TEARES ON THE DEATH OF MOELIADES.
The third Edition.
EDINBVRGH Printed by Andro Hart. 1614
To the Author.
IN Wanes of
Woe thy Sighes my Soule doe tosse,
And doe burst vp the Conduits of my Teares,
Whose ranckling Wound no smoothing Baume long beares,
But freshly bleedes when Ought vpbraides my Losse.
Then thou so sweetly
Sorrow makes to sing,
And troubled Passions dost so well accord,
That more Delight Thy
Anguish doth afford,
Then Others
Ioyes can Satisfaction bring.
What sacred Wits (when rauish'd) doe affect,
To force Affections, Metamorphose Minds,
Whilst numbrous Power the Soule in secret binds,
Thou hast perform'd, transforming in Effect.
For neuer Plaints did greater Pittie moue,
The best Applause that can such Notes approue.
S
r. W. ALEXANDER.
TEARES ON THE DEATH of MOELIADES.
O Heauens! then is it true that Thou art gone,
And left this woefull
Ile her Losse to mone,
Moeliades, bright
Day-starre of the
West,
A
Comet blazing Terrour to the
East:
And neither that thy
Spirit so heauenly wise
Nor
Bodie (though of
Earth) more pure then
Skies,
Nor royall
Stemme, nor thy sweet tender
Age,
Of cruell
Destinies could quensh the
Rage?
O fading
Hopes! O short-while-lasting
Ioy,
Of Earth-borne man, that one
Houre can destroy!
Then euen of
Vertues Spoyles
Death Trophees reares,
As if he gloried most in many Teares.
Forc'd by hard
Fates, doe
Heauens neglect our Cryes?
Are
Starres set only to act
Tragedies?
And let them doe their
Worst since thou art gone,
Raise whom they list to Thrones, enthron'd dethrone,
Staine Princely
Bowres with Blood, and euen to
Gange,
In
Cypresse sad, glad
Hymens Torches change.
Ah thou hast left to liue, and in the Time,
When scarse thou blossom'd in thy pleasant Prime.
So falls by Northern Blast a virgin
Rose,
At halfe that doth her bashfull Bosome close:
So a sweet
Flourish languishing decayes,
That late did blush when kist by
Phoebus Rayes.
So
Phoebus mounting the
Meridians hight,
Choak't by pale
Phoebe, faints vnto our Sight,
Astonish'd
Nature sullen stands to see,
The
Life of all this
All, so chang'd to be,
In gloomie Gownes the
Starres about deplore,
The
Sea with murmuring Mountaines beates the Shore,
Blacke
Darkenesse reeles o're all, in thousand Showres
The weeping
Aire, on
Earth her sorrow povres,
That in a Palsey, quakes to see so soone
Her
Louer set, and
Night burst forth ere
Noone.
If
Heauen (alas) ordain'd thee yong to die,
Why was't not where thou mightst thy
Valour trie?
And to the wondring
World at least set forth
Some litle Sparke of thy exspected
Worth?
Moeliades, O that by
Isters Streames,
Mong sounding Trumpets, fierie twinkling Gleames
Of warme vermilion Swords, and Cannons Roare,
Balls thicke as Raine pour'd by the
Caspian Shore,
Mong broken Speares, mong ringing Helmes & Shields,
Huge heapes of slaughtred Bodies long the Fields,
In
Turkish blood made red like
Marses Starre,
Thou ended had thy Life, and Christian Warre:
Or as braue
Burbon thou had made old
Rome,
Queene of the World, thy Triumph, and thy Tombe.
So
Heauens fair Face to Th'vnborne
World which reeds,
A Booke had beene of thy illustrous Deeds.
So to their Nephewes aged Syres had tolde
The high Exploits perform'd by thee of olde;
Townes raz'd, and rais'd, victorious, vanquish'd Bands,
Fierce Tyrants flying, foyl'd, kill'd by thy Hands.
And in deare
Arras, Virgins faire had wrought
The Bayes and Trophees to thy
Countrie brought:
While some New
Homer imping Wings to
Fame,
Deafe
Nilus dwellers had made heare thy Name.
That thou did not attaine these
Honours Spheares,
Through want of
Worth it was not, but of
Yeares.
A Youth more braue, pale
Troy with trembling Walls
Did neuer soe, nor
She whose
Name appalls
Both
Titans golden
Bowres, in bloody Fights,
Mustring on
Marses Field, such
Marse like Knights.
The
Heauens had brought thee to the highest Hight,
Of Wit and Courage, shewing all their Might
When they thee fram'd.
Ay me that what is braue
On
Earth, they as their owne so soone should craue.
Moeliades sweet courtly
Nymphes deplore,
From
Thule, to
Hydaspes pearlie Shore.
