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A Chronycle with a Genealogie declaryng that the Brittons and Welshemen are lineallye dyscended from Brute. Newly and very wittely compyled in Meter. |
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| To the hyghe and moste excellente Prince Edwarde the sixte, Kynge of Englande, Fraunce and Irelande, and in yearthe the supreme heade of the Churche of Englande and Irelande: Arthur_Kelton wyssheth continuall peace, helthe of bodye, and prosperous successe. yearthe: =earth | |||
| AS the worthy, prudent Secretary | |||
| In those daies, named Danucius | |||
| Wrote volumes large, of famous memory, | |||
| Onely to prefer, and make glorious | |||
| 5 | The name of his Lord, called Aurelius | ||
| Thinkyng it sinne, rebuke and shame | |||
| Out of his boke, to seclude his name. | |||
| ¶ Eucolpius, euen in like case | |||
| Preferred, Alexander_Seuerus | |||
| 10 | Whiche in his tyme, so worthy was | ||
| The Romain Cato, with Titus_Liuius | |||
| Aduaunced the name, of Ceasar Iulius | |||
| Thus one after other, their time did apply | |||
| To that entent, good fame shuld not dy. | |||
| 15 | ¶Euen so most mighty, and gracius prince | ||
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| Under support of your benigne grace, | |||
| I mindyng sleuth, vtterly to conuince | |||
| As most vnworthy, folowyng their trace | |||
| Your redoubted father, in euery lyke case | |||
| 20 | For to aduaunce, my wittes will frame | ||
| With the most worthiest, to set out his name | |||
| ¶After shall intreate, of his magnificence | |||
| His lawes, statutes, his Ciuil ordinaunce | |||
| His mighty powre, his wonderfull prudence | |||
| 25 | His iust iudgementes, his rightfull gouernance | ||
| Namely to speake of very true substance | |||
| His graces lawes, most godly deuised | |||
| Lately into Wales, to vs there commised | |||
| ¶With a certayne true comparison | |||
| 30 | Whiche was most worthiest, of Antiquitie | ||
| The Romains, with their foundacion | |||
| Ether the Brutes, with their posteritie Ether: =either | |||
| And of their Cities, the soueraigntie | |||
| Which of them twayne, shuld other surmount | |||
| 35 | London or Rome, as after shall recount. | ||
| ¶With an extract, or a Genealogy | |||
| Conueiyng his, and your most noble discent | |||
| As auncient Aucthors, putteth in memory | |||
| From the fyrst age, to this time present | |||
| 40 | Accordyng to their myndes, and true iudgement | ||
| Who wrote the same, in time long paste | |||
| To that intent, it shuld indure and last. | |||
| ¶Consideryng the high magnificence | |||
| Of your father, most clerely did shyne | |||
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| 45 | Passing al other, in princely excellence | ||
| None to be compared before his tyme | |||
| Al men perceiue, your nature doth inclyne | |||
| To amplify the same, more out at large | |||
| Surmounting the steps of your fathers stage | |||
| 50 | ¶In whom consisteth, our confidence | ||
| Our hope, our trust, our consolacion | |||
| Wherin nature, sheweth an euidence | |||
| Accordyng to our expectacion | |||
| To folowe the same, by inclinacion | |||
| 55 | With your mother, most gracious Quene | ||
| Whose vertue plaine in your face is sene. | |||
| ¶Thus God of his deuine myght | |||
| Hath indued, your most noble maiestie | |||
| As appeareth to euery mannes syght | |||
| 60 | Whose incomperable dexteritie | ||
| In learnyng, hauyng a soueraigntie | |||
| Passyng all other, by reporte of name | |||
| Consideryng your age, this is the fame. | |||
| ¶The procedynges, of your noble age | |||
| 65 | Doth vs encourage, your subiectes trewe | ||
| Well perceauyng, your verteous courage | |||
| Most godly stories, for to insewe | |||
| Which doth insence: my hert doth renewe | |||
| To dedicate this vnworthy litell boke | |||
| 70 | Unto your highnes, therevpon to loke. | ||
| ¶Whiche was begon, in your fathers time | |||
| Unto whose highnes, I minded the same | |||
| But death alas, his life did vptwyne | |||
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| Before I coulde my purpose well frame | |||
| 75 | Preuenting al thinges, but his worldly fame | ||
| Whiche may not passe, wither, nor yet decaie | |||
| His famous report, indure shal alway. | |||
| ¶O ye infernal systers of the darcke nighte | |||
| With Cerberus in Hel, as Poetes doth fain | |||
| 80 | Of all nobilitie, the quenchers of lighte | ||
| Whose crueltie, no wight can restrayne | |||
| Ye cut the thred, ye parte in twayne | |||
| The life of man, without respecte | |||
| The poore ye spare, the noble reiecte. | |||
| 85 | ¶Cursed be ye, ye doughters of Hell | ||
| Whiche are in number, counted but three | |||
| Cloto, Lachesis, and Atropos the fell | |||
| Ye might haue spared, your crueltie | |||
| A littel tyme, of our felicite | |||
| 90 | Untill our king, most noble of corage | ||
| Had proceded into moo yeares of age. | |||
| ¶What I haue written in sentence playne | |||
| In laude or prayse, of your father dere | |||
| Unto your highnes, let it remayne | |||
| 95 | As though it did, to your grace appere | ||
| Written of your-selfe, as matter clere | |||
| With no lesse zeale, obedience and loue | |||
| Then duetie may obserue, increase and moue | |||
| ¶I do confesse, and this is trewe | |||
| 100 | If Cato the sage, or prudent Tully | ||
| With their fyled tonges, and sentence newe | |||
| Were here again his grace to magnify | |||
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| As they dyd the Romains glorify | |||
| Yet shulde they not, as in this case | |||
| 105 | Worthely geue prayse, vnto his grace | ||
| ¶All thynges remembred as of my parte | |||
| Most humbly desireth, your noble grace | |||
| With constant wyll, and faithfull heart | |||
| To pardon my boldenes, foly and trespace | |||
| 110 | Consideryng alway, as in this case | ||
| That euery trewe heart, inforced is | |||
| To rendre his loue, duetie and seruice. | |||
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The ende of the preface. |
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The Chronicle of the Brutes. |
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| IN the Golden tyme when al thynges florished | |||
| As it were, by deuyne prouidence | |||
| And that nature in manne was stablished. | |||
| Hauyng reason, wisdome and science | |||
| 5 | By gifte of the high magnifycence | ||
| To vnderstand, determine and knowe | |||
| The Heauens aboue, and the earth alowe. | |||
| ¶Then the wyse, sage and auncient | |||
| By great industry and diligent laboure | |||
| 10 | By sobre respecte and great aduisement | ||
| Made lawes, statutes, with other good order | |||
| Man to stablyshe, onely by fauoure | |||
| Them to conducte, sauely to bryng | |||
| Unto knowledge, wisdome and learnyng. | |||
| 15 | ¶Thus by politike moderacion | ||
| Without rigoure, or cruel ordinaunce | |||
| Prynces notable, of intencion | |||
| Hauyng poure and mightye gouernaunce | |||
| Established lawes, by discrete purueyaunce | |||
| 20 | Onely theyr subiectes, to keepe in awe | ||
| Dreadyng God, and fearyng his lawe. | |||
| Such Princes, kinges and famous Emperors | |||
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| Of duetie ought to be magnified | |||
| Not onely as worthy Conqueroures | |||
| 25 | But as men with grace nutrified | ||
| Whose actes are worthy to be specified | |||
| Enrolled vp with golde pearle and stone | |||
| Registred in a boke, them-selfes alone. | |||
| ¶Like as the Romains wyse and circumspect | |||
| 30 | In tyme long past, their fame to aduaunce | ||
| All notable thynges, as in effecte | |||
| Made by statutes, or Ciuill ordynance | |||
| Registered was, for a remembraunce | |||
| Their Senate onely to magnify | |||
| 35 | By famus report, as thei thought them worthy. | ||
| ¶The Romaines most commended Ceasar | |||
| The Troians Hector the famous knyghte | |||
| The Percians, great Alexander | |||
| The Grekes Achilles, for manhode and myghte | |||
| 40 | The Carthagiens, to maintain their righte | ||
| Affirmyng Hanniball, their lodesterre | |||
| Thus euery-one, his tyme dyd preferre. | |||
| ¶And we Arthur most worthyest of all | |||
| Ought to remember, in our fantasy | |||
| 45 | Passyng all other, in deedes marciall | ||
| Like Mars him-selfe, shinyng in glory | |||
| In his triumphes, conquest and victory | |||
| As the story of him dothe recounte | |||
| All other kinges in his time dyd surmount. | |||
| 50 | AS that tyme is past, and worne out | ||
| This tyme present, we must put in vre | |||
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| That in time to come, there be no doute | |||
| But that this tyme, that time may assure | |||
| For time once past, is without recure | |||
| 55 | Wherfore this tyme, let vs intende | ||
| The time to come, may this time commende. | |||
| ¶Let the Romains, adua[u]nce their Ceasar | |||
| The Troian Hector, their famous knyght | |||
| The Percian their great Alexander | |||
| 60 | The Greke Achilles, for strength and myght | ||
| The Carthagiens, to maintain their ryghte | |||
| Onely preferryng, their Hannyball | |||
| Yet haue we one, passyng them all. | |||
| ¶Whiche we ought of duety and reuerence | |||
| 65 | Most humbly, his grace to magnify | ||
| Salute in heart, worde and sentence | |||
| Somwhat of hym to exemplify | |||
| I meane our kyng, most famous Henry | |||
| Our naturall Lord, our supreme hed | |||
| 70 | Most renoumed, and most to be dred. | ||
| ¶Lyke as Cato, the prudent counceler | |||
| Wrote volumes large, of famous report | |||
| Prynces notable, onely to preferre | |||
| Among the Romaynes, vertue to supporte | |||
| 75 | Whose example, is to our comforte | ||
| Folowyng the same, vice to confounde | |||
| Thus of our dutie, surely are we bounde. | |||
| ¶Wherfore I wyll my pen aduaunce | |||
| Mekely thereto my-selfe incline | |||
| 80 | With most dilygent attendaunce | ||
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| Directyng my style, this present tyme | |||
| In worde and sence, straight as a lyne | |||
| With Rome, Carthage, Thebes and other mo | |||
| As farre as the best, his fame to goo. | |||
| 85 | ¶Lyke as Phebes, in the midday spere | ||
| His radiant beames, moste pure and bryghte | |||
| Illustreth out, bothe freshe and cleare | |||
| Persyng the dewes, by force of might | |||
| Illuminyng all maner of syght Illuminyng] I illuminyng 1547 | |||
| 90 | Comforting frutes, flowers earbes and grasse | ||
| So doth our king, al other kynges passe. | |||
| ¶I wold to Chryst that my edicion | |||
