hee means to grace his fathers funerall.
By this hee travells to
Saint Martins lane,
And to the shops hee goes to buy a
chaine;
Where ev'ry painted
Babie that hee sees,
With their horse-gilded varnish doth so please,
As such commodities must not bee lost,
For he will have them whatsoe're they cost.
To th'
Royal Exchange fain would he take his course
If he had any money in his purse,
But the
Long-shop hath brought his pockets low
With
Daggers, Bells, and
Hobby-horses too.
For
City-wives I will not
presse them much,
If they be pleas'd that I may only touch
Their errors, not their persons; which shall be
Shadow'd so covertly as none shall see.
I have
observ'd that nothing is more sweete
In their conceit, then when these
gossips meete;
Nor would this halfe so much their husbands vex,
If all these
gossips were but of one Sex:
But this the grief on 't, forth they will not go
But they must have their
foremen with them too.
Which to redresse, and for a quiet life,
Let ev'ry one be
foremen to his wife;
For this in short time will her humor tame,
And purchase to her selfe a better name.
For the gum'd grogran
Citty-usurer,
He is
observ'd so much by
Lucifer,
I need small
observation take of him,
Being known to be th'
Engrosser of all sin.
Not all his
furrs nor
vermin-skins shall save him,
He has contracted with him meanes to have him;
And reason good, for you shall truely finde
The
master and his
man both of one minde:
For there is nought the
Ʋsurer doth crave,
But that he may
Security receive,
With whom in this his
master doth agree,
For all he seeks is but
Securitie.
Yet for all this I cannot chuse but love him,
Because he cheats so many men above him,
And by a Forfeiture or such like Sentence,
In time he brings them unto true repentance;
Whereas if they had never met with him,
Perchance they had still rioted in sin.
Besides, he 's
charitable, for to his door
You cannot come but you shall see the poor;
Yet th' cause hereof he cannot well conceale,
"He makes all poor with whom he has to deale,
Now for the
Country, though there many be
Who make pretences of simplicitie,
Because they little know that part of speech
Which
southerne people to their children teach;
Yet in a home spun native Rhetorick
They shew themselves as pregnant and as quick,
As those whose education may impart
Far more accomplishment by meanes of Art.
A subtle-piercing ayre has made these wittie,
Apt to deceive as any in the Cittie;
For th' richer
grubs, we properly may call
Broggers, Forestallers, and
Regraters all:
And these prey on his state that weakest is,
As
Whales and
Sea-Bulls feed on lesser fish.
For th'
younger sort small policie discerns,
Yet as the old Cock crows the young Cock learns;
Though they be gulld oftimes by
City ware,
They are by it made circumspecter farre,
And now and then the
City recompences
With a commodity of stale-stuffe wenches,
Who by their
carriage gaine them such esteeme
As many times they match with
Aldermen.
For th'
higher ranke, they live at such a rate,
As some of them cannot support their state
Without sinister meanes, yet these by aw
Seeme to oppose and contradict the Law;
So as the Law grows tongue-tide, or else bent
To give these
Bulls of
Basan all content.
"Law 's as a Spiders-web, and ever was,
"It takes the little flies, lets great ones passe.
But let us draine these
Rivolets that flow,
Those last are lost, they were so long ago.
If we extract not poyson from each Rill,
Injoyn us Silence, we have lost our Skill:
But
Pan should thwart the fancy of his Pipe,
Ceasing to play when Vices are so ripe.
Then to our
Trillo; you shall heare more set
In this Composure then you heard of yet.
A nimble
Ningle we did lately heare
Has purchased a thousand pounds by yeere,
Contracting for Delinquents, though some say'
He was
Delinquent once as well as they.
And there's small doubt, when all
Accounts are past,
He of his
House, shall be both
first and
last;
For though his
Fortunes to such
grandeur swell,
A ranker
Cheat breaths not 'twixt Heav'n and Hell:
So dearly hugging private Interest
As fordid Lucre has intranc'd the Beast.
The Proverbe is, "All evill comes from North,
And worse then
This the North-coast nere brought forth.
Here you shall see, w
ch I did smile to see,
Reteyners to some man of qualitie
Cheat a
Sot of his Coyne, or which is worse,
In the kings high-street take away his purse,
Which they with winged speed wil forthwith carrie
Unto their old receit or Sanctuarie;
Where these
Reteyners due account must make,
And with their state-split-
Master part the stake.
Yet who dare say that such a man as he
Would give least countenance to theeverie?
His port doth rather argue him a Giver,
Then to support his State with
Stand, Deliver;
But so long hee his bounty did display,
"He cannot as he would, but as he may.
Thus I in
Observations of all sort,
Be they in
Country, City, or the
Court,
Have in my
Progresse such exactnesse showne
As I suppose no Traveller hath done.
Yea in the
Academie I observ'd
Those
Drones enjoy best
roomes who least deserv'd;
And many more, which if I should expresse.
Would force the hearer to amazednesse,
That any one should possibly containe
Such store of
Observations in one braine.
For
Rules of
Art so far do they excell
The diving plots of matchlesse
Machavell,
That I of all the world could compose
An Abstract of her policies, and enclose
Each project and occurrent that befell
Within the compasse of a
Wallnut-shell:
For I ne're view'd the forme of any State
I'de not
Observe, observing imitate.
What resteth then, but that yee doe devise
Honors for him, whose knowledg makes ye wise?
The Court Ape.
SO briske I am, so sweet and so perfum'd,
I have no
tricks, it may be so presum'd;
But I doe muse how any one should think
I could thus neatly goe and have no chink;
For howsoe're some
Courtiers have said it,
They were supported only by their credit.
Tradesmen grow now so wise (the more's the pitie)
The
Court is out of credit with the
Citie.
At this time have I nere the
Minories
Two Coaches with distinguish'd liveries,
Eight
Barb'rie mares, two foot-cloth Naggs beside,
On which, for more variety; I ride
The publique streetes, to visit such a
Ladie,
By whom I have a
standing pension paid me.
Coach men and Pages divers have I too,
On whom my
cast suits use I to bestow,
With other
vailes which accidental be,
Besides the grace they have in following me.
Nor is this all, Crowns must I alwayes carrie,
And hazard too when I 'me at
Ordinarie,
Where like true
Heire of bounty I must show
Farre more profuse then
vulgar Gallants doe.
I have a
Tweake too, one of my retenue,
Who will expect a share in my revenue;
"If
Phebus had no light, could
Phebe shine?
"No more can She without some ayde of mine.
Now can one thinke, I on this charge should sit,
And have no meanes at all to second it?
A
fire must fuell have or it goes out,
A
Lampe must needes have oyle applide unto 't;
Springs Rivers feed,
Seas are by Rivers fed,
Bees sucke sweet flowers, and so are nourished.
While these in distinct nourishment doe share,
Must I
Chameleon-like be fed with Ayre?
No; I have meanes in
Court to shew my light,
For I 'me esteem'd a speciall Favorite
To such a
Peere, whose greatnesse can support
The lowest
Shrub that grows within his
Court,
Much more such State-aspiring
Pines as I,
Who on his grace without desert rely.
For if I should desert or merit weigh,
I 'de make a Conscience of those tricks I play;
But bare might I be as the slough-stript
Snake,
If of my pranks I should a Conscience make:
For this my
maxim is; "He that will blush,
"Or value honesty more then a Rush,
"Or so precize, hee 'l no advantage take,
"May thrive in
Court, but he 's not very like.
But now it rests, that I my
tricks doe show,
Which showne, judge if I may not thrive or no.
In
Court I live and flourish where I live,
Apt to receive, but seldom apt to give;
In ev'ry Boat a private Oare I have,
Where th' bargain 's ill I neither win nor save:
For I've a braine has wit enough to plot,
And for a Conscience I know it not;
Because this Conscience such a
Scarcrow is,
As it deterreth us from what 's amiss;
Which if wee should observe, it would be like
Within short time to overthrow us quite.
If any State-employment be in hand,
I by some secret
Agent understand
Whereto it tends, compounding with a friend,
To whom by meanes the
State doth recommend
This publick taske, that I may share with him
In th' benefit that he 's employed in;
Which if he grant, to raise his estimate
I recommend his service to the
State,
Extolling his deserts, saying; "'T were fit
"Such men as he should reape a benefit
"By their employments, otherwise 't would seeme
"The
State were weak & could not judge of them:
Yet I may sweare sincerely from my heart,
I little prize or value his desert;
My chiefest ayme and principallest care
Is how I may in his preferment share.
For to that end did I his worth improve,
Causing him thinke 't was only for his love,
Whereas peculiar profit drew me to it,
Nor care I much if all the world doe know it.
For these are usuall
projects now a dayes,
And if contrived nimblie, merit praise
In th' undertaker; yea I know a
Man
High in the
Courts esteeme, who now and than
For all his outward lustre will not stick
To gul the
State with this familiar trick.
If any one, whose service hath beene tride,
Sue by some meanes for to be gratifide,
That
he his hopes on stronger stayes may ground,
He with this gracefull
Courtier doth compound;
That if he shall procure him such a Summe
For all the former service he hath done,
He shall be
Sharer with him, and receave
Two parts and more of all that he shall have.
This moves this spritely
Courtier to perswade,
That such a summe of money may be paid
For such State-service, which above compare
Deserv's due guerdon; for his onely care
(As he pretends) is to preferre the suite
Of them whose name hath purchas'd them repute.
The
State weighs his deserts, and doth bestow
What 's fit and equall for his service too.
But when it 's to be paid, this understand,
Seldome a fourth part comes to th' owners hand;
For his perswasive
Orator will share
Above the former composition farre,
Telling him how, if't had not beene for him
He had not got the value of a pin:
Then fit it were that he three parts allot
To him by whom his entire suite was got.
Thus must we plot and reape the greatest gaine
Through their deserts, who in the
Camp remaine
Subject to all those miseries of warre,
Which on the
Souldier still inflicted are.
Our soft down beds be all the harms we feele,
Our silken-Roabes, our Harnesse and our Steele;
Our Crystall springs of luscious
Hypocrice,
Our humors taste no warlike enterprize;
Our Congies, Cringes, amorous salutes,
Our Love-inducing-Sonnets, warbling Lutes,
Our Masks, Tilts, Triumphs & obsequious greetings,
Our closs encounters in our Entry-meetings,
Our deere
Eringo love-provocatives,
Our
Julips, Apozems, Preservatives,
Our secret plots to work our ends thereby,
Closing our drifts within an
Oyster-pye,
Our private aymes to purchase such a wife,
By laying siege now in her husbands life;
Our
french-Moriscoes, motives of delight,
Our
Parachito, Monkey, Marmosite,
Our
Arbour-daliance, when we make resort
To those sweet groves and gardens of the
Court,
Move us to joy in such a happy birth,
As those who doe enjoy their heav'n on earth.
In brief, what's choice we have it, and contemn
Those weake delights are us'd by
vulgar-men.
Here you shall see a man of discipline,
One who came off right bravely in his time,
With all observance make recourse to us,
That we would deigne to be propitious
To his preferred Suite; which wee set light,
Hows'ere his cause seeme equall and upright.
The reason is, this
Supplicant is poor,
And with a bounteous hand can scarcely shoure
Into our boundlesse skrips, what wee expect,
"This is the cause his Suit takes no effect.
Thus in the
Court doe wee our lustre shew,
And on inferior
groundlings take a view
With such contempt, as they who us behold,
Would hardly think us made both of one mold.
For come wee within distance but of those,
Wee hold a
Pomander streight to our nose,
Lest their ranke breath should any way infect us,
Or that the
popular might more respect us.
Yet I protest I can no reason see,
That wee of them more cautulous should bee
For any such infectious ayre, I say,
Then they of us,
corrupter far then they.
But far be it removed from my brest
To hatch least thought of stayning my own nest:
For ther's enow that will this staine encrease
In ev'ry coast, though I should hold my peace.
Now from the
Court to
City must I goe,
Where I my
tricks am purposed to show,
Which I 'm indifferent, please they or displease,
But to display them briefly, they be these.
I have choice
Spies and
Tarriers in the towne,
Who by their long experience now are growne
Ripe in observance; now the use I make
Of these, is this; they serious notice take
Of such
commodities as bear most sway,
And at what speciall rate they goe away.
Which known, I hold it thriving policy
To make a Suit for this
Monopoly,
By which the
trades-men shall be forc'd to stand
T
[...]ll they seeke
composition at my hand.
Or else I cause the
Impost to bee rais'd,
Which new enhancement I've no sooner caus'd
Then I make meanes (such is the course of us)
To get unto my selfe the overplus.
Or else I f
[...]me this
Impost of the king,
But what is due to him I seldome bring;
F
[...]r th'
Maxim is I hope, as it hath beene,
"Where there is much, much will be overseene.
Another feare I have, and it is this,
If any
Trades-man in the towne shall wish
To v
[...]nt such
Ware as he hath now with him,
Before some new Commodities come in,
Let him
annoynt me well, I will make way
That no new Ware be sold till such a day.
As for example, if a
Vintner wold
Before new wines come in, vend all his old;
By my procurement I can cause restraint
O
[...] all new Wines, till hee his old shall vent:
Yea, and inhance the rate too of his owne,
Because such want of Wines are in the towne.
If any likewise would
Protection have,
Be he ne're such a State-abusing knave,
He shall receive it by some means of ours,
And wipe the nose of all his
Creditors:
Yea
breake he in the morning, yet ere night
The
Sonne of this same
Bankrupt shall be
Knight.
More curious feats I have besides all these,
Which to my waining coffers yeeld encrease;
But in the
City they so frequent are,
As they grow now like to their sullied ware:
So as of these Ile briefly make an end,
And to my
Country Cormorants descend.
Hath any man desire to have his
nest
Or any of his
brood grac'd with a
Crest?
Though there were never Title of h s own
To any of his Predecessors known,
He shall to him and his a
Style inherit,
Which after times may think he got by merit,
Or some Field-service that he never did,
Or some strange Act, which to the world is hid.
A
Catalogue of
Honors I have written,
Whereof he may make choice as he thinks fitting;
An
Heralds arch these Titles are displaid on,
Barons, Knights-Baronets, or new-styl'd Vaidon;
Only I feare, some of these
honors bee
Of too high ranke for such an one as hee:
Yet if he will but lose his strong-ty'd-purse,
Ile get him one, a better or a worse.
For
Honours as they should, so humble seeme,
Many enjoy them know not what they meane;
Which th'
Herald shadows oft times with a jest,
Devising for their
Coat as strange a
Crest;
As
three Red-Herrings in a forrest greene,
With a souc'd Gurnet peering up betweene.
Or for one
Combe, as I have heard it said,
A curry-Combe betwixt two Sunnes displaid.
But now admit the
Country grow so wise,
It will by no meanes yeeld to such a price,
Alledging how there is no reason why
That they at such high rate should
honor buy,
Seeing decrease of money it is such,
As there be few that have it, but will grutch,
Though they doe value
Honor as their life,
To pay so much as then when Coine was rife.
Or else perhaps
Honors so common seeme,
As now they fall into such disesteeme,
They'll have no more
Knights made, 'tis so agree'd on,
Lest they sh
[...]uld want ancient
Esquires to breed on.
Admit, I say, all this, I have a feat
To get me Lands and livings by Escheat;
For, by my
Tarriers, I doe understand
Of all improved and concealed Land,
Which presently I beg, and in an houre
Turn Husband, wife and children out a doore.
Compound with mee none can at any rate,
For now all composition comes too late;
I'm seiz'd and in possession, taking care
To build a curious house to seate my H
[...]ire;
Planting delicious Orchards to delight
With luscious fruits, the choycest appetite;
Contriving spacious fish-ponds closed round,
With marble Columns raised from the ground:
In briefe, ther's nothing that you can devise,
Appears not in this earthly
Paradise.
Now all these works are finished and done,
To reare a sumptuous
Mansion for my Sonne,
Who many times before I turne to mold,
Hath his Reversion to another sold;
Which so prevents my care, Ide think no sin,
But that I have confer'd my State on him,
To strip this
Wag, who in a Net doth dance,
Of all the hope of his inheritance.
But 'tis no matter, I've a State for life,
Which I suppose will mediate this strife;
For now of late I'm run so far on shelfe,
All I have left will scarcely serve my selfe.
Yet must I gull the time and make a show
As if I had more owne then I doe ow;
My
foot-cloth beares mee out, nor is my debt
So great as I need much to pawn it yet.
