Memoirs of the Life and Worth▪ Lamentations for the Death, and Loss of the every way admirable Mr. VRIAN OAKES.
WEep with me, Reader! Never
Poet had
His Quill employ'd upon a
Theme so sa
[...]
As what just Providence (Grief
grumble not)
Do's with black
Warrant Press mee to! O what?
This!
OAKES is dead! One of the bittrest
Pil
[...]
(Compounded of
three Monosyllables)
That could have been dispensed!
Absalom
Sure felt not more
Distress, Death, Danger, come
With the
three Darts of
Ioab!—
Blest
Shade! an
Vniversal Tax of Sorrow
Thy Country ows thee! Ah! we need not borrow
The
Praefica's: Say,
Oakes is dead! and there!
There is enough to squeese a briny Tear
From the most flinty
Flint: Once at the
Blow
Of
Moses, from a
Rock a
Stream did flow;
But look! th'
Almightye's
Rod now smites us home
Oh! what
Man won't a
Mourner now become?
[Page 2]Dear Saint! I cannot but thy Herse bedew
With dropping of some
Fun'ral Tears! I Rue
Thy Death! I must,
My Father! Father! say,
Our Chariots and our Horsemen where are they?
I the
dumb Son of
Craesus 'fore mine Eyes
Have sett, and will
cry when my
Father dyes.
Oh! but a
Verse to wait upon thy Grave,
A
Verse our
Custome, and thy
Friends will have:
And must I
brue my Tears? ah! shall I
fetter
My Grief, by studying for to
mourn in
Metre?
Must too my
cloudy Sorrows
rain in
Tune,
Distilling like the softly Showrs of
Iune?
Alas! My
Ephialtes takes me! See't!
I strive to
run, but then I want my
feet.
What shall I do? Shall I go invocate
The
Muses to mine aid? No▪ That I hate!
The sweet
New-England-Poet rightly said,
It is a most Vnchristian Vse and Trade
Of some that Christians would be thought.
If I
Call'd Help, the
Muses mother
Memory
Would be enough: He that
Remembers well
The
Vse and
Loss of
Oakes, will grieve his fill.
Ih'd
rather pray, that Hee, in whose just
Eyes
The Death of his dear
Saints most
preciose is,
And Hee who helped
David to bewail
His
Ion'than, would not my Endeavours fail.
A sprightly
Effort of
Poetick Fire
Would e'en Transport mee to a mad Desire:
How could I wish, Oh! that the nimble
Sun
Of thy short Life before thy Day was done
[Page 3]Might
backward Ten Degrees have moved! or
Oh! that thy
Corps might but have chanced for
To have been buried near
Elisha's
bones!
Oh! that the Hand which rais'd the
Widows Sons
Would give thee to thy Friends again! But, Fy!
That Passion's vain! To sob,
Why didst thou dy?
Is but an
Irish Note: Death won't Restore
His
Stolen Goods till Time shall be no more.
Shall I take what a
Prologue Homer hath
Lett mee Relate the Heavenly Powers Wrath?
Or shall I rather join with
Ieremie,
And o're our great and good
Iosiah sigh,
O that my Head were waters, and mine Eyes
A fountain were, that Hadadrimmon's Cryes
Might bubble from mee! O that Day and Night
For the Slain of my People weep I might!
Ah! why delay I? Reader, step with mee,
And what is for thee on
Grief's
Table see
Memoria Praeteritorum
is
The
Dish I call thee to: Come taste of this.
Oakes vvas! Ah! miserable word! But what
Hee vvas, Let Never, Never be forgot.
Beleeve mee once, It were a worthy thing
Of's
Life and
Worth a large Account to bring
To publick
Vievv, for general
Benefit.
I would essay (with Leave, Good Reader) it,
So far as
feet will carry mee▪ but know it
From first to last,
Grief never made good Poet.
Hee that
lasht with a
Rod could
versify,
Attain'd, and could pretend far more than I!
[Page 4]
Short was thy
Life! Sweet Saint! & quickly run
Thy
Race! Thy Work was, oh! how quickly done!
Thy
Dayes were
(David's
measure) but a
Span;
Five Tens of Years roll'd since thy Life began.
Thus I remember a
Greek Poet Rhimes,
They whom God Loves are wont to dy betimes.
Thus
Whit
[...]ker, Perkins, Preston, Men of Note,
Ay! many such, Never to
fifty got.
