Pro Vere, autumni lachrymæ. Inscribed to the immortal memorie of the most pious and incomparable souldier, Sir Horatio Vere, Knight: besieged, and distrest in Mainhem. By Geo: Chapman. Chapman, George, 1559?-1634. 1622 Approx. 9 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 9 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2003-01 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A18420 STC 4988 ESTC S107715 99843411 99843411 8143 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A18420) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 8143) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1475-1640 ; 1342:13) Pro Vere, autumni lachrymæ. Inscribed to the immortal memorie of the most pious and incomparable souldier, Sir Horatio Vere, Knight: besieged, and distrest in Mainhem. By Geo: Chapman. Chapman, George, 1559?-1634. [18] p. Printed by B. Alsop for Th. Walkley, and are to be sold at his shop at the signe of the Eagle and Child in Britaines Burse, London : 1622. In verse. Signatures: A-B⁴ C² (-C2). Reproduction of the original in the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. 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Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Vere of Tilbury, Horace Vere, -- Baron, 1565-1635 -- Poetry. 2002-08 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2002-09 SPi Global Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2002-10 Emma (Leeson) Huber Sampled and proofread 2002-10 Emma (Leeson) Huber Text and markup reviewed and edited 2002-12 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion PRO VERE , AVTVMNI LACHRYMAE . INSCRIBED TO THE IMMORTAL Memorie of the most Pious and Incomparable Souldier , Sir HORATIO VERE , Knight : Besieged , and distrest in MAINHEM . Pers : Sat : IV. — da verba & decipe neruos By GEO : CHAPMAN . LONDON , Printed by B. Alsop for Th. Walkley , and are to be sold at his shop at the Signe of the Eagle and Child in Britaines Burse . 1622. TO THE MOST WORTHILY HONORED and Iudicially-Noble Louer and Fautor of all Goodnesse and Vertue , ROBERT , Earle of SOMERSET , &c. ALL lest Good ; That but onely aymes at Great , I know ( best Earle ) may boldly make retreat To your Retreat , from this Worlds open Ill. Of Goodnesse therefore , The Prime part ( the Will ) Enflam'd my Pow'rs , to celebrate as farre As their force reacht , This Thunderbolt of Warre . His wisht Good , and the true Note of his Worth , ( Yet neuer , to his full Desert , set forth ) Being Root , and Top , to this his Plant of Fame . Which cannot furnish with an Anagram Of iust Offence , any Desire to wrest All the free Letters here ; by such a Test To any Blame : for equall Heauen auert , It should returne Reproach , to prayse Desert ; How haplesse , and peruerse , soeuer bee The Enuies , and Infortunes following Mee : Whose true , and simple-onely-ayme at Merit , Makes your acceptiue , and still-bettering Spirit My Wane view , as at Full still ; and sustaine A Life , that other subtler Lords disdaine : Being Suttlers more , to Braggart-written Men , ( Though still deceiu'd ) then any truest Pen. Yet Hee 's as wise , that to Impostors giues , As Children , that hang Counters on their sleeues : Or ( to pare all his Wisedome to the Quick ) That , for th' Elixar , hugges the Dust of Brick . Goe then your owne Way still ; and God with you Will goe , till his state all your steppes auow . The World still in such impious Error strayes , That all wayes fearefull are , but Pious wayes . Your best Lordships euer most worthily bounden , GEO : CHAPMAN . PRO VERE , AVTVMNI LACHRYMAE . ALL my yeeres comforts , fall in Showres of Teares , That this full Spring of Man , This VERE of VERES , Famine should barre my Fruites , whose Bountie breedes them , The faithlesse World loue to deuoure who feedes them . Now can th'Exempt I le from the World , no more ( With all her arm'd Fires ) such a Spring restore . The dull Earth thinkes not This ; Though should I summe The Master-Martiall Spirits of Christendome , In his few Nerues ; My Summe ( t'a thought ) were true . But who liues now , that giues true Worth his due ? 