A Pindarique ode, humbly offer'd to the ever-blessed memory of our late Gracious Sovereign Lady, Queen Mary written by J.D., Gent. Cobb, Samuel, 1675-1713. 1694 Approx. 19 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 7 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2003-01 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A33517 Wing C4772 ESTC R5662 13211840 ocm 13211840 98509 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. A33517) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 98509) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 412:4) A Pindarique ode, humbly offer'd to the ever-blessed memory of our late Gracious Sovereign Lady, Queen Mary written by J.D., Gent. Cobb, Samuel, 1675-1713. Dryden, John, 1631-1700. 12 p. Printed for John Whitlock ..., London : 1694. Written by Samuel Cobb. Attributed, when first published, to John Dryden. Cf. BM; NUC pre-1956. Reproduction of original in Huntington Library. 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 2002-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2002-09 Aptara 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 A Pindarique ODE : Humbly Offer'd to the Ever-Blessed Memory Of our Late Gracious SOVEREIGN LADY Queen MARY . Written by I. D. Gent. Pallida mors aequo pulsat pede pauperum tabernas , Regumque turres . Hor. lib. I. Carm. LONDON , Printed for Iohn Whitlock , in Stationer's Court , near Amen Corner , 1694. A Pindarique ODE , UPON THE Death of the QUEEN . I. THe Mighty Work is done , which in his Heav'nly Mind , Th' Immortal Pow'r above had long before design'd . See , the Great Pillar of the World lies Dead , Consum'd by unavoided Fate ! See , what old Prophets in their Verses said , Who of this fatal Day did wondrous Things relate ! O Sacred Shade , why didst Thou silent go ? Why stood the solid Earth so firm at such a Blow ? Ye Heavens , why shook ye not ? why did not Storms arise , And Darkness overflow the Skies ? Or hairy Comets this strange Revolution show ? As that Great * Monster of the World , Who every Kingdom with fierce Wars did rend , Who all things in disorder hurl'd , In Thunder , and in Hurricanes did to the Shades descend . But Heav'n of Her far better things did know , And She who no disturbance made below , T was just She should to Heav'n in Peace and Silence go . II. Ah wretched Nation ! thrice unhappy Land ! Which dost on ev'ry side on ruine stand ; Become a Wonder to thy Friends and Foes . How art Thou mourn'd by these ! how scorn'd by those ! Insulting Paris , with a wicked Joy , Laughs at thy Sorrow and thy Tears ; And that † Old Serpent , who does all destroy , Hisses , and shakes his Tail , when the glad News he hears . Empress of Islands once ! the Glory and the Pride Of all the Spacious Universe beside : Thy Valour show , thy Courage now declare , Where is thy Strength ? Thy Beauty where ? Thee Nations lov'd , thee Kingdoms did adore , And thy unbounded Pow'r , did stretch from Shore to Shore ; And thy Imperial * Lions through the World did Roar. Heaven's brooding Seed on all thy Fields did lie , And thy large Fleece was never dry . Be , Happy Isle , ( said God ) for ever be From Hostile Arms , and from Invasion free : Thee let no cruel Troops assault , no mighty Host , No foreign Prince invade thy Armed Coast. Then round thy Bosom the wide Sea He threw , And made the Waves a Shield , and Castle too . But , Darling of the Gods ! The Care of Heav'n alone ! Oh! say , Where are thy Mighty gone ? Where are they now who guarded thee from Violence & Wrong ? Justly we 're fill'd with Wonder and with Dread , Since all that e're was lovely , now is fled , The Great , I mean the Good , and Vertuous MARY's dead . III. Tell , O ye Winds , Fate 's rigid Law , Spread all around the mournful Voice ; Let Belgia hear th' unhappy Noise , And bear it to Fam'd Orange , and Nassau . Say their Great Hero trembles now , A Royal Sorrow sits upon his Brow ; And underneath the Weight