And thus
(Rachel New-England!) many Seers
Have left us in the
akme of their Years.
Good Soul! Thy
Iesus who did for thee
dy,
In Heaven longed for thy
Company.
And let thy
Life be measur'd by thy
Deeds,
Not by thy
Years; Thy
Age strait nothing needs.
Divert, My Pen! Run through the
Zodiac
Of
Oakes his
Life: And cause I knowledge lack
Of most Occurrents, let mee now and then
Snatch at a Passage worthy of a Pen.
Our Mother England,
ev'n a Village
there
(Fuller,
insert it!) did this Worthy
bear.
Over the Ocean
in his Infancy
His Friends with him into
New-England fly:
Here, while a lad, almost a miracle
(As I have heard his Aged Father tell)
Sav'd him from
drowning in a River: Hee
Would (guess) a Miracle
and Moses
bee.
Now did Sweet Nature
in him so appear
A Gentlewoman
once cry'd out, If ere
Good Nature could bring unto Heaven, then
Those wings would thither carry Vrian.
[Page 5]
Prompt Parts,
and early Pitty now made
Men say of him, what once observers said
Of great Iohn Baptist,
and of Ambrose
too,
To what an one will this strange Infant grow?
Her Light
and Cup
did happy Harvard
give
Unto him; and from her he did receive
His Two Degrees: (
A double Honour
to
Thee (Harvard! Own it!)
did by this accrue!)
So being furnisht with due burnisht
Tools
The Armour
and the Treasure
of the Schools,
To Temple-work
he goes: I need not tell
How he an Hiram,
or Bezaleel
Did there approve himself; I'le only add
Roxbury
his first-fruits (first Sermon)
had▪
Some things invite: Hee back to
England goes;
With God and Man hee there in favour growes;
But whilst he lives in that Land,
Tichfield cryes
Come over, Sir, and help us! He complyes:
The
Starr moves thither! There the
Orator
Continu'd charming sinful mortals for
To close with a sweet Jesus: Oh! he woo'd,
He Thundred: Oh! for their eternal good
How did he bring the
Promises, and how
Did he discharge flashes of
Ebal? Now
Hee held Love's
golden Scepter out before
The Humble Soul; Now made the
Trumpet roar
Fire, Death, and Hell against Impenitent
Desp'rates, untill hee made their hearts relent.
[Page 6]There did hee merit
Sibs's Motto,
I
Iust like a Lamp, with lighting others dy.
Ah! like a
Silk-worm, his own
bowels went
To serve his Hearers, while he soundly spent
His
Spirits in his Labours. O but there
He must not dy (except
Death Civil) Here
(Why mayn't we Sigh it! here dark
Bartholmew
This gallant and heroic
Witness slew.
Silenc't he was! not
buried out of sight!
A worthy
Gentleman do's him invite
Unto him; and like
Obadiah, hide
Him, dear to them with whom he did reside,
Finding his
Prayers and
Presence to produce
An
Obed-Edom's blessing on the House.
A
Spirit of great Life from God do's enter
Within a while into him: Hee do's venture
To
stand upon his
feet: Hee prophesy's;
And to a
Congregation Preacher is,
Join'd with a loving
Collegue; who will not
Be buried, till
Symmons be forgot.
But our
New-England Cambridge wants him, and
Sighs, "
Of my Sons none takes me by the hand,
"Now
Mitchel's gone! Oh! where's his parallel?
"Call my Child
Vrian! Friendly Strangers tell
"An
OAKE of my own breed in
England is,
"That will support mee Pillar-like; and this
"Must be resolv'd; I'le
Pray and
Send! Agreed!
Messengers go! and calling
Council, speed!
[Page 7]The good
Stork over the
Atlantic came
To nourish and cherish his Aged
Dam.
Welcome! great Prophet! to
New-England shore!
Thy
feet are
beautiful! A number more
Of Men like thee with us would make us say,
The
Moral of
More's fam'd
Vtopia
Is in
New-England! yea, (far greater!) wee
Should think wee
Twisse's
guess accomplisht see,
When New Ierusalem comes down, the Seat
Of it, the wast
America will bee't.
