Sacellum Apollinare. A Funeral POEM TO THE MEMORY OF THAT Great Patriot & Statesman, GEORGE, LATE Marquiss of Hallifax.
—Sapiens dominabitur Astris.
LONDON, Printed by J. Wilkins; and are to be Sold by R. Baldwin, near the Oxford-Arms-Inn, in Warwick-Lane, 1695.
AS HEAV'N it Self's on
Empire's Axis roll'd,
(For
God-Head's but
Dominion Uncontroul'd;)
So the
Crown'd Head, the Sublunary
JOVE,
Does, in his Royal
Orb of
Glory, move;
With all his
Bolts of Fate, in his High Post
Of
Sovereign Pow'r, the Weilded
Thunder boast.
But, in the Highest tow'ring Flight of KINGS,
'Tis the Great
Statesman plumes their
Eagles Wings;
They Move the Great MACHINE,
He Sets the
Springs.
And thus, whilst Pregnant EMPIRE's
Labouring Head
With some vast
Off-spring Teems; the
Statesman's Aid,
To bring the Fair Divine
Minerva Forth,
Is call'd the Great
Lucina to the
Birth.
Wisdom and
Counsel! 'Tis their Min'istring Ray,
Those Bright CROWN-
Genij, Cheer th'
Imperial Sway:
[Page 4]The
Harmony of WORLDS is only Theirs;
Empire but Guides, 'tis
They that Tune the
Spheres:
Counsel, in Church or State, the
Warmth, by Whom
Aaron's and
Moses's Budding
Wands both Bloom:
Thus MONARCHY, what, tho' She Reigns
Alone,
'Tis by her
Argus-Eyes She Guards her Throne:
Her
Lights an Hundred, tho' her
Hand's but One.
Of those Rich
Lights, Great
HALLIFAX shin'd there;
In
Powr's whole
Constellation, None more Fair:
In
Calms or
Storms, in every varying
Gale,
The Furl'd, the Hoysted, or the Slacken'd
Sayl;
The
Helm to Manage, or the
Mates to Cheer,
No
Pilot-Hand cou'd ever Worthier
Steer:
TRUST, the Magnetick
Load star of his Soul;
And FAITH, and ZEAL, his
Needles to the
Pole.
The Studied
World was his Long
Theam, and All
The
Politick Movements of the Mighty
Ball:
[Page 5]Yes, the
Old World He had Fathom'd o're and o're;
Nay, had there been yet
Ʋnknown Globes t' explore,
To give that
Head, that
Reach, those
Depths, their Due,
He had stood a Fair
Columbus, for the
New.
In SENATES, There, with all his
Brightest Beams,
Not
Michael, to th' Embattl'd
Seraphims,
A Mightier
Leading CHIEF: Oraculous
Sense!
Victorious
Right! Amazing
Eloquence!
All from that Clearest
Organ sweetly Sung:
From that bold ENGLISH
CICERO's Silver Tongue,
VVell might Great TRUTH, and Genuine
Justice flow;
For
He Lookt
Ʋpward, when
He Talkt
Below:
Up to
ASTRAEA, Heav'ns translated
Pride,
Her Righteous
Ballance his Great
Standard Guide.
In Redress'd
Wrongs, and Succour'd
Rights APPEAL,
No Hand, in the
Judiciary Scale,
More VVeigh'd and Pois'd, than
HALLIFAX alone;
Ev'n
Half the Great
Tribunal, was his Own.
[Page 6]But, in that more Exalted
Patriot-Cause,
The Moulding of those
Stamps Imperial, LAWS;
Then, when the whole
Divinity of
Pow'r,
In her
Collective Strength, that Lab'ring Hour,
In her All-wise Consulting
Providence,
Sits, some New Fair
Creations to Commence;
In that
High VVork, for the Great
FIAT Fixt,
No Hand like
His, the Sovereign ELEMENTS Mixt.
This Fam'd GAMALIEL in the Great
State-Schools,
Thus by unerring PRUDENCE Sacred Rules,
No wonder, on that
Card'nal Hinge He mov'd;
In
Pow'r-Craft Skill'd, that Bold
Arts-Master prov'd:
The Great
Performing Part He had Study'd thro',
And no less Learnt the Greater
Duty too.
The
Publick Spirit, and the
Active Soul,
More Lively
VVarmth, than e're
Prometheus stole,
Those
Champions both of
Earth and
Heav'n's Just Right,
Bound by their Great
Indenture Tripartite,
[Page 7]Their equally divided FAITH must bring,
Betwixt their GOD, their
Country, and their
King.
In
Pow'r and
Trust, thro' his whole Life's long Scene,
Never did
Honour wear a Hand more
Clean:
He from the
Israel Prophet's Copy drew;
The Suppliant
Naaman for his Grace might sue.
Distress, 'tis true, his Succour ne'r cou'd lack —
But then her
Laded Chariots must go Back.