| Accordyng to my iudgement | |||
| Myght take effecte, like my intencion | |||
| 95 | In thynges condyng worthy or equiuolent condyng: =condign | ||
| Unto his grace, this tyme present | |||
| Then wolde I, the truthe declare | |||
| Which am inforced with terms rude and bare | |||
| ¶Yet neuerthelesse, my inwarde desyre | |||
| 100 | Without any more loquacitee | ||
| Greatly I seke, as reason doth requyre | |||
| For to approue, his noble maiestie | |||
| Of all other kinges, to haue the soueraintee | |||
| As sonne and ayre, to lusty dame nature | |||
| 105 | Resemblyng her person shape and fygure | ||
| ¶I dare alledge, as in this case | |||
| That nature sought, tyme oportune | |||
| When she first formed, his noble grace | |||
| Onely by respecte, of gentell Fortune | |||
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| 110 | All other causes, for to contune | ||
| Assured to_gether, by promise bounde | |||
| That in his parson, no faulte were founde. | |||
| ¶Thus hathe nature, by great aduisemente | |||
| With circumspecte deliberacion | |||
| 115 | Full lyke a Goddesse, pure and excellent | ||
| Shewed her powre, and mighty operacion | |||
| Nothyng reseruyng, at his creacion | |||
| Whiche myght his nobilitee aduaunce | |||
| Unto his byrthe she gaue suche attendaunce. | |||
| 120 | ¶With strength, beawtie, and semelynesse | ||
| She hath amplyfyed his courage | |||
| Most renoumed, for gentlenesse | |||
| Therin he hathe so great aduauntage | |||
| Passyng all other, his parentage | |||
| 125 | Thus by report, preferred is his name, | ||
| Intitled in the boke, of worthy fame. | |||
| ¶Gentel[e]st of Gentyles, grace to recure Gentelest] Gentelst 1547 | |||
| Like Alcibyades, that famous knyghte | |||
| Of Athenes prince, their party to assure Alcibiades of Athenes. | |||
| 130 | So is his grace, most gentelest in syghte | ||
| Whose inwarde respecte, iudgyng a_ryghte | |||
| A prynce of nature, that gentle is | |||
| Of faythfull subiectes, can neuer mysse. | |||
| ¶For like as gentlenes, doth playne appere | |||
| 135 | Onely by naturall inclinacion | ||
| In countenaunce, in speache and cheare | |||
| So dothe the loue, and hearty affection | |||
| Exclude all maner of contencion | |||
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| Causeth subiectes, them-selfes to endeuer | |||
| 140 | Where gentlenes is, in loue to perceuer. | ||
| ¶By his gentlenes our wronges ar redressed | |||
| By his gentlenes, our loue made pardurable | |||
| By his gentlenes, the truth out expressed | |||
| Our heartes are made sure, and veritable | |||
| 145 | His gentlenes is so resemblable | ||
| That al thinges to him, he doth accumulate | |||
| Whiche to gentlenes is appropriate. | |||
| ¶So that his grace, passeth all other | |||
| An euident thyng for to declare | |||
| 150 | There reigned, neuer suche another | ||
| His subiectes to kepe, preserue and spare | |||
| Wherfore we may in this compare | |||
| All-most one thyng, as in degree | |||
| His gentlenes, to mercyfull pitie. | |||
| 155 | ¶For that lande dominion or regiment | ||
| That hathe a prince, of gentell nature | |||
| God hathe promised, long stablishment | |||
| In loue together, they shall indure | |||
| Wherfore in this, let vs assure | |||
| 160 | Sith gentlenes commeth of gyft deuine | ||
| Let vs to gentlenes, our heartes incline. | |||
| ¶Thus are we bounde, plainly to expresse | |||
| His gentlenesse, onely to discure | |||
| Conseruyng our wealth, and whole redresse | |||
| 165 | By his grace, lately put in vre | ||
| Of his lawes, nowe are we made sure | |||
| Among the mountaynes hilles and vales | |||
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| Now is it England, somtime called Wales. | |||
| ¶And further in this to reporte | |||
| 170 | Accordyng to his mercifull yousage yousage: =usage | ||
| Our abusions onely to transporte | |||
| Hath deuised with his counsayl sage | |||
| Wales to conducte from all bondage | |||
| Brefely to conclude, this to vnderstand | |||
| 175 | Priuileged we ar, with the lawes of England. | ||
| ¶Like as Minos, that famous kyng | |||
| Somtime raignyng, in the land of Crete Minos king of Crete | |||
| Full renoumed for science and connyng | |||
| Founde out the lawes, most holsome and swete | |||
| 180 | Grounded on reason, with vertue replete | ||
| Ministryng them, as a iudge royall | |||
| Among his subiectes, by deedes equal. | |||
| ¶Prouidyng before, in his aduertence | |||
| None shoulde declyne, as in this case | |||
| 185 | For lacke of knowledge, and experience | ||
| So ready he was, their welthe to purchace | |||
| Thus of his liuyng, and bountifull grace | |||
| Preparyng in tyme, them to aduaunce | |||
| Onely by lawe, and Ciuil ordinaunce. | |||
| 190 | ¶Though he wer a kyng, with scepter and croune | ||
| To execute right, nothing disdained | |||
| For all his fame, his princely renoume | |||
| In iudgement sate, his domes vnfayned | |||
| Loue nor hate, his person constrayned | |||
| 195 | But like the deserte, as then did appere | ||
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| His sentence gaue, with right princely chere. | |||
| ¶ Methamorphosios, there may ye se | |||
| Of Mines the princely gouernaunce | |||
| Also of Scille voyde of all pitie | |||
| 200 | Her father slewe with cruell vengeaunce | ||
| Onely of Minos, to haue acquaintaunce | |||
| And he agayne like a ryghtfull kyng | |||
| Gaue sentence plain, her dede condempning. | |||
| ¶For to affyrme and brefely conclude | |||
| 205 | Our partie in this, fully to sustayne | ||
| Unto Minos with lyke similitude | |||
| Let vs aduaunce, our kyng and souerayne | |||
| In all thynges that dothe appertayne | |||
| Unto Iustice, or good gouernaunce | |||
| 210 | By lawe, reason or Ciuill ordynaunce. | ||
| ¶Was there euer yet, any prince liuyng | |||
| In Chronicle, story, or sentence playne | |||
| His noble grace, in this resemblyng | |||
| O[u]r common-welthe, for to sustayne Our] Or 1547 | |||
| 215 | Or for our sake, vndertoke suche payne | ||
| As dothe his grace, this present tyme | |||
| Us to preserue from damnable cryme. | |||
| ¶Howe far were we, out of oure way | |||
| For lacke of Iustice and good gouernaunce | |||
| 220 | Was there euer any, before this day | ||
| Kyng or prynce, of suche remembraunce | |||
| Us to instructe, by lawe or ordinaunce | |||
| Wherby we myght, our foly redresse | |||
| Till now his grace, the truthe to confesse. | |||
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| 225 | ¶Whiche by study, and diligent laboure | ||
| Most circumspectly, herein aduised | |||
| For to reforme, our olde behauior | |||
| His gracious lawes, to vs hath commised | |||
| To the entent we shulde not be supprised | |||
| 230 | By bondage inforced with crueltee | ||
| From olde customes, set vs at lybertee. | |||
| ¶We must of force, the truthe confesse | |||
| We cannot well, our-selues excuse | |||
| Our deedes playnely beareth witnesse | |||
| 235 | Of our folly and great abuse | ||
| Olde customes had, lothe to refuse | |||
| Surely at the fyrste, howe they began | |||
| Not pleasyng to God, nether yet to man. | |||
| ¶For among al, some customes we had | |||
| 240 | Whiche before God were intollerable | ||
| As I suppose, all men beyng sadde | |||
| Will graunt it, trewe and veritable | |||
| A thyng vniuste falce and flexable | |||
| Though some affirmed their customes sure | |||
| 245 | By Charter Riall, euer to indure. | ||
| ¶Some Lordes no doute had great rialtie | |||
| Conserued by kinges, in times long past | |||
| In Forest and Chace, hauyng libertie | |||
| But not their subiectes, to spoyle and waste | |||
| 250 | By colour or craft, su[c]he meanes to caste suche] suthe 1547 | ||
| Them to kepe in thraldome and bondage | |||
| Where they ought, no dewtie nor seruage. | |||
| ¶Yet some there were, by way of exaction | |||
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| Under pretence, of suche rialtee | |||
| 255 | By craft, and subtill collusion | ||
| Onely to deceiue, the porealtee | |||
| Affirmyng vnder suche libertee | |||
| All men to take, that there shoulde passe | |||
| Out of their way, to fine for their trespasse. | |||
| 260 | ¶A_lacke that suche ingratitude | ||
| In mannes mynd shuld be comprehended | |||
| A poore man, beyng destitude | |||
| Oute of his way, nothyng offended | |||
| The oppression, before entended | |||
| 265 | Compound they must, be it right or wronge | ||
| Or els inforced to some pryson stronge. | |||
| ¶Suche was the custome, without defence | |||
| Playnely to yelde, or money to pay | |||
| Foly it was, to speake of indigence | |||
| 270 | For ready money, wolde then away away] a away 1547 | ||
| (And further) some dothe report and say, | |||
| They must agre, and be at a poynt | |||
| As the Foster wold, or els lose a ioynte. | |||
| ¶Worthy Edippus the famous yong knight | |||
| 275 | Which was so lusty, and freshe of courage [Ed]ippus of [Th]ebes | ||
| So strong, so hardy, so full of myght | |||
| Had neuer so dredefull, a passage | |||
| Nor in the lengthe of all his voyage | |||
| Founde none so monsterus a beast | |||
| 280 | In mountayne, wodde chace or forest. | ||
| ¶Spynx the serpent whiche was so odible | |||
| So monsterus, so fearefull to see | |||
| sig: [b6] | |||
| So fyerse, so cruell, and so terrible | |||
| Deuouryng all-thyng without pitie | |||
| 285 | Was neuer so full of crueltie | ||
| Men for to spoyle, for siluer or golde | |||
| In story founde, that euer was tolde. | |||
| ¶This Edippus with full pure entent | |||
| Goyng towarde Thebes, that famous citie | |||
| 290 | Of aduenture met this cruell Serpent | ||
| Uppon the mountayne, called Phocie | |||
| Of his manfull, Magna[ni]mitee Magnanimitee] Magnamitee 1547 | |||
| There he slewe this monsterous beast | |||
| Settyng the countrey, and Thebes at rest | |||
| 295 | ¶But our Edippus, refuge and Champion | ||
| Our comforte our ioye and heartes solace | |||
| Our noble, most famous of renoune | |||
| Our kyng most worthiest that euer was | |||
| Onely by prudence, hath brought to pas | |||
| 300 | A thousande hath slayne, as in effecte | ||
| Whiche of suche cryme, by force wer detecte. | |||
| Our mountains, our wodes, our chases gret | |||
| From suche exactions, are made full playne | |||
| No rauenous prayes, now can they geate | |||
| 305 | They must of force, their fury restrayne | ||
| They may no longer, suche purpose attayne | |||
| There is no helpe for their refute | |||
| But leaue their custome, and olde pursute. | |||
| ¶There shall no crafte, nor yet colusion | |||
| 310 | No fayned tales, no falce pretence | ||