'T is so diuine a Sparke , and loues to liue So close in Men ; that hardly it will giue The Owner notice of his Pow'r or Being . Nought glories to be seene , that 's worth the seeing . God , and all good Spirits , shunne all Earthy sight , And all true Worth , abhorres the guilty Light , Infus'de to few , to make it choice and deare , And yet how cheape the Chiefe of all is VERE ? As if his want , wee could with Ease supply . When should from Heauen fall His Illustrious Eye , We might a Bon-Fire thinke would fill his Sphere , As well as any other , make vp VERE . Too much this : why ? All know , that some one Houre Hath sent a Soule downe , with richer Dowre . Then many Ages after , had the Graces , To Equall in the Reach of all their Races . As when the Sunne in his Aequator shines , Creating Gold , and precious Minerall Mines In some one Soyle of Earth , and chosen Veine ; When , not 'twixt Gades and Ganges ▪ Hee againe Will daine t' enrich so , any other Mould . Nor did great Heauens free Finger , ( That extold The Race of bright ELIZA'S blessed Raigne , Past all fore-Races , for all sorts of Men , Schollers , and Souldiers , Courtiers , Counsellors ) Of all Those , chuse but Three ( as Successors ) Eyther to other , in the Rule of Warre ; Whose Each , was All , his three-Forckt-Fire and Starre : Their last , This VERE ; being no lesse Circular In guard of our engag'd Ile ( were he here ) Then Neptunes Marble Rampier : But ( being There Circled with Danger ( Danger to vs All ; As Round , as Wrackfull , and Reciprocall . Must all our Hopes in Warre then ▪ Safeties All ; In Thee ( O VERE ) confound their Spring and Fall ? And thy Spirit ( Fetcht off , Not to be confinde In lesse Bounds , then the broad wings of the Winde ) In a Dutch Cytadell , dye pinn'd , and pin'de ? O England , Let not thy old constant Tye To Vertue , and thy English Valour lye Ballanc't ( like Fortunes faithlesse Leuitie ) Twixt two light wings : Nor leaue Eternall VERE In this vndue plight . But much rather beare Armes in his Rescue , And resemble her , Whom long time thou hast seru'd ( The PAPHIAN Queene ) When ( all asham'd of her still-giglet Spleene ) She cast away her Glasses , and her Fannes , And Habites of th' Effeminate Persians , Her Ceston , and her paintings ▪ and in grace Of great LYCVRGVS , tooke to her Embrace , Cask , Launce , and Shield , and swum the Spartan Flood ( EVROTAS ) to his ayde , to saue the blood Of so much Iustice , as in him had feare To wracke his Kingdome . Be ( I say ) like her , In what is chaste , and vertuous , as well As what is loose , and wanton ; and repell This Plague of Famine , from thy fullest Man : For , to thy Fame , 't will be a blasting Ban , To let him perish . Battailes haue beene lay'd In Ballance oft , with Kingdomes ; and hee weigh'd , With Victorie , in Battailes . Muster then ( Onely for him vp ) all thy Armed Men , And in thy well-rigg'd Nymphs Maritimall , Ship them , and plough vp all the Seas of Gall , Of all thy Enemies , in their Armed Prease ; And ( past Remission ) flye to his Release . 'T is done , as sure as counsail'd : For who can Resist God , in the Right of such a Man ? And , with such Men , to be his Instruments , As hee hath made to liue in Forts and Tents , And not in soft SARDANAPALIAN Sties Of Swinish Ease , and Goatish Veneries . And know ( Great Queene of Iles ) That Men that are In Heauens Endowments , so Diuinely rare , No Earthy Powre should too securely dare To hazard with Neglect , since as much 't is , As if the Worlds begetting Faculties Should suffer ruine ; with whose losse would lye The World it selfe , and all Posteritie . For worthy men the breeders are of Worth , And Heauens broode in them ( cast as Offall forth ) Will quite discourage Heauen to yeeld vs more : Worths onely want , makes all Earths plenty , poore . But thou hast now a kind and Pious King , That will not suffer his immortall Spring To die vntimely ; if in him it lye , To lend him Rescue : Nor will therefore I Let one Teare fall more from my Muses Eye , That else ha's vow'd to pine with him , and dye . But neuer was ( in best Times most Abuses ) A Peace so wretched , as to sterue the Muses . FINIS .