Cambridge! thy Neighbours must congratulate
Thy Fate! Oh! where can thy
Triumvirate
Meet with its Mate? A
Shepard! Mitchel! then
An
Oakes! These
Chrysostoms, these
golden Men,
Have made thy
golden Age! That fate is thine
(To bee blest with the Sun's perpetual Shine)
What
Sylvius sais of
Rhodes. Sure thou mayst call
Thy Name
Capernaum! But oh! the
fall
Of that enlightened Place wee'l humbly pray
Dear Lord! Keep
Cambridge from it!—
But Quill! where fly'st thou? Let the Reader know
Cambridge some years could this brite
Iewel show,
Yet here a
Quartane Ague does arrest
The Churches Comfort, & the Countryes Rest.
But this (Praise Mercy) found some
Ague-frighter,
Hee mends, and his Infirmity grows lighter,
Ev'n that his dear
Orestes smil'd,
So small
Your Illness, you'd as good have none at all.
[Page 8]Well! the poor Colledge faints!
Harvard almost
(An
Amnesty cryes'
st!) gives up the ghost!
The
branches dwindle! But an
OAK so near
May cherish them! 'T was done! The gloomy fear
Of a
lost Colledge was dispell'd! The Place,
The Learning, the Discretion, and the Grace
Of that
great Charles, who long since slept & dy'd
Lov'd, and Lamented, worthy
Oakes supply'd.
His
Nurse he
suckles; and the
Ocean now
Refunds what th'
Earth in
Rivers did bestow.
Pro Tempore (a sad
Prolepsiis) was
For a long time his
Title; but just as
Wee had obtain'd a long'd for Alteration,
And fixt him in the
Praesident's firm Station,
The wrath of the Eternal wields a blow
At which my Pen is gastred!—
But Up!—Lord! wee're undone!—Nay! Up! and Try!
Heart! Vent thy
grief! Ease
Sorrow with a
Sigh!
Lett's hear the matter! Write
de Tristibus!
Alas! Enough!—
Death hath bereaved us!
The
Earth was parch't with horrid
heat: We fea'rd
The
blasts of a Vast
Comet's flaming Beard.
The dreadful
Fire of Heaven inflames the
blood
Of our
Elijah carrying him to God.
Innumerable
Sudden Deaths abound!
Our
OAKES a
Sudden blow laid on the ground,
And gives him blessed
Capel's wish, which the
Letany
prayes'gainst, To dy Suddenlie.
[Page 9]The Saints hope to have the
Lord's Table spread;
But with astonishment they find him
dead
That us'd to
break the
Bread of Life: O wee
Deprived of our
Ministers often bee
At such a
Season. Lord, thy Manna low
In our blind Eyes we fear is wont to go!
The
Man of God at the first
Touch do's feel
[With a
Praesage] his Call to Heavens weal;
Hee sits himself for his
last Conflict; Saw
The ghastly
King of Terrors Icy claw;
Ready to grapple with him; then he gives
A Look to him who
dy'd and ever lives;
The great
Redeemer do's
disarm the
Snake;
And by the Hand his faithful
Servant take,
Leading him thorow
Death's black Valley, till
Hee brings him in his arms to
Zion's Hill.
Fall'n Pillar of the Church! This
Thy Translation
Has turn'd our Joyes into this
Lamentation!
Sweet Soul! Disdaining any more to
trade
With
fleshly Organs, that a
Prison made,
Thou'rt flown into the
World of Souls, and wee
Poor, stupid Mortals lose thy Companie.
Thou join'st in Consort with the Happy
gone,
Who (happ'er than
Servants of Solomon)
Are standing round the Lamb's illustrious Throne
Conversing with great
Isr'el's-Holy-One.
Now could I with good old
Grynaeus * say
"Oh! that will be a bright and gloriose Day,
"When I to that Assembly come; and am
"Gone from a world of guilt, filth, sorrow, shame!
[Page 10]I read how Swan-like
Cotton joy'd in Thought,
That unto
Dod, and such he should be brought.
How
Bullinger deaths grim looks could not fright
Because twould bring him to the
Patriarchs Sight.
(Well might it be so!
Heathen Socrates
In hopes of
Homer, Death undaunted sees.)
Who knows but the Third Heaven may sweeter be
Thou
Citizen of it! (dear
Oakes!) for thee?
Sure what of
Calvin Beza said; and what
Of thy forerunner
Mitchel, Mather wrote,
I'le truly add,
Now Oakes
is dead, to mee
Life will less sweet, and Death less bitter bee.
Lord! Lett us follow!—
Nay! Then, Good Reader! Thou and I must try
To
Tread his
Steps! Hee walk't
Exemplar'ly!