In
Progresse time, I likewise goe to see
'Mongst other
Apes, the
Ʋniversitie,
Where though
*
Licinius-like all Arts I hate,
I must be made forthwith a
Graduate
For which I promise, when they come to
Court,
Some
Chaplains place, but they must pay me for't.
Thus have I shown my
tricks in ev'ry place,
And howsoere some twit mee to my face,
Affording mee
(poor Snakes) no better word
Then of a
Carpet-civet comfit Lord,
Though aged
Court-Apes fall into contempt,
I'm none of these, my person is exempt:
Who have no
tricks to cheat may droop and die,
But thanks unto the
Stars, this need not I;
My happy
Fate such apprehension lent me,
As I would see that man could circumvent me.
Now he that has a wit and will not use it
Unto his best advantage, doth abuse it.
It rests, as you have heard so to report,
No tricks are like those tricks are plaid at
Court.
The City Ape.
TIs strange to heare
this
silken-gull preferre
Those plots by which his
Court ship seems to erre,
Before those honest aymes which ever are
Both more secure and more successive far.
'Tis sure the corrupt age hee liveth in
Makes him thus vainly glory in his sin;
Or else hee holds
Confession of his crimes
Agreeing well with these
absolving times,
Where sundry
Rites they to the
Church restore
Which we nere heard this threescore yeeres before.
But doth this
painted Truncke, whose best repute
Dependeth on the fashion of his Sute,
Imagine all the Projects of the State,
To have no other Forge but from his pate?
Or that there is no Engineer so quick,
To vie with him in matters politick?
Yes, know thou powdred and perfumed
Ape,
For all thy
Cinnamon adulterate shape,
Though thou seeme to disvalue other men,
Ile match thee with a
grogran Citizen,
Who, as it will appeare before wee part,
Shall put thee down with
tricks spight of thy heart.
Yet I ne're travel'd far to get them neither,
Being a byrth right left me by my Father;
So as in these I cannot well miscarrie,
Because they are to mee Hereditarie.
Nor be my actions halfe so base as His,
For all his policie meere servile is;
Hee's tyde to dance attendance early, late,
And to Petition men for his estate;
Grounding his hopes on others overthrow,
But Ide be loth to raise my Fortunes so.
My
Shop's my
Ship, where I doe vent my ware,
To which both
Court and
Country doe repaire;
Where if the buyer chance to bid too much
For his commoditie, I am none such
To lessen what he offers; my receite
Of custome, is the place where I must wa
[...]te:
Where if I should make scruple of my gaine,
How should I pay my rent or port maintaine?
I must and will for my best vantage stand,
"Let the
gull take his losse in his own hand.
Yet some are thus opinion'd, Of all men
There's none more simple then a
Citizen;
For hee can scarcely any reason show
For ought he sees, but asks
where Malt doth grow:
This makes them call us
Cockneies, nor doe wee
Thrive worse for that we so accounted bee.
For wee
darke-shops to vent ill ware may use,
And with simplicity our guile excuse;
Protest
yes verily, and make a show
Of that which
verily is nothing so.
Here you shall see a
gallant-gull come neere us,
When in our shops he shall no sooner heare us
Cry out to passengers
What doe ye lack?
But he is forthwith tane with some new knack;
Out cometh gold from this
Arabian Rat,
Which our keene lick'rish Teeth doe water at.
More will we aske then we expect by halfe,
Of purpose to entrap this
golden-Calfe;
For there's no purchase in the world can please
A
Citizen so much as gulling these.
The reason is, our weakness they contemn
As sillie, simple and plain-dealing men,
Because (forsooth) we no discoursers be,
But only of our owne commoditie.
We know no tillage, nor no pasture grounds,
The
City-walls have ever been our bounds,
Unlesse along we with a neighbour go
To
Croydon, Acton, Newington, or so.
Now there is nought on earth makes me so sorie,
As that this
Court-Ape should so vainly glorie
That we repaire to him for his direction,
In the procurement of our own
Protection,
Which is not so; for as we laid first plot
Of bringing that to passe which we have got,
So Ile maintain it, none of these but wee
Are Agents too in this immunitie:
Which to confirme, I purpose to relate
A
President which hapned but of late.
"One of my
Bretherhood of good esteeme,
"As any neere
Long-lane long time hath beene,
"Pretending by a mighty losse on Sea,
"(Though this was but a meere pretended plea)
"That he through poverty could not defray,
"What he in Conscience was bound to pay.
"Yet long ere this, that he might
Statutes shun,
"Had he confer'd his
State upon his Son.
"With this pretence he to a
Courtier goes,
"To whom sincerely he his purpose shows,
"Imparting to him briefly his intent
"Was to make men beleeve his means were spent;
"That so he might by this deluding cheat,
"Increase his State, his
Creditors defeat.
"Meane time his ayde he humbelly would crave,
"That for his Debts he may
Protection have;
"Which court'sie should so ty him during breath,
"His State should be the
Courtiers at his death.
"This the spruce credulous
silk-worm seems to trust,
"And little dreams what State was made at first;
"But by
Assumpsit holding th'
Grant secure,
"Hee a
Protection labours to procure:
"Which got, my
fox-fur'd Brother was at ease,
"Frolick and merry as a Mouse in Cheese.
"But now ensues the jest, when he should die,
"(As no
Protection 'gainst mortalitie)
"Adoption did the
Courtier so intrance
"In hope of his assur'd inheritance,
"Hee'd suffer none (so carefull was the else)
"To visit this rich
sick-man but himselfe;
"About his Bed still would he seeme to bee,
"Expecting that which he did long to see:
"But lo! his hopes were turned to despaire,
"When he perceiv'd another made his Heire;
"Which caus'd him vow that he would never after,
"Make his
Protections instruments of laughter.
But I doe wonder how
Court-Apes should seeme
So much our
City-Apes to disesteeme;
They'r made, I'm sure, of selfe-same element,
Hows'ere they seeme inferior in discent.
N
[...], nor inferior in discent at all,
As might be prov'd of late from
Girdlers-hall,
Where
One of obscure race as one could bee,
Without so much as a
welsh-Pedigree,
When he deceas'd, so well his fortunes stood,
Was found descended of a
noble blood.
Which makes me think, if so their race were known,
That there be many
Trades-men in the Town,
Whose high descent aymes at a noble pitch,
Provided alwaies, that these men die rich:
For then, for
Heires they need take little care,
Some
noble unknown kinsman will be Heire:
The Law enableth him as
heire apparant,
For why;
A great mans claim includes a Warrant.
But while I make my
Brethrens actions knowne,
I am forgetfull wholy of mine owne.
For th' little time I did the
Court frequent,
I found it wanton and incontinent;
Which I observing, though a
City-Ape,
I had a great desire to imitate:
And that you may know how I profited,
Ile shew you briefly where I practised.
"To a
Court-Landresse first did I repaire,
"Encountring her at bottom of a staire;
"Which by experience I may safely sweare,
"Within a fortnight after cost mee deare.
"For shee demanding of mee where I dwelt,
"Weak
[...]y and unadvisedly I tell 't,
"Whereof she made this use: One day being come
"Unto my Shop, when I was gone from home,
"(For by direction shee my shop had found)
"Shee call'd for ware to th' value of ten pound;
"My man expecting money, shee delay'd him,
"Asking where was his Master, she had paid him?
"Long had not hee and shee contesting bin
"Till I, as fortune bad, came rushing in;
"Whom shee no sooner ey'd, then by my name
"Saluting me, shee justifi'd the same.
"Where Duck (quoth I?)
shee, rounding in mine eare
"(But never blush'd at matter)
told me where.
"I, lest I should my credit overthrow,
"Told her,
I did remember it was so,
"Entreating her excuse, I had forgot it;
"Thus did I colour 't so, as none could note it.
But now my reputation doth remaine
Free from all touch, as if it nere had staine;
All causes unto mee are now refer'd,
As the sufficientst man within the
Ward.
If a
[...]y childe be in the
Parish got,
I of the
Parents take especiall note
To take them joyntly bound, be 't boy or daughter,
That th'
Parish be not charged with it after.
For I'm held none of these who prate
non sence,
Spending the day in nodding on a bench;
For these, as if their beard held all their wit,
Speake scarce two words but they are stroking it.
I know right well, there's not an Officer,
From
Treasurer unto the
Scavenger,
But needs those choice directions of mine,
For I have borne each office in my time,
And in each place of note so well become me
As there was none could take advantage on me.
But I shall little neede to presse this theame,
The
City notice takes of my esteeme;
The
Vergers too, so highly do approve me,
As scarce two Seats be in the
Church above me.
Now having got such honor in the Towne,
Ile take survey where I am lesser knowne;
If they dis-value me, impute ye it
To want of my acquaintance, or their wit.
To th'
Ʋniversity I nere repaire
But once a yeere, and that's at
Sturbridg-faire;
Yet am I knowne to many
Scholars there,
Who buy of me whats'ever they doe weare.
Silks, Sattins, Grograns, Serges of each sort,
Of mee they cheap, and I doe cheat them for't.
If a penurious
Master have a mind
To
Satten-face his doublet, though behind
It be of
Buckram, hee'll to mee resort,
And tell mee hee's injoyn'd to preach at
Court;
So as he meanes, if God will give him leave,
To buy a
Satten-forepart, with half-sleeve;
For that's as much he thinks as will be seene,
To gaine unto his person more esteeme.
Forthwith I finde a
Remnant of the best,
(So much at least I verily protest)
Wherewith I doe sufficiently store
This choice Divine, who nere bought silke before.
Yet I confesse this
Remnant that he bought,
Such a commoditie 'twas good for nought,
Being
gumm'd throughout to make it neatly shine,
Which gave content unto this spruce
Divine.
When th'
Fair is done I to the
Colledg come,
Or else I drink with them at
Trompington;
Craving their more acquaintance with my heart
Till our next
Sturbridg faire, and so wee part.
Now for the
Country; where I make my stay
In no place longer then at
Beverley.
To Country maids, and Gentlewomen too,
My newest and alluringst stuffs I show;
Which doe so mad them, they perforce must buy,
And I perceive their humor by their eye:
So as I ever hold that stuffe most deare,
To which these
Gooslngs most affection beare;
Swearing it cost mee more then all the rest,
For P.
and G.
's the marke which proves it best.
Then with shop-usual formal
Rhetorick,
I touch these itching
tamefowles to the quick,
For I doe tell them, if they hold 't too deere
Ide wish them to goe try some other where;
But I'm perswaded, though they doe complaine
My rates too high, they'l come to me againe;
For sure I am, wheres'ever they doe try,
There's none can sell at lower rates then I.
Thus I adjure them, yet perhaps they'l go
To make a tryall, to a shop or two,
But this the j
[...]st; we have a
practise made,
The better to enhance our thriving trade,
Amongst our selves no secret must be hid,
But we are to give notice what they bid,
That we may altogether sing one song,
And by ou
[...] rates not one another wrong.
Yea, by our art to gaine our
trades their due,
We have a
trick to sell old ware for new;
Which
country people seldom doe perceive,
For they're too simple to smell out a knave.
Although sometimes they fit us in our kind,
When they with easie gale and ready wind,
In ev'ry Coast doe take especiall care
To change
stale wenches with our
slubberd-ware;
Which wee accept, and if good luck bechance them,
To
great-mens wives their fortune may advance thē.
Thus have you heard the
tricks that I can play,
Which smoothly carried profit more then they,
Whose glorious outsides paint their projects over
With nothing else save with a gilded cover.
If
Wags be gulld by running on our shelves,
Wee were not cause on't, they may thank themselves
Wee in our Shops doe stand, they come unto us,
To profit what wee can they will allow us.
But if't dislike them that we should doe so,
Truth is wee'll do 't whether they will or no;
For it was never yet to any knowne
But One might make best use he could of 's owne.
Which whether I have done or no, review
My courses o're, and Ile bee judg'd by you.
The Country Ape.
HEa
[...]ke how this silken civet
Citizen
Esteeme of us poor silly
Countrey-men;
As if wee were of no account or note.
But had a braine as simple as our coate.
Why, pray you
Sir, if I may be so bold,
Are you of pure
[...] or of choicer mold?
Or doe you bre
[...]h on fresher ayre then wee?
Or shines some
Starre on your nativitie,
Which keepes her light from us? or is your wit
So pure, as all draw influence from it?
Are you so subtil, as you onely have
The trick to Cheat, to Cozen and Deceive?
No
Sir, though I live in a wilder place,
For sleights and feats I'le bate you ne're an Ace.
Your darke-loom'd Shops shall never have it so,
False Ballances, base Compositions too,
Counterfeite Stuffs our haire-brain'd
Fopps to gull,
In ev'ry
Country shop wee have them full.
For you must know the
Country's no such
Ape
But it can
City-fashions imitate;
Yea we have nimble
Monkeys of all sort
Can personate both
City and the
Court;
Which neere resemblance that it may appeare,
Give eare to my discourse and you shall heare.
First we have
Lords and
Ladies very many,
As proud and hautie as the
Court has any;
There's not a fashion knowne but it comes downe,
For such as these have
Taylors in the Towne,
By whose intelligence they are informed
What's new, which they observe hows'ere deformed.
Being thus attyr'd, they're presently addrest
To shew their bravery at some Gossips feast;
Where many
Country gentlewomen are,
Who by observance take especiall care
What these
great Persons weare, for they intend
To be in fashion ere the sennet end,
Which if their frugal Husbands but deny,
They hope by putting finger in the eye
To get their purpose; for they little stand
Whether new fashions make them sell their Land.
Which our
May-morish Wenches likewise follow,
Who thinke they beare aw
[...]y the fashion hollow.
Nor doe these onely imitate the
Court
In sumptuous habit, and are beggard for 't;
But forasmuch as they in
Court doe see
No great respect of hospitalitie,
They hold it providence to shut up door,
No matter though they famish all the poor:
Or that they may their private waste maintaine,
Both
Lords and
Knights doe table with their men.
Here you shall see a
Farmers doore barrd up,
Where th' poor may cry but is from almes shut;
His cryes, his teares can no compassion force,
For th'more he beggs, he ever fares the worse.
What boots it, though his Barnes and Garnars be
Stor'd with all fruits, yet he pleads povertie?
His aymes are how to get, and if he can
To make his
Mushram impe a gentleman.
Besides all this, I would be very loth
That
Court or
City either of them both,
Should shew more art in any
Contract making,
Then we can doe for all their undertaking.
Yea I my selfe can of my selfe aver,
I know no griping-grinding Usurer,
Whose practise is oppression, but I'le vye
With him or any one under the skye.
For
Courtiers no such businesse intend,
They onely
borrow, Usurers doe lend.
But shew me that Man at a full
Exchange,
Be he home borne or to our
Country strange,
Whose long profession, give the man his dew,
Has a
seer'd Conscience worse then any
Jew,
And I will cope with him in his profession,
Be it
Church-sim
[...]me or
State-opression.
For this my practise is the whole yeare thorow,
When any come to me in hope to borrow;
First to examine his necessitie,
As, Wants he Bread to feed his familie;
Or is his Living gag't, and day at hand,
He either must redeeme or lose his Land;
Or is he in su
[...]h bondage, as his gri
[...]fe
Requires without delay present reliefe;
I'le hold his Nose to Grindstone and so use him,
He shall doe what I please, or let him chuse him,
Statutes on
Statutes forthwith so pursue him,
As like
Actaeons hounds they still doe view him,
So that unlesse he hye him all the faster
They wi
[...]l in time devoure their breathlesse master.
For
Conscience haggard-like I doe disclaime her,
Since He that has her, seldome proves a gainer.
Two bags I have, the one whereof I call
Just
All the World, and it holds nought at all;
The other
Bag, with which I use to lend
Money to those that want, I call
my Friend;
Whereof I make this use; if any come
Requesting me to lend them such a summe,
If th' offers they propound, content not me,
As want of panne or good securitie,
I presently reply to these who crave,
In
All the world I not one pennie have;
But if such come as I may profit by them
Be 't the same instant, I will not deny them:
For though I have no Coyne, as I pretend,
To give them all content, I'le use my
Friend.
After this manner am I wont to deale
In all my practise with the Commonweale.
Now you shall heare how cunningly I lurch
By
Simonie the Pastor of the Church.
Impropriations have I one or two
With some
Advousons which I thus bestow,
Least any of my profits should be lost,
"I hold them best deserving who give most.