When
Forth thy Nurse,
Forth where thou first did passe
Thy tender Dayes (who smylde oft on her Glasse,
To see thee gaze)
Meandring with her Streames,
Heard thou had left this
Round, from
Phoebus Beames
She sought to slie, but forced to returne
By
Neighbour Brookes, She gaue her selfe to mourne:
And as She rush't her
Cyclades among.
She seem'd to plaine, that
Heauen had done her wrong.
With a hoarse plaint,
Cleyd down her steeppie rockes,
And
Tweid through her greene Mountaines clad with flocks,
Did wound the
Ocean murmuring thy death,
The
Ocean that roard about the
Earth,
And to the
Mauritanian Atlas tolde,
Who shrunke through griefe, and down his white haires rold
Huge Streames of teares, which changed were in Floods
Wherewith he drown'd the neighbour Plains & Woods.
The lesser
Brookes as they did bubling goe,
Did keepe a
Consort vnto publicke
Woe.
The Shepheards left their Flocks with downe-cast Eyes,
Sdaining to looke vp to the angrie
Skies:
Some brake their Pipes, and some in sweet-sad Layes,
Made senselesse things amazed at thy Praise.
His Reed
Alexis hang vpon a
Tree,
And with his Teares made
Doven great to be.
Moeliades sweet courtly
Nymphes deplore
From
Thule, to
Hydaspes pearelie Shore.
Chast
Maides which haunt faire
Aganippe Well,
And you in
Tempes sacred
Shade who dwell,
Let fall your Harpes, cease Tunes of Ioy to sing,
Discheueled make all
Parnassus ring
With
Antheames sad, thy Musicke
Phoebus turne
In dolefull plaints, whilst
Ioy it selfe doth mourne.
Dead is thy
Darling who decor'd thy Bayes,
Who oft was wont to cherish thy sweet Layes,
And to a
Trumpet raise thy amorous
Stile,
That floting
Delos enuied might this
Ile.
You
Acidalian Archers breake your Bowes,
Your Brādons quench, with teares blot
Beauties Snowes,
And bid your weeping
Mother yet againe
A second
Adons death, nay
Marses plaine.
His
Eyes once were your
Darts, nay euen his
Name,
Where euer heard, did euery
Heart inflame.
Tagus did court his
Loue, with
Golden Streames,
Rhein with his
Townes, faire
Seine with
all she claimes.
But
ah (poore I ouers)
Death them did betray,
And not suspected made their
Hopes his
Prey!
Tagus bewailes his
Losse, with
Golden Streames,
Rhein with his
Townes, faire
Scine with
all She claimes.
Moeliades sweet courtly
Nymphes deplore,
From
Thule, to
Hydaspes pearlie Shore.
Eye-pleasing
Meads whose painted
Plaine forth brings,
White, golden, azure Flowres, which once were Kings,
In mourning
Blacke, their
shyning Colours Dye,
Bow down their Heads, whiles sighing
Zephyrs flye.
Queene of the Fields, whose Blush, maks blush the
Morne
Sweet
Rose, a Princes Death in
Purple mourne.
O
Hyacinthes for ay, your
AI keepe still,
Nay, with moe markes of
Woe your Leaues now fill.
And you O
Flowre of
Helens teares that's borne,
Into these liquid
Pearles againe you turne.
Your greene Lockes
Forrests cut, in weeping
Mirres,
The deadly
Cypresse, and Inke-dropping
Firres,
Your
Palmes and
Mirtles change; from Shadowes darke
Wing'd
Syrens waile, and you sad
Echoes marke
The lamentable Accents of their Mone,
And plaine that braue
Moeliades is gone.
Stay
Skye thy turning Course, and now become
A stately
Arche, vnto the
Earth his Tombe:
Ouer which ay the watrie
Iris keepe,
And sad
Electras Sisters which still weepe,
Moeliades sweet courtly
Nymphes deplore,
From
Thule, to
Hydaspes pearlie Shore.
Deare
Ghost forgiue these our vntimely Teares,
By which our louing Mind, though weake appeares
Our Losse not Thine (when we complaine) we weepe,
For Thee the glistring Walls of
Heauen doe keepe,
Beyond the
Planets Wheeles, boue highest Source
Of Spheares, that turnes the lower in his Course.
Where
Sunne doth neuer set, nor vgly
Night
Euer appeares in mourning Garments dight:
Where
Borcas stormie Trumpet doth not sound,
Nor Cloudes in Lightnings bursting, Minds astound.