Plato would have none to be prais'd, but those
Whose
Praises profitable wee suppose:
Oh! that I had a
ready Writer's Pen,
(If not
Briareus hundred Hands!) and then
I might limn forth a
Pattern. Ah! his own
Fine
Tongue can his
own worth Describe alone
That's it I want; and poor I! Shan't I show
Like the man, whom
an Hero hired to
Forbear his Verses on him!
Yet a lame
Mephibosheth will scape a
David's blame.
Well! Reader! Wipe thine Eyes! & see the
Man
(Almost too
small a word!) which
Cambridge can
[Page 11]Say, I have lost! In
Name a
Drusius,
And
Nature too! yea a compendious
Both
Magazine of worth, and Follower
Of all that ever great and famose were.
A
great Soul in a
little Body. (Add!
In a small
Nutshell Graces
Iliad.)
How many
Angels on a Needle's point
Can stand, is thought, perhaps, a
needless Point▪
Oakes Vertues too I'me at a loss to tell:
In short,
Hee was New-England's
t
[...]
SAMUEL;
And had as many gallant Propertyes
As ere an
Oak had
Leaves; or
Argus Eyes.
A better
Christian would a
miracle
Be thought! From most he bore away the
Bell!
Grace and
good Nature were so purely mett
In him, wee saw in
Gold a Iewel sett.
His very
Name spake
Heavenly; and Hee
Vir sui Nominis would alwayes bee.
For a Converse with God; and holy frame,
A
Noah, and an
Enoch hee became.
Vrian and
George are Names aequivalent;
Wee had
Saint George, though other Places han't.
Should I say more, like him that would extol
Huge
Hercules, my Reader'l on me fall
With such a check;
Who does dispraise him? I
Shall say enough, if his
Humility
Might be described. Witty
Austin meant
This the
First, Second, and
Third Ornament,
Of a Right Soul, should be esteem'd. And so
Our
Second Moses, * Humble
Dod, cry'd,
Know,
[Page 12] Iust as Humility mens Grace will bee,
And so much Grace so much Humilitie.
Ah!
graciose Oakes, wee saw thee
stoop; wee saw
In thee the
Moral of good
Nature's
Law,
That the
full Ears of
Corn should
bend, and grow
Down to the ground:
Worth would sit alwayes low.
And for a
Gospel Minister, wee had
In him a
Pattern for our
Tyro's; sad!
Their Head is gone: Who ever knew a greater
Student and
Scholar? or beheld a better
Preacher and
Praesident? Wee look't on him
As
Ierom in our (Hungry)
Bethlechem;
A perfect
Critic in
Philology;
And in
Theology a
Canaan's Spy.
His
Gen'ral Learning had no fewer
Parts
Than the
Encyclopaedia of Arts:
The old Say,
Hee that something is in all,
Nothing's in any; Now goes to the wall.
But when the
Pulpit had him! there hee spent
Himself as in his onely
Element:
And there hee was an
Orpheus: Hee'd e'en draw
The
Stones, and
Trees: Austin cryes,
If I saw
Paul in the Pulpit, of my Three Desires
None of the least (to which my Soul aspires)
Would gratify'd and granted bee. Hee might
Have come and seen't, when
OAKES gave
Cambridge Light.
Oakes an
Vncomfortable Preacher was
I must confess! Hee made us cry,
Alass!
In sad
Despair! Of what? Of
ever seeing
A better Preacher while wee have a beeing.
[Page 13]
Hee! oh!
Hee was, in
Doctrine, Life, and all
Angelical,
and Evangelical.
A
Benedict and
Boniface to boot,
Commending of the
Tree by noble
Fruit.
All said, Our
Oakes the
Double Power has
Of
Boanerges, and of
Barnabas:
Hee is a
Christian Nestor! Oh! that wee
Might him among us for
three Ages see!
But ah! Hee's gone to
Sinus Abrahae.
What shall I say? Never did any spitt
Gall at this
Gall-less, Guile-less Dove; nor yet
Did any
Envy with a cankred breath
Blast him: It was I'me sure the gen'ral Faith,
Lett Oakes
Bee, Say, or
Do what e're he wou'd,
If it were
OAKES, it must be
wise,
true[?], good
Except the
Sect'ryes Hammer might a blow
Or two, receive from
Anabaptists, who
Never lov'd any Man, that wrote a Line
Their naught, Church-rending Cause to undermine.
