Well; I may now receive, and die; My
sinne
Indeed is great, but I have beene in
A Purgatorie, such as fear'd hell is
A recreation to,'and scant map of this.
My minde, neither with prides itch,
nor yet hath been
Poyson'd with love to see, or to bee
seene,
I had no suit there, nor new suite
to shew,
Yet went to Court; But as Glaze which
did goe
To'a Masse in jest, catch'd, was faine
to disburse
The hundred markes, which is the Statutes
curse,
Before he scapt, So'it pleas'd my destinie
(Guilty'of my sin of going,) to thinke
me
As prone to'all ill, and of good as
forget-
full, as proud, as lustfull, and as
much in debt,
As vaine, as witlesse, and as false
as they
Which dwell at Court, for once going
that way.
Therefore I suffer'd this; Towards
me did runne
A thing more strange, then on Niles
slime, the Sunne
E'r bred; or all which into Noahs Arke
came;
A thing, which would have pos'd Adam
to name;
Stranger then seaven Antiquaries studies,
Then Africks Monsters, Guianaes rarities.
Stranger then strangers; One, who for
a Dane,
In the Danes Massacre had sure beene
slaine,
If he had liv'd then; And without helpe
dies,
When next the Prentises 'gainst Strangers
rise.
One, whom the watch at noone lets scarce
goe by,
One, to'whom th'examining Justice sure
would cry,
'Sir, by your priesthood tell me what
you are.'
His cloths were strange, though coarse;
and black, though bare;
Sleevelesse his jerkin was, and it
had beene
Velvet, but 'twas now (so much ground
was seene)
Become Tufftaffatie; and our children
shall
See it plaine Rashe awhile, then nought
at all.
This thing hath travail'd, and saith,
speakes all tongues,
And only know'th what to all States
belongs;
Made of th'Accents, and best phrase
of all these,
He speakes one language; If strange
meats displease,
Art can deceive, or hunger force my
tast,
But Pedants motley tongue, souldiers
bumbast,
Mountebankes drugtongue, nor the termes
of law
Are strong enough preparatives, to
draw
Me to beare this: yet I must be content
With his tongue, in his tongue, call'd
complement:
In which he can win widdowes, and pay
scores,
Make men speake treason, cosen subtlest
whores,
Out-flatter favorites, or outlie either
Jovius, or Surius, or both together.
He names mee,'and comes to mee; I whisper,
'God!
How have I sinn'd, that thy wraths
furious rod,
This fellow chuseth me?' He saith,
'Sir,
I love your judgement; Whom doe you
prefer,
For the best linguist?' And I seelily
Said, that I thought Calepines Dictionarie;
'Nay, but of men, most sweet Sir?'
Beza then,
Some Jesuites, and two reverend men
Of our two Academies, I nam'd; There
He stopt mee,'and said, 'Nay, your
Apostles were
Good pretty linguists, and so Panurge
was;
Yet a poore gentleman, all these may
passe
By travaile.' Then, as if he would
have sold
His tongue, he prais'd it, and such
wonders told
That I was faine to say, 'If you'had
liv'd, Sir,
Time enough to have beene Interpreter
To Babells bricklayers, sure the Tower
had stood.'
He adds, 'If of court life you knew
the good,
You would leave lonenesse.' I said,
'Not alone
My lonenesse is. But Spartanes fashion,
To teach by painting drunkards, doth
not tast
Now; Aretines pictures have made few
chast;
No more can Princes courts, though
there be few
Better pictures of vice, teach me vertue.'
He, like to'a high stretcht lute string
squeakt, 'O Sir,
'Tis sweet to talke of Kings.' 'At
Westminster,'
Said I, 'The man that keepes the Abbey
tombes,
And for his price doth with who ever
comes,
Of all our Harries, and our Edwards
talke,
From King to King and all their kin
can walke:
Your eares shall heare nought, but
Kings; your eyes meet
Kings only; The way to it, is Kingstreet.'
He smack'd, and cry'd, 'He's base,
Mechanique, coarse,
So'are all your Englishmen in their
discourse.