These I induct, for I doe value them
Well worthie th' place who are well-monied men,
But least some censure should on me befall
By being found thus
Simoniacall,
Whereby the
Princes priviledge might choose one
To take the benefit of my
Advouson;
That I more smoothly may delude the
State,
I in my sale use to
Equivocate.
As for example, I doe take a course
To sell the
Parson whom I choose a
Horse,
A
Librarie of
Bookes to furnish him,
Because he wants
Books when he enters in;
And these I rate to him at such a price,
As serves for
Horse, Books, and for
Benefice.
Now who can say that I doe sell this Living,
Whose bounteous hand is so inclin'd to giving?
Tell me what
Great one makes them fairer play,
To give both
Bookes and
Benefice away?
No, No, the most of all our Clerks will sweare,
Though th'
Benefice be cheape, th'
Addition's deare:
But let them looke to this before they enter,
I make no conscience of it,
Caveat Emptor.
Yea I doe hold these kinds of
Sale as good,
If they be well and duely understood,
As to make tender of them for ones life;
Provided that he take her for his Wife
Whom they shall chuse; which voluntary offer
Makes me suspect, her
Master has made proffer
Of some familiar curt'sie long before,
"I count him mad will for a living
bore.
But if he must, let him be his owne Carver,
"Who chuseth not his Wife doth ill deserve her.
She's his
impropriation, which through hate
Unto his person, might ingraffe his pate;
Whence in his
Parish would abroad be knowne,
"He had a
Common-place Booke of his owne.
But let these
Contracts passe, they'r knowne enough
Both in the
Church and in the
Country through;
I'le now descend to shew what fierie spirit
Our native
Country people doe inherit;
Which I perswade me, will seeme strange to all,
Because wee seeme as if we had no gall:
But we doe scorne that any place should bee
More malapertly factious then wee.
For when I was a
Tennant I doe know,
(Though I'm no
Tennant but a
Landlord now,)
I would commence a suite upon my
Lord
(Because I knew the Law) for any word.
In which
Commencement, many flockt together
Like
Birds all of one brood and of one fether,
Who with joynt
Combination made a purse,
To put their seame-rent
Landlord to the worse.
Yea I have knowne so insolent a
Nation,
As when they heard the Princes
Proclamation
Tend to th' extinguishment of Tennant right,
They in a braving manner set it light,
Affronting their weake
Landlords at their gate,
Vowing they'd force them to confirme their state
Nor be their haughtie
Lords lesse domineering,
Puff'd up with present hope of a
next Hearing;
For now am I a
Landlord and must sharke
(For Priest forgets that ever he was Clarke,)
As others doe, by raising Fine on Fine,
And cram my selfe how ere my
Tennant pine.
Great are my debts, and my expences large,
Now whom should I thinke fitting to discharge
This heavie taske which thus ore-burdens mee,
But these rich
Gormaws who my
Tennants bee?
Which that it may more covertly be donne,
In all my State I doe invest my Sonne;
On which Estate doth presently ensue
A
Gen'rall Fine, which hath beene ever due.
Scarce is this
Fine paid, till I make a claime,
By re-estating of my selfe againe,
Of a
new Fine, whereto they must consent
Or have a triall for their tenement.
Which if
[...]he
Court adjudge once to be mine,
To
Demaine land convert I it in time;
So as Depopulation is as common
As is inconstancy unto a Woman:
For in the
Country many Farms appeere,
As neither Farme nor Farmer had beene there.
Now forasmuch as we all Learning lack,
Unlesse we have it from an
Almanack,
For I doe know no Nation under Sun
In a
Prognostication puts us down;
You shall perceive (for so I hold it fit)
What speciall use we daily make of it.
Herein we note and take observance too
Whether our
Heire be like to thrive or no;
Which we collect by this rare-erring forme,
We seeke the Planet when he first was borne,
For we assure our selves this cannot erre,
Prov'd and confirm'd by
Shepheards Calender.
If any dayes foretell ensuing dearth,
Those be our dayes of
Jubile and mirth;
For my owne part I speake it, I doe feare
Nothing so greatly, as a plentuous yeare:
For so much graine I've in my Barns engrost,
As if it prove not deare, it will be lost;
For till the Markets rise, as now they fall,
I'le bring none forth, let
Ratts consume it all.
What doe I care, though
Justices doe seeke
My Barns and well-stor'd Granars weeke by weeke,
Vaults and close-arched caves I have below
Within the earth, of which they little know
Nor ever shall; so I my selfe may serve
I take no thought if all the
Country sterve.
"They who for others good their course contrive,
"May live belov'd, but dye before they thrive.
To
Court or
City seldome I repaire,
Nor doe I know any employment there.
To
Ʋniversity I never come,
Unlesse along I carrie up my Sonne
To get a
Scholars place, and after rise
By my fat purse unto some Benefice.
Meane time that he a lesser charge might be,
To my Estate I still plead povertie;
Which
Master of the
Colledge oft believes,
Whereby my Sonne a
Scholership receives:
Though I 'me resolv'd for money I have more
Then many of their
Founders had before.
Thus have I liv'd, and thus I meane to live,
Apt to receive but most unapt to give;
Thus hoord I Treasure for my Sonne and Heire,
And get my Harvest while the season 's faire.
Oppression is my darling, which I take
From none so much as from the
City Ape;
Whose
contracts are the
stories that I read,
So as I find my knowledge bettered
By daily use and practise I observe,
From whose choyce
Rules I would be loath to swerve;
Meane time let me be rude and simple thought,
So may my purpose to effect be br
[...]ught.
The Church Ape.
I Am a
Levite and a great one too,
And can observe the time as others doe;
In my Opinions I am wondrous warie,
Lest I offend the State and so miscarrie;
For th' only Scar-Crow that I boggle at,
Is not distaste of
conscience but the
State.
And twice a yeere I commonly resort
For observations sake unto the Court;
Where it's the sum and substance of my care
To note how
men in Grace affected are
Unto Religion, for 'tis only these
Who at their Gyrdle hang Saint
Peters keyes:
To whom (I wis) sole Soveraignty is giv'n,
To ope on earth, but to be shut from heav'n.
If they be pure, I shew my heate of zeale,
As much as any in the Commonweale;
But if I finde a coldnesse where I come,
Or an inclining to the
Sea of
Rome,
Mine Arguments like pellets I bestow
The
English Discipline to overthrow.
Most men are of opinion where I live
That I am rich, for I no almes do give,
I keepe no House nor Hospitalitie,
But for extortion, fraud, and usurie,
I keepe receit of custome; thus say they,
But 'las poor fools, they know not what they say;
For if they knew how my
Corrivalls crost me,
How much in bribes my
Consecration cost me;
How much procuring such a Ladies Letter
To such a Lord, though I was nere the better;
How, though I beare the Title, yet I am
No Real-Bishop, but a Serving-man
To such a
great man, for his Farmer am I,
Who though I would, cheat him hardly can I;
If they knew this, they would right soone confesse
I were the poorst in all my Diocesse.
And though a
Pastor should be none of these,
Who share both in the
Flesh and in the
Fleece,
I must not only
Fleece but
Flea them quick
Till I have paid well for my Bishoprick.
Nor is my charge the lesse, when this is donne,
For I've a wanton wife, a wastefull Sonne,
Who must have fresh supplies to feed their riot,
Hows'ere by hook or crook they may come by it.
I have a Lord, and daily I attend him,
Who made me once a grant of th' next Cōmendam
Should fall into his Lapse; but I doe heare
A Simoniack Slaves inducted there,
Which if I prove, hee's forfeit his Induction,
And be suspended henceforth from his Function.
Yet though these
Motes in others I make known,
I never note these
Eye-beams of mine owne.
I can dispence with private Symonie,
And make a vertue of necessitie;
Yea and maintaine that common error too,
Framing Apologies for what I doe.
'Tis ill you'l say, which you observe in some,
Who by the window to the Temple come;
But I must answere, They'r mistaken quite,
For to the Church no way can bee more right;
For though
Noahs-arke, y
e Churches type, had doors
And windows too as this same Church of ours,
Yet that gall-wanting Bird when
Noah had sent her
To take survey, did by the window enter.
An Olive branch shee in her bill did beare,
Implying that the dry-land did appeare,
And to the Arke, the Churches figure hies,
And through no
Doore but by the
Window flies.
To us this
Simile may have relation,
Who should resemble
Doves in conversation,
Our way is by the
window not the
doore,
Since to the Arke
Doves led that way before.
In great assemblies I doe seldome preach,
Lest I false doctrine to my flock should teach,
For I confesse I am no great Divine,
Nor in such studies doe I spend my time:
At
Bethel once indeede I made assay,
When most of th' learned Doctors were away,
Where som report, my Doctrine mov'd much laughter,
Which made mee vow Ide ne're come thither after.
And I've observ'd my vow; nor doe I care,
When I doe heare that such a Chaplain's rare,
And that hee's flockt to by the better sort,
Or gains himselfe a singular report.
For this opinion, like a dang'rous shelfe,
Makes a poore Preacher oft undoe himselfe
With a continuate study, yea not one
Of these is ought but only skin and bone.
But let me come more neer them; what's their ayme,
But to receive preferment by their fame?
Which I have got, and now may silent be,
While more deserving men attend on me.
Unto the
City seldome I repaire,
Unlesse it bee for some delicious fare,
Wherein I take more absolute delight
Then ere in
fasting did the
Anchorite.
Sometimes perchance I to th'
Exchange may goe,
To buy my wife what shee enjoyn'd mee to;
Some new-invented Dressing that's in grace,
Sweet powders for her skin, oyles for her face,
Or some provocatives which may move sense,
And cause me give her due benevolence.
All which I buy where they are to be sold,
For I must tell you I am growing old,
And gladly would my imperfections smother,
By giving her content one way or other.
For else she might, which would a scandall be,
During my
Visitation cuckold me,
As some have done, whom I'de be loth to mention,
Who now maintains One with her Bishops Pension:
And this is better farre as I suppose,
Then have her keep a knave close by my nose,
Who night by night with her would closly drab it,
And change my Rochet to
Actaeon's habit.
Tertullians opinion I despise,
Who held this
tenent, None should marry twice;
With which strange error I was nere misled,
For I have two, and neyther of them dead.
Of
Basils minde among us there be few,
Who would not change his old wife for a new.
"Much of one thing breeds loathing, therefore we
"Must cheere our palats with varietie.
I hold that act of
Luther bravely done,
Who made
Besse Bore a Lemman of a Nun,
Which spritely action wondrously rejoyc'd her,
In hope to get a
clister for a
cloyster.
With
Romish-Catholicks I could agree
In all their points of Doctrine save these three,
Fasting, Pray'r, Alms-works, for these be those
Which we professe to be our greatest foes.
First
Fasting, whereto they ascribe a merit.
It takes both of the flesh and of the spirit,
Disheartens Nature, weakens her delight,
Consumes the marrow, dulls the appetite;
Seares up the radick humor, and doth quench
The native ardour of Concupiscence.
Indeed it makes devotion ferverous
And full of zeale, But what is that to us?
Let
Hermites for devotion give exemple,
Zeal hath been long since whipt out of our Temple.
Secondly
Prayer, though soveraign and good,
And rightly styl'd the Soules eternall food,
Our businesse being many, I think meet,
That our devotion should be short and sweet.
For many worldly affairs have we in hand,
Which if we should upon promotion stand
Might oft miscarrie, whence may gathred be,
Long Prayrs can no way stand with Policie.
For
Almes-deeds; All mis-deedes I observe,
For by
Good-works I meane not to deserve;
'Ti
[...] superstitious Doctrine,
Babels staine,
And such as none but
Rhemists will maintaine.
Time was indeed, but time's not as it was,
When no way-faring traveller could passe
Without reliefe, for Hospitals were then
Harbours and Inns to all distressed men.
Which bounty was by
Abby-lubbers showne,
Who had no wives nor children of their owne;
Which we account of as an old-wives fable,
Our
Olive-branches spread about our table,
And though they seldome prosper, yet must we
Have speciall care of our posteritie:
For worser far then Infidels they are,
That of their
families will have no care.
Men of our ranke, there's nothing so much raises
As gaining great-mens Love with Bribes and Praises;
This is that
Cement joynes us unto them,
Whence wee contemn inferior Clergy-men,
Whom th' hand of greatness to small honor lists,
Because they'r not, as we are,
Men of Gifts.
Some muse why any one would mee enstall,
Having no Learning nor no worth at all;
But I replie, these Places where we be,
Require small learning but much policie.
There was a time, which time's estrang'd from ours,
When we were
Rabbies and Expositours
Of holy-Writ, and taught the heav'nly way,
And in our
Gen'rall-Councels bore great sway.
But we account him simple now, that cares
More for Divine then Temporall affairs.
Learning's an uselesse Relique, or a Prize
Got with a wasted body, and dim eyes
Which oft contemns preferment, with desire,
Like a sequestred
Ermit to retire
From th' view of earth: while we take little care
For this esteeme, which vanisheth like ayre.
Our contemplation is how we may skip
To some more rich, commodious-Bishoprick.
Where wee may hatch our eggs, and feed our brood,
And labor to get good, but doe no good.
And thanks unto my Fates, I've now in hand
The
richest-Bishoprick in all the Land,
And priviledges too, so great and many,
As more or higher there enjoyes not any.
To instance some whereof, that I have here,
I've pow'r to chuse the Sheriffe of the
Sheere;
If any
Justice shall my
Grace displease,
Ile thrust him from th' Commission of the Peace,
And make him vaile to th' lowest of my Traine,
Before he be restor'd to 's place againe.
No Suite may be commenc'd in any Court
'Gainst
[...] mine but I wil
[...] f
[...]k him for't.
If any one no
present chance to send,
He shall ere long find me his heavy friend;
So as of late, I've brought them to that use,
As Country Presents will maintain my house.
Some works of seeming zeale I doe professe,
Yet is my love to th' World nothing lesse;
For out of feare lest some men should complaine
Of my extreme hard dealing, I retaine
Some semblances of pitie to the poor,
And for them make a dole-day at my door.
Where, that the world may know my ardent zeale,
Both to the Church and to the Common-weale,
I manifest my charitable ends
With
sound of
trumpet, and invite of friends;
Which in my judgement well deserve expressing,
To sound alarum to a Bishops blessing:
For bounties of this kind are held so rare,
'Tis good to publish those poor few that are.
In
Visitation time, because there be
Many poor people that doe pester me,
I give direction wheresoe're I come,
Mine
Almoner tender reliefe to none,
Before I goe from thence, which makes them stay,
While I out of the back-gate slip away.
Hows'ere this be, I zealously pretend
My close departures for no other end.
Then to prevent
vain-glory; which would meet
So great a
Bishop in a publique street:
And therefore I a private passage take,
That ostentation I might better scape.
Now in the
Country where I make retire,
My Senses have whats'ever they desire;
As first, for curious objects which delight
The moving apprehension of the sight,
Eye-drawing Pictures in ea
[...]h chamber stand,
Which shew such lively motion and command
In their attractive beauties, as they woo them
That are Spectators, to doe homage to them.
Wherein 'tis one State-axiom of mine,
To chuse a Picture sorting with the time.
For while
Spayne had the name, it was mine ayme,
To have th'
Infantaes Picture sent from
Spayne,
Which in my dining chamber I set up,
Or in my private Parlor where I sup,
Where any one, by drawing up the latch,
Might judge how much I did approve the match.
But see what chanc't! Last day a busie knave
This
Spanish Picture hapned to perceive,
Which hee observing, told me he did muse
Why I would hang such Pictures in my house,
As gave distaste unto the publick State,
And made their proffers projects of deceite;
Where I reply'd, it little me behov'd
To hate that
Picture which my
Prince once lov'd.
Yet lest it should give scandall or offence,
I caus'd it streight to be removed thence.
Nor is my eye delighted only there,
But with selectedst melody mine
eare,
With choycest cates my liqu'rish
appetite,
With od'rous perfumes I my
smell delight,
And with embraces amorous as may be
Touch I my Lordships
wife, but not a
Ladie.
Thus ev'ry Sense enjoys his earthly blisse,
As if my heav'n were where my Palace is,
For nought on earth doth in me griefe begit,
But only one, and I will tell you it.
It is intended, having cure of Soules,
That upon summons I should preach at
Paules,
Which though it come scarce once in twenty yeere,
I'm sick when I should make my Sermon there;
So as enforc't by my infirmitie,
(Or want of brains) I hire a Deputie:
Which done, I make returne from whence I came,
And thank my wits for shielding me from shame.
