A GROANE AT THE FVNERALL of that incomparable and Glorious MONARCH, CHARLES THE FIRST, King of Great Brittaine, France, and Ireland, &c.
On whose Sacred Person was acted that execrable, horrid, and prodigious Murther, by a trayterous Crew and bloudy Combination at WESTMINSTER, Janury the 30. 1648.
Written by I. B.
Printed in the Yeare, M.D.C.XL.IX.
A GROANE.
TO speake our Griefes at full over Thy Tombe
(Great Soul) we should be Thunder-struck, & dumbe.
The triviall
Off'rings of our bubling eyes
Are but faire
Libels at such Obsequies.
When Griefe bleeds inward, not to sense, 'tis deep;
W'have lost so much, that 'twere a sin to weep,
The wretched Bankrupt counts not up his summes
When his inevitable ruine comes.
Our losse is finite when we can compute;
But that strikes speechlesse, which is past recruit.
W'are sunke to sense; and on the Ruine gaze,
As on a curled Comets fiery blaze:
As Earth-quakes fright us, when the teeming earth
Rends ope her bowels for a fatall birth:
As Inundations seize our trembling eyes
Whose rowling billowes over Kingdomes rise.
Alas! our Ruines are cast up, and sped
In that black totall—CHARLES is Murthered.
Rebellious Gyant hands have broake that Pole,
On which our Orbe did long in Glory roule.
That
Roman Monsters wish in Act we see,
Caligula.
Three Kingdoms necks have felt the Axe in Thee.
The Butchery is such, as when by
Caine,
The fourh Division of the world was slaine.
The mangled Church is on the shambles lay'd,
Her Massacre is on thy Blocke display'd.
Thine is Thy peoples epidemicke Tombe:
Thy Sacrifice a num'rous
Hecatombe.
The Powder-min's now fir'd: we were not freed,
But respited by Traytours thus to bleed.
Novembers plots are brew'd and broach't in worse,
And
Ianuary now compleats the Curse.
Our Lives, Estates, Lawes, and Religion, All
Lye crush'd, and gasping at this dismall fall.
Accursed Day that blotted'st out our light!
May'st
Thou be ever muffled up in Night.
At
Thy returne may sables hang the skie;
And teares, not beames, distill from Heavens Eye.
Curs'd be that smile that guilds a Face on
Thee,
[Page 2] The Mother of prodigious Villanie,
Let not a breath be wafted, but in moanes;
And all our words be but articulate groanes.
May all Thy
Rubrick be this dismall Brand;
Now comes the miscreant Doomes-day of the Land.
Good-Friday wretchedly transcrib'd; and such
As Horrour brings alike, though not so much.
May Dread still fill Thy minutes, and we sit
Frighted to thinke, what others durst commit.
A Fact that copies Angels when they fell,
And justly might create another Hell,
Above the scale of Crimes; Treason sublim'd,
That cannot by a parallell be rim'd.
Raviliack's was but under-graduate sin,
And
Gourney here a Pupill Assassin.
Infidell wickednesse, without the
Pale!
Yet such as justifies the Canniball.
Ryot Apochryphall, of
Legend breed;
Above the Canon of a Jesuites Creed.
Spirits-of-witch-craft! quintessentiall guilt!
Hels
Pyramid! another
Babell built!
Monstrous in bulke! above our
Fancies span!
A
Behemoth! a Crime
Leviathan!
So desperately damnable, that here
Ev'n
Wild smels Treason, and will not appeare.
That Murdering peece of the new Tyrant-State,
By whom't hath Shot black Destinies of late;
He that belch'd forth the Loyall
Burleighs doome,
Rocoyles at this so dreadfull Martyrdome.
What depth of Terrour lies in that Offence,
That thus can grind a seared Conscience!
Hellish Complotment! which a League renewes,
Lesse with the men then th'Actions of the Jewes.
Such was their Bedlam Rabble, and the Cry
Of
Justice now, 'mongst them was
Crucifie:
Pilates Consent is
Bradshaws Sentence here;
The
Judgement-hall's remov'd to
Westminster.
Hayle to the Reeden Scepter; th'Head, and knee
A
[...]to'r aga
[...]e that Cursed Pageantrie.
Th
[...]
[...]