No
Syrian Bribe was on his Shoulders worn;
That
Tainted Robe such TRUTH and VIRTUE scorn.
Thus, like the
Eden Pair, Why is
Truth drawn
A
Naked Beauty, in Transparent Lawn?
Yes, 'till her
Innocence, for Imp'ious
Gold,
That Tempting, False
Hesperian Apple, Sold;
'Tis from that
Fall, Original
Blushes came;
'Twas
Then She wanted
Fig-Leaves for her Shame.
A
Bribe! That most loath'd
Thought! Ev'n his whole
Roof,
His humblest
Menials, that Temptation-Proof,
[Page 8](So Fair their Leading LORD's
Example stands)
Oblig'd with Frank
Full Hearts, but
Empty Hands.
His
Favours in that
Generous Current run,
As
Providence vouchsafes Her
Rain and
Sun.
His
Favours Cheaper ev'n than
Heav'n's confer'd:
For, though, like
Heav'n, th' Imploring
Pray'r He heard;
Yet no
Thanksgiving Offerings Return'd:
To His Kind GRACE, no
Gumms nor
Incense burn'd.
Ay, and 'twas Nobly Brave! What can more high,
Than an
Ʋnmercinary Greatness fly?
If ought his
Obligations must Defray,
He rather chose that
Heav'n, than
Man should Pay:
Yes, with a Fair
Ambition, Just
Disdain,
Scorn'd less than
JOVE, his
Golden Show'rs shou'd Rain.
And well so High, that
Fair Ambition tow'r'd;
For
HALLIFAX so
Scorn'd, and
JOVE so
Show'r'd:
Whil'st that vast
Affluence Warm'd his
Fruitful Soyl,
'Till his
Rich Glebe, and
Loaded Harvest Pile,
With that
Increase, that
Milky Canaan flow'd:
Prosperity thus Reap'd, where
Virtue Sow'd.
NATURE & FORTUNE,
Here, both
Rivals join'd,
Which to their darling
HALLIFAX, more Kind,
Should heap the Ampler
Mass: Nature her more
Refin'd, and
Fortune in her
Courser Oar.
The
World but Smil'd, where
Heav'n had Smil'd before.
Great Blessings, when by
Greater MERIT shar'd,
(Not Providence's
Gift, but her
Reward,)
Are all
Heav'n's Fairest
Blazon, Noblest
Pride;
Th'
Eternal DISPENSATION
Justify'd.
The
Righteous Distribution ought no less:
So Great 'tis to
Deserve, and then
Possess.
Nor in Proud
Courts, nor
States alone, that Great
Dictator; Ev'n in the DESPOTIC
Seat,
In His own narrower
Domestic Sway,
His
Houshold Sweet
Penates deckt so Gay;
To VICE, like
Hannibal to
Rome, that sworn
Eternal
Foe; and VIRTUE's
Champion born:
To his own
Filial Nursery, so Kind
A FATHER, with those
Leading Lights, He shin'd:
The Early
Phosphor to their
Morning Dawn:
So Fam'd his equally
Paternal Care,
T' Instruct the
Great, and to Adorn the
His Advice to a Daughter.
Fair.Thus BEAUTY's
Toilet spread so all Divine,
Her
Cabinet Jems so Furnisht from That MINE;
The
Virgin, and the
Bridal Coronet,
Were, by Kind
HALLIFAX, so richly Set;
VIRTUE and INNOCENCE at that full View,
As ev'n th' Original
Eden Lanschape drew:
All her whole
Hierarchy of
Graces; not
One least Enamell'd
Heav'nly Spark forgot;
Each
Star in the whole
Feminine Renown,
From
Cassiopoea's CHAIR, to
Ariadne's CROWN.
In the Rich
Furniture of that Fair MIND,
Those dazling
Intellectual Graces shin'd,
To draw the
Love and
Homage of Mankind;
Nothing cou'd more than his firm FRIENDSHIP
Charm:
Cheerful, as
Bridal-Songs; as
South-Suns,
Warm;
The Solemn Honour of his
Plighted Hand,
He stood a more than Second
Pylades;
Ʋnshaken, as
Immutable DECREES.
But, whilst these vast
Perfections I Recount,
The
Heights to which those Soaring
Glories mount:
My
Muse thus rapt into that
Cheerful Sphear;
Is This her
Wailing Dirge? her
Funeral Tear?
For his
Sad DEATH, to Draw his
Glorious LIFE!
Paint
Lights for
Shades, and
Ecstacies for
Grief!
Are These the
Melancholy Rites She brings,
Fit
Ayrs to Tune the
Mournful Theme She sings!
Yes, the
True Mourner's in th'
Historian Play'd:
What's Present
Grief, but Past
Delight Display'd?
Counting what once was
Ours, we need no more:
To Sum th'
Enjoyment, does the
Loss Deplore.