Some other usefull projects I intend,
Now when I feele I'm drawing neere my end,
For doubtlesse some would think I foulely er'd,
If I should leave my children unprefer'd.
So as grown weak, my wife and children doubt me,
And like
Jobs comforters they cling about me,
Advising me, as they poor Orphans are,
(Not for my Soul, for that's their least of care)
But that I would take course to settle on them
Some meanes, that they may live as doth becom thē,
Likewise my wife puts finger in the eye,
And says her joynture dies, when I doe die,
This makes me plot how these
[...]hings may be don,
When other matters should be thought upon.
First, how my ofspring may
preferment have,
Before the mete-wand measure out my grave.
Secondly, how their
Mother may be sped
Of some young
Ruffin when her
Bishop's dead.
Which to effect, there's nought so fully pleases,
As the renewall of concurrent Leases;
Admit th
[...]y doe defeat him that succeeds me,
This gainfull guilefull contract much besteeds me;
For by this meanes, revenues I bestow
Both on my wife and on my children too.
This makes me send my
Briefes from day to day,
If any one will
Leases take, they may.
And at more easie
rate then ere they had,
Which makes my
Leasers run as they were mad.
Thus live or die, seven yeers apprentiship
Has taught me how to geld a Bishoprick;
Which to good use converted, I see not
But it may thrive though indirectly got,
For, if no ill-got-goods thrive in this Nation,
Some would seeme base who now are men of fashion
The Judiciall Ape.
BRave
Apes; briske Bungs;
yet they must leave the field,
And to an ancient
Bencher learne to yeeld;
Fox-fur'd 's my Gowne, and smooth my close-cut chin,
But far more Foxly-smooth am I within.
Gravely can I for lucre-sake protest,
And clap mine unctuous fist upon my brest,
Ev'n when my heart's as neer unto my mouth,
As
East is to the
West, or
North to
South.
Musaeus came the other day to me,
(A curious wit for straines of Poesie)
And he besought me in a Cause as good
As truth could make it, if well understood,
To be his friend, and I did promise him,
But breach of promise is with us no sin.
He mee accoutred with his words of Art,
And I admit'd him too for his good part;
Ripe was his judgement, and his wit as quick
Garnish'd with copious flowers of Rhetorick.
But these are tongue ty'd Orators with me,
Who would have me his friend, must bring his fe
[...].
Yet for all this, I will not stick to chide,
If any come to tempt me with a Bribe.
For I would have these
wittalls understand
Fees must passe by my
servants to my hand,
I take no Fees my selfe, they may fee
Ned,
"They need not feare their cause if he be sped.
For we have
Tarriers, Agents, Instruments,
To ope the Cabinet of our intents
And plot our purposes, give them their due,
And these we use as men should use a scrue.
These be our
Harping-irons that will draw
Like
Ferrets, these
minc'd-Maggots of the Law:
Who when their cause must to a hearing come,
Next night before unto my chamber run,
And currie favour all the waies they can,
To get admittance to me by my Man;
Which got, they finde me in Majestick sort,
Starching my beard, or reading a Report.
While each of these more scurvy Court'sies makes
Then upon
Whitby-Strand are shapes of Snakes;
Which country Congies, were they ten times worse,
Shew State enough, because they cram my purse.
Suppose then how these Russetings appeare
Wholly divided betwixt hope and feare.
At whose approach I lay aside my booke,
Teaching my face a
Radaman
[...]h
[...]an looke:
Sirrahs, What make you here? who sent you hither?
Your man, scarce mutter they,
walk knaves together;
Thus fret I like
gumm'd grogran, which once past,
I deigne to take a superficiall taste
Of their ill-open'd cause, and give them hearing,
Wh
[...]ch I
[...]tend next morning to appeare in;
Yet so, as if it nought concerned me,
B
[...] out of meere respect to equitie,
Though I doe prize th
[...] justice of his Cause
As much as old
Sysambris did his Lawes.
Bu
[...] being heard, I doe d
[...]meane me so,
I get
[...]oth coyne and good opinion too.
Thus doe my plots work for a thriving end,
I
[...]oll the poor, yet I'm the poor-mans friend.
N
[...] am I alwaies held the same I seeme,
For in my time I have a
Nigler been:
So as in privacy I sometimes must
With my seer'd bones quench the desire of lust.
A faire poor Client fall she in my dish,
Ile tickle her for
forma-pauperis.
Downe goe my trunck-hose with their gravity,
To cope for once with acts of levity;
Her
Case Ile put, like to a man of Law,
B e'
[...] right or wrong I doe not care a straw:
My
Bon-a-Roba shee the day shall win,
Nor
[...]pend a graine, but what she spent in sin,
I weigh not what the world doth Judge of me,
My saplesse-age pleads my Apologie.
"
Appius has silent tongue, but speaking eyes,
"Yet who saith
Appius loves
Virginia lyes.
Yet they can tell you that do better know me,
How none sometimes can have admittance to me.
Fit were it then ye were advis'd when time is,
For now and then I drinke a cup of
nimis,
So as to sleep so soundly I betake me,
A thousand Cannons scarcely could awake me.
Yet see my boldnesse! while my thirst I drench
In profuse cups, I sometimes mount the Bench,
And gives my cup-shot-judgement out of hand,
Ere I the Case or Preadings understand,
And who dare well control me? sith these shelves
Which wrack my wits, my fellows feel themselves.
Besides, if any in my friends Case do oppose me,
I am their Advocate, if they will chose me.
They cannot stand for
Seconds, I'm the man
By all their Pleadings bob me if they can,
Some I have had, and in th
[...]s
English Nation,
Who have stood firmly on their generation;
That they were greater and more ancient borne
Then any descent was; but I held in scorne
Their fruitlesse Pleas, to th'
Judges I did write,
And made expresse my Byrth, Descent and Scite.
Whereto they condiscended out a hind,
And doom'd my worthlesse brood take upper-hand.
Our Titles are, as wee doe make them good;
And if they crosse u
[...] they'r mis-understood,
For what is for us we embrace and love,
But what's against us we doe dis-approve.
Zlid, doe you think that our rich scarlet may
With such a Pension our
Retinue pay
Unlesse we
[...] lose by 't? No, wee know our time,
And with
Duke Humfrey wee'll be loth to dine.
Now for my
Circuit so imperious am I,
That though I purchase the distaste of many,
Yet I'm indifferent how they censure me,
I justifie my legall Soveraignty.
My
white-lock is ambitious of honour,
Yea, I must tell you, I doe dote upon her.
But in no place am I predominant
So much as when I'm
Judge-itinerant:
Where stocks of country Gentlemen do meet me,
And in submissiv'st manner use to greet me;
Like
Widgeons some behinde and some before me,
As a terrestriall Idoll they adore me.
Blest is the man, to whom Ile daigne to speake;
And how admir'd when I a jeast doe breake.
'Tis wonderfull to see what preparation
Is daily made for me, and in what fashion
Each County entertains mee and my crue,
Who take upon them, give the knaves their due,
As they were petie Judges in commanding
Weake officers, who have no understanding
But only to admire them, and give way
To their commands, whats'ere they doe or say.
My
Tipstaffe is esteem'd a wittie man,
And one (so saith the witless Commonty) who can
Prevaile much with me, for he ever knowes
What way the winde of my opinion blowes.
Nor err they in their judgement, for indeed
Hee that would in his businesse succeede
Must make this man his Orator unto mee,
For he so fitly, to my profit knowes mee,
As be the Cause you recommend to him
Never so foule, yee shall be sure to win.
For, truth is, I dare hardly say him nay,
He knows my courses so, which to display
Would shame mee quite, so as whats'ere I show,
I must keepe in with him whats'ere I do.
Now when I leave the County where I sit,
(I cannot chuse but jeere them for their wit)
The generous Fry swim to my Chequer bag,
Where one presents mee with a
summer Nag,
One with a
cast of
Hawks, and now and then,
Some Shires
Scotch Daggers to my Serving-men;
Others give
hunting Leases, which remaine
For Customs now, and must not off againe.
Yet were these bounteous Babies blest the while,
If all their bounties could procure a smile
From my composed Count'nance, but they err
That doe expect me to be popular.
No, I must punctuall be, and set my face
According to the
tenour of my place.
My posture is accoutered with braves,
In calling of the Shrieff and Gentry knaves:
None dare affront me while I am in place,
And whom I please, I put to all disgrace.
In Counties where I am at my own finding,
My richly-moultred Mill is ever grinding.
The Gentry, they have notice by the Shrieves,
And furnish me with Muttons, Veals and Beeves;
Others doe send me Venison and Wine,
So as my
Circuit is a joviall time.
For such aboundance of provision have I,
As it would furnish neere a Royall-Navie.
Now lest yee doubt my numerous Retinue
Should want their due or competent Revenue,
I give the meaner sort which doe attend me
Reversions of that store the Gentry send me;
As
broken-meat, and
beere, all which they prize,
And sell poor people at the end o'th Size.
There's nought unvalued that may mony give,
So well my Meney is inform'd to live.
But for the better sort you may suppose,
(Specially such who help to trusse my hose)
I mint some other profits more then these,
As my Subscription unto
Refrences,
Which ignorant people bring, hoping thereby
T' affright their strong and factious enemy:
But they'r deceiv'd, for they no more prevaile
By our Refe
[...]ments then an old-wives tale,
Nor shall this trouble us; our men gaine by them,
Come they as thick as hayle wee'll not deny them.
Thus far our
Country life hath been exprest,
In
Court and
City wee'll display the rest.
In
Court we seldome come, yet great men know us,
And in a Courtly-garbe petition to us
By their ingenious Agents, and we heare them,
And though their Crimes be odious we forbear them.
Or if to us they should a Letter send
In such an ones behalfe, to be his friend,
Then Stoick-
Cato wee'r instructed better,
We passe no Doome before we read the Letter,
For wee've experience of a tickle-seat,
How dangerous it is t' offend the
Great:
Wee'll not distaste them then in any case,
Lest they be meanes to put us from our place.
Sometimes we are invited to a Play,
Upon some joviall ceremoniall-day,
Where we doe presse, as other
Sages use,
With grave aspect unto the
Banket-house,
And there in
Conscript manner doe wee sit,
Admiring of some passages of wit
Which we doe understand as well as he
That tooke
Opigena for
Mercurie.
But in reserved jests we have a care,
To make men deeme us wiser then we are:
If Great-ones laugh, it is a pregnant jeast,
And we approve it as we hug a Feast.
If we be widdowers, though saplesse, old,
Decrcpit, crooked, rhumatick and cold;
Yet see what wealth can do, w
[...] straight are chosen
As fit to match with such a Great mans Cosen,
Though shee, poor Gi
[...]le,
[...]ather would be led
Unto her Grave then to a loathed bed:
Yet Will a
[...] old man serve them for a cloake,
And be a Chimney for a greater smoake.
And that's the cause, no question, when we dy
And leave our wives so large a Legacy,
Why they set their affection on Sol
[...]a
[...]oes,
That can discourse on nought but Barracadoes:
For such is their strong-temperd resolution,
They love no
Judgement like to
Execution.
But 'tis no matter for the worlds Sentence,
We get us honour by our wives a
[...]quaintance;
Which we so idolize, that we can sh
[...]w it
Even in our pace, as we were borne unto it.
Were it not fit then we should shew all grace
To such as these who raise us to our place?
For tell me seriously, how many have
Deserved well, who never could receive
Any
[...]steeme at all, for all their worth,
Because they had no
friend to set them forth?
These liv'd obscurely, and as poorly dyde,
Nor cap'd nor congi'd, nor so much as ey'de,
Or popularly viewd; what was the cause?
They had nought but the knowledge of our Lawes
To give them count'nance, whereas such as we
By our
Alliance more authentick be.
For there's no place nor person in the
Court,
Whereto we may not readily resort
And have accesse, by consequence, successe
In whats'ere we Petition, more or lesse.
But now I must unto the
City goe,
Where I am Councellor and dweller too;
Neighbours I have, but principally three,
Who now are
Wardens of a
Companie,
Men of sufficient wealth, I can assure ye,
And now and then impannell'd in a Jurye:
Of one whereof (I cannot chuse but laugh)
For all he walks now with his Civil-staffe,
Being made Juror of a grand Enquest,
And in 's opinion wiser then the rest;
Unto his fellowes that himselfe display'd,
"Thus long have we our Verdicts (friends) delay'd,
"And as ye see it draweth neere to night,
"And we by Law are barr'd from Candle-light,
"Meat, drink, and necessaries, till we give
"Our Verdict up, which die; or which to live.
"Now hear me (friends) we've twelve Indictments here,
"Against twelve prisoners as may appeare;
"To what end should we thus precisely watch them
"Let's hang six and save six, and so dispath them,
Yet this is held a man of choyce esteeme,
And in his white fox-fur sits to be seene
Upon his well-couch'd-Bench, whose Pillars be
As fit t' advise a
Company as he.
Yet deigne I with these sage-gulls to discourse,
Nor doe I hold my judgement any worse.
The Sun may shine on dung, none can deny it,
And yet receive no stayne nor blemish by it.
The object of their knowledge is my jeast,
The ground of my acquaintance is to feast,
And jeere them for their bounty when they doe it,
Though I must tell you I toe gladly to it.
But for requitall they have none from me,
It is suffi ient they've my companie.
"Once in his life the Churle make's his feast,
"And by that feast, his byrth-day is exprest:
Whose rule is my direction, and shall ever;
I'd rather be a taker then a giver.
If they invite us to them we will meet them,
"Though fools make feasts, wise men may go to eat them.
Nor are these all th' delights I cope with here,
I have variety through all the yeere.
Here a f
[...]esh
Erithrea of choice price,
Came last day privately for my advice,
"Whether a Citizen lawfully might
"Having, (as she put case, laid with a Knight)
"Challenge precedence for her eldest Son
"Fore such an one as had no such thing don?
Whereto I answer'd; might I put her Case,
I little doubt but she should have the place,
And for her Son get that prioritie
Which did belong unto my Progenie.
At which reply, smiling away she went
Silent, which
silence did imply
consent.
Thus both in
City, Country, and in
Court,
With a reserved gravity and port
I spread my beams of honour, and descry
A select affectation in mine eye.
I looke about me with a glorious vaine,
While my fastidious wagg beares up my traine:
Groundlings I dis-esteeme that crosse the way,
As if I were of better clay then they:
And in a word, so sweetly doe I breath,
I feare no Enemy so much as Death.
The Politicall Ape.
ALas, fond
Apes; how shallow doe these show,
Thus to discover whatso'ere they know?
They have no
Project be it nere so slight
But must be publish'd to the open light:
Their hearts are in their mouths, which they disclose
Not onely to their friends, but to their foes.
Which lightnes I abhorre; for nere shall hee
Be scholed in the grounds of
policie,
Who by experience has not got the art
To make his Tongue a stranger to his heart.
He onely to the hight of wisdome growes
Who seemes as if he knew not what he knows.
His
Projects must be neatly shadowed,
His
drifts with secret Curtains covered;
His
Plotts so smooth as the quick'st sighted men
Cannot with all their sleights discover them.
There's nothing in the World I more detest
Then t' have
transparent Windows in my brest;
For by this meanes my
inside should be laid
Ope to the world, and all my tricks displaid:
Which would not onely grieve me, but enforce
The World to love me ever longer worse.
In my opinion those
Cilician Geese
Are wiser in their secrecy then these,
Who have expos'd themselves to publick view
By making others knowne to what they knew.
For they (as t'is reported) When they fly
Over mount
Taurus, least they should descry
Their flight by cackling to those
Eagles there
Which in aboundance to those Hills repaire,
With winged speed (for there they dare not tarrie)
They hast, and in their Bills small Stones doe carrie.
Thus by instinct th
[...]y use a policie
To save them from their furious enemie:
While these
tame fools, whom sillie
Geese condemne
Will give their foes advantage over them.
But these that dance so blindly in a net
Shall be excluded from my
Cabinet;
They are too full of chinks, so let them rest,
"My
Secretarie shall be my owne Brest.
In all those Coasts wherein I have remain'd,
I've some experience in my courses gain'd,
Which I made use of to my owne behoofe;
And where I ever seem'd to hold a loofe,
I was most interessed still in that,
Yet few could reach the pearch I aymed at.
