THE PRESBYTERY. A SATYR.
‘Turba gravis paci placidoque inimico quieti.’
AS
Alexanders hastned death did bring
Each of his Captaines to be made a King,
Even so our Bishops ruines did preferre
Unto a Bishopricke each Presbyter;
But the same dangers from their league arise,
As ever did from th'others enmities;
Yet here they differ, th'other did advance
By their owne worth, these by their ignorance;
Th'other were great before, these till their raigne
Did first begin, were scarcely knowne for men;
Th'other were fit to governe, so are these,
As fit as Milk-Maids to weare Harnesses:
Fine soules indeed! curdled of stench and dust,
Borne for to break poore Chambermaids that rust
For want of use, fine motly
Prester-Johns,
Old
Pharises in new Editions;
Young Blew-cap
Iesuites, Religions Dawes,
A
Junto of Reformed
Loyola's;
Good Pulpit-Mountebankes, who with one breath
Can either Quack a Spirituall Cure, or Death;
Antipodes of
Rome, who though their feet
Seeme contrary, yet in one Centre meet;
Spruce Christian
Muftyes, but that
Muftyes be
Continued, these a sever'd quantitie,
Who out of many Beads one Bracelet rise,
And (if they be not hang'd up) make a noyse;
Most holy Gegawes, which make Elders dance,
But you are strucke by
Scotch Musicians;
Rattles of th'Gospel, which so active be,
That deafen all the better Harmonie:
Dodona's Grove, or whatsoever
Knockes
Will say, yo'are nothing else but vocall blockes,
And yet from every trunck we almost see,
Arise an Evangelicke Mercurie;
Things, which in nothing but their lyes come neere
The nature of the name they see me to beare;
Serious Jack-Puddings of Religion,
The Antimasque of Reformation;
The
Phosphors of new light, those spots that run
(To stop, not cleere the light) amidst the Sun;
Genera Fryars, they (with submission) lye,
That say we'ave rooted out all Popery;
Their Capes preserve it, onely that their hopes,
Aspire unto plurality of Popes:
That which poor
Canterbury nere profest,
Is now made good by every Parish-Priest,
Brave times indeed! 'las whither are we hurl'd?
What universall madnesse shakes the world?
What is all space so empty, earth must come,
And mount aloft to fill a
Vacuum?
Are our eares charm'd, that now all sounds displease,
But a
Scotch Bag-pipe? 'las what dayes are these!
Wolsey might be a Deacon, and here con
A farther lesson of Ambition:
Nay,
Machiavel, if he were now alive,
Would he but change Religion, might thrive;
Religion! 'las it is a crazie frame,
And somewhat like the Synod, onely name,
Which like the great
Mogores renowned sway,
The most are pleas'd to mention, none obey,
Which like some glorious City ruined long,
Do's onely live in Paper and the Tongue.
Religion, which a blind man well might call
Immense, but one that's deafe, not finde at all,
That which the world doth generally disguise,
That stamp by which all knavery currant is;
Art thou thy selfe, great Nymph? or else doe some
Deflowre thee, nay force thee away from home,
And make thee doe their drudgery? O spleen,
Couldst thou but rise as some lungs stretch'd ha been,
Thou mightst boil out more hot, then ere one brother
Could to pronounce damnation on another.
Erected snakes, could but my anger now
So farre degenerate as stoope to you,
How could I thrash you and abuse you worse,
Then you your selves can a rich Poet curse,
Worse then you censure Usurers, when you look
On the lanke reckonings of an
Easter Booke:
Alas, how could I daube you, worse then ere
Hicks did his
English Concordance besmeare;
Or a hot Monke could with mouth-engines work
Strange executions against the Turke?
But Ile be still, a County Maior can soon
Quaffe all these vapours of Religion;
What? quaffe them say you; yes, they cannot be
Surcharg'd with too much Schoole-Divinitie;
They doe not feed on Fathers, them they hate,
Both as a hard an undigested meat;
Nay, those that know them, intimately say,
They cannot Conjure by the
Kabbala;
Nay, most oth' Patriarkes would be to seek,
To tell their new confession in Greek;
But they who want all weapons, will not strike,
But each prove a Rhetoricall
Vandike,
Worse then the running o'th'raines, which sence
Tells onely evill in the consequence;
But this will be when th'King their Sermons heares,
When
Lesly reads, and
Pryn regains his eares,
When
Edwards, that destroying
Amurath,
His Inquisitionary Swords shall sheath
That puny
Hercules, who fiercely sweats,
To slay the Monsters he himselfe begets;
The
English Cadmus, whose most conquering pen
Sowes Dragons teeth to raise up armed men,
Who like the Maid to the great Victor sent,
Makes poyson now become his nourishment,
Who lest the growing Sectaries should not live,
Beats them like Walnut Trees to make them thrive,
That Church
Lycurgus, who to stop the sinnes
Of waste and drunkennesse, cut down the
Vines,
That venerable sonne of fury, that
Makes modesty quite excommunicate,
Which in the Classick Ordinance must come in,
As numbred for the six and thirtieth sinne,
By him you know the Brotherhood, this one
In time may make a Brotherhood alone:
But they are Planets that at distance run,
And
Vines lookes like the picture of the Sun.
FINIS.
Printed in the Yeare, 16 [...]