Yett after my
Encomiastick Ink
Is all run out, I must conclude (I think)
With a
Dicebam, not a
Dixi! Yea,
Such a course will exceeding proper bee:
The
Iews, whene're they build an
House, do leave
Some
part Imperfect, as a call to
grieve
For their
destroy'd Ierus'lem! I'le do so!
I do't!—
And now let
sable Cambridge broach her Tears!
(They
forfeit their own
Eyes that don't; for here's
[Page 14]Occasion sad enough!) Your
Sons pray call
All
Ichabod; and
Daughters, Marah! Fall
Dovvn into Sack-cloth, Dust, and Ashes! (To
Bee senseless Now, Friends, Now! will be to show
A
CRIME &
BADG of
Sin and
Folly!) Try
Your
fruitfulness under the Ministry
Of that kind
Pelican, vvho spent his
Blood
The feed you! Dear
Saints! Have ye got the Good
You might? And let a
Verse too
find the Men
Who
fly'd a Sermon! Oh! Remember vvhen
Sirs! your
Ezekiel was like unto
A
lovely Song of (Been't
deaf Adders you)
One with a pleasant Voice! and that could play
Well on an Instrument! And i'n't the Day,
[...]he gloriose Day, to dawn (ah! yet!) wherein
You are drawn from the
Egypt-graves of
Sin
Compelled
to come in? For shame come in!
Nay! Join you all!
Strive with a
noble Strife,
To
publish both in
Print (as vvell as
Life)
Your preciose Pastor's
Works! Bring them to view
That vvee may
Honey tast, as vvell as you.
But, Lord! What has thy
Vineyard done, that thou
Command'st the
Clouds to rain no more? O shevv
Thy favour to thy
Candlestick! Thy
Rod
Hath almost broke it: Lett a
Gift of God,
Or a sincerely Heaven-touch't
Israelite
Become a
Teacher in thy Peoples sight
At last I vvith
License Poetical
(Reader! and thy good leave) address to all
[Page 15]The children of thy People! Oh! the
Name
Of
Vrian Oakes, Nevv-England! does proclame
SVRE I AN OAK was to thee! Feel thy Loss!
Cry,
(Why forsaken, Lord!) Under the Cross!
Learn for to
prize Survivers! Kings destroy
The People that
Embassadors annoy.
The Counsil of God's
Herald, and thy
Friend,
[Bee wise! Consider well thy latter End!]
O lay to heart! Pray to the heavenly
Lord
Of th' Harvest, that (according to his Word)
Hee vvould
thrust forth his Labourers: For vvhy
Should all thy
Glory go, and
Beauty dy
Through thy default?—
—Lord! from thy lofty Throne
Look dovvn upon thy
Heritage! Lett none
Of all our
Breaches bee unhealed! Lett
This dear, poor Land be our
Immanuel's yett!
Lett's bee a
Goshen still! Restrain the
Boar
That makes
Incursions! Give us daily more
Of thy All-curing
Spirit from on High!
Lett all thy
Churches flourish! And supply
The almost
Twenty Ones, that thy Just Ire
Has left
without Help that their Needs require!
Lett not the
Colledge droop, and dy! O Lett
The Fountain run! A
Doctor give to it!
Moses's are to th'
upper Canaan gone!
Lett
Ioshua's Succeed them! goes vvhen one room!
Elijah, raise
Elisha's! Pauls become
Dissolv'd! vvith Christ! Send
Tim'thees in their
[Page 16]Avert the
Omen, that vvhen
Teeth apace
Fall out, No
new ones should supply their place!
Lord! Lett us
Peace on this our
Israel see!
And still both
Hephsibah, and
Beulah bee!
Then vvill thy People
Grace! and
Glory! Sing,
And every Wood vvith
Hallelujah's ring.
Vixêre fortes ante Agamemnona
Multi; sed illachrymabiles
Vrgentur ignoti
(que) longà
Nocte; carent quia Vate sacro.
Hor.
Non ego cuncta meis amplecti Versibus opto.
Virg.
—Ingens laudato Poema:
[...] legito!—
Call.
[...]ui legis ista, tuam reprehendo, si mea laudes
Omnia, Stultitiam: Si nihil, Invidiam.
Owen.
Non possunt, Lector, multae emendare Liturae
Versus hos nostros: Vna Litura potest.
Martial.