I never saw that
Statseman in my dayes,
(Nor would I have it spoken to my praise)
Whom I in short time could not make my friend,
And finde as soone whereto his aymes
[...]id tend.
For thus I wrought him; First I sought to wind
Into his
Nature, how he stood inclin'd,
Which found, I most affection us'd to show
To that, which he stood most aff
[...]cted to:
Whereby, as
Jet attracts the yeelding straw,
Just as I would, could I his humour draw.
Or by his
ends, if once I had displaid him,
I by that meanes would labour to perswade him,
Which he could not resist, seeing me bend
My speech to that wh
[...]reto his course did tend.
Likewise if my observance found him weake,
I of his
We
[...]kenesse would advantage take,
And if he were to stiffe I could not draw him,
His
Weaknesse gave me strength to overaw him.
But if he could by none of these be rested,
By meanes of
Some where he was interested,
His bosome open'd to receive me in,
Where seiz'd, I tooke in hand to governe him.
In all my time,
Man was my onely book,
On which with serious Studie I did look:
Tracing all his demensions to and fro,
For still I dogg'd him where he us'd to go.
Were he a
Statist I observ'd him streight,
And poiz'd him too, to finde if he were weight;
And now and then I found him wondrous light,
Or else bleere-ey'd and blemish'd in his sight.
For eyther his
Ambition did so mad him,
As he would doe what ere his fancy bad him;
Or else his
bleered Judgement so deprav'd him,
As still in State-affaires he misbehav'd him.
In which observances I wondred much
(Not without just occasion) any such
Should be advanc'd to place of that esteeme,
Who never knew what State-affaires did meane.
So as more aptly could I not compare
These
Spongie Statesmen who are nought but ayre,
Then to that world-wasting
Phaeton,
Whose ayme's to guide the Progresse of the Sun,
When they alasse (so simple are these Elves)
Can hardly give direction to themselves.
Nor did I onely limit my Survey
To these who have the glory of the Day,
Sitting like
Pilots at the sterne of State,
But such as were of lower Estimate.
Where I observ'd, there was not any vice
Derivative to man form
Paradise,
That could her secret Poyson so much smother
As not infuse it selfe in one or other.
For men of all degrees employed were
How to their Seed they might a fortune reere;
Wherein they all contended how they might
Incroach the farr'st upon an others right.
Which practise I approv'd, yet much condemne
The weake and open passages of them;
For their
projectments scarcely were begun
Till they discover'd all that they had done;
Which gave their foes occasion to prevent,
By timely circumspection, their intent.
I rather relish him can play the knave,
Yet seems as if he knew not to deceive:
For in my books He is the only one
Who hath a wit, yet seems as he had none,
There is no walke that me so much doth p
[...]s
[...]
A
[...] tracing clouds with
Aristophanes;
To walke, I meane, obscure, as censure may
Tax neither what I act nor what I say.
Which to
[...]ff ct the better, I doe give
Such satisfaction wheresoere I live;
As there's no rite nor custome that can show it,
But I can soon conform my self unto it.
Y
[...]a of my
faith a nose of wax I make,
Though all I doe seems done for Conscience sake.
[...] I addr
[...]ss
[...] my selfe in any case
U
[...]o the disposition of the place:
At
R
[...]me I live just as the
Romists doe,
Elswhere I live as they'r affected to.
At pu
[...]e
Geneva, Prot
[...]stant I am,
At
Dow
[...]y or at
Rhemes another man,
In
Germany a s
[...]lfe-inspired
Luther,
At
Amsterdam a
Laodicean Neuter,
'Mongst zealous men I seem a hot
Precisian,
But when I come within the
Inquisition,
L
[...]st▪ touching my profession, they shou
[...]d doubt me
I carry store of
Rel ques still about me;
Which I suppose to be the only course,
For without these I well might fare the worse.
Thus I conform my selfe to any Rite,
Be he
Armenian or
Hugonite;
State-stirring
Brownist, or a
Broughtonist,
Licentious
Famulist, or
Barrowist,
His
Ape I am, and will be so profest,
To ma
[...]e me more familiar with his brest;
O
[...] which I worke my aymes, for by my wit
What ere I act, my Conscience shadows it.
For prosper in the world few I know,
And hold concurrence with
Religion too;
Which m
[...]kes me gull the world with a pretence
O
[...] hyp
[...]critick zeale and cons
[...]ience.
For popular opinion 's my desire,
So as in th'
Country I have built a
Quire
Where I and my religious family
M
[...]ke our repaire (as seems us) usually;
Yet from the
Pulpit far remote's my Seat,
Be
[...]au
[...]e I am not well
resolved yet
In cas
[...] of Conscience, therefore would I be
Far of, that's doctrine may not trouble me.
The cause is this; as yet I have no time
To treat of any thing that is D
[...]vine;
My ayms are plots of profit, plants of pleasure,
For points of
Faith, Ile think of them at leisure.
"Who wish unto their aymes an happy end,
"Must in their aymes no other thing intend;
For he that deales much in the world, I trow,
Without the
Church, he has enough to doe.
Nor with these
Politick Rules doe I resort
Only to
City, Country, and the
Court;
For I these grounded
axioms can show
Unto the learned
Academie too:
Where with quick eye I may observe their tricks
Withouten
Aristotles-politicks.
Here a
grand Senior-Dunce will keep his place,
Although he have a
Parsonage in chace;
Which having purchas'd, yet concealing it,
Some yeere or two heel keep his
Fellowship.
The selfe-same smooth
politicall-abuse
Have I observ'd in
Masters of a House,
By whom such
Fellowes only are appointed
As had their oylie-fists before annoynted;
So as, though't seem much different to their functiō,
"Nought they affect so much as
extreme unction.
Where no
Election can be freely granted,
If he that would be chosen
fellow, wanted;
For no admission can be ever made
Untill the
Master of the House be paid.
Besides, conveyance of
[...]heir Colledge-Leases,
Is as the
President or
Provost pleases;
Which many times themselves they so befriend,
As they convert them to their proper end:
For it is daily seene what course they take,
And what commoditie of these th
[...]y make.
To all which acts I approbation give,
"For he that cannot sharke, he cannot live.
All Engins must be us'd that we may git
Unto our selves a certain benefit.
Nor can be thrive that cannot well dispence
For profits sake, with
Faith and
Conscience.
From
forrain States intell
[...]gence I have,
Whi
[...]h like
[...]
[...]e
[...]ly
Corran
[...]s I receive
By me
[...]ns of such as are employ'd for me
In ev
[...]y place where their occasions be.
These, like
Architas wooden Dove, can bring
Tiding
[...] f
[...]om such a State, or such a King;
So as nought can be done in any Nation,
Whereof my
Agents give me not relation:
Whi
[...]h betters my experience in each part,
M
[...]k
[...]g my best friends strangers to my heart.
For h
[...] that has the humor to display
Himselfe unto his friend, although he may,
Yet his too open brest shall at no time
Partak
[...] of any sec
[...]e
[...]y of mine:
I m
[...]y p
[...]sume my Councells must be showne
By him, who has not b
[...]ains to keep his owne.
I ho
[...]d i
[...] to be oyle and labor spent
H
[...]e
[...]
[...]course what th'
Spanish-treaty meant,
But
[...] had bu
[...]sse so strange a carriage;
To m
[...] mo
[...] sh
[...]s and less
[...] intend a marriage
But this was so well shadow'd, giv
[...] it due,
By th'
Spanish Jipsy and her wandring
crue,
A
[...] I
[...]ill presse no more this
Sub
[...]ect now,
"O
[...]ly the
Cinque-ports must be look'd unto,
Thus have I sto
[...]'d my well-experienc'd pate
With
Politick-Rul
[...]s extracted from each State,
Where I h
[...]ve liv'd or conversant have bin,
As there
[...] n
[...]ne but I could humor him.
For was he
zealous? I could make a shew
Of servent zeale and of devotion too;
Was he a worldling? I was worldly given,
Discoursing more of
Mammon then of heaven;
Was he
voluptuous? Ide consort him right,
As one devoted wholy to delight;
In briefe, there was no ranke, degree, nor state,
Which in my selfe I could not personate.
Nor car
[...] I much wh
[...]ts'ever the world deeme,
This is my Mott:
I am not what I seeme.
The Chymicall Ape.
ALL rules of Art, of small esteeme I hold
To his, who can extract refined
gold
From
copper, brasse, or such inferior mettle,
For he can make pure
Ophir of a kettle.
Besides, so rare is Art exprest in him,
He may from
Lattin, Alchimie or
Tin
Draine store of
silver bulloyne, with the which
He maks himselfe and his attendants rich.
The
Stone, the
Stone, O that I had the
Stone,
By meanes whereof I might be such an one!
Which
Stone I have long studied to obtaine,
Wasting my oyle, weakning my
Chymick braine,
And still me thought I had it, yet was crost,
For longer that I sought, the more I lost.
Yet forasmuch as I did understand
That many did professe it in the Land,
Whose solid judgements could not chuse but see
That such a thing might well effected bee,
Or else they nere would such estates have spent
In trying of a meere experiment;
I reassumed spirit, and betooke
My selfe more strictly to my
golden-Booke.
Besides all this, I heard how
Kellie came
By practise of this
Art to speciall fame;
An
other likewise so experienc'd grew
In this mysterious
Art reveal'd to few,
As he an
artificiall tree of gold
Had curiously contriv'd, which daily would
Bud, bloome and blossom, and in branches spring,
Which might be soone a beneficiall thing:
For these
Hesperian-plants in time would prove
By their encrease to be a
golden-Grove.
All this encourag'd me, hoping one day
The charges I had been at to defray
With plentuous int'rest; but the more I travel'd,
The more I found my senses to be gravel'd.
Limbecks, with artfull
forges builded I,
And places too where I my
gold might try;
Sev'n yeers and more have I my wits thus bet,
But not a penny-weight extracted yet.
Sometimes unto the
Braziers Ide repaire,
And laugh'd at my conceit while I staid there;
For I was halfe resolv'd within short space
To change the
brasse and
copper of that place
Into pure
gold, and make my copesmates merry
With transmutation of all
Lothberry.
Thus fed I on opinion, laying out
Great summs, till I my purpose brought about,
Which once disburs'd, I never shall receive
But count it lost whats'ere I ventur'd have.
For having spent my fortunes and my wit
In diving to the secrecies of it,
My aymes I bended to another marke,
Resolving now to learne the art to sharke.
For which, that I might more enabled be,
I streight betooke me to a companie
Of wittie
Rake-hells, roaringly profest,
And in all forlorne courses bravely flesh't.
Flankt were my troups with
bolts, bauds, punks, and
panders.
Pimps, nips and
tints, Prinado's, highway-standers;
All which were my
familiars, and would doe
With quick dispatch whats'ere I put them to.
So as some of my crue of choice account
Did ev'ry
Sessions time up
Holborn mount;
Yea I my selfe could
Miserere sing
Or I had gone to heaven in a string.
For to relate those nimble
tricks we plaid,
Though on the publick Stage they be displaid,
As th' subtile headed
Alchimist can show;
Or th'
Alchimists own Ape,
Tom. Trinculo,
One hold I fitting to be here exprest,
By which you may judge better of the rest.
"One of my
Foists resolving to resort
"In th' habit of a
Courtier to the
Court,
"Where he demean'd himselfe as none could deem,
"But he was just the man that he did seem;
"Nor any
Courtier there of sweeter scent,
"Nor choycer in his forme of complement,
"More punctual in his gate, or in his looke,
"As one whose postures had been all by th' booke;
"After a turne or two, to th' Table came
"Where two
great personages were at game.
"The one whereof, had laid his purse close by,
"His losse upon occasion to supply;
"My
Bung observing this, takes hold of time,
"Just as this
Lord was drawing for a
prime,
"And smoothly
nims his purse that lay beside him,
"And all this while the other
gamester ey'd him,
"At whom he winks, to move him to conceale it,
"As one that had no purpose for to steale it.
"He that perceiv'd him, thinking him to be
"One of the
Court or of his companie,
"Smiling, continued play, and so it rested
"Untill this
Lord seeks for his purse, but mist it:
"Whereat the other laugh'd; quoth he, enquire
"Of such an one, and clad in such attire,
"One of your own acquaintance, I suppose,
"Who
nim'd you of your purse before your nose.
"Diligent search was made all there about,
"But my ingenious
gue had got him out
"Before this inquisition, which secur'd him
"Better then when the court-wals had immur'd him.
Thus were my
Limetwigs laid in every place,
Who like
Blood-hounds had still some game in chase,
Which they pursu'd with such an eager mind,
As where they seiz'd they left small store behind.
Scarce could two
country fopps together meete
To heare a cheating-
ballad in the streete,
But presently some
Complices of mine
Took hold of th' opportunity of time;
For while these to the
Ballad-monger flocked,
My nimble-
Nipps div'd deep into their pocket.
But for as much as I perceiv'd these shifts
Were meerly grounded on apparent thifts,
And that some private foe through in-bred malice
Might be a meanes to bring me to the Gallows,
This sharking trade relinquish'd, I became
A wondrous strange reformed honest man;
An
Emp'rick-Doctor, who had Art at will,
Which I derived from my
Chymick-Still,
Where I such
waters made, as in short time
Doctor Stevens water was lesse priz'd then mine.
Balms, apozems, confections had I store,
Yet th' more I had my
Patients wish'd for more:
Such rate effects were daily wrought by these,
As they were Cures for any strange disease.
But that I might seem learned in mine Art,
Of late I've got an
Herbal all by heart,
Whereof I make this use; when I can give
No reason why this dies, or that should live,
(For no such depth as yet mine art affords)
I streight confound them with abstrusest words.
As
Cataplasms, Diarrhicks Cataclisms,
Concucurbetuls, Emplasms, Paroxisms,
With which I so conjure them, as they cease
To aske me any qu
[...]stions tou
[...]hing these.
"Who for his practise can no reason show,
"He must have words or he's not worth a stroe.
Besides all this, such
Authors can I number,
As they that heare me are enforc'd to wonder:
For thus hold
[...]
Galen, thus
Hippocrates,
Thus
Silvius holds, thus
Dioscorides,
But
Paracelsus thus, who in my brest
Hath more esteeme then any of the rest.
Though I was never so on learning set
As I read any of these
Authors yet;
Nor care I much, 'tis my desire to seeme
More then I am, to gain me more esteeme.
Some twenty
Patients have I here hard by,
Who know not what they ayle, no more doe I,
Yet lest of negligence they me condemn,
Morning and night I duely visit them;
Prescribing them
receits to cheere their blood;
Which many times doe far more harm then good.
Yet am I crouded to on ev'ry side,
So as of late I on my
foot-cloth ride
By meanes of such a
Lord, who had occasion
To try my profound Art this last vacation;
Whose hand of bounty did my state enrich
For curing of an
ulcer in his breech.
How glad am I my
Chymick-works are done,
Amalga like they had more
Moone then
Sonne?
More profit doe I reape by one direction
To mine
Apothecarie, or inspection
Into my
Patients water, then I looke
Ere to receive from all my
Chymick-smook;
For
Alchymie with piercing
Antimonie,
Upon my knowledg caus'd a want of monie.
Minerall metals,
Niter, Oro
[...]halke,
By th' use whereof I in a cloud did walke,
Hatching such quaint
Chymeraes in my braine,
As reaping wind was all that I could gaine.
Hope train'd me on till all my wits were reft me;
I sought for
gold t
[...]ll I no
brasse had left me.
But why doe I my weaknesse thus descry?
When men have er'd were wiser held then I,
In making search for this unvalued
Stone,
But I must leave them and their wits alone;
They hope a day will come will pay for all,
But I feare such a day will never fall.
So as me thinks I cannot well compare
These men who build strange Castles in the ayre,
More fitly then to those who once did labor
To take a
Hare with playing on a
Taber.
Fly brasse; no
Chymick but a
Physick-ape
Since I left
Mercury for
Aesculape:
My practise now 's cleere of another nature,
Trading before in
Smoake but now in
water.
Now am I us'd with choycest entertaine,
Had in esteeme wheres'ever I remaine;
In
City, Court, and
Country harbored,
With free accesse unto a
Ladies bed,
Whilest her weak husband thinks she
Physick wants,
And for my
Potion gives me hearty thanks.
Streight she protests my
Pills doe only please her,
Thus much I'm sure, they for that season ease her;
For
application is the soveraignst thing
That may
conceiving to a woman bring.