His Valiant Soul does bow . He , whom nor barb'rous Turks , nor France could e're With their unnumbred Armies terrify , Death He hath seen in War , yet never fear'd Him there , Nor trembled when the Bloody Standard rose ; Nor was afraid in Martial Camps to die : Whose single Valour can oppose A Universe of Stubborn and resisting Foes ; The only Hero , th' universal He , That ne're was Conquer'd yet , and ne're will be : At last His Love above His Heart prevails , His Strength eclips'd , and all His Courage fails . As the * Pellaean did his Friend bemoan , And breath'd forth many a Sigh and many a Groan : Soft Tears unbuckl'd His Heroick Soul , Nor could He tame His Grief , nor could His Heart controul . IV. Ye † Piny Fishes , wheresoe're you go , Let remote Kingdoms our Great Sufferings show : Where're your flying Canvass does its Wings display , Where're through the large Regions of the Main You cut your liquid Way , To Nations , as you pass , complain ; Tell ev'ry Coast , and ev'ry Shore , Say the Great * Pana's dead , say England is no more . The Winds shall bear it to some distant Clime , Whether fam'd China or Iapan it be , There to Her Name shall live , and conquer aged Time ; And role with ev'ry Wave along the Sea. Beyond where the known † Columns stood of Old , Beyond what Mariners shall e're descry ; Beyond those Worlds unknown , where're they lie ; Her Glory , and Her Virtue shall be told . And if by me Thy Name is e're forgot ; If e're Great Ghost , it slips out of my mindful Thought ; May Art forsake me ! and my Muse become , For ever silent , and forever dumb ! O may it never more my Mind inflame , If I shall once forget Thy Memory and Name ! V. But say , What shall I worthy Thee rehearse ? Too high my Subject , and too mean my Verse . Say in what Lays , in what immortal Strain , In what bright Numbers wilt thou live again ? For tho' thy Body mingled in the Dust does lie , Thy Soul , which never is to die ; Thy mighty Soul , stamp'd of Heav'n's noblest Coin , More Pure than Gold , more Precious and Divine , Does in thy Everlasting Vertues shine : Thy Everlasting Vertues did I say ? Yes , sure , they will remain ; Yes , sure they will for ever last , and reign , Beyond the Last and Everlasting Day . Nor art Thou gone , whilst there is left behind The best and truest Image of Thy Mind . Vertue does Thy re●semblance show , And still Thou breathest in th' Example which Thou gav'st below . As when the God of Light descends to rest In the deep Ocean of the sultry West , Some steps of Phoebus we may still behold , He fringes all the Clouds with Silver and with Gold. VI. Say , mighty Shade , to whom hast thou assign'd Thy noble Spirit ? to whom's Thy Mantle left behind ? Speak ; Does that happy Mortal breathe below Who can compare with Thee ? Who can Thy Praises show ? Smile but upon me , and Thy Smiles will raise Me to so vast and lofty Pitch , that I Shall soon forget my-self , and learn to fly With other Poets , whose immortal Lays Do pierce the gilded Sky ; Where meaner Birds did never stretch their Wings , and where Only Iove's Royal Eagles sail thro' the unbounded Air. * These with a steddy Eye behold the Sun , And see the shining God in his Meridian run . Strictly they view the Glories of his Face , How bright his Beauties , and how swift his Race : Whilst others standing on the Ground below , Look up , and faint , and weak , and weary grow ; No longer able on his Light to gaze ; No longer able to endure the Vertue of his Rayes . VII . How then shall I , a meaner Bird , begin ? Which of thy num'rous Vertues shall I sing ? Or thy Religion and Piety , Thy Patience , and Thy Clemency , Thy Mildness , and Humility , And wide extended Charity , Which thro' the British World did run . Which with the Sun it 's Morning Race begun , And ended with the lab'ring Sun. Widely and far Thy Princely Bounty reach'd , And , like the † Pharian Nile , o'er all our Nation stretch'd ; But far more happy did it