[...]rew in solemne pompe guard on
[...] Maj
[...] as not to th'Block, but Throne:
[Page 3] The Belch agrees of those envenom'd Lyes;
There a
Blaspemer, here a
Murd'rer dyes.
If that goe first in horrour, this comes next,
A pregnant
Comment on that gastly
Text.
The Heav'ns ne're saw, but in that Tragicke howre,
Slaughter'd so great an
Innocence and Powre.
Bloud-thirsty Tygars I could no streame suffice
T'allay that Hell within your Breasts but This?
Must you needs swill in
Cleopatra's Cup,
And drinke the price of Kingdomes in a sup?
Cisterns of Loyalty have deeply bled,
And now y'have damm'd the Royall
Fountain Head.
Cruell
Phlebotomie! at once to draine
The
Median, and the rich
Basilick veine!
The tinctures great that popular murther brings,
'Tis scarlet-deep, that's dy'd in bloud of Kings.
But what! could
Israel find no other way
To their wish'd
Canaan than through This Red Sea?
Must God have here his leading Fire and Cloud,
And He be th'Guide to this outragious Crowd?
Shall the black
Conclave counterfeit His hand,
And superscribe Their Guilt,
Divine Command?
Doth th'ugly Fiend usurpe a Saint-like grace?
And Holy-water wash the Devils face!
Shall
Dagons Temple the mock'd
Arke inclose?
Can
Esau's hands agree with
Jacob's voyce?
Must
Molech's Fire now on the Altar burne?
And
Abel's bloud to Expiation turne?
Is
Righteousnesse so lewd a
Bawd? and can
The
Bibles Cover serve the
Alcoran?
Thus when
Hel's meant,
Religion's bid to shine;
So
Faux his Lanterne lights him to his
Mine.
Here, here is sins
non ultra, when one Lie
Kils This, and stabs at Higher
Majestie.
And though His sleepy Arme suspend the scourge,
Nor doth loud Bloud in winged Vengeance urge:
Though the soft houres a while in pleasures flie,
And conquering Treason sing her
Lullabie.
The guilt at length in fury he'l inroule
With barbed Arrows on the trayt'rous Soule.
Time may be when that
John-à Leyden King
[Page 4] His Quarters to this Tombe an Offring bring,
And that
Be-Munster'd Rabble may have eyes
To read the Price of their deare Buttcheries.
Yet if just Providence reprieve the Fate,
The Judgement will be deeper, though't be late.
and After-times shall feele the curse enhanc'd,
By how much They've the sin bequeath'd advanc'd.
Meane time (most blessed shade) the Loyall eye
Shall pay her Tribute to Thy Memory.
Thy
Aromatick Name shall feast our sense,
'Bove
Balmie Spiknard's fragrant Redolence▪
Whilst on Thy loathsome Murderers shall dwell
A plague sore-blast, and rotten ulcers smell.
Wonder of Men and Goodnesse! stamp'd to be
The
Pride, and
Flourish of all History.
Thou hast undone the
Annals, and engross'd
All th'
Heroes Glory which the Earth e're lost.
Thy Priviledge 'tis onely to commence
Laureate in
Sufferings, and in
Patience.
Thy wrongs were 'bove all
Sweetnesse to digest;
And yet thy
Sweetnesse conquer'd the sharp test:
Both so immense, and infinitely vast,
The
first could not be reach'd, but by the
last.
Meane
Massacres are but in
death begun;
But Thou hast
Liv'd an
Execution.
Close conffin'd up in a
deceased Life;
Hadst
Orphan Children, and a
Widow-Wife.
Friends not t'approach, or comfort, but to mourne
And weep their unheard plaints, as at Thy Urne?
Such black Attendants Colonied Thy Cell,
But for thy Presence,
Car'sbrooke had been Hell.
Thus basely to be Dungeon'd, would enrage
Great
Bajazet beyond an
Iron Cage.
That deep
indignity might yet have layne
Something the lighter from a
Tamerlaine.
But here
Sidonian Slaves usurp the Reines,
And lock the Scepter-bearing Armes in chaines.
The spew'd-up surfeit of this glut'nous Land;
Honour'd by
Scorne, and cleane beneath all brand.