There is a
lovely-Lady in this land,
Whom I have had these two yeeres under hand,
Yet I for manners sake will laine her name,
But trust me, sh
[...]e's a hen that loves the game,
Wh
[...] ha
[...] b
[...]en long time
barren; yet have I
By art and other things I did apply,
Made her a f
[...]ui
[...]full Mother; yea some say
That shee
conceiv'd the very selfe same day
That I did minister; but I divine
It came right neeere unto that very time.
And I am glad on't; for I doe not see
How he had Heir'd his Land withouten mee.
The
babe is full of hope, and will no question,
For h
[...]s
Syres sake, love men of our profession.
But 'tis no matter, now in grace I am,
And shall be dead before he be a man;
Thus much entirely shall I wish un
[...]o him,
Hee
[...]d be no
Alchymist, it will undo him;
For other Arts, a Gods name take his venter,
This is so deepe I thinke it has no center.
Nor am I only practis'd in the
Court,
But in the
Country too to make me sport.
Here
Granam Gurton will be sick for love,
And I must scent some love-procuring Glove,
To cause her
sweet-heart more affection show,
And this I promise out a hand to doe.
Some foure houres after I make known to her,
That I've confer'd with my
familiar,
Who has engag'd his word before one weeke,
Hee whom she seeks shall for her fancy seeke.
Shee payes me well, and hopes all shall be mended,
But I am gone before halfe weeke be ended.
Young wenches too I have exceeding store,
And I content them all, what would they more?
Only some
zealous-Sisters doe refraine
To come unto me, but I know their ayme;
They daily so
increase and
multiply
Among themselves, they need none such as I.
Thus have I traced many dangers ore,
And now at last arived on the shore;
I like the
Horse-leach feed upon their blood
To whom I seldome tender any good:
My
Patients are my profits, nor care I
Leg of a Dog whether they live or die.
This is the highest pitch of all my skill,
How to draw up a
Pothecaries bill
Of
ounces, drams &
doses, w
ch long
Item
(Wer't not for gain) would ty
[...]e me much to write'em.
Within few moneths I hope I shall not need
On other mens infirmities to feed;
My ten yeers practise so much treasure gaine me,
As
ten at hundred now may well maintaine me.
The Criticall Ape.
NOw by my life, a blind man may discover
A
Ship of fools or
Dottrells new come over.
Have you heard such a crue of brainless Skulls,
As if they had been bred i'ch'
Ile of gulls,
Boast of the
Vilanies that they have done,
Meaning to end just as they have begun?
Heere a
great Lord like one of
Isis Asses
In my conceite all other fooles surpasses;
For he consumes his Lungs when he doth see
Any Man grac'd or in esteeme but hee.
'Tis worth observing too, to note how sin
Retaines a kinde of priviledge in him.
Be his vile courses nere so indirect,
The
greatnesse of his place will him protect,
And give such lustre to his vices too
As they like vertues shine in outward show.
For where
Ambition or
Oppression either,
Yea all enormious vices put together
Are covered with
State, inferiours love them,
At least there 's few dare censure or reprove them:
So as that
maxim's true in my conceit,
"It is a rare Sight to be
good and
great.
But I doe heare this high-aspiring fellow,
Is in a single combat or Duello
Upon disgraces offer'd, prest to fight
With an
Hispaniolized Favorite;
But I 'm perswaded neither of them both
(So highly grac'd they are) but will be loth
To shed one others blood, hows'ere they prate it,
Unlesse they be dispenst with for the
Statute.
But should one kill the other in this sort,
I thinke the
State had cause to thanke them for 't.
Now
Verulam, good Man, is in his grave,
I muse who shall his House and Title have;
That spatious-specious-pretiouss refectorie,
Which cost a wo
[...]ld of wealth, so saith the storie:
Those peble-paved B
[...]ookes, empaled Lakes,
Thick clad with countless sholes of Ducks & Drakes.
For 's Ladie, she has got one now, will busse her,
And chang'd her U
[...]lesse
Vicount for her
Vsher;
Whence th'
Crosse inne may report, as sure it will,
"A
Countesse dain'd to lye her
Vnder hill.
For
him whome some call his adopted Heire,
Our waggs point at the Tow'r, and say hee's there,
Where he with his She Cousins plays at Gleeke,
Though some make bold to say he's in by th'weeke.
But what is that to me! this would I know
Whether he be
Saint Alban yea or no.
Saint Alban! no; yet
Alban was a Martyr,
And one each gate, i'th Towne bestow'd a quarter;
Now th'
State might well afford it to bestow
That
Style on him, would he be Martyr too.
For I ne're read that any Age did call
Saint Alban Martyr Lord High
Admirall.
But God will have a stroake in every Man,
Witnesse the dismall shot of
Eglesham,
Whose fate was this
Dukes fall, enforc'd to loose
Those Honours by a
stabbe whereto he rose;
"So weake's that Arch of Greatnesse which relyes
"On Complements and meere formalities:
But God is mercifull, as he is just,
To whom, with whom I leave him, so I trust.
Next him, an
Ape of pleasure or delight,
A very sensual fleshly
Sibarite;
And he triumphs, fond
Ape, as much as may be,
In favors shewn him by his wanton Ladie.
Yet should he but unto the world be sent
Nak'd, he would die for want of nourishment;
For then his outward beauty would deceive him,
His
consorts loath him, and his
pleasures leave him.
For this r
[...]ine
axiom is, He that doth find
"Move comfort in his body then his mind,
"May feed, and glut, and gormandize his time,
"Yet all this while he lives but like a Swine;
"Who spends his dayes in Surfeits and in Sinning,
"Making his end far worse then his beginning.
Ne t him, a shallow, weake,
vaine-glorious-gull,
Or
styles and
titles who is stuck so full,
As there is none, such
honours doe befall him,
That know to day, to morrow how to call him.
Yet lend your ear, I'le tell you in a word
What this
Colossus is,
A Spongy Lord,
Whose merit's meane, whose apprehension small,
Great onely in his Titles, that is all.
The way by which he seekes esteeme to gaine
Is this, he strives
great States to entertaine;
Conduits run
Rhenish, and the Kings high street
Smells of his odours and his perfumes sweet.
In publique wayes his bounty he displayes
In
Sucket, Bisket, Wafers, Carawayes;
At one
reere-supper in expence more large
Then all his yeares Revenues will discharge.
The height of his
Ambition is to get
By
Citizens acquaintance into debt;
But I suppose till he has paid old score,
They will be loath to lend him any more:
Then let him paune his
Honour, but this age
Is farre too wise to credit such a gage.
This
Ape hows'ere in State himselfe he beare,
He can with patience take a box o' th' eare
And n'ere repine, as if he did allow it
More
Courtier-like to take a wrong then do it;
For he through me
[...]kenes of his spirit doth prize
Patience above the weight of injuries.
Next a licentious
selfe-conceited Ape,
Who in the
Court such sport doth daily make,
The
Ladies, he protests, so value him
They would not want the
Wag for any thing.
His Parentage he likewise doth disclose,
Least his descent should admiration lose,
Which he describes, and I believe him, thus;
A Courtier gat him of a Succubus;
Of whom both bred and flesht, he nightly trades
In darke
Court-entries with his Ladies maides:
Which
Ladies well observing, doe attire
Themselves like
maids, that they might have like hire,
In ev'ry
Mark, Court-sh
[...]w or
Enterlude,
He must make one, or it is holden rude;
For (as he thinks) he is by
Ladies eyde,
More then all those that are employ'd beside.
Y
[...]t let me tell you, this
conceited fancy
Whereof he labours, brought him to a
phrensy;
Nor is he yet recover'd, but inchain'd
Untill his
madding humor be reclaim'd.
Next him a wastefull, formall
fashion-monger,
A finicall, superfluous state-wronger,
Who boasts of his invention in devising
All those strange
f
[...]shions in our
State arising,
Which
[...]y h
[...]s travaile were first brought a shore,
For to this
Ile they were not knowne before.
Nor is his forraine travell unrequired,
So much are we with his conceit delighted;
For to discharge the debt that we doe owe him,
A
yeerly-Pension doe we pay unto him.
Wee pay unto him! No; I scorne it I,
That any such Pie-colour'd
Butter-flie
Should gaine by me or any one of mine,
To geld the
State, or gull the present time.
Yea rathe
[...]
[...]h
[...]n Ide second such a Cheat,
I
[...]e s
[...]e his c
[...]rrion gutts about his feet.
B
[...]t I commit him till he pay his
Tayler
To
B
[...]okers-Lavender, or to the
Jayler,
Where let him lie in nastie, nittie-linnen,
Till he make satisfaction for his sinning.
Next an
Observing-Ape, who travels Nations
To gaine him knowledge by his
Observations,
Glories in those strange coasts where he hath beene,
And in the
Novels he hath heard and seene.
Nought he
observes but he relateth it,
And yet me thinks, he somthing doth omit:
Which if he had remembred, sure I thinke,
Could not so soone into oblivion sinke.
But I must tell him of it; "
Sir, do you heare?
"A strange Conjunction hapned this last yeere
"
Twixt Mars and Jupiter; pray now divine
"What this Prognosticates to after time.
"Some, and the wisest, of opinion are
"That it presageth
famine, others
warre,
"Others, some
pestilent-disease occurring,
"Causing men die on heapes by such a murrin.
"But what is your opinion? —l'as poor sot,
He eyther has forgot or knoweth not
What
Constellations meane! But sirra, you,
Who knows more coasts then ere
Columbus knew;
While
forraine-Country wonders are made known,
You much forget this
Country of your owne.
For in this
Iland where your selfe was borne,
Did you nere visit
Glastenbury-Thorne?
Saint Thomas Beckets
path, his Shrine, his Cell?
The Civit-senting Mosse of Win'freds
well?
The Stones of Salsbury-
plain, which none can number?
The
Stones of Whitby-strand,
that Snakie wonder?
Bruertons
Logg which on a Mote doth lye,
And sinking bodes, The Ancestor
must dye.
Or of
Saint Quintins (as Ive heard it told)
Whose ancient Seat is
Harpham on the
would,
Where at such times as
chiefe of th' house shall dy,
A Drum to th' hearing of the neighbours by,
For three daies space together sounds alarum,
(A gentle easie summons to prepare him.)
Which dying march, (as I have understood)
Issues from th' covert of a shadie wood,
But whence or how produc'd, that know not I,
(A Sacred-Secret Seal'd from mortall eye.)
But it implies (this Charity will grant)
He dies a Champion ith' Church militant.
Or of those
Cornish-Choughs I'm sure you heare,
Which built at
Claughton once in
Lancashire,
Who, as I've heard it there reported oft,
When a late Ancestor sirnamed
Croft
Deceas'd, fled streight from thence (but God knows whither)
Where they had built for many yeeres together.
Which ominous or no, I cannot tell,
Nor what it boded can I gather well,
But people thereabout affirme, it wants
Her ancient priviledg'd inhabitants,
Who left their Country-coast, their native nest,
And took plantation where they liked best.
Or of those rare, intestine, civill-warres,
Or fatall skirmishings of
Irish-Stares,
Where son with father fought, daughter with mother,
Shedding the reeking blood of one another:
Nor could their quenchlesse rage extinguish'd be,
But by an universall Tragedie;
For there was scarce one left (as I've heard say)
To bring their fellowes word, who won the day.
So hot is fury (as appear'd by these)
As it respects no State, Sex, nor Degrees,
But breathing forth revenge holds on the fight
A tedious Summers day from Morn to Night.
But sure these
*
News are come unto your eare,
The bruit whereof's dispers'd in every sheare:
The
fatall vesper (Man) where th'
Romish pastor
Brought to himselfe and numbers more disaster.
Which tragick act should not so
censur'd be
As if those men had sinned more then we;
For those on whom the Towre of
Siloam fell
Were not the worst, as is observed well:
But rather let's this application make,
(That of Gods judgements we may warning take:)
"If th' best employment that a
Christian hath
"Be not secure from th' violls of Gods wrath,
"And that he spareth not, for our exemple,
"To chastise those who doe frequent his Temple;
"How can we look, when any of us come
"To
Sinks of Sinne, but he will pay us home?
"We make our Brothells Temples, & in Stewes
"Our
Saintly-formalists erect their Pewes;
"If Places of devotion then receive
"Such fearfull ruines as of late some have;
"How can these
sensuall Synagogues but fall?
"well,
Boyes, a
day will come will
pay for all.
But sure he hears
these news, for none be newer,
I meane that Ratsbane-Academick
Bruer,
Who rather then he would his
Bev'rage lose
Poyson'd rare hopefull
Plants, as th' rumor goes.
Yet he lives still and flourisheth, nay more,
Continues selfe-same trade he us'd before;
Whereas if
Justice executed were
Upon th'
offender, as his crimes appeare,
"Who caus'd these
Schollers such
Rats deaths to dy,
"Should die a
dogs-death, more have thought then I.
But sure you heare, (for who is 't heareth not)
Of th' monstrous fish in
Vistula late got,
Which wore a
triple-Miter on his head,
And on whose back were lively figured
Saint
Peters-keyes, a
partizan of warre,
Which
Wizards doe divine predictions are
Of some strange thing that's likely to ensue,
Now what that is Ide gladly know from you.
Fall upon
Rome, you answer somthing will,
But I would heare whether 't be good or ill:
For under cope of heav'n no
State I know
But some occurrent it is subject to:
Wherefore resolve me, Sir, before you go,
Whether it bodes our State some good or no;
Or whether this same monstrous fish divine
Some doubtfull alteration in our time;
For sure I am nought can escape your dish
(If fit to be observ'd) be 't
flesh or
fish.
But sure you 've heard or seen that fearfull vision,
Which th' wiser sort have held in great derision;
That white-mayl'd-Army marshalling her power,
All rankt in battail'
[...]ay on
Burnley Moore;
Where not a man but vented his conceite;
One said it was an enemy to th' State,
Some
Spinola that mortally doth hate us:
Some thought it was a
Posse Comitatus
Rais'd in the County, purposely to seaze
On some Recusant for arrerages.
But most men held it was great
Bacchus train,
Had shot those Squibs & Streamers in their brain:
For most of these that for this
Vision stood
Could scarce discern a Souldier from a Cloud.
But sure you heare (for 'twas within this sennet)
How
Birds would be of th' Order of
Saint Bennet,
How
Raven, Crow, Pie, Sparrow (pretie Soule)
Flockt about
Bennet, as sh'ad been an
Owle:
How
Raven taken in a golden dreame,
Would needs a naked
Benedictan been,
Till th' sweet tun'd
Finch with his melodious pleading,
Split
Raven quite and plum'd him for his treading.
Which sharpe encounter cost
Musaeus more
Then all these
Fowles could ever yet restore.
But zlid, Ide like forgot! he cannot chuse
But heare of
Bugle-blues and
Titre-tues,
Choice blades, brave youths; yea I durst almost sweare
That he has notice what their Projects were,
So as whats'ere he speak in 's own defence,
He cannot chuse but have intelligence,
And therefore should be censur'd;—'las not he,
Though he pretend some
Rules of policie
Whereon his erring
Observations stand,
He's held the veriest
Widgeon in the land;
"For like a bottle (howsoere he show him)
"Nought he retaines, unless 't be put into him.
"So as me thinks I fitly may compare
"This simple
Sot unto that muddie
Maire,
"Who of his wisdome self-opinionate,
"Like to some state-observing
Magistrate,
"Mongst other things which he was glancing at,
"Observ'd one weare a
ribband in his hat
"Of dang'rous colour, for the field was blue,
"Whence he infer'd he was a
Titre-tu,
"An enemy to th' State: streight to the place
"He sends his ale-tipt-
Sergeant with his
Mace,
"To summon this
Titerian to appeare
"And show some cause why he such toyes did weare.
"The
youth accosts the
Maire; the
Maire the
youth;
"Who having stroakt his beard & wipt his mouth,
"Charg'd him upon th'
Allegiance which he bore
"His Prince, to show why he such ribbands wore?
"Sir, quoth the
youth, most
Boyes in all our
Parish
"Such
ribbands weare in honor of our
Morish.
"In honor of your
Morish, quoth the
Maire,
"You and your
Morish shall taste both one fare.
"Brethren this
Morice is a welshman borne,
"Who on Saint
Davies day weares
Leeks in scorne
"Of us true
English-Brittains— I think meete
"To set you and your
Morish both by th' feete;
"For we doe know hows'ere these
Ruffins prate,
"
Ribbands and
Leeks are stratagems of State;
"Which well effected, to the
Court Ile come,
"And show the Prince what service I have done.