| No colour, deceipte, or adulacion | |||
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| Be taken nowe for their defence | |||
| Lyke as they are, suche-lyke recompence | |||
| So that the truthe shalbe defended | |||
| 315 | When the vniuste shalbe condempned. | ||
| ¶Hathe not his grace, of his mere goodnes | |||
| Moste pryncely, our causes to renewe | |||
| Brought vs from all wrongfull dures | |||
| Suche abusions, onely to subdew | |||
| 320 | And further all offenders to pursewe | ||
| Hathe stablyshed vs by prudent purueiaunce | |||
| Them to Chastise, for their misgouernaunce. | |||
| ¶ Hercules the strong, and pereles knyghte [He]rcules of [Tr]oie [?] or E[gip]te. | |||
| Of whom the Poetes, so muche dothe faine | |||
| 325 | Had neuer more vertue force or myght | ||
| Then hath our kyng, Lorde and soueraygne | |||
| Yet dyd he wonderfull thinges attayne | |||
| In his conquest triumphes and victory | |||
| As the stories of hym dothe specify. | |||
| 330 | ¶ Busiris Antheus and Gereon | ||
| Of Egipte, Libie, also of Spayne | |||
| All thre kynges by succession | |||
| Can witnesse this story playne | |||
| Diomed in Trace, as kyng did raygne | |||
| 335 | Cacus Nessus and Cerberus the great | ||
| Also the Lyon, and the Bulle of Crete. | |||
| ¶ Abcor the Serpent, odious and blacke | |||
| Most outragious wylde and sauage | |||
| The monsterus messe, of Archades lake | |||
| 340 | Deuouryng all thynges in their rage | ||
| sig: [b7] | |||
| Hercules with most knyghtly visage | |||
| Slewe them all, suche was his grace | |||
| None might withstand, his knighthod to deface. | |||
| ¶These tirantes great, by odius cryme | |||
| 345 | Accused were, of thefte and robbery | ||
| Bryngyng the countrey, vnto ruine | |||
| Spoilyng the people, of malice and enuy | |||
| Delityng in murder, and tiranny | |||
| Whiche caused Hercules, maugre their wyll | |||
| 350 | Them to betray, and after to kyll. | ||
| ¶Here must ye note, marke this ryght well | |||
| As Diodorus , affirmeth it playne | |||
| Also Sainct Ierome , likewyse doth tell | |||
| How that there were, Hercules twayne | |||
| 355 | Whiche were ryght noble, stories be playne | ||
| But Hercules, named Egipcius | |||
| Was he that dyd, these dedes meruaylous. | |||
| ¶Not Hercules, called Alcides | |||
| Whiche the Greekes, so highly do commend | |||
| 360 | Sonne of Iupiter, this is douteles | ||
| To whose powre he myght not extend | |||
| Who-euer wyll the cause defend | |||
| Loke in the fifth boke, of Antiquities | |||
| Of Birosus , the Ethimologies. | |||
| 365 | ¶As in a treatise, lately compyled | ||
| After my simple, and rude deuice | |||
| As auncient Aucthors, hathe comprysed | |||
| In time long past, right famous and wyse | |||
| Whiche to set forth, I did enterpryse | |||
| sig: [b7v] | |||
| 370 | Where ye may see, of these nobles twayn | ||
| For the common-welth which toke most payn. | |||
| ¶Of this Hercules, Called Egipcius | |||
| Came the notable, and famous lignage | |||
| Downe to Troy, and so to Brutus | |||
| 375 | Unto this day, with all the surplusage | ||
| To our most noble, ryall of courage | |||
| Henry the eyght, elect by grace deuine | |||
| Of the same discent, stocke blud and lyne. | |||
| ¶Whiche onely nowe, for our redresse | |||
| 380 | With like vygoure, and manfull myght | ||
| As a kyng, of wisedome perelesse | |||
| Consideryng all thynges of ryght | |||
| Suche tiranny hath appealed out of syghte | |||
| By his royall powre, and heart most constant | |||
| 385 | As at this tyme, to vs is apparaunt. | ||
| ¶Where are become, these tirauntes great | |||
| So insaciate, of their desyre | |||
| Whose rauin some-time, no man could let | |||
| So inraged was, their mortall yre | |||
| 390 | Who durst denay, what they did require | ||
| To burne or spoyle, all was one thyng | |||
| Suche was their vse, custome and liuyng. | |||
| ¶The trewe man abrode, he might not pas | |||
| But must of force, with them compounde | |||
| 395 | Like as they wold, geue more or las | ||
| Or els they wolde, his wealthe confounde | |||
| With some distres, to beate or wounde | |||
| His cattell steale, or goodes to spoile | |||
| Thus wolde the Thefe, the true man defoile. | |||
| sig: [b8] | |||
| 400 | ¶Yf they were taken, as seldome was sene | ||
| They wolde alledge, for theyr defence | |||
| The Lord of the soyle myght them redeme | |||
| And of this roialtee, with them dispence | |||
| Suche was their vse, and vyle pretence | |||
| 405 | Paiyng therfore, their fine accustomed | ||
| From all daungier, to be franchysed | |||
| ¶The partie nothyng herein suffysed | |||
| Must nedes of force, his wrong sustayne | |||
| Goddes people vtterly despysed | |||
| 410 | The trewe man the losse, the thefe the gayne | ||
| Restitucion none should they attayne | |||
| Fiue pounde and a peny, paid for the fyne | |||
| The Thefe goeth quite, for fault and crime. | |||
| ¶And yet alas, one custome we had | |||
| 415 | Whiche as I thincke, all grace dyd expell | ||
| I suppose neuer none halfe so bad | |||
| Ingendred in the pitte of Hell | |||
| The pryce of a man, was knowen to well | |||
| Yf he were slayne, the paiment should be | |||
| 420 | Lyke as he was, in byrthe or degre. | ||
| ¶O custome vnkynde, causer of distresse | |||
| Whose terrible plage, infecteth the Ayre | |||
| Mannes lyfe with murdre, to represse | |||
| Consideryng Christ, mannes solle to repayre | |||
| 425 | Became man, of a Virgyn fayre | ||
| Onely for loue, man to redeme | |||
| Alas that man, with murdre shuld be sene. | |||
| ¶Murdre of truthe, is intollerable | |||
| sig: [b8v] | |||
| ¶Murdre before God, calleth for vengeaunce | |||
| 430 | Murdre to man, is abhominable | ||
| Murdre to nature, is a defiaunce | |||
| Murdre to lyfe, is a discontinuance | |||
| Murdre to grace, is playne a rebell | |||
| Murdre at the first, began sure in Hell. | |||
| 435 | ¶This was our countrey brought in defame This: =Thus | ||
| Sclaundred and noysed, for our outrage | |||
| All trewe men of this reaported shame reaported: =reported | |||
| God knoweth who had the pylage | |||
| The poore man, but small aduauntage | |||
| 440 | The Thefe his pleasure, on mountayn and hyll | ||
| Yf he had money, myght walke at his wyll. | |||
| ¶Thus the slaunder ranne far abrode | |||
| All-most to our greate desolacion | |||
| As thoughe we all had ben of one accorde | |||
| 445 | No diuersitee in their opinion | ||
| Suche was the rumoure and communicacion | |||
| Nothyng reseruyng in their iudgement | |||
| Betwene a Thefe and the Innocent. | |||
| ¶And thus full ofte, we bare the blame | |||
| 450 | Causeles, of truethe nothyng offended | ||
| Nor by consent, worthy of infame | |||
| Yet by report we were suspended | |||
| As though we had, therto intended | |||
| Idelnesse was cause, as in effecte | |||
| 455 | Why we were had in suche respecte. | ||
| ¶Oh thou vicious Sardanipall [v]icius Sarda[ni]pall. | |||
| The beginnyng of slouthe and Idlenesse | |||
| sig: c1 | |||
| Whose example all welth dooth appall | |||
| Delightyng in synne and wretchednesse | |||
| 460 | With surfeites great, the body to oppresse | ||
| Whiche brought in thefte and robery | |||
| Murder, riote, also aduoutry. | |||
| ¶Who list the story, to accompte | |||
| Shall well perceiue, in sloth and idlenesse | |||
| 465 | All other before the, thou didst surmounte | ||
| Thy vicious life, bereth full witnesse | |||
| She was thy lady and chiefe mastresse | |||
| To whom thou didst, thy-self abounde | |||
| Whiche was the cause thy person to confound | |||
| 470 | ¶For Arbachus, of vertues respecte Uerteou[s] Arbachu[s] | ||
| As a prince of excellent wisedome | |||
| Did thee manace, chastice and correcte | |||
| For thy froward, abhominacion | |||
| Idlenesse was cause, and occacion | |||
| 475 | Why thou vicious Sardanapall | ||
| From thyne estate, had so greate a fall | |||
| ¶For like as verteous businesse | |||
| Inuenteth thynges right laudable | |||
| So doth riote and idlenesse | |||
| 480 | Increase mische[u]es intollorable | ||
| One thyng marke, whiche is veritable | |||
| Put idlenesse, clene out of vre | |||
| For custome all-moste, turneth to nature. | |||
| ¶Note where idlenesse, doth oft remayne | |||
| 485 | Fare-well all verteous businesse | ||
| For idlenesse, inflameth the brayne | |||
| sig: [c1v] | |||
| And bryngeth in newe-fanglenesse | |||
| Sequestrith the herte, from all goodnesse | |||
| And aldre-last, note this for euer | |||
| 490 |
God from man, it doth cleane deceuer. deceuer] deceiuer 1547 |
||
| ¶Idlenes, caused our abusion | |||
| By idlenes, increased our infame | |||
| Till now of late, by politicke reason | |||
| Of our kyng, moste gracious of name | |||
| 495 | Whiche hath brought vs into a new frame | ||
| So that we fele, by worldly businesse | |||
| There commeth gayne, and moderat richesse | |||
| ¶Thus hath our wise worthy Arbachus | |||
| Suppressed our foly and customes rude | |||
| 500 | Causyng our hertes, to be desirus | ||
| To folowe the sage, multitude | |||
| Idlenes vtterly to exclude | |||
| Laboryng abrod[e], our fode to gete abrode] abrod 1547 | |||
| Leuyng by our handes, and bodely sweate. | |||
| 505 | ¶To digge and delue, to eare and sowe | ||
| To graffe or plant, in rough or playne | |||
| On mountayns hie, or vales lowe | |||
| Litle we force, for labor and payne | |||
| So that we maie, our welth attayne | |||
| 510 | Tenderyng so muche our businesse | ||
| That we forget, the vice of idlenesse. | |||
| ¶For where-of truthe, with vs late past | |||
| Bothe corne and fruite, was scant and bare | |||
| Our countree voyde, laie halfe in wast | |||
| 515 | I dare allege, and surely declare | ||
| sig: c2 | |||
| Now at this tyme we maie well spare | |||
| If there should chaunce, a tyme of nede | |||
| With corne and cattaile, our neighbors fede | |||
| ¶And thus daily, we do preuaile | |||
| 520 | In our increase, bothe cataile and corne | ||
| Thankes be to God, all is quoche-quaile quoche-quaile: see OED s.v. couch-quail | |||
| The chaffe the wedes, a_waie are shorne | |||
| Neuer so well, sens we wer borne | |||
| Our countree made playne, and habitable | |||
| 525 | Whiche semed before, irrecurable. | ||
| ¶And further, of his benyng grace | |||
| Through his moste mercifull assent | |||
| Our commune-welth, for to purchace | |||
| Hath remitted, of pure intent | |||
| 530 | Two thousande markes, of yerely rent | ||
| Before paied, in siluer and golde | |||
| Taxed emong vs, of customes olde. | |||
| ¶Yet hath our Troian, most mighty emperoure | |||
| Planted vs, with prudent Catons | |||