glide , With a more fruitful and more * constant Tide , And water'd all the World beside . Forgive me , Son of God! and pardon if I say Like Thee She spent her Night , like Thee Her Day ; Like Thee She could Create anew ; So far Her winged Bounty flew : Thousands , like Thee , She often fed , And oft She heal'd the Sick , and oft reviv'd the Dead . VIII . Nor did She spread Her Charity alone ; To Heav'n , and all the World Her Piety was known : Religion did Her Actions sway ; Religion's Precept She did still obey , And every Hour did Praise , and ev'ry Hour did Pray . She , like th' old Hebrew * Prophet , did with Heaven discourse , Her Prayers obtain'd such mighty force . She talk'd with the Creator Face to Face ; And thence Her Beauty shone , and thence Her Heav'nly Grace . But all our Opticks of Philosophy , All our faint Reason is to weak to see Whether She was a part of the Blest Trinity : Whether She was the Holy Ghost , or no , And came in Human Flesh to visit us below ; For since She liv'd by Prayer , we may suppose it so . IX . She , like Elias , when the Land was parch'd and dry , Unlock'd the watry Chambers of the Skie . Her Pray'rs such Blessings did obtain , She from above could call the Dew and fruitful Rain . Nor need we wonder at her living Power , Since being dead She caus'd a greater Shower . Her Prayers were equal to Her Friends and Foes , She pray'd for these , and pray'd for those . And when the Scepter fill'd Her Royal Hand , Of Idols how She purg'd the Christian Land ! Destroy'd the Golden Calves which did in ‖ Bethel stand . Strong , tho' a Woman , like some Rock She stood , And frightn'd all the Hellish Brood : † Vulturs , and wild Birds of prey , Owls , and Bats , which hate the Day , From Her Divinity did haste away . Thou North , ( and then in God's great Dialect She spake . God's Dialect became Her well ) Those cruel Foes to Us , O North , in pieces break ; And , O ye Winds , that stubborn Off-spring quell : Drive those Swine headlong in the * Tyrrhene Main , said She , For since they harmful and pernicious be , And cannot live by Land , 't is fit they should by Sea. X. Tho Heav'n Her num'rous Vertues knew , To Heav'n Her num'rous Vertues flew : Tho' She had all the Glory that Mortality could have , ( Glory ! that Cloud , which , like a Shadow , runs , And , like a Daphne , our Embraces shuns ) Tho' none was e'er more Good , more Vertuous , and more Brave , Yet was Her Soul as Low and Humble as the Grave : For ev'ry Night She spent , and ev'ry Day , In contemplation on Her native Clay . Upon the Dust Her mindful Thought She kept , And often at Her fading Glories wept : Majestick Sorrow in Her Breast did rise , And divine Tears stream'd from Her noble Eyes : While Angels bore Her to the Land of Rest , Such humble Thoughts Her gracious Mind possess'd , She thought Her-self too mean to dwell among the Bless'd . XI . Henceforth ye Mountains which adorn fair Albion's Sea , For ever Black and Mournful be : O never more be White , Nor kind to the returning Saylor's fight ! Whether from Guinea he his Riches show : Or where wide Indus Silver Waters flow ; Or where Arabia's Spicy Forrests grow . And Thou , O France whilst Europe's Princes Mourn , Since thou dost laugh , and all their Sorrow scorn ; Be Curst ! May Heav'n with Bloody Int'rest repay Thy Cruelty , and most Inhumane Joy ▪ And may thy Rhine and rapid * Sein , Role to the Ocean Bloody with thy Slain , And make a truly Red , a truly Purple Main ! XII . And thou , O Kensington ! Great Kensington ! ( But Ah! why do I call thee so , Since now the Beaut'ous and the Mighty's gone ? ) Curst Kensington ! the cause of all our Woe . Henceforth become a wild , uncultivated Place , And like some barren Desert be ; Let never Dew , nor Showers descend on thee ; Nor let a Kingly Court thy Countries ever grace : † Fair Eye of Heav'n , ne're on their Mountains shine , Never thy usual Ray of Favour give , As when the Beauty of the Place did live ; Whose Influence was more Pow'rful than thine : Their Fields let never Plough-Men dress , Their Trees no fruitful Branches bear ; Be only Cypresses and Willows there , And all beside a stony , Libyan Wilderness ! XIII . But , now She sees how vainly we lament , Whilst She adorns the Starry Firmament . Whilst Hallelujahs wast Her to the Heav'nly Shore , Where Sancrost and Great Tillotson have sail'd before ; And as She passes through the Milky-Way , Which leads to the White-Hall of God , Where Stars innumerable are spread abroad , She looks with Wonder and Amazement round the Realms of Day ; And as She Piously looks every where , The Blessed Virgin , first Salutes her there . Two Maries now in Heav'n are seen , The Blessed VIRGIN , and the Blessed QVEEN . Immortal Joy among the Just does grow , The Blessed QVEEN does such a Ray bestow . Heav'n with Triumphant Echoes does abound , And greater Gladness does through the Bright Fabrick sound , Than when a Hundred Sinners that repent are found . XIV . Fly , fly , pure Saint , to Thine own Kingdoms fly , And fix Thy Station in Thy Native Sky . Go , Royal Spirit , lead on the Glorious Way , Whilst Clouds and Stars beneath Thy Feet do lie ; Whilst Saints of Honour on their Musick play , And all the Peers of Heav'n , for Thy Arrival stay . Lo ! up to th' highest Firmament She flies , And there augments the Glory of the Skies : There does the Pure , and Innocent Soul remain ; There does She ever Live , and ever Reign . There sits She Cloth'd in pure refined Rays , And hears Resounding Heav'n sing Her Eternal Praise . So after the Redemption of Mankind , After the Storms which the Great Ransome bore , To Heav'n He did return , from whence He came before , And left His grieving Twelve behind : As through the City of the Stars He rode , Angels and Saints met the Triumphant God , And full of Adoration , and of Love , Around him the bright Company did move , And blest him as He past to fill His empty Throne above . XV. Look down , Triumphant Goddess , and some Pity show On us , Thy Subjects truly Militant below : Favour our Pious Cause , and let Thy Beaut'ous Star Defend and Guide us , in our Noble WAR . Let Thy Star fight for us , I say , For Stars of Old have fought in their Battalia ; And did their Bloody Banners against † Israel's Foe display . See , how Thy Hero toils on this laborious Stage , And struggles with an Impious Age. See what vast weight Thy WILLIAM does sustain , Whilst Monstrous Tygers , and fierce Beasts of prey , And stubborn Men more fierce than they , Cross His strong Rage in vain . Now , valiant Prince , lament no more , But to Thy streaming Sorrow place some Bound or Shore , And the * Tyrinthean Champion's steps pursue , Who Dragons , Beasts , and Birds , a mighty number slew : At last by the Decrees of his great Father Iove , He was translated to the Gods above ; And as through the bright Pavement he does walk , And with his Heav'nly Brethren talk , He does the Starry Monsters scare , ( In Heav'n they 're fearful , as on Earth they were ) And frightens all the Birds , the Beasts , and Serpents there . FINIS . Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A33517-e140 * Ol. Comwel . † Lewis , XIV . * The Arms of England . * Alexander moan'd his dear Friend Cli●us . † Ships made of Pine , * Alluding to that noted Story of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , The Great God Pan is dead . † The Pillars of Hercules . Né plùs ultrà . * Only Eagles can look against the Sun stedfastly . † From Pharos , an Island in Egypt , lying at the Mouth of Nile . * Nile flows but once a Year . * M●ses . ‖ The Church ; for Beth-el by interpretation signifies , The House of God. † By Vulturs and the rest are meant Roman Catholicks . * The Tyrrhene is put for any Sea. * A River in Paris . † The Sun. † Jud. 5. 20. The Stars in their courses fought against Sisera . * Hercules , so called from Tyrinthea , a City near Argos , where he was nurs'd .