But were this
State-sot ignorant of these,
Has surely heard of th' massacre of
Reze,
So many
Ensignes, Colours, Streamers, Standers,
Ancients, Lieutenants, Colonells, Commanders,
So many
Heroes which we sometime had
In
Coate of male, but now in
Durance clad;
So many maine
Land-pieces which did breath
The seldom welcome Embassie of death,
Seaz'd and surpriz'd, so as it may appeare,
The
French at no time sold their
salt so deare.
While some doe think th'
English had won the day,
But that their
Generall was slunke away;
But this is but some flying-false report,
And they that spread it would be censur'd for 't;
For is it likely such a man as he,
So stout (So sayes the
Corrant Historie)
Should be on Sea, and scarcely understand
How his
Commanders far'd that were a Land?
Or He rest safe from shot of Enemy,
And his whole Navy in such jeopardy?
Or so well entertain'd at his approach,
As to be sent for by the
* Kings owne Coach?
Bells to be rung in consort, which descry'de
The sorrow they conceiv'd for those that dide?
Bonefires erected in each publique streete,
With perfumes mixt, fit for a man so sweete,
And he deserve so ill? I cannot see
How a wife State should so deluded bee.
For nere was
England brought to such a lurch,
Their Colours trail'd unto Saint
Michaels Church
And reer'd in all contempt, as who should say,
Nere
France ore
England had a fairer day.
But our adherence now helps one another
As well becomes a reconciled Brother:
Which
gallant Juncto may enrich our State;
Becoming
sharers in the Silver plate.
Nor doe we feare, but wee next yeere shall catch it,
Should
Argus & th'
H
[...]sperian-Sisters watch it.
Yet Ile be thus opinion'd till I die,
And so are many persons more then I;
Had but that martiall militarie place,
Seene but his sweet and amiable face,
It would have beene with admiration charm'd
To see
Adonis like
Bellona arm'd;
For had those
Amazons so bravely bred
Been there encamp'd, they would have yield or fled.
But we are quite deceiv'd, the
Golden-Fleece
Surprizeth Souldiers more then
Ambergreece.
Where hath this great
Observer been the while,
And never view'd these wonders of our Ile?
In
Court hee'll say to make himselfe some sport;
Well go to Sir, you must be jerked for 't,
And that will learne you wit another time,
To draw a curtaine o're a
great mans crime.
But see you
Silke-worme! who is one of those
Who scents the street with perfume where he goes;
A
Courtly carpet-Ape who takes delight
In giving Raines unto his appetite.
There's many things which he doth glory in,
As first, he makes a p
[...]ofit of the king,
Farming his
imposts at such easie rate,
As he both cheats the
Prince and wrongs the
State.
The next abuse, which addes no lesse disgrace
To men made eminent by ranke or place,
Is that he hath pow'r wheresoere he please
For to dispose of all
Court-offices.
Besides, there's not a
Captaine in the Land
Receives
Exchequer-pay but from his hand;
Which must be guelt, as use hath beene before;
To make the
Courtier rich, the
Captaine poor.
He bestows
Honors too, which to the cost
Of the receiver, fall on him bids most:
So he who hath deserv'd no stile at all
May have his penniworth when Markets fall.
To dignifie his undeserving pate,
The
Academie makes him
graduate,
Where if the
Master of a House deceases,
He placeth and displaceth as he pleases.
I wonder much the
State will suffer him
Thus to triumph and riot in his sin;
But sure he plays not such vile pranks as these,
Boasting too highly of his rogueries;
For many
Court-pips be there that I know,
Who make a shew of more then they can doe:
If this be so, he well deserves descrying,
And to be cudgell'd roundly for his lying.
But see yon
City-Mammon how he struts,
As full of Sinns as he is stuff'd with Guts!
For nimble
tricks I doe not know his match,
So sliely can the
Ʋrchin Cony-catch,
As none but he would think and see his feat,
That he had serv'd a
Prentiship to cheat.
If he owe more then he intends to pay,
He seekes by all the conning meanes he may,
To frustrate his weake
Creditors whose Wits
Goe a wool-gathring, he
Protection gits:
So as the hopes they ground on are but small,
For by this course he wipes their Nose of all.
Yet tickles he my itching spleene with laughter,
And makes me smile, I sweare, a sennet after,
To thinke how he deludes that
Ape o'th
Court,
Who labours his
Protection in this sort.
He tells him, he shall in his Fortunes share,
And at his death he shall be made his Heire,
Upon which deed of gift the
Gull relyes,
And 's like to hang himselfe when th'
Merchant dyes;
For now when he should seize upon his store,
He finds an other seiz'd thereon before.
In ev'ry
Faire too he his
tricks can play,
And sharke, and cheate, and profit day by day;
For
Country people they so simple are,
They scarce discerne good from adulterate ware.
Besides all these, if th'
Academie looke
Not to themselves, and shun his dangerous hooke,
He hath a
tricke to gull them with the show
Of Sattin foreparts, Silken halfe-sleeves too.
But let him looke to 't, though his profits be
Great to him selfe, yet his posteritie
Drawn from y
e loyns of this broad-spreading tetter,
I'm so resolv'd, will never thrive the better.
Next him the
Country Boar comes leering in,
So simple-seeming as he knew no sin;
But he that holds him so 's a simple man,
For he can cheat as well as others can:
Yea he that holds him so let him but try him,
And he will finde himselfe no gainer by him.
He makes a shew, that so his
tricks may passe,
That he can hardly tell to
Michaelmas,
And so precise, some will not stick to say,
He will not lend his
Bull on
Saboth Day:
Yet for
Oppression, Biting
usurie,
Rapine, Extortion, hatefull
Simonie,
He scorns that any one should put him downe
In
Court, in
Ʋniversity, or
Towne.
Yet see this
Erwig, How he starves himselfe,
For all his substance and injurious pelfe;
The more he has the more he seemes to lack,
Indebted both to Bellie and to Back:
For his hid trash he labours so to smother,
He'l neither feed the one nor cloath the other.
But leave him to himselfe; for such as these
May be compared to
Hermocrates,
Who when he saw sad deaths approaching houre,
Did make himself his own
Executour;
And being ask'd the reason, did reply,
I got my wealth, who should dispose 't but I?
But eye me yon
Church Chuffe, how broad he struts,
With thighs and legs o
[...]e pentis'd by his guts!
A formall apish tim
[...]st, who delights
In fauning on our rising favorites;
Who once profest compassion to the poor,
Bolts cha
[...]ity and pity out of door.
A zeale-pretending halting
Laodicean,
Or Mountebank adulterate Physitian,
Who with 's infectious drugs corrupts his sheepe,
And with his leaden Sermons makes them sleepe.
If a sound Lay-Divine profoundly write,
His worke gets scarce admittance to his sight:
For this spruce-damask-Cassoked Divine,
Will have no books divulged in his time,
But su
[...]h as relish of his oyl
[...]-spent Lampe,
Though like base bulloigne they deserve no stampe.
Thus
Ignorance must censure what we doe,
Raze and deface our choi
[...]est Labours too:
So as this
Aenobarban Bacchanist
For th'
Presse is now made sole
Monopolist:
Fo there's no
Author without
Achans wedge
May ever hope to
[...]et his priviledge.
If this be longer suffer'd, I professe
To m
[...]ke my
Trunk my
Print, my
*
Deske my
Presse.
He has confest he counts it as no sin
By th' window to a Living to get in,
For he has presidents of divers men
That doe the like, and he will follow them.
But if he see a vertuous exemple,
It's not so soon admitted to his Temple.
Well, if Oppression, Rapine, Injury,
Equivocation or Church-Simony,
Ambition, Assentation, Insolence,
Licentious life, and loose Non-residence
May under
Church-mens copes securely fight,
I vow to God I'le be made Deacon streight;
For there is no Profession in this Nation
Save this, for such crimes may get dispensation.
Now shield me deare
Justinian! who comes here!
O Sir, I know you by the Robes you weare:
That conscript habit cannot shroud your sin,
Unrip your case, Sir, shew me what's within.
Shall I be your Anatomist? I will,
And squeaze your ulcerous corrupted ill.
This
Lime-hound ha
[...]h disparaged the State
By his injurious judgement, and with hate
Of God and all good-men, as well appears,
Grows rich by O
[...]phans cryes and Widows tears.
He may for forme sake to the Temple goe,
Because he hath no other thing to doe,
But it is only done to take a nap
And thank God for 't:
he sleeps i'th Churches Lap.
Bribes have so stuff'd his Cushion none can wake him
Till wrath and fury dog and overtake him.
Hee'd hug
Astraea if she were a Whoor,
But being pure, he kicks her out a door.
Hee's in such grace, he scorneth opposition,
Conscience hee'l harbour upon no condition.
His chap-fallen chin is shrunk below his Navell,
Yet hugs he gold till's mouth be fill'd with gravell.
He limits his nice Dame, what she shall pay
For this or that, who hopes to see a day
When his corrupted corpse reduc'd to dust
Shall give free scope to her restrained lust.
But note yon
politick State-underminer,
Of
Machiavels opinions late refiner;
How he condemns those
Apes which went before,
Yet to be censur'd he deserves far more
Then all the rest: For hath not he confest,
And made himself as guilty as the rest?
He tax
[...]th them of
opennesse (poor Elfe)
When he incurres like
weaknesse in himselfe.
So as I think, whats'ere he seem to know,
Hee's lesse in substance then he is in show.
Tracing the clouds with
Aristophanes,
He comes farre short of
Aristomanes,
Who strait-immur'd, as stories doe report,
Within a ragged Rock, an aged Fort,
When he with other noble
Captains were
In
Lacedemon kept close prisoner;
To free them from these unrelenting Rocks,
For shame (quoth he)
Let's imitate the Fox,
Who were he here, hee'd gain him libertie,
Let's not come short of him in policie.
No more they did, for digging those rag'd shelves,
Within short ti
[...]e they after freed themselves.
But this
State-polititian works his ends,
By making all he treats with his firme friends;
And with pretence of
Conscience ties them to him,
Causing thē think he's same man he doth show him:
But I make little doubt, when these have tride him,
But they'
[...] detest him, having once descride him.
"This Ile avouch, and stand to 't when I've done,
"He that is friend to all, is friend to none.
Let him then gull his friends, engrosse his sin,
Till he have no friend left to burie him.
But hold sides that ye burst not, luck befall
Thi
[...]
Paracelsian Chimick-Ʋrinal!
Who would not laugh to h
[...]are him cry,
the Stone,
The Stone, the Stone, as if he had just none?
Or that his paine had caus'd him sh w the madder,
By reason of some gravell in his bladder.
But 'las, poor
seered thing, he cannot see
His
Chymick-works will ever usefull be.
For though he once presumed on his wits,
To turne
Spits, Jacks and brazen
Candlesticks
Into pure
gold, his muddie braines grow wearie,
"Brazers may use their trade in
Lothberrie.
This
Cricket now is turn'd a
water-caster,
Since which blest time his wealth grows daily faster;
For as he vaunts, where ere he make resort,
Bee't to the
City, Country or the
Court
He's only priz'd and had in all esteeme,
Yet knowes not what the Rules of
Physick meane.
If this be so, it cannot be den
[...]de,
Under his hand but many men have dide,
So as no other reason see can I,
But that the Law
[...] should censure him to die:
An
Homicide is hang'd if he kill any,
What sense is 't he should l
[...]ve has kild so many?
Thus have these
Apes display'd them, so could I
If I my
tricks would labour to des
[...]y;
But this my feare is, if I should des
[...]ry them,
By their discovery some might profit by them;
Which would much grieve me, such an one I am,
As I nere wish'd for good to any man:
Yea I may sweare, I know not one alive
That with my heart I could desire to thrive.
But if I might impeach their name; Ide doe it,
Or doe them any harme, Ide quick
[...]y show it:
Their imputation is my joy, th
[...]ir hurt
The only pleasant game that makes me sport.
When
Timon, my deere friend, once chanc'd to see
A mans wife hanging on a
wild-figtree,
O (quoth he)
It would Timon
highly please
That ev'ry bough brought out such fruit as these;
For then our wives would sing a silent dittie,
And we should need no Cuck-stools in the Cittie!
The like wish I; nor doe I only wish
To
woman kinde that heavie doome of his,
For I'm indifferent for sexes both,
This could I never love, and
that I loth.
Aesope I hug, and I doe honour him,
Who in a tale brought
Arist. de part. anim. l.
3. c.
1.
M
[...]mus chasing in;
An
[...] in reproofe of
nature did proceed,
For setting Bulls-horns rather on his head
Then on his shoulders, being stronger part;
In which respect preferd he curious
art
Before the hand of
nature: for quoth hee,
Such over sights in Art Wee seldome see.
His steps I follow, for I tartnesse show
To th' choicest works of
art and
nature too:
Nothing can please me in this globe of earth
But others woes, whose moans afford me mirth.
If on a learned worke I chance to looke,
Though I've no judgement I can taxe the booke,
And call the
Author for his paines a foole,
Yet past two Months I never went to Schoole.
By meanes whereof, and home-bred education,
One taught me th' rules of a Prognostication;
Streight by direction from an
Erra pater,
I knew ech distinct
Planet and his
nature.
Which known, I could not brook my Country well,
But in acquaintance with some
Gipsies fell;
Whose chiefest
Bung and Captain now I am,
And held in
Palmistrie the only man:
Where though I cannot sing the
Gipsies song,
I am as merrie as the day is long.
For if a
Milk-maid come to me and crave,
Ide tell he
[...] when she shall a Husband have;
Or an old
Chrone, that I to her would show,
Whether she must out-live her
Grub or no;
Hows'ere their fortune be, better or worse,
My
dainty-Doxie nims away their purse;
With which we merrie make and bravely rore,
With some stolne Pullen that we have in store.
Truth is, since I kept square with these, I find
My selfe and my affections worse inclin'd
Then ere they were before; nor doe I care,
"They that fare well may reputation spare.
"He must be stain'd, consorts with such as these,
"He that lies downe with dogs must rise with flees.
Thus in each Village I and my ragg'd nation
With canting gibrish doe we make our station;
In
Corporations we doe seldome tarrie,
Because of
Statutes to the contrarie.
For other Coasts such
Officers we find,
That though they see us, yet they will be blind;
For now and then, they'r such kind natur'd men,
They will not stick to eate with us a Hen.
But I repent me, I so much have said,
Lest some that heare me, come to learne my trade.
To the State-Critick.
WHy, who are you? whence came you?
what's your name?
That you should taxe the
State,
or touch her fame?
Is it your manners Sir, to chide great men,
And with your tarter lines to nettle them?
Admit you me
[...]t with some that nere did good,
As deepe in sinne, as they are high in blood,
What priviledge have you receiv'd from us
To mixe your Inke with gall and Copprice thus?
Are you a man of such account I pray,
As th'
State should notice take of what you say?
Have we not in
[...]his famous Ile one
Sage,
N
[...]r one
Wise Master in this latter age,
That can reprove the errours of our time
Without the help of your
caprichious Line?
Is now your rurall straine of
Melibaeus
M
[...]xt with
Thersites humour or
Tirteus?
Are great mens crimes your Subj
[...]ct? and must they
Tast of your Whippe, when they doe goe astray?
But let us heare how you your sp
[...]eene expresse,
Which
Sir implyes your male-contentednesse.
Some have so blushl
[...]sse and so shamel
[...]sse beene,
To let their Coach a
[...]d foot-cloth Horse be seene
At common S
[...]rumpets dores; to rouze a whoor;
Why, I have seene this
Critick, and much more:
And vaild my bonnet, with
God save your Honour.
Just as his Lordship came dismounted f
[...]om-her
And I conniv'd at this, and would not see,
Though light was not more manifest to me
Then his Licentious actions: now must you
Bring these concealements to a publique view?
I know a Lord with choicest gifts enricht
Who, as report goes, is of late bewitcht,
And to a Doctor goes to cure those spels,
But they that know him, think 'tis something elss.
And will not stick
vnder the Rose to speak
That this same Docter is (indeed) his Tweak.
But what have they or I to doe with him?
If it be so, 'tis but a Lordly Sin.
Many have beene, and so no doubt will be,
Bewitcht with Object
[...] meaner farre then she.