| 535 | To be our president and gouernour | ||
| Associate with noble S[c]ipions Scipions] Sipions 1547 | |||
| With diuerse mo, of high discressions | |||
| For to augment, our common-weale | |||
| Graunted by comission, vnder his seale. | |||
| 540 | ¶In sundery partes, for our redresse | ||
| As did some-tyme, the noble senate | |||
| Consules prefectes, of greate sadnesse | |||
| Dictatours full famous, of estate | |||
| Decemuires, wisedome to approbate | |||
| sig: [c2v] | |||
| 545 | Trauersyng the countries rounde aboute | ||
| Where suspecte persones, wer had moste in doubte. | |||
| ¶To that intent, our ciuility | |||
| Wer not suppressed, for lacke of gouernance | |||
| Nether is inforced, by tyrrany | |||
| 550 | But redused, to a Ciuile substance | ||
| Accordyng to the vse, and continuance | |||
| Of Englishe lawes, in tyme long past | |||
| Wherof we bee now, made sure and fast. | |||
| ¶Thus charge vpon charge, daily doth insewe | |||
| 555 | Unto his grace, in maner importable | ||
| Inuentyng lawes, and statutes newe | |||
| Gentill and softe, by meane tretable | |||
| To th'entent, it should bee pardurable | |||
| Emong vs for euer, this is the meane | |||
| 560 | Uncorrupted to kepe vs pure and cleane. | ||
| ¶Thus a kyng of vigilant respecte | |||
| Sheweth vnto vs, this constant loue | |||
| As a father, in this effecte | |||
| Tenderyng his childe, vice to remoue | |||
| 565 | Without rigoure, our foly doth reproue | ||
| Caryng not for treasure or expence | |||
| But to withdrawe, the cause of our offence. | |||
| ¶For to compare, and brefe the tyme | |||
| Accompt all stories, that euer was | |||
| 570 | Inforce your-self, thereto to inclyne | ||
| Rede where ye list, your tyme to pas | |||
| And ye shall not finde, that euer there was | |||
| A kyng of better remembrance | |||
| sig: c3 | |||
| His subiectes to kepe, preserue and aduance. | |||
| 575 | ¶Reken Cesar, with his triumphes all | ||
| Alexander, Hector, or Achilles | |||
| Edippus, or worthy Haniball | |||
| Minos the Iudges, or greate Harcules | |||
| Or yet Arbachus, of knighthod pereles | |||
| 580 | Let theim come all, their vertue to declare | ||
| Yet shall thei not, with his grace compare. | |||
| ¶For these princes, these conquerors great | |||
| Set their mynde, and full attendance | |||
| Countrees to subdewe, and kyngdoms to geate | |||
| 585 | Onely by strength and mightie puysance | ||
| And some again to take their chance | |||
| Ieopard their persones to get theim a name | |||
| As beastes wilde, to make theim tame. | |||
| ¶And thus thei wrought all by fantasy | |||
| 590 | As fortune list, the party assure | ||
| To win or lose, put in ieopardy | |||
| Hap as it would, all in aduenture | |||
| Goodes, landes, life, body and treasure | |||
| But those kynges, are moste to be commended | |||
| 595 | From vicious life, their subiectes hath defended. | ||
| ¶As our noble, and moste famous kyng | |||
| Appoyncted by grace, of the deite | |||
| Moste circumspecte, in ouer-lokyng | |||
| His subiectes to kepe, in a conformite | |||
| 600 | One lawe, one kyng, one deuinite | ||
| One faithe, one hope, one erudicion | |||
| One mynde, one will, and one intencion. | |||
| sig: [c3v] | |||
| ¶Neuer none like, accompt the tyme | |||
| Sens Brute, our first progenitoure | |||
| 605 | Borne by dissent, of right noble lyne | ||
| Beyng prince, kyng, and gouer[no]ure gouernoure] goueronure 1547 | |||
| Unto our parents, chiefe protectoure | |||
| Through whose manfull magnanimite | |||
| Thei wer deliuered from olde captiuite. | |||
| 610 | ¶As famous auctours, moste seriously | ||
| With a sincere opposicion | |||
| In tyme long past right willyngly | |||
| By a louyng emulacion | |||
| Onely for our, eriducion | |||
| 615 | Hath related, as after shall insewe | ||
| More exactly, matter constaunt and trewe. | |||
| ¶Some-what herin, doubtles am I moued | |||
| For to expresse, my fantasy | |||
| Not of impacience, muche greued | |||
| 620 | But that some, hath iudged wrongfully | ||
| As in reproche, of our country | |||
| Deniyng playne, moste noble Brute | |||
| Our antecessor our stocke and our frute. | |||
| ¶A boke of late, there was compiled | |||
| 625 | By Polidorus , in Italy borne [Po]lidorus. | ||
| Nothyng to vs reconsiled | |||
| But rather written, in hatred or scorne | |||
| Yet shall we saie, if he had sworne | |||
| We Welshmen, with hym shall compare | |||
| 630 | For olde antiquities, the truth to declare. | ||
| ¶His slanderous stile, to exterminate | |||
| sig: c4 | |||
| Reiect, auoyde, and cleane put a_waie | |||
| Whiche is so subtle, and intricate | |||
| Thynkyng therby, our fame to decaie | |||
| 635 | None will so reporte, I dare well saie | ||
| Hauyng wit, reason or intelligence | |||
| Ether to iustice, myndyng aduertence. | |||
| ¶Not contented, this to deny | |||
| But would of force, our name appall | |||
| 640 | Clea[n]e to extincte, out of memory | ||
| As though we wer, reiectes of all | |||
| Knowyng not, our discent naturall | |||
| From whence we came, nor of what lyne | |||
| Us to infame, this is his cryme. | |||
| 645 | ¶Me-thinke of truth, to muche ye erre | ||
| In your reproche, spoke of disdain | |||
| Affirmyng plaine, in tyme of warre | |||
| We Welshemen, no honor to attain | |||
| Nether yet in peace, trewe to remain | |||
| 650 | Your barberous wordes, backe doth rebounde | ||
| To your infame, all thynges doth sounde. | |||
| ¶It is vnmete, a man of your age | |||
| Accompted sadde, wise and discrete | |||
| So violently abrode to rage | |||
| 655 | Matters to penne, whiche is vnmete | ||
| With wordes vntrew, with termes onswete | |||
| Or thynges deny whiche auctours olde | |||
| In tyme long past, bothe wrote and tolde. | |||
| ¶Who shal but thinke, your sentence light | |||
| 660 | As thynges in vain, to none effecte | ||
| sig: [c4v] | |||
| Wordes of reproche, spoke again right | |||
| Menne should abhorre, and cleane reiecte | |||
| To breue my tyme, this is th'effecte | |||
| Your slaunderous wordes, affirmeth plaine | |||
| 665 | To rise of ire, hatred or disdayne. | ||
| ¶If ye of force, will vs persewe | |||
| Onely through your ingratitude | |||
| Blame vs nothyng, your wordes exchewe | |||
| Beware hurte not, a multitude | |||
| 670 | Lest some perchaunce, with sentence rude | ||
| Iustely again, like your offence | |||
| Euen with the same, will you recompence. | |||
| ¶We speake to you, Master Polidorus | |||
| Whose ingratitude, we greatly complain | |||
| 675 | Ye go aboute, to rase out the floures | ||
| Of our parentes, as thynges in vain | |||
| And yet of truthe, ye cannot refrain | |||
| But generally, vs to accuse | |||
| No indifferency, herin ye vse. | |||
| 680 | ¶We Welshemen saie for our defence | ||
| That ye Romayns, surmountyng in pride | |||
| With your Imperiall magnificence | |||
| Supposyng therby, the heuens to deuide | |||
| Came long after, our noble tribe | |||
| 685 | So that we maie, write of your estate | ||
| Not ye of vs, ye came all to late. | |||
| ¶How should ye knowe, our antecessours | |||
| Our stocke, our line, our progeny | |||
| Our moste mightie conquerours | |||
| sig: c5 | |||
| 690 | Sithe ye bee of muche lesse memory | ||
| Writyng nothyng, almoste plainly | |||
| But what doth rebounde, to your estate | |||
| Magnifiyng the pompe, of your Senate. | |||
| ¶By_cause your auctoure, Titus_Liuius | |||
| 695 | Of noble Brute maketh no mencion | ||
| Beyng perchaunce, somewhat obliuius | |||
| Or knewe not, of that succession | |||
| Therfore ye make no discripcion | |||
| But onely of your kynges of Italie | |||
| 700 | Whiche reigned there, successiuely. | ||
| ¶As appereth, by storie euident | |||
| Called Fasciculus Temporum | |||
| Where litle is, to vs pertinent | |||
| But to the first, of your succession | |||
| 705 | Hauyng the regall possession | ||
| Breuely doth passe, all other thynges | |||
| Onely doth write, but of a fewe kynges. | |||
| ¶Though he forgate, this noble prince | |||
| Or listed not, his fame to conuaie | |||
| 710 | Yet shall he not his name conuince | ||
| Nor this his honor, to pulle awaie | |||
| Fasciculus Temporum , plainly doth saie | |||
| That Brute beganne, first to excell | |||
| When Heli was prieste, and Iudge of Israel | |||
| 715 | Holy Eusebius , doth testifie | ||
| Also sainct Bede , maketh mencion | |||
| That noble Brute of the age, fiue and thirty | |||
| Entered first into this region | |||
| sig: [c5v] | |||
| Whiche was before Christes incarnacion | |||
| 720 | A thousand .i.C. twenty and twayne | ||
| And after Troye .xliii. yeres playne | |||
| ¶ Galfridus affirmeth assuredly | |||
| That noble Brute, in his yeres grene | |||
| Like Marce for strength, fearce and hardy | |||
| 725 | In Grece moste princely was sene | ||
| Wan there croune, ceptre and diademe | |||
| From Panderus of Achilles blud | |||
| His doughter, his treasure, with all his gud. | |||
| ¶And further the Grekes to deface | |||
| 730 | That daie he did, the felde recure | ||
| Moste princely, met them in the face | |||
| Whose knightly strokes, thei might not indure | |||
| A shilde he bare, the felde of asure | |||
| Three crounes of gold, sumteously wrought | |||
| 735 | A Lion sette, on his helmet a_lofte. | ||
| ¶Also Guydo, de Collumpnia | |||
| Doth verifie, this to be trewe | |||
| That he did honor the goddes Diana | |||
| Passyng the seas, fortune to insewe | |||
| 740 | Where he had answere, his ioyes to renewe | ||
| Beyng right yong, should supply the place | |||
| With scepter and croune, his enemies to inchase | |||
| ¶ Ranulphus , a manne of perfeccion | |||
| Writeth right playne, as in this case | |||
| 745 | How noble Brute, within this region | ||
| Landed first, by a speciall grace | |||
| Predestinate before, was that place | |||
| sig: [c6] | |||
| As Diana the mightie Goddes | |||
| Had promised, namyng it Totnesse, | |||
| 750 | ¶Also the floure, of histories | ||
| Named Peter_Pactauiences | |||
| With many noble writers | |||
| Alloweth the verie same sences | |||
| To muche of truthe, are their offences | |||
| 755 | Whiche will alone, suche thynges deny | ||
| That auctours olde, do write and verify. | |||
| ¶ Martinus super Cronicas | |||
| Veropius , and Sabellicus | |||
| Affirmeth playne, how all-thyng was | |||
| 760 | In the tyme of Brenne and Belenus | ||
| Of the discent, of noble Brutus | |||
| How thei entered, first in Italie | |||
| Hauyng at Rome-gates, a noble victorie. | |||
| ¶This story to amplifie and augment | |||
| 765 | The sixt yere of Artaxarses the kyng | ||
| As Iacobus_Phillippus doth assent | |||
| Over the Persians, that tyme reignyng | |||