For such a Varlot-brood to teare all downe,
And make a common
Foot-ball of the
Crowne;
[Page 5] T'insult on wounded
Majesty, and broach
The bloud of
Honour by their vile reproach.
What Royall Eye but Thine could sober see,
Bowing so
Low, yet bearing up so
high?
What an unbroken
sweetnesse grac'd Thy Soule,
Beyond the Worlds proud conquest, or controule!
Maugre grim cruelty, thou kept'st Thy Hold;
Thy
Thorny Crowne was still a
Crowne of Gold.
Chast
Honour Might enrag'd could ne're defloure,
Though others th'
Vse, Thou claim'dst the
Right of Power.
The
brave Athenian thus (with lopp'd-off
Hands)
A stop to swelling sailes by's
mouth commands.
Cynegirus.
New Vigour rouz'd Thee still in Thy Embroyles,
Antaeus-like, recruiting from Thy Foyles.
Victorious
fury could not terrour bring,
Enough to quell a captivated King.
So did that
Roman Miracle withstand
Horatius. Cocles.
Hetrurian shoales, but with a single hand.
The Church in Thee had still her Armies; thus
The World once fought with
Athanasius.
The Gantlet thus upheld; It is decreed,
(No safety else for Treason) CHARLES must bleed.
Traytor and
Soveraigne now inverted meet;
The wealthy
Olive's dragg'd to th'
Brambles feet.
The
Throne is metamorphiz'd to the
Barre,
And despicable
Batts the
Eagle dare.
Astonishment! yet still we must admire
Thy
courage growing with Thy
conflicts high'r.
No palsied hands or trembling knees betray
That Cause, on which Thy Soule sure bottom'd lay.
So free and undisturbed flew thy Breath,
Not as
condemn'd, but
purchasing a death.
Those early Martyrs in their funerall pile,
Embrac'd their Flames with such a quiet smile.
Brave
Coeur-de-Lyon Soule, that would'st not vaile
In one base syllable to beg Thy Bayle!
How didst Thou blush to live at such a price,
As ask'd thy People for a sacrifice!
Th'
Athenian Prince in such a pitch of zeale,
Codrus.
Redeem'd his destin'd Hoast, and Common-weale;
Who brib'd his cheated Enemies to kill,
Thus Thou our Martyr died'st: but Oh! we stand
A Ransome for another CHARLES his Hand.
One that will write Thy
Chronicle in Red,
And dip His Pen in what Thy Foes have bled.
Shall Treas'nous Heads in purple
Caldrons drench,
And with such veines the Flames of Kingdomes quench.
Then Thou at least at
Westminster shal't be
Fil'd in the Pompous List of
Majestie.
Thy
Mausoloeum shall in Glory rise,
And Teares and wonder force from Nephews Eyes.
Till when (though black-mouth'd Miscreants engrave
No Epitaph, but Tyrant upon Thy Grave.)
A Vault of
Loyalty shall keep Thy Name,
An orient, and bright
Olibian flame.
On which, when time succeeding foot shall tread,
Such Characters as these shall there be read.
Here CHARLES the best of Monarchs butcher'd lies;
The Glory of all
Martyrologies.
Bulwarke of Law; the Churches
Cittadell;
In whom they triumph'd once, with whom they fell:
An English
Salomon, a
Constantine;
Pandect of Knowledge, Humane and Divine.
Meeke ev'n to wonder, yet of stoutest
Grace,
To sweeten
Majesty, but not debase.
So whole made up of
Clemencie, the
Throne
And
Mercy-seat, to Him were alwaies one.
Inviting Treason with a pardoning looke,
Instead of
Gratitude, a
Stab He tooke.
With passion lov'd, that when He murd'red lay,
Heav'n conquered seem'd, and
Hell to bear the sway.
A Prince so richly good, so blest a Reigne.
The World n're saw but once, nor can againe.
Scilicet,
Humano generi Natura benigna
Nil dedit, aut tribuet moderato hoc Principe majus
In quo vera Dei, vivens
(que) eluxit Imago:
Hunc quoniam scelerata cohors
vi
[...]lavit, acerbas
Sacrilego
Deus ipse petet de Sanguine
poenas
Contemptum
(que) sui Simulachri
haud linquet inultum.
Parodia ex Buchanani Geneth. Jacobi sexti.
FINIS.