From
Cares cold Climates farre, and hote
Desire,
Where
Time's exild, and
Ages ne're expire:
Mong purest Spirits enuironed with Beames,
Thou thinks all things below, t'haue bene but Dreames;
And ioyes to looke downe to the azur'd Barres
Of
Heauen, powdred with Troupes of streaming
Starres:
And in their turning
Temples to behold,
In siluer Robe the
Moone, the
Sunne in Golde,
Like yong Eye-speaking
Louers in a Dance,
With Majestie by Turnes retire, aduance.
Thou wonders
Earth to see hang like a Ball,
Clos'd in the ghaistly
Cloyster of this
All:
And that poore
Men should proue so madly fond,
To tosse themselues for a small Foot of Ground.
Nay, that they euen dare braue the
Powers aboue,
From this base
Stage of Change, that cannot moue.
All worldly Pompe, and Pride thou seest arise
Like Smoake that's scattred in the emptie Skies.
Other
Hills and
Forrests other sumptuous
Towres,
Amaz'd thou finds excelling our poore Bowres,
Courts voyde of Flatterie, of Malice
Mindes,
Pleasure which lasts, not such as
Reason blinds.
More sweeter Songs thou heares and Carrolings,
Whilst
Heauens do dance, and
Quire of
Angells sings,
Then moldie
Mindes could faine, euen our
Annoy
(If it approach that Place) is chang'd in Ioy.
Rest blessed
Spirit, rest saciat with the Sight
Of Him whose Beames (though dazeling) do delight,
Life of all liues,
Cause of each other cause,
The
Spheare and
Center where the
Mind doth pause:
Narcyssus of himselfe, himselfe the
Well,
Louer, and
Beautie that doth all excell.
Rest happie
Ghost, and wonder in that
Glasse,
Where seene is all that
shall he, is, or
was,
While
shall be, is, or
was, doe passe away,
And nothing be, but an
Eternall Day.
For euer rest, thy Praise
Fame may enroule,
In golden Annales, while about the Pole,
The slow
Boötes turnes, or
Sunne doth ryse
With scarlet Scarfe to cheare the mourning
Skies.
The Virgins to thy Tombe may Garlands beare
Of Flowres, and with each Flowre let fall a Teare.
Moeliades sweet courtly
Nymphes deplore
From
Thule to
Hydaspes pearlie Shore.
FINIS.
WILLIAM DRVMMOND.
OF JET,
Or
PORPHYRIE,
Or that white Stone
PAROS affoordes alone,
Or these in
AZVRE dye,
Which seem to scorne the
SKYE;
Here
Memphis Wonders doe not set,
Nor
ARTEMISIA'S huge Frame,
That keepes so long her Louers Name:
Make no great marble
Atlas tremble with Gold
To please a Ʋulgar EYE that doth beholde.
The Muses,
Phoebus, Loue, haue raised of their teares
A Crystal Tomb to Him wherethrough his worth appears.
STay
Passenger, see where enclosed lyes,
The
Paragon of Princes, fairest
Frame,
Time, Nature, Place, could show to mortal
Eyes
In
Worth, Wit, Vertue, Miracle to
Fame:
At lest that Part the
Earth of him could clame,
This
Marble holds
(hard like the Destinies)
For as to his braue
Spirit, and glorious
Name,
The One the
World, the other fills the
Skies.
Th'immortall
Amaranthus, princely
Rose,
Sad
Violet, and that
sweet Flowre that beares,
In SANGVINE SPOTS the Tenor of our Woes,
Spred on this
Stone, & wash it with thy Teares,
Then go and tell from
Gades vnto
Inde,
Thou saw where
Earths Perfections were confinde.
Sonnet.
APassing
Glance, a
Lightning long the Skies
That vsh'ring Thunder dies straight to our Sight,
A
Sparke, of Contraries which doth arise,
Then's drown'd in the huge Depthes of
Day and
Night:
Is this Small-small cald
Life, held in such Price,
Of blinded
Wights, who ne're judge Ought aright.
Of
Parthian Shaft so swift is not the
Flight,
As
Life, that wastes it selfe, and liuing dies.
Ah, what is humane
Greatnesse, Valour N
[...]
What fading
Beautie, Riches, Honour,
[...]
To what doth serve in
golden Thrones to sit
Thrall
Earths vaste pound triumphall
Arches raise?
That all's a
Dre
[...]ne learne in this PRINCES Fell,
In whom saue
Death, Nought mortall was at all.
WILLIAM DRVMMOND.
To the Reader.
THE Name which in these Verses is giuen PRINCE HENRIE, is that which he Himselfe in the Challenges of his Martiall Sports, and Mascarads, was wont to vse, MOELIADES Prince of the Isles: which in Anagramme maketh a VVord most worthie of such a Knight, as He was a Knight (if Time had fuffred his Actions answere the Worlds exspectation) onely worthie of such a VVorde, MILES A DRO.