| These princes .ii. with standerdes displaiyng | |||
| As brother with brother, of one minde and assent | |||
| 770 | Again you Romains, with hert most veruent | ||
| ¶Had a battaill strong, as is expressed | |||
| Where your Senate, Tribunes and Dictators | |||
| By knightly force, wer clene oppressed | |||
| Your Pretours, Consules and gouernors | |||
| 775 | Your lusty manfull, young soldiors | ||
| Your valiant knightes, in stele armed bright | |||
| sig: [c6v] | |||
| All were taken, slain or put to flight. | |||
| ¶Ye cannot well, these auctours deny | |||
| For all your vain, [o]stentacion ostentacion] stentacion 1547 | |||
| 780 | Your citee spoyled, all went a_wry | ||
| Make therof a true declaracion | |||
| Ye wer right faine by composicion | |||
| A peace to take, th[i]s is no naie this] ths 1547 | |||
| Els to yelde vp, or sone flie awaie. | |||
| 785 | ¶Noble Arthur the famous Brute | ||
| Of the same line, and true succession | |||
| Whiche by his conquest, and princely pursute | |||
| Uanquished full many a region | |||
| Sonne of Utir called Pendragon | |||
| 790 | Chronicles, plainly doth it specify | ||
| Yet ye Romaines, this prince will deny | |||
| ¶Loke in Fasciculus Temporum | |||
| The tyme of Bisshoppe, Hilarius | |||
| In lina Christi , accomptyng the sum | |||
| 795 | Foure hundred sixty and foure, truly to discus | ||
| Then florished Arthur, that was victorious | |||
| With his owne hande, in one daie he slewe | |||
| Foure hundred and sixty, if that story be true. | |||
| ¶Also beholde Policronicon | |||
| 800 | The .xxiii. Chapiter, the seuenth boke | ||
| There maie ye se, by plain discripcion | |||
| The yere of our Lorde, who list to loke | |||
| A .xi hundred foure score, his body vp_toke | |||
| Translated into Glastinbury | |||
| 805 | By the famous kyng, the second Henry. | ||
| sig: [c7] | |||
| ¶In the thirtie yere, or there-aboute | |||
| Of our soueraigne, kyng Henry th'eight | |||
| Ye blinded Romains, to put out of doubte | |||
| The cause made plain, perfect and streight | |||
| 810 | A crosse was founde, of full greate waight | ||
| In Glastenbury, with letters of golde | |||
| Grauen full depe, with this sentence olde. | |||
| ¶Here lieth Arthur, the worthy kyng | |||
| Depe in the grounde, his body to hide | |||
| 815 | Sometyme in Britaine, famously reignyng | ||
| God of his mercie, for hym prouide | |||
| His solle vnto rest, to be his guide | |||
| For a more concordaunce of yearthly fame | |||
| For euermore, florishe mought his name. | |||
| 820 | ¶But ye Romains so full of pride | ||
| Will in nowise, to this assent | |||
| In couerture, all thynges to hide | |||
| Of ambicion, and froward intent | |||
| In all your stories, this is full ment | |||
| 825 | Nothyng to touche, or matter to frame | ||
| Whiche should rebounde, to your rebuke or shame | |||
| ¶Youre olde enmite, rancor and debate | |||
| Will not permit, the Brutes to aduaunce, | |||
| By_cause your noble Imperiall estate | |||
| 830 | By theim was brought, vnto vtteraunce | ||
| At your hard walles, suche was your chaunce | |||
| The honor ye lost, your knightes manly slain | |||
| By princes notable, kynges of Britain. | |||
| ¶For shame a_wake, beginne of newe | |||
| sig: [c7v] | |||
| 835 | Recante your fayned fantasie To Master Polidorus. | ||
| Confesse your faulte, all is vntrewe | |||
| Make some excuse, with honestie | |||
| Affirme the slepe, was in your iye | |||
| Feble with watche, heuy was your hed | |||
| 840 | Ye wist not well, what ye wrote or said. | ||
| ¶And thus maie ye, your-self excuse | |||
| Referryng it, vnto ignorance | |||
| Your old errours, clene to refuse | |||
| Resityng playne, as matter insubstance | |||
| 845 | All that ye did, was of inconstance | ||
| Affeccion moued so muche your intent | |||
| For to write trewe, ye could not assent. | |||
| ¶Sithe ye so largely, in your pretence | |||
| Here-tofore, haue vs frequented | |||
| 850 | I[n] amplifiyng your cruell insence In] Ia 1547 | ||
| Again vs moste fraude[le]ntly inuented fraudelently] fraudently 1547 | |||
| Though herin my spirites be incensed | |||
| You to requite, in writyng so large | |||
| Take it a_worth, myne is the charge. | |||
| 855 | ¶For he that will, causeles procure | ||
| Or it inuent, thynges of defame | |||
| He maie well iudge, beyng right sure | |||
| Men will requite hym, euen with the same | |||
| Likewise again, in borde or in game | |||
| 860 | As the cause is, seke out the grounde | ||
| Slandered report, clene to confounde | |||
| ¶Ye are vnueritabl, in your reporte | |||
| Unshamefast, auctours to deny | |||
| sig: [c8] | |||
| And we very lothe, for to supporte | |||
| 865 | Fables vntrewe, to inuent a lye | ||
| Let Boccas b[e] iudge, if ye will apply be] by 1547 | |||
| Whiche of vs twaine, moste haue offended | |||
| Or in this case, worthiest to be commended. | |||
| ¶Where ye alledge, and vs accuse | |||
| 870 | That we in battaill, are feble and faint | ||
| No fetes of armes, that we can vse | |||
| But must of force, of very constraint | |||
| Intreate of peace, as cowardes attaint | |||
| Your slandered reporte, to your infame | |||
| 875 | Shall euer increase, in hinderyng your name | ||
| ¶I will appeale, as in this case | |||
| Recorde to take, of Titus_Liuius | |||
| Let hym verify, how all thynges was | |||
| In the tyme of noble Camillus | |||
| 880 | Dictatour of Rome with famous Lucius | ||
| Consuls electe, as for that yere | |||
| With Emilius , the story is full clere. | |||
| ¶ Eutropius an auctoure full trewe | |||
| Likewise plainly, doth defyne | |||
| 885 | As in the story, before doth insewe | ||
| The famous Brutes as in their tyme | |||
| Beyng of discente, bloud birthe and lyne | |||
| Of noble Brute, their fury to withstande. | |||
| Rome inclosed, with moste mighty Englande | |||
| 890 | ¶If ye list by clere, computacion | ||
| Plainly to knowe, the yeres and the tyme | |||
| How long it was, after Romes foundacion | |||
| sig: [c8v] | |||
| Three hundred thre score puttyng therto nyne | |||
| The first fall, the wofull ruyne | |||
| 895 | Of Rome that euer, I did of rede | ||
| Neuer before, standyng in suche feare and drede | |||
| ¶Oh ye Romains, full of presumpcion | |||
| Remembre your birthe, stocke, and your line | |||
| And of your citee, the first foundacion | |||
| 900 | Accomptyng Amilius your parentyne | ||
| With Rea his sister, the feminyne | |||
| And Aldre-last, truly to discus | |||
| The two brethren, Remus and Romulus. | |||
| ¶Ye beganne with robery and pilage | |||
| 905 | And we by marciall dissipline | ||
| Ye froward of birthe, bloud and linage | |||
| And we right noble, famous of line | |||
| Accompt bothe male, and feminyne | |||
| Ye in fayned, fables to in[s]ewe insewe] inewe 1547 | |||
| 910 | And we in_forced, to stories trewe. | ||
| ¶Thynges grounded on wrong maie not indure | |||
| Scripture therof, maketh mencion | |||
| An euill beginnyng, who maie assure | |||
| Therof to make, a good foundacion | |||
| 915 | For where nothyng is, but fraude and treason | ||
| Murdre riote, with foule aduoutry | |||
| The ende must nedes, be full of misery. | |||
| ¶Though fortune fauor, a tyme to aduance | |||
| In her assence, climyng a_lofte | |||
| 920 | With a pretence, of faire countenance | ||
| As hath been proued, in tymes full ofte | |||
| sig: d1 | |||
| In her returne, fallyng vnsofte | |||
| She hath agayne, with frownyng chere | |||
| Dusked the weather, before pure and clere. | |||
| 925 | ¶Where ar nowe, your famous Emperors | ||
| Your triumphant knightes, stately ridyng | |||
| Your notable wise Senatoures | |||
| Your Consulers, your Citie guidyng | |||
| Your preefectes Dictatours, clerely shining | |||
| 930 | Are they not consumed, frustrate and gone | ||
| And ye from fauoure, almost left alone? | |||
| ¶Your noble Marcke called Aurelius | |||
| Which was of Rome, the famous Emperor Marcus_Aurelius | |||
| Criyng out, with voice most piteous | |||
| 935 | Cursyng the tyme, the day and houre | ||
| When Rome beganne, first for to flowre | |||
| Triumphyng in pompe, also in pride | |||
| Which caused vertue, from Rome to deuide. | |||
| ¶Did not he also, piteously complayne | |||
| 940 | Saiyng of truthe, Rome shal be confounded | ||
| Of very Iustice, the Goddes cannot refrain | |||
| But of equitie, must be condempned | |||
| For like he said, as Rome was commended | |||
| Aboue all other, most worthiest of name | |||
| 945 | The time shall come, of reproche and shame. | ||
| It must procede, by iustfull sentence | |||
| Consideryng al thynges of ryght | |||
| Where oppression is done by violence | |||
| It may not indure, by force of myght | |||
| 950 | Example good, to euery wight | ||
| sig: [d1v] | |||
| Beholde ye Romains, this present tyme | |||
| Are ye not almost, brought vnto ruine. | |||
| ¶Considre well, your first begynnyng | |||
| Of Remus and Romulus, brother and brother Remus and Romulus | |||
| 955 | An accident, of very euill liuyng | ||
| If ye note well, Rea their mother | |||
| Sacred to Uesta, it was no other | |||
| Professed there, onely to Chastitee | |||
| Hir lyfe duryng, to liue in virginitie. | |||
| 960 | ¶The Temple by her, defiled was | ||
| The story playne, beareth full witnesse | |||
| And she againe, for her trespasse | |||
| By her brother, cruell and merciles | |||
| Uoyde of all succoure, beyng remediles | |||
| 965 | Died in prison, recure was there none | ||
| Her chyldren sole, left alone. | |||
| Their father not knowen, for birth or linage | |||
| Fostered they were, without al reuerence | |||
| Of a shee-Wolfe, full wilde and sauage | |||
| 970 | The children froward, cruell of corage | ||
| Of very hatred, ire and disdayne | |||
| The elder brother, the yonger hath slayne. | |||
| ¶Lyke as their vncle, named Emilius | |||
| His brother slewe, with fraude and treason | |||
| 975 | So in like case, most cruell Romulus | ||
| Against all kynd, and naturall reason | |||
| His brother slewe, for his possession | |||
| Thus of Rome, was the Antiquitie | |||
| Murdre vpon murdre, voyde of all pitie. | |||
| sig: d2 | |||
| 980 | ¶Remembre Rome, thy olde abusion | ||
| Thy infamed, and cursed gouernance | |||
| Thy tiranny, and falce extorcion | |||
| Thy great adultrie, and foule daliaunce | |||
| Way these together, al in one balaunce | |||
| 985 | And thou shalt not fynd, any rightful sentence | ||
| Against the Brutes, to geue euidence. | |||
| ¶Who began fyrst, the Ciuill warres | |||
| Discord, discencion, troble and stryffe | |||
| The proude Romains, surmounting the sterres | |||
| 990 | Whiche was the losse, of many mannes life | ||