Besides, What's all our Sable
Cavalcade,
To the Great DEAD, our Darkest
Funeral Shade?
Her Glorious
Amulet but
Cheaply Set:
She finds the
Diamond, and
We the
Jet.
When
Learning, Wisdom, Eloquence, Expire,
And the
Great SOULS, (Sparks of
Celestial Fire)
Back to Their
Elemental Sourse Retire:
To such
Rich DUST, in vain we
Pyramids Rear;
For
Mausoloeum's are but
Pageants there.
What's a poor Short-liv'd Pile of
Crumbling Earth,
A
Mould'ring Tomb, t'
Apollinary WORTH?
Worth, that so far from such a
Narrow Bound,
Spreads a
Large Field! Moves th'
Ʋniversal Round!
Fills every
Tongue! Thus, what no
Ʋrn contains,
The
World's the
Casket to those
Great REMAINS.
Nor let
Poetick Vanity Rehearse
Her
Boasted Dreams, Her
Miracles of VERSE:
Think, in some poor
Recorded EPITAPH,
That Shallow Page of
Brass, or
Marble Leaf;
[Page 13]Or, in some more
Voluminous Folio Pile,
A
Davideis, or
Arthur's Sweating Toil,
Some Sacred WORTHY's
Deathless Fame t' Enstal;
Rais'd by her
Lyres, like the Old
Theban Wall.
No; when
Great NAMES ne'r Dye; That
Work alone,
Is all a Fair
Creation of Their
Own.
True GLORY Shines by her
Own Lighted
Beam:
'Tis not the
Muse's
Song, but
Muse's THEAM.
When in Great
HALLIFAX, WIT's
Pantheon fell,
And
Death now husht that Silenc'd ORACLE▪
From Fair
Eliza's Hallow'd
Westminster-School.
Helicon-Walls,Methinks, I hear a Fatal
Summon calls:
When, lo! the
Delphick
Dr. Busby,
who Dy'd the same Day.
SEER, that
Reverend BardOf Sacred
Literature's rich
Fount, prepar'd
Th' Expiring
HALLIFAX, in
Death to wait.—
No less Attendant on his
Funeral State,
Fate to that ever
Honour'd HEAD cou'd owe:
LEARNING it self must shake, at such a
Blow.
But, tho' with all this
Mine of
Learning stor'd;
He
Liv'd, and
Dy'd, no Niggard of that
Hoard:
Witness His own
Long Pious
Founded
His Free School Foundations.
Piles,Where
Nurtur'd ARTS, by His
Auspicious Smiles,
Tune their
Young Voices to the
Muse's Song,
Nerv'd by his HAND to
Books, and
Virtue, strong.
Thus, as th' Old
Israel Patriarch, to his once
Illustrious
Twelve, HE to His
Hundred Sons,
His
Fruitful CHARITY's Adopted
Race,
(With all his Tenderest
Diffusive Grace,)
Doals, with a True
Paternal Glory crown'd,
His
Living and His
Dying Blessings round.
Yes, from that
Hand, this
Scatter'd Bread must fall:
He Furnishes those
Numerous Pencils, all
To
Copy from
His Great
Original:
Resolv'd, if possible, Resolv'd t'
Inspire,
To this
Young Nursery, His
Cherisht Choire,
His own Rich
Soul, their
Transmigrated Fire.
But, why (if 'tis not a too
Bold Offence,
To dare
Expostu'late with OMNIPOTENCE,)
Why should Prodigious
Worth, from th'
Orb it warm'd,
Snatch'd from the
Soyl it cherisht,
Eyes it charm'd,
From its
Deserted Charge, unkindly Fly,
Quit th'
Earth it Blest, Impoverish
Worlds, and Dye?
No, the Kind
Heav'ns, in Mercy, to Rebate
That
Mighty Loss, the too keen
Edge of
Fate,
Have circled
Virtue in a
Fence so High,
As stands so Safe, it knows not how to Die;
But Founds its own Proud
Immortality.
For, as some Lofty
Cedar, long had stood
The
Land-mark of the
Plain, and
Glory of the
Wood;
Till the Dread
Voice of
Fate, Heav'n's Angry
Blast,
The
Bolt of the Destroying
Thunder cast,
All the tall PRIDE lies
Fal'n.—Yet still some
Shoot,
Some tender
Scyen from the
Sacred ROOT,
By' its
Nutrimental PARENT-
Succours fed
Springs, Growes, Spreads, Flourishes; till th' Uprear'd
Head
A Second
Pearch for the Fair
Bird of
JOVE.
So may Great
HALLIFAX Himself Survive;
Thus
Fall, and thus His
Deathless Virtues
Live.
LIVE in His
Fair SUCCESSION, ever Blest;
Whil'st
Honour Builds its own
Rich PHAENIX Nest.
FINIS.