Y
[...]t I'me resolv'd they judge not farre amisse,
Who say that he 's
Bewitcht, for so he is:
For who, unlesse drawne in by some impostor,
Would such a
Blouse to his dishonour,
fost
[...]r?
Now were it fit, lik
[...]
Glow-wormes, to discover
M
[...]ting and meetings of so great a Lover?
Admi
[...] you know extortion in the Land,
In officers cor
[...]upti
[...]n under hand,
Symony, B
[...]ocage, Rapine, Sacriledge,
M
[...]y you not see the Age grant priviledge
T
[...] such State-epidemicall dis
[...]ases?
"What profit gets, it generally pleases.
Why Sir, I see as much as you can see,
For my whole life is
Albions scrutinie:
In
City, Court and
Cou
[...]try I doe want
For no inte
[...]ligence, for I doe hant
W
[...]th ci
[...]cumspection every nooke and angle,
And how our State-impostors doe intangle
Ou
[...] unexperienc'd
New comes, I observe it,
And how they 'r honour'd most that least deserve it.
All which I could display, and draw the lines
Of all their actions to succeeding times
To make men wonder at, but pray thee, say,
Would this reclaime these
State moaths any way?
Or dart a blush in any of their faces?
Or
[...]ake them wearie of their purchas'd places?
Or strike a terrour in their conscience?
Or eins
[...]all lost justice to her Bench?
W
[...]uld it m
[...]ke one man good that now is evil?
Or weane one s
[...]ule from serving of the devill?
Lasse no Sir; Though from God you have your warrant,
And fai
[...]hfully perfo
[...]m his sacred arrant,
When so small ben
[...]fit is w
[...]ought by th' Pulpit,
D
[...]e you by
Satyrizing hope to help it?
Is all the Tribe of
Levi so farre short
Or shallow to improve, reprove, exhort,
As th
[...]y must silenc'd be, while you begin
To taxe the
[...]
Coat, because
[...]hey taxe not sin?
You are too bold, Sir, in you
[...] fluent straine,
And tenders that which none will entertaine:
For doe you thinke we live in such an Age
A
Clergie man will loose a Parsonage
Before he scourge not sinne? it cannot be;
For how should he relieve his familie,
His
hopefull O
[...]ve branches with his Spouse,
With all the h
[...]ly Meynie of his house;
If he should not dispence with his Creatour,
And smooth the sinne of his Impropriatour?
Or that an Officer in any Court,
Will rectifie himselfe by your report;
Or purchase to his soul least hope of blesse
By taking of a poore man one fee lesse?
For though
Extortion be, I g
[...]
[...], a sin,
This course would goe well neere to begger him:
A place that at so dea
[...]e a
[...]a
[...]e is bought
Most be imploy'd for gaine, not so
[...]d for nought.
Or that a
Lawyer should his practise make
Less
[...] for himselfe, th
[...] for his Clyents sake?
Or use that glibberie m
[...]mber of hi
[...] Tongue,
To further right, and not to bolster wrong?
For so he sh
[...]ul
[...] g
[...]w out of practise quite,
And wrong himselfe, by doing others right.
For right and wrong though they contraries be,
Yet wrong does right, if it bring in a fee?
Or a
Physitian, whose Empyrick H
[...]nd
Must kill downe right before he understand,
Should apprehend remorse, when, as by doses
He weighs his Physick out, but not the losses
O
[...] his abused Patients, who with g
[...]ones
Must loose their lives and substance both at once:
These hauing novght to give must be forsaken,
And if they die the care is quickly taken?
Or a
Civilian th
[...]ugh Conscience be
Th
[...] O
[...]j ct of his Law, will loose his fee,
Or not protract a Cause and make a sturre
By plodding some impertinent demurre:
For he such store of
Presidents can show,
That then examples tell him what to doe,
And will secure him: onely le
[...] pretences
Guilded with sanctity disguise offences.
Or that a
Rorer w
[...]ll his Oathes forbeare
Or shudder when he does Gods judgements heare;
Or leave his Brothell
[...], or his midnight revells,
O
[...] leave consorting with his f
[...]mal Devels?
For so he should abandon all his joy,
And loose th
[...] Title of a roring B
[...]y;
No, S
[...], these taskes surpasse
[...]
Critick straine,
And make him wash the
Blackamoore in vaine.
Yet I p
[...]s
[...]ade me, you exprest your zeale
In you
[...] dimensions, to the Commonw
[...]ale;
And that your meaning was to waine the State
From some of that which all good people hate.
But where sinne 's grow to ripeness
[...], you must know
Good meanings and intentions will not doe:
So delicate a
[...]e these corrupted times,
As none must taxe or taint heir swelling crimes.
But tell me in good sadn
[...]sse what's the cause,
To think your Lives more powerful
[...]hen our Lawes?
If an
Oppressor hatefull Contract
[...] make,
Our Laws can bring h
[...]m h
[...] a B
[...]re to th' stake;
The Cunningst
Church thiefe be he neere so great,
When on e detect
[...]d for a Counterfeat
[...],
Must not uncensn
[...]'d passe, nor any one
Who in a civill State shall throw a Bone.
So as in my Opi
[...]ion from the State
Such Stigmaticks doe highly derogate,
Who judge their
Muse mongst men t' have more command,
Then all the Lawes and Statutes of our Land.
But to remove this Error, I thinke fit
If any one have mind to shew his wit,
That in obscurer manner he disclose it,
Least too much plainenesse make the
Satyre lose it.
This moved some, as in their
workes we find,
In
Hieroglyphicks to expresse their mind,
Or like choyce
Heralds to finde out a Crest
Fitting the forme and nature of the Beast
As some of our spruce-silken Curtaine Lords
Who shew their worth in their imperious words
Have beene displaid and shadow'd to their shame,
Yet know not who nor where they wounded them.
"But most of these their Dingity have lost,
"And can of nought but painted Scutchions boast.
This Course was held at first, and ever since
The freest from distaste and from offence.
For when we darkely write, thanks be to Heav'n,
So small a portion of conceit is given
To our
Magnifico's, as when they read us,
They understand us not, or never heed us;
Which happy ignorance secures our pen,
And makes them laugh at us, that nettle them.
In these darke colours have I drawne the shapes
Of vicious
Silke wormes in this
Age of
Apes.
Which sh
[...]dow'd with a
Vision, may doe good
To purge, if not to purifie the blood.
Nor would I have this to be held in me
Weakn
[...]sse of courage or timiditie;
For in a Cause where I intend to doe
Service to God I ne're did terror know.
Nor doe I see ought in this vale of teares,
Which should beget in me such fruitlesse feares.
The Substance I enjoy, I nere did gather,
But as a Birth-right left me by my Father;
For had my fortunes hung upon my care,
My part had com'
[...] unto an easie share.
But what I now possesse, be it more or lesse,
I never w
[...]sh God may it longer blesse
Then I shall willingly forgo
[...] the same,
To honour God and magnifie his name.
Nor is my health so good that I should feare,
When s' ere 't please God, my dissolution here.
Besides, gray-hayres have caus'd me change my song,
Assuring me my dayes cannot be long:
Should I
[...]hen in my Glorious Makers sight,
P
[...]y servile Sycophant or Parasite?
Shou
[...]d I now wh
[...]n my one foot is in grave,
Learne the obsequious posture of a knave?
Should I contemne my Soule when death is nie,
O
[...] complement when I should learne to die?
Should I who ne're could fawne in all my dayes,
An unjust Man ag
[...]inst my conscience praise?
No, heav'ns forb
[...]d! that I sh
[...]uld taxe that thing
In Subjects, which I would not in a King?
O praise that in a King which I'le not doe
Even in his Groome or meanest Subject too?
For howsoe're our Statists Some times frowne
Seeing those darling vices of their owne
Touch'
[...] to the quicke, yet why should good men feare
Such Impes who Sattin in and out side weare?
No, in that cause where I desire to please
My gratious God, I scorne the threates of these.
But I returne unto my
Critick now,
And will informe him too what he shall doe.
I know the Sate, Sir, desperately sick,
Where some Sores should be Lanced to the quick,
For they must not bee smooth'd or smeer'd with Oyle,
Least they attract a more impressive soile:
But how should this be done, or how app
[...]de,
B
[...]fore the member grow quite mortifide?
An art-full and experienc'd hand were fit,
A
[...]d to that act
[...]ve hand a pregnant wit.
A grave and serious outside too wou
[...]d prove
That they were types of what their selves did move:
For him unfit I hold to chastize sin,
Whose youth admits no downe upon his chin.
He should be of authority and power
If he would be a powerfull monitour,
For such mens words like
nayles enforce our passion,
Stru k by the
Rulers of a Congregation
Yea this our owne experience doth teach,
We eye as much the
person as the
speech:
For if he be a man of worth or prize,
Speake what he will his person makes it wise.
Besides, that life of his should be approv'd,
That his example may be better lov'd:
For it redounds unto the Teachers shame
To taxe, when he is guilty of the same.
Who aymes to shoote his shaft at many men,
May chance to hit himselfe too, now and then,
Unlesse he
blamelesse be, which is so rare,
As to se
[...]ke such our labours we may spare.
Lest then this frumpe should
[...] our dish be laid,
Phisitian cure thy selfe (as hath been said,)
Our
Lifes should forme our
Lines, that after times
May say, our
Lifes did paralel our
Lines.
But why should we pursue this fruitlesse taske
By striving
Great-mens errors to unmaske?
Their discontent may by some censure move us,
But them we cannot hurt, so far above us.
I hold it best then
Critick, we begin
To let these
Peers take their
Careere in sin,
While we restraine our liberty of pen,
Untill we see Gods judgement waken them.
Have we not known of late some raised high,
That they with more disgrace and shame might die?
Who would have thought in such a civill State
(I rather touch't because it chanc'd so late)
That
Witch of
Endor, who (I thinke) had force
In magick-art much like my crop ear'd horse,
Of whom 'twas propheci'd (I can assure ye)
Three yeers agoe, that he should die in
furie,
Should be ith' Street with stones & brick-bats slain,
And not one known of all that bandlesse train,
Who murdred him? Sure 'twas his profuse sin,
Which when he would not mend, God met with-him
But let him rest, they doe exceeding ill
Who rake him from his ashes with their quill:
He troubled us enough ere he was slaine,
It were not well to raise him up againe.
Should we peruse the Actors and the Crimes
Both of preceding and succeeding times;
To what command their Soveraignty extended,
And with what shame and misery it ended;
What glory they exprest, and how their state
Was blemish'd by their
fault, not by their
fate:
What port th
[...]y bore, yet in the end no gainers,
But split themselves, and ruin'd their reteiners.
We would admire Gods lawful judgements show
[...]
No lesse on other States then on our own.
See those
Sicilian tyrants, how their power
Still labours one another to devoure
Envie wrought with suspicion, both conspir'd
With hot revenge: to have wh
[...]t they requir'd,
Yet what effect produc'd these plots to all
Those state-aspiring Flyes but timelesse fall?
Though
Caesar with victorious honor come
To be sole Monarch ore triumphant
Rome,
And ride in 's
Ebor to be seene of all,
A stab will serve him in the Capitall.
"Much have I seene, yet seldome seene I have
"Ambition go grayheaded to his grave.
This then
(State-Critick) would I thee advise,
"To leave to God the censuring of vice;
But if thou needs must shew thy wood-bred natur
[...]
Let it be shrouded in a shadow'd Satyre.
The Apes Censure.
EXcellent
Apes; yee have your selves displaid,
Now heare what shal againe to you be said.
And first for you
grand-gull, whose ayrie vants
Consist of
Titles and of
Sycophants,
I here degrade you, and injoyne you more,
To live as private as you did before
You came to
greatnesse: they that cannot tell
How to demeane themselves when th
[...]y are well,
Must by severer meanes be brought unto it,
I doe this to reclaime you, pray you show it.
For you licentious fl
[...]shly
Libertine
Who in delights surfeit away your time,
Go from our presence; wee have here enow
To traine our
Lords in lightnesse besides you.
Cynthia's pure rayes should not be dark't by those
Who live like
Venus friends, but
Vesta's foes;
Retire, Retire, your follies are descride,
And live from us till you be mortifide.
For you
Vaine-glorious Ape, you doe appeare
So proud, we cannot brooke your being here.
God hath ordain'd before the heav'nes begin,
A fall for Pride, A punnishment for Sin;
The proud are ever plagu'd by prouder ones,
"There must be had sharpe
Steele to smooth rough stones
Leave us, you are not for us, nor be wee
For you, or yours, till you more humble bee.
For you, my prettie
Guga, whose vaine
fancie
Hath brought you to a carlesse, curelesse
Phrensie,
I will not
censure you, for as it seemes
You understand not what a
Censure meanes;
Yet that you be restrain'd, I hold it fit,
Till diet and restraint restore your wit.
Which done, you may regain your former freedom,
"For mad-braind boys our
court doth litle need'em.
For you, new fangle
Jack, whose aymes aspire
To gaudie and fantasticall attire,
For your abuse both to the State and us,
Wee
censure you and your distemper thus.
Till you a
fashion finde, rome too and fro,
That may content our hum'rous
gallants so
As they shall never change that
fashion more,
But keepe them still to that which you bring ore.
For you rare
Ape, your
observation's such,
I cannot well admire your worth too much;
Yet I may partly guesse what is your ayme,
And I will labour to effect the same.
It's your
ambition to beget esteeme,
In
publique places to be heard and seene,
And so you shall; for trust me you shall be
Reer'd on a
publique place, the
Pillorie.
Now my sweete
Ape, how brisk my
Courtier goes,
A if for want of feete he went on 's toes?
You, or I much mistake me, make a sport
To buy and sell our
Offices in
Court;
Our
Imposts too you farme for such a sum,
And glory in your
tricks when you have don.
For which, neat
Sir, you shall by th' heeles be laid,
Till restitution to the State be made.
For you rich
City-Ape, who can devour
Poore Widows houses, cheat your Creditor,
And by
Protections bearing such a date,
Wipe others of their owne, inhance your State;
These I suppresse; and if it shall appeare
Your Sonne was not estated a whole yeare
Before you
broke, your
Creditors shall share:
Meane time of
Pious Works you must take care.
For you
penurious drudge, who pores one earth,
And joyes in nought but in your
Countrey dearth;
Twentie poore Soules you weekely shall maintaine,
During which time you shall not sell a graine;
For th s's the ayme which I doe levell at,
The
leane Kine are to feed upon the
fat:
For if the
fat yeeld not the
leane supplie,
The
fat may ryot, but the
leane will die.
For you
Law list, for
Laws are in your fist,
Ruling our
Courts of
justice as you list;
You shall be spar'd for climing up our stayres,
Betake you now unto your private prayers:
Meane time this Labell shall be writ and hung
Upon your Gowne, to manifest our wrong:
"For love of bribes, and for contempt of right,
"My Master is become
Anacorite.
For you
Church-gnat, who can observe the time,
And make your Coat a cover for your crime;
Who
Church Revenues with your tricks inhance,
And pride you in your blockish ignorance;
Who to oppression and extortion sold,
Dishonour God, idolotrize your gold:
Since gold (my
Prelate) is to you so deere,
To
India go, you shall be Bishop there.
For you
Sir Politick, you are so wise
I know not well what
Project to divise
To keepe your Brains a worke; but for a space
My Pleasure is that you doe leave this Place,
And not returne, untill you understand
What causeth dearth of money in our Land;
What way our best commodities doe go,
And whether they bring back as good or no.
For you my
Chimick Ape, I muse you would
Pore in a glasse and lose your hope of gold;
But let this passe: I heare you have no skill,
And that in curing one, you twentie kill;
Which to redresse, I have by Act decre'd,
Your
Ʋrinal be broken on your head:
And that you be indited of ma
[...]slaughter
If ere you practise rules of
Physick after.
Now for my
Critick Ape, that
Demophon
Who sweats i'th
shadow, shudders in the
Sun,
Who never saw that man in all his dayes
He could finde in his heart to love or praise;
He with his
Gypsies is so fitly mated,
He will be taken hold on by the Statute.
Mean time let, him by
Foists and
Bungs be friended
It is not long till he must be
suspended.
Be gon, my
Censure shall not be disputed,
This is decree'd and must be executed.
Affrighted with the Censure
of each Ape,
Fearing my selfe were one I did awake;
But finding it a dreame
I thought it fit,
Only for pastime-sake to publish it.
Similis mihi
Simia nulla est.