| Marius and Silla, began the myschefe Marius and Silla. | |||
| Foure thousand lay deade and slayne | |||
| Six hundred knightes, the story is playne | |||
| ¶Likewyse most dredefull and piteous | |||
| 995 | For to reherse, the woful distruction | ||
| Betwene Pompey, and Ceasar Iulius | |||
| Thre hundred M. brought to confusion | |||
| Murdred and slain, through falce abusion Ceasar Iulius Pompeius | |||
| Thus of the Romains, was the gouernaunce | |||
| 1000 | Let Boccus be iudge, of al their mischaunce. | ||
| ¶Who were the cruell, persecutours | |||
| Who subplanted, Christes religion | |||
| Who were the falce, conspiratours | |||
| Who were the traytours, to euery region | |||
| 1005 | Who wrought fraud, who wrought treason Who] Who, 1547 | ||
| Who slewe the Appostles, Peter and Paule | |||
| Who martered, all-most the sainctes all. | |||
| ¶Who inuented, falce conspiracie | |||
| sig: [d2v] | |||
| Who oppressed, the pore Innocent | |||
| 1010 | Who slewe the worthy, Scipions thre | ||
| Oh cursed people, without al reuerence | |||
| Who conspired against the magnificence Scipions | |||
| Of Ceasar, most mightiest of estate | |||
| By treason slaine, among your Senate. | |||
| 1015 | ¶Oh cruell Rome, confesse thy outrage | ||
| Thy shameful murdre, thy foule abusion | |||
| Cry out and complaine, with al thy surplusage | |||
| Alacke alacke, through falce contradiction | |||
| In the was slayne, by cruell treason | |||
| 1020 | The lantern the light, the prince of eloquence | ||
| Among you Romains, most of excellence. | |||
| ¶Of Rethorique, the famous oratour | |||
| In his daies, called sage Tullye Tully | |||
| Chosen to be a gouernoure | |||
| 1025 | Your common-weale, onely to guyde | ||
| By meane of knighthode, also of Cleargy | |||
| Defended you, from proude Cataline | |||
| Which wold haue brought your citie to ruine | |||
| ¶With all his falce conspiratours | |||
| 1030 | Which to his treason, were fully consented | ||
| Punished those rebelles, and traitours | |||
| By prison strong, their bodies turmented | |||
| By force wherof, the commons assented | |||
| The prison to call, after his owne name | |||
| 1035 | Tullian, the more to encreace his fame | ||
| ¶What shuld I say, of your treasons all | |||
| To amplify them, and set them at large | |||
| sig: d3 | |||
| In murdre and riote, like fendes infernall | |||
| So monsterous ye are, of mind and corage, | |||
| 1040 | Of customes olde, as beastes full sauage | ||
| Innocentes to kill, vertue to confound | |||
| Of all sorowes, the rote and the ground | |||
| ¶Fourtene Emperours, in stories I fynde | |||
| One after other, there did insewe | |||
| 1045 | To Christes faith, cruell and vnkynde | ||
| Innocent bloud, causelesse to pursewe | |||
| Onely twayne, no mo was founde trewe | |||
| All the rest, as tirantes inflamed | |||
| Wold in no wise, Christ to be named. | |||
| 1050 | ¶Recorde I take, of that cursed man | ||
| To God alway, founde contrarius | |||
| Called in his day, cruell Ualerian Ualarian | |||
| Uoide of all fauoure, most impiteous | |||
| Of Emperoures all. none more vngracious | |||
| 1055 | Against Christes faithe, of mind and will | ||
| By persecucion, his sainctes to kyll. | |||
| But god of his grace, his power to withdrawe Sapor | |||
| Caused Sapor that time kyng of Perce | |||
| For all his froward, and cursed lawe | |||
| 1060 | His imperiall powre, sone to suscesse suscesse: see OED s.v. succease, altered form of surcease | ||
| Toke him prisoner, in middes of the Prece | |||
| Made a fote-stoole, of his cursed Corse | |||
| When-euer he lyst, to mount on his Horsse. | |||
| ¶Likewise the tiraunt, named Domician | |||
| 1065 | Proudest of all, recken any-one Domician | ||
| Persecuted many a Christian man | |||
| sig: [d3v] | |||
| Into Pathmos, exiled Sainct Ihon | |||
| Thought him-selfe, most worthiest alone | |||
| In his estate, proudly vp-stalled | |||
| 1070 | A God abrode, for to be called. | ||
| ¶Made a decree, of very presumpcion | |||
| In paine of death, no man to deny | |||
| But God aboue, knowyng his intencion | |||
| To punishe his pride, in his owne army | |||
| 1075 | Caused his knightes, to wounde his body | ||
| With vnware death, the story to expresse | |||
| Denied of buriall, was his Carcasse. | |||
| ¶Most cruell infamed Maxence Maxence | |||
| Likewyse our Faith, he did pursewe | |||
| 1080 | Causeles with most cruell violence | ||
| Hauyng no respecte, to Christ_Iesu | |||
| Slayne as a traytour, to God vntrewe | |||
| Of very disdayne, his life once past | |||
| His cursed troncke, into Tybre was cast. | |||
| 1085 | ¶ Galerius falseste of assent Galerius | ||
| Against Christes faith, sought occasion | |||
| Them to destroy, by furious iudgement | |||
| Whiche was at length, to his confusion | |||
| With sicknesse take, thus in conclusion | |||
| 1090 | The Ayre corrupted, gan to putrify | ||
| Onely by stincke, of his carren body | |||
| ¶Also valence, the prowes Emperour | |||
| Whiche in his rage, was so mercylesse Ualence. | |||
| Against Hermites, them to deuoure | |||
| 1095 | Liuyng in desert, and wildernesse | ||
| sig: d4 | |||
| Slewe them all of very wilfulnesse | |||
| Consumed he was, by brennyng of Fyre | |||
| By the Gootes, which his death dyd conspire | |||
| ¶Most cursed of all, that I rehearse can | |||
| 1100 | Among all your falce conspiratours | ||
| Was your Emperour, named Iulian Iulian_Apostita. | |||
| Whiche wrought by crafty inuencions | |||
| Called sprytes, by his Coniuracions | |||
| Did them worship, by way of sacrifice | |||
| 1105 | Unto God most hatefull, in such maner wise | ||
| ¶With them he had, suche conuersacion | |||
| That they to hym, were fauourable | |||
| For his Ceremonies, and falce oblacion | |||
| Promisyng him, to be veritable | |||
| 1110 | That he shoulde passe, in deedes honorable | ||
| Great Alexander, in triumphant victory | |||
| As in excellyng, his state and glory. | |||
| ¶Thus fell he into fayned fantasy | |||
| Trustyng to Pluto, the God infernall | |||
| 1115 | But then the Lorde most mighty | ||
| Disdayned his pryde, Imperiall | |||
| Send vnto him a knyght Immortall | |||
| Most Angelicke, in stele armed bryght | |||
| Roue hym to the hearte in his most myght. | |||
| 1120 | ¶Among all other, that I can rede | ||
| Most vicious, and odius to heare | |||
| Was cursed Nero, without feare or drede Uicius Nero. | |||
| Whose shamful story, plainly doth appere | |||
| Consydre it well: ye Romains drawe nere | |||
| sig: [d4v] | |||
| 1125 | Suche do ye foster, nurrishe vp and bryng | ||
| Hatefull to God, most froward in liuyng | |||
| ¶Who was more vicious of nature | |||
| By constraint of his disposicion | |||
| Who was more vnsure, grace to recouer | |||
| 1130 | Then was Nero, by inclinacion | ||
| More prouder of port, with fraude and treason | |||
| His wife his brother, causelesse he slewe | |||
| No matter of right, them to pursewe. | |||
| ¶This story right sore, doth him accuse | |||
| 1135 | With his mother called Agripine | ||
| Like a ribauld her body shuld mysuse | |||
| In carnal knowlage, filthy as a swine | |||
| And further playnely to defyne | |||
| His mothers wombe, he corue vpon a day | |||
| 1140 | To se the place, nine monethes where he laie. | ||
| This proud tirant, vnfortunate man | |||
| Morall Senec, causeles he slewe Senec. | |||
| Which was his maister when he began | |||
| Uirgins profest, he dyd pursewe | |||
| 1145 | Beyng right chaste, stedfast and true | ||
| His Lecherus lust, onely to fulfyll | |||
| Rauished them of force, against their wyll | |||
| ¶Yet moreouer, this Fend infernall | |||
| Against Christes faithe, most dispiteous Peter and Paule | |||
| 1150 | Slewe the Apostles, Peter and Paule | ||
| For which vengeance, and deedes most lecherus | |||
| God gaue him ouer, as man vngracious | |||
| With a dagger, roue him-selfe vnto the hert | |||
| sig: d5 | |||
| Died for payne, anguishe and deadly smarte. | |||
| 1155 | ¶Thus God of his righte, tirantes can chastyce | ||
| Which wil rebell, against pore innocencie | |||
| Them to murdre, and will not aduertise | |||
| In Christ to haue, trewe confidence | |||
| They must of force, without assistence | |||
| 1160 | Remayne with Cerberus, the Hell-hound | ||
| Linked with Tantalus in chaines fast bound. | |||
| ¶Of [y]our Emperours, a ful great number your] our 1547 | |||
| I coulde resite froward of courage | |||
| Christes faithe, causeles to incumber | |||
| 1165 | I will let pas, all the surplusage | ||
| No more to speake, of fraude and pyllage | |||
| Neither murdre, treason, with their infame | |||
| Set them together, with rebuke and shame. | |||
| ¶Can ye deny, but this is trewe | |||
| 1170 | Why do ye then, vs Brutes accuse | ||
| We are right lothe, [y]our faultes to renue your] our 1547 | |||
| But sithe ye causeles, do vs misuse | |||
| As in report, ye cannot refuse | |||
| Grosse is his witte, worthy of infame | |||
| 1175 | That will not defend, his countrey and name | ||
| ¶If ye loke well, and iudge a_ryght | |||
| Ye ought not vs, Welshmen disdayne | |||
| Sith we with all our force and might | |||
| Your holy men did entertayne | |||
| 1180 | From your exile, and cruell payne | ||
| When that they durst, no-where abyde | |||
| For their refuge, we did prouide. | |||
| sig: [d5v] | |||
| ¶For in the time, of your great outrage | |||
| When no man myght, your malice intreate | |||
| 1185 | So wilfull were ye, of minde and corage | ||
| Christ and his lawes, sone to forget | |||
| His electe to kyll, malice and threate | |||
| Of very constraint, inforced to flee | |||
| So cruell and merciles, that time were ye. | |||
| 1190 | ¶Helpe or redresse, none could they finde | ||
| Their carefull life, for to assure | |||
| Their inspyred heartes, their constant minde | |||
| Inforced were, [by] lacke of recure by] 1547 omits | |||
| To seke abrode, their harde aduenture | |||
| 1195 | Where that they might, with pure intent | ||
| Christes religion for to augment. | |||
| ¶Then into Wales, they dyd approche | |||
| Through Goddes prouidence, his myght to shewe | |||
| Under many a strong mighty roche | |||
| 1200 | Builded their Chappels, in desertes lowe | ||
| In sondry places, as men doth knowe | |||
| As at this day, plainely doth appere | |||
| The places olde, euident and clere. | |||
| ¶This is no fayned inuencion | |||
| 1205 | Neither yet no curious fable | ||
| Who lyst to loke, without suspection | |||
| Shall fynde it trewe, and veritable | |||
| Written by fathers, honorable | |||
| For a more concordant of Godly fame | |||
| 1210 | Our Churches at this day, bereth their name | ||