Are not your Frenchmen neate?' 'Mine?
as you see,
I'have but one Frenchman, looke, hee
followes mee.'
'Certes they'are neatly cloth'd; I,'of
this minde am,
Your only wearing is your Grogaram.'
'Not so Sir, I have more.' Under this
pitch
He would not flie; I chaff'd him; But
as Itch
Scratch'd into smart, and as blunt
iron ground
Into an edge, hurts worse: So, I (foole)
found,
Crossing hurt mee; To fit my sullennesse,
He to another key, his stile doth addresse,
And askes, 'What newes?' I tell him
of new playes.
He takes my hand, and as a Still, which
staies
A Sembriefe, 'twixt each drop, he nigardly,
As loth to'enrich mee, so tells many'a
lie.
More then ten Hollensheads, or Halls,
or Stowes,
Of triviall houshold trash he knowes;
He knowes
When the Queene frown'd, or smil'd,
and he knowes what
A subtle States-man may gather of that;
He knowes who loves; whom; and who
by poyson
Hasts to an Offices reversion;
He knowes who'hath sold his land, and
now doth beg
A licence, old iron, bootes, shooes,
and egge-
shels to transport; Shortly boyes shall
not play
At span-counter, or blow-point, but
they pay
Toll to some Courtier;'And wiser then
all us,
He knowes what Ladie is not painted;
Thus
He with home-meats tries me; I belch,
spue, spit,
Looke pale, and sickly, like a Patient;
Yet
He thrusts me more; And as if he'undertooke
To say Gallo-Belgicus without booke
Speakes of all States, and deeds, that
have been since
The Spaniards came, to the losse of
Amyens.
Like a bigge wife, at sight of loathed
meat,
Readie to travaile: So I sigh, and
sweat
To heare this Makeron talke: In vaine;
for yet,
Either my humour, or his owne to fit,
He like a priviledg'd spie, whom nothing
can
Discredit, Libells now 'gainst each
great man.
He names a price for every office paid;
He saith, our warres thrive ill, because
delai'd;
That offices are entail'd, and that
there are
Perpetuities of them, lasting as farre
As the last day; And that great officers,
Doe with the Pirates share, and Dunkirkers.
Who wasts in meat, in clothes, in horse,
he notes;
Who loves Whores, who boyes, and who
goats.
I more amas'd then Circes prisoners,
when
They felt themselves turne beasts,
felt my selfe then
Becomming Traytor, and mee thought
I saw
One of our Giant Statutes ope his jaw
To sucke me in; for hearing him, I
found
That as burnt venom'd Leachers doe
grow sound
By giving others their soares, I might
growe
Guilty, and he free: Therefore I did
shew
All signes of loathing; But since I
am in,
I must pay mine, and my forefathers
sinne
To the last farthing; Therefore to
my power
Toughly'and stubbornly'I beare this
crosse; But the'houre
Of mercy now was come; He tries to
bring
Me to pay'a fine to scape his torturing,
And saies, 'Sir, can you spare me?'
I said, 'Willingly.'
'Nay, Sir, can you spare me'a crown?'
Thankfully I
Gave it, as Ransome; But as fidlers,
still,
Though they be paid to be gone, yet
needs will
Thrust one more jigge upon you: so
did hee
With his long complementall thankes
vexe me.
But he is gone, thankes to his needy
want,
And the prerogative of my Crowne: Scant
His thankes were ended, when I, (which
did see
All the court fill'd with more strange
things then hee)
Ran from thence with such or more hast,
then one
Who feares more actions, doth make
from prison.
At home in wholesome solitarinesse
My precious soule began, the wretchednesse
Of suiters at court to mourne, and
a trance
Like his, who dreamt he saw hell, did
advance
It selfe on mee; Such men as he saw
there,
I saw at court, and worse, and more;
Low feare
Becomes the guiltie, not th'accuser;
Then,
Shall I, nones slave, of high borne,
or rais'd men
Feare frownes? And, my Mistresse Truth,
betray thee
To th'huffing braggart