| ¶Loke vp your stories, and sentence olde | |||
| sig: [d6] | |||
| Accomptyng the tyme, yeares and season | |||
| I dare affyrme, Beyng so bolde | |||
| To make herein, a comparison | |||
| 1215 | With any Christen religion | ||
| For lengthe of time, bearyng good name | |||
| Concernyng our fayth, for any infame | |||
| ¶A thousand .CCC. fowre score and twayne | |||
| Sithen it floryshed, fyrst with vs | |||
| 1220 | In the tyme of many a proude Romayne | ||
| Martered was holy Euleuterius | |||
| In whose tyme raigned Lucius | |||
| In Britaigne, the famous region | |||
| Then entered forth Christes religion | |||
| 1225 | ¶This was in the yere of our Lorde | ||
| An hundred six and fiftye playne | |||
| After his byrthe, stories doth accord | |||
| Sithin the faythe, came fyrste into Britaygne | |||
| Among vs Brutes there to remayne | |||
| 1230 | As at this day, ye may well see | ||
| Neuer accused, of Infidelite | |||
| ¶What place so constant, sure and stable | |||
| As at that tyme, myght there be founde | |||
| Like unto Wales, none so veritable | |||
| 1235 | No tiranny with vs, there did abounde | ||
| The faith remayned, full hole and sounde | |||
| Accordyng to Christes religion | |||
| Without spot or gall, of infection. | |||
| To what place shuld they haue resorted | |||
| 1240 | To haue had redresse, in this misery | ||
| sig: [d6v] | |||
| Or where shuld they haue ben supported | |||
| Nether in Rome, neither in Italy | |||
| Nether in Spaine, Fraunce, or Germany | |||
| Brefely to conclude, this is manifest | |||
| 1245 | From the sonne risyng, doune to the Weste. | ||
| Such tirantes that time had the gouernaunce | |||
| That no man durste Christ to confesse | |||
| Dispysed his lawes, and in that instaunce | |||
| In .xxx. daies, as Scripture doth witnesse | |||
| 1250 | Twenty thousand slayne this is doutlesse | ||
| By Dioclesian, raigning in the Easte [Di]oclecian [Ma]ximian | |||
| And Maximinian, downe in the west. | |||
| ¶Who-euer harde of suche a sorte | |||
| So vngracious, and so vntrewe | |||
| 1255 | As were the Romaynes, in their report | ||
| To blaspheme our Lord, Christ_Iesu | |||
| Affirmyng plaine, this to be trewe | |||
| That Rome neuer ioyousely prospered | |||
| Sithin the faith, among them entered | |||
| 1260 | ¶Loke in the time, of Arcadius | ||
| There may ye se, their false opinion | |||
| Beyng Emperour, with Honorius [Archadi]us Archadius] [...]haidus 1547 [wit]h hono[riu]s.Archadius] [...]haidus 1547 | |||
| Unto their Idolles hauyng affection | |||
| As sainct Austine, maketh relacion | |||
| 1265 | In his boke called Ciuitate Dei | ||
| Where he confoundeth, their false Heresy. | |||
| ¶My hand quaketh for fere and drede | |||
| My heart of truthe, beginneth to shrinke | |||
| When I beholde, this story to rede | |||
| sig: [d7] | |||
| 1270 | The teares weate, distilleth my incke | ||
| Oh Lorde, to remember and thincke | |||
| The crueltie, mischefe, and endles paine | |||
| Among the Romains, that time did raigne | |||
| ¶Who shuld but morne, lament and wepe | |||
| 1275 | Consideryng all thynges of ryghte | ||
| The vertuous with grace then replete | |||
| Put in exile, cleane out of syght | |||
| The tirauntes great, by force of myght | |||
| Persecuted the innocent bloudde | |||
| 1280 | Thus with the Romains, that time it stode. | ||
| To brefe my sentence, the truthe to tel | |||
| With vs in Wales, none were opprest | |||
| No tirauntes great, with vs did dwelle | |||
| There was the place, of peace and rest | |||
| 1285 | Christ and his lawes, for to degest | ||
| None durst approche, that to deny | |||
| Agayne our faithe, once to reply. | |||
| ¶How may ye then, with vs compare | |||
| Or why do ye, Welshmen defame | |||
| 1290 | Let your owne stories, the truthe declare | ||
| Ye are defectiue, even in the same | |||
| As in reproche, worthy of blame | |||
| Innocentes, gyltlesse to accuse | |||
| In that your-selfe, most dothe abuse. | |||
| 1295 | ¶Of your nobles, and Emperours all | ||
| With Constantine, make no comparison | |||
| For his magnificence Imperiall | |||
| Borne in Britaygn, that famous region | |||
| sig: [d7v] | |||
| He was the fyrste, of hearty affection | |||
| 1300 | That dyd decree, al men to dye | ||
| Christ and his lawes that wolde denye. | |||
| ¶Unto the Churche, for Christes sake | |||
| Excelled all other, before his time | |||
| The Romayne Temples, newely did make | |||
| 1305 | Dedicated them by sentence deuine | ||
| To the honour of God, and the orders nyne | |||
| With most mere and pure deuocion | |||
| Gaue to the Church, the fyrst possession | |||
| ¶To that intent, from all indigence | |||
| 1310 | The ministers shuld stande at reste | ||
| God for to serue, with due reuerence | |||
| All worldly thoughtes to be represt | |||
| Uertue to increace, this is manifest | |||
| All solitary, there for to abyde | |||
| 1315 | For the loue of Chryst, this did he prouide. | ||
| Gaue goodes and treasure with ornaments large | |||
| Amplifyde all thynges, with great expence | |||
| Made a decree, and gaue in charge | |||
| That all men shuld, with due reuerence | |||
| 1320 | To Christes crosse, kepe his obedience | ||
| And was the fyrst, in Banner and Shylde | |||
| Crosses to peynt, that bare in felde. | |||
| ¶Oh most famous Co[n]stantine | |||
| To whom no Romayne might attayne | |||
| 1325 | Whose goodnesse the worlde did inlumine | ||
| Borne in England, then called Brytaygne | |||
| Sonne of S. Helin, the story is playne | |||
| sig: [d8] | |||
| From Troy linially, downe discended | |||
| In Christes Churche, most to be commended. | |||
| 1330 | ¶But nowe a_lacke, all is reuersed | ||
| Onely through fayned perfection | |||
| For doubtles, vertue was repressed | |||
| When Constantine, first of affection | |||
| To Peters Churche, gaue such possession | |||
| 1335 | Then obedience, beganne to rebell | ||
| Whiche caused pride, Humilitee to expell | |||
| ¶O Rome Rome, change thi soil, remoue thy place | |||
| Barren and bare, fruteles is thy ground The bish[op] of Rome | |||
| Yet vnto this day, for lacke of grace | |||
| 1340 | Littell vertue, in the there doth abound | ||
| I dare alledge, this world so rounde | |||
| May not suffyce, this present houre | |||
| [T]o satisfye thy head and gouernoure To] So 1547 | |||
| ¶The cruell Emperours, by force of warre | |||
| 1345 | Myght neuer suche ryches attayne | ||
| Kingdomes to spoile, countreis to marre | |||
| As at this time the cause is playne | |||
| With so smal trauayl, and so great gayne | |||
| Suche Policie there is inuented | |||
| 1350 | By seale and wax, and parchment indented | ||
| ¶Solles for to saue, ded gone and past | |||
| But God alone no wight can tell | |||
| Whether they be free, or in payne caste | |||
| In Paradice, Heauen, or in Hell | |||
| 1355 | Yet for money, those solles wil they sell | ||
| By auctoritee of Peter and Paule | |||
| sig: [d8v] | |||
| Pardon forgeue, and release them all | |||
| ¶Thus Lord thy might, thei wold withdraw | |||
| To whom mercy, onely doth appertaigne | |||
| 1360 | As though they might, in heuen make a lawe | ||
| At their pleasure, solles to detayne | |||
| Some to release, and some to remayne | |||
| Lyke as they wolde, for mede or hyre | |||
| Some to acquite, some leaue in the fire. | |||
| 1365 | ¶Oh Lorde aboue, a damnable offence | ||
| Among thy people, suche erroures to bryng | |||
| Against all trewthe, and godly reuerence [Ac]tes .iiii. | |||
| To haue a trust, in any other thyng | |||
| There is no helpe, no other meanyng | |||
| 1370 | Let this in our heartes, fast be graued | ||
| Onely by Christes blud, our solles ar saued. | |||
| ¶And yet (O Lord) how farre do they erre | |||
| Thy maiesty is all full of mercy | |||
| No sinner doutles, wilt thou debarre | |||
| 1375 | Being penitent, contrite and sory | ||
| These couetous heades, cleane contrary | |||
| The poore solle, wrapped in woo and payne | |||
| Without money, shal lie still and complaine. | |||
| ¶What Charitee herein is extended | |||
| 1380 | When two solles in paine, lieth together | ||
| Perchance both in one case haue offended | |||
| The one for money, his ioye shall recouer | |||
| The other for lacke, shal lye styll for euer | |||
| Suche is their Charitee, in time of nede | |||
| 1385 | Their wordly pompe, to set forth and fede. | ||
| sig: e1 | |||
| ¶If cruell Nero, had now a frende | |||
| That would disbource, and paie at large | |||
| So to compounde, and make an ende | |||
| For all his synnes, and fell outrage | |||
| 1390 | I thinke his solle might walke at large | ||
| Consideryng perdons, are so plentie | |||
| By meane wherof, hel is emptie. | |||
| ¶Oh Lorde God, what wondrefull pride | |||
| Is it on yearth, goddes to be called | |||
| 1395 | Equall with thy grace, solles to deuide | ||
| As though thei wer, in heuen stalled | |||
| Thy enemies Lorde, thei maie be called | |||
| Whiche will thy people, suche errors bryng | |||
| For their profite, our solles deceiuyng | |||
| 1400 | ¶Is there any other, maner of meane | ||
| Then in the bloud, of Christ_Iesus | |||
| The imm[a]culate lambe, moste pure and cleane immaculate] immuculate 1547 | |||
| The sonne of God, whiche doth forgeue vs | |||
| If we knowledge, our deedes vicius | |||
| 1405 | Christ it is, that geueth remission | ||
| By the mercis, of his blessed passion. | |||
| ¶The Apostle blessed sainct Peter | |||
| Nether yet inspired holy sainct Paull | |||
| The very trewe, and sincere preacher | |||
| 1410 | Euer pardoned any solle at all | ||
| The spirite once past, the body mortall | |||
| That onely to God, reserued is | |||
| His deuine power, consisteth in this. | |||
| ¶O glorius God, how muche are we bound | |||
| sig: [e1v] | |||
| 1415 | Unto thy deuine maiestie | ||
| These errors greate for to confounde | |||
| Auoydyng the danger, of this infirmitie | |||
| In the tyme, of our necessite | |||
| Like as sometyme, surely it befell | |||
| 1420 | Unto thy electe, of Israell. | ||
| ¶Whiche so tenderly, hast cared for vs | |||
| That nothing mought be, for our saluacion | |||
| But by thy pitie, moste glorious | |||
| Thou hast of thy godly affeccion | |||
| 1425 | Prepared the same, for our redempcion | ||
| As in the olde lawe, apereth full well | |||
| By Iosia, then kyng of Israell. | |||
| ¶For when thy lawes, wer clene suppressed | |||
| By the space of many hundred yeres | |||
| 1430 | By Iosia again wer redressed | ||
| Dedicated to thy heuenly speres | |||
| Abholished their frounyng cheres | |||
| In worshippyng their false Idolatry | |||
| Thy glorious name, newly to magnify. | |||
| 1435 | ¶By reason wherof, this prince deserued | ||
| A name of renowne, to hym most excellent | |||
| By thy grace Lorde, onely reserued | |||
| Whiche to his name, shalbe permanent | |||
| Neuer none to hym, equiuolent | |||
| 1440 | Reignyng as kyng ouer Israell | ||
| Lorde vnto thee, this is knowen right well. | |||
| ¶So in likewise, moste mercifull Lorde | |||
| This present houre, of thy tender loue | |||
| sig: e2 | |||
| Thy olde mercie, newly to recorde | |||
| 1445 | Our princes herte, inwardly doth moue | ||
| Suche abusions, to reiecte and reproue | |||
| Thy lawes, Lorde, long out of remembrance | |||
| Are now reduced, to thy godly ordinance. | |||
| ¶By our moste noble, Henry th'eight | |||
| 1450 | Through thy incomperable goodnesse | ||
| All thynges Lorde, is made pure and streight | |||
| Abholished is all wickednesse | |||
| In especiall Lorde, this is doubtlesse | |||
| The power of Rome, so long misused | |||
| 1455 | Our kyng hath now vtterly confused. | ||
| ¶ NOW to returne, where I began | |||
| So to conclude, and briefe my stile | |||
| Betwene the Brute and the Roman | |||
| No termes to seke, my tong to fyle | |||
| 1460 | No matter more, now to compile | ||
| The tyme to tracte, do I intende | |||
| But close vp my boke, and make an ende. | |||
| ¶But first to you, master Polidorus | |||
| Your conscience, onely to discharge | |||
| 1465 | Whiche of long-tyme, hath been obliuious | ||
| Against vs Brutes, in writyng so large | |||
| Your spirites incensed, all in a rage | |||
| By your [r]eporte, vs to infame reporte] yeporte 1547 | |||
| Your pen to rashe, your termes out of frame | |||
| 1470 | ¶Where is become, your bounden deutie | ||
| Our antecessours, this to deface | |||
| Sithe it pleaseth, the high Maiestie | |||
| sig: [e2v] | |||
| Of our moste noble the kynges good grace. | |||
| Not to disdaine, as in this case | |||
| 1475 | To be compted, of the same stocke and lyne | ||
| Doune by dissent, to this present tyme. | |||
| Who wer more worthy, then wer these three | |||
| Hercules, Hector, and Arthur the kyng | |||
| For their princely Magnanimitee | |||
| 1480 | Was neuer none, to them resemblyng | ||
| In bodely strength, all other surmountyng | |||
| Lions, Dragons, monsterous and wild | |||
| By manly constraint made them tame and milde | |||
| ¶These princely men, these worthies thre | |||
| 1485 | Whose knightly force, for to preferre | ||
| Poetes do fayne a singularitee | |||
| For their manhode, and strength in warre | |||
| Should be transformed, into a starre | |||
| As it wer, by a deuine grace | |||
| 1490 | In the Cristall sky, to take their place. | ||
| ¶To bryng you, from all ambiguitie | |||
| Unto the truth, of this succession | |||
| By a dissente, and a genelogie | |||
| Without any vain, ostentacion | |||
| 1495 | I purpose with an honest emulacion | ||
| Here to conclude, who-so list to loke | |||
| Set together, at the ende of my boke. | |||
| ¶But yet because, I haue expressed | |||
| As here-tofore, somewhat a[t] large at] al 1547 | |||
| 1500 | Our old abuses, newly redressed | ||
| Perchance ye will ley, theim to my charge | |||
| sig: e3 | |||
| ¶Saiyng therin, ye haue aduantage | |||
| So that we cannot, the thyng deny | |||
| But with the Prophete, to saie peccaui. | |||
| 1505 | ¶We do confesse, our simplicite | ||
| Like as it was, in tyme of Israell | |||
| To liue with milke, yerbes and hony | |||
| For greate excesse, we take no trauell | |||
| Nether for pompe, or riche apparell | |||
| 1510 | We Welshemen plaine, that do deny | ||
| Whiche is oft, muche vsed in Italie. | |||
| ¶But as Dauid, with grace replete | |||
| In tyme of Saull, the famous kyng | |||
| Disdained not, his shepe to kepe | |||
| 1515 | Aboute the feldes, them pastoryng | ||
| Likewise do we, our-selfes conferryng | |||
| Disdaine not, herdmen to be | |||
| Whiche is a parte, of our ciuilite. | |||
| ¶We vse no figges, in pees potage or meat | |||
| 1520 | Which in Italy, is oft frequented | ||
| Without suspecte, together we eate | |||
| No poysons with vs, is there inuented | |||
| And ye again contrary incensed | |||
| With poyson strong, this is in substance | |||
| 1525 | The greater estate, the lesse of assurance. | ||
| Withdrawe your pen, Master Polidorus | |||
| Your vain reporte, and fliyng fantasy | |||
| Your termes grose, and matter slanderus | |||
| No more in this, to amplify | |||
| 1530 | But what maie stande, with honesty | ||
| sig: [e3v] | |||
| Wordes of defame, ye maie well thinke | |||
| Men will requite, euen to the pittes brinke | |||
| ¶Herin to make, a degression | |||
| After the mynde, of Iosephus | |||
| 1535 | In the yeres, and computacion | ||
| Betwene noble Brute, and Romulus | |||
| And of their citees, stately and sumpteous | |||
| Which of them twaine, should other surmount | |||
| Of antiquitee, their yeres to accompt. | |||
| 1540 | ¶Also their stocke, birthe, and their lyne | ||
| As Eusebius , and also sainct Bede | |||
| Plainly doth define and determyne | |||
| Brute to bee, moste auncient in-dede | |||
| Foure hundred and twenty yeres as I rede | |||
| 1545 | So that London, was a citee of fame | ||
| When Rome, nor Romulus beare no name. | |||
| ¶Loke vp your stories, and marke them well | |||
| When Brute began, his foundacion | |||
| Ely was Iudge, and prieste in Israell | |||
| 1550 | Nexte insuyng, after Samson | ||
| As holy scripture, maketh mencion | |||
| Whiche was before Christ, M.L.xxii. yere | |||
| As in the stories, more plainly doth apere | |||
| ¶And thus Eusebius , also sainct Bede | |||
| 1555 | Affirmeth plain, in euery-thyng | ||
| How Rome was made, the iiii yere in-dede | |||
| Of Acham that tyme, of Italy kyng | |||
| Whiche doth agre, the yeres accomptyng | |||
| That London before Rome, was raised first | |||
| sig: e4 | |||
| 1560 | Foure hundred and twenty yeres iust. | ||
| ¶Also Galfridus , reherseth plain | |||
| How many kynges, successiuely | |||
| One after other, here did remain | |||
| Of one dissent, lyne and progeny | |||
| 1565 | Fully an hundred, as he doth specifie | ||
| Recon from Brute, doune to Cadwaladre | |||
| And thus of the kynges, was the hole numbre. | |||
| ¶From Cadwalader, the yere accomptyng | |||
| As diuerse auctours, doth specify | |||
| 1570 | Untill this tyme, doune dissendyng | ||
| Till our moste noble, th'eight kyng Henry | |||
| Of the same stocke, lyne and progeny | |||
| As by dissent, the yeres doth appere | |||
| Fully eight hundred fiftie and eight yere. | |||
| 1575 | ¶Then to accompt, the yeres and the numbre | ||
| Sithen Brute, toke his first possession | |||
| Equally deuide, them asunder | |||
| Recordyng to the computacion | |||
| And ye shall finde, by plain discription | |||
| 1580 | Two thousand sixe hundred .lxvi. yeres plain | ||
| Sithin Brute began, the yere of his reigne | |||
| ¶Thus for yeres, tyme and continuaunce | |||
| For bloud, birthe, and high parentage | |||
| For nobilitee, and mightie puissaunce | |||
| 1585 | For vigoure, strength, and manfull corage | ||
| Let vs compare, with Rome and Cartage | |||
| With all other, notable citees | |||
| For our renoumed, olde antiquitees. | |||
| sig: [e4v] | |||
| ¶What should I more, of this report | |||
| 1590 | Sithe stories olde, doth it renewe | ||
| Whose list therto, hymself resorte | |||
| As I haue saied, shall finde it trewe | |||
| Set out at large, as it is dewe | |||
| Honor reuerence, with all other thynges | |||
| 1595 | As doth appertayne, to worthy kynges. | ||
| ¶Wherfore let vs Integratly intende | |||
| Our moste famous kyng, for to aduance | |||
| Like his desertes, his grace to commende | |||
| In his high and mightie gouernance | |||
| 1600 | Blessed are we, happy [is] our chance is] his 1547 | ||
| To be borne vnder, so noble a kyng | |||
| To se his grace, ouer vs reignyng. | |||
| ¶Whiche hath prouided, for our redresse | |||
| Neuer none like, before this daie | |||
| 1605 | Let vs in Wales, the truth confesse | ||
| And for his grace, moste hertely praie | |||
| Long to continewe, God graunt he maie | |||
| With rest and peace, emongest vs here | |||
| Saue our Quene, our prince, and his doughter dere. | |||
|
¶The Autour. |
|||
| COnsideryng, fortunes mutabilitee | |||
| Now vp now doune, as the whele goth a_bout | |||
| To_day a prince, of muche nobilite | |||
| To_morowe in danger, standyng in great doubt | |||
| 5 | This hath happened, the worlde throughout | ||
| Well-moste none, of the first bloud and lyne | |||
| In any region, reigneth at this tyme. | |||
| sig: [e5] | |||
| ¶Emong all princes of excellence | |||
| For length of tyme, bloud and progeny | |||
| 10 | Let vs preferre, the highe magnificence | ||
| Of our moste royall, th'eight kyng Henry | |||
| Whiche at this houre, by grace of the deity | |||
| Possesseth the same kyngdome and powre | |||
| Like as did Brute, his first progenitoure. | |||
| 15 | ¶Though doble fortune, in tyme long past | ||
| His noble bloud, for to incumbre | |||
| Her traiterous traynes, a_brode did cast | |||
| With foren kynges, to kepe them vnder | |||
| In diuerse places, sente in an numbre | |||
| 20 | Yet God would not, of his deuine grace | ||
| The Troyans bloud, should lose their place. | |||
| ¶As shall appere, by this dissente | |||
| Brifely set out, this present tyme | |||
| By auctours good, famous and excellent | |||
| 25 | As stories olde, doth determine | ||
| Though for a tyme, thei wer in ruine | |||
| Not possessyng their in_heritaunce | |||
| God of his might, hath now made assuraunce. | |||
| ¶But sithe it wer, all to tedious | |||
| 30 | Their auncient names, for to prescribe | ||
| I will be briefe, and compendious | |||
| By numbre, to accompt this tribe | |||
| All foren kynges, for to deuide | |||
| Onely a fewe of the Brutes to name | |||
| 35 | As thei wer worthy, of laude and fame. | ||
|
FINIS. |
|||
| sig: [e5v] | |||
|
¶A Genelogie of the Brutes. Genealogical tables, comprising signatures e5v-f2, not entered
|
|||
| sig: [f2v] | |||
| THese Auctours olde, with one accorde | |||
| This famous line, conueigheth streight | |||
| To our most drad, soueraigne Lorde | |||
| By the grace of God, Henry the eyght, | |||
| 5 | To Edward our prince, our tresure of weight | ||
| Whom God aboue, their enemies represse | |||
| Send them long life, with plenteous successe. | |||
|
FINIS. |
|||
| sig: [f3] | |||
| ¶Imprinted at London in the parishe of Christes_Church within newgate by Richard_Grafton, Prynter to our soueraigne lorde Kyng Edward the .vi. | |||
| 1547. | |||
| Cum priuilegio ad imprimendum solum. | |||
| sig: [f3v] [page blank] | |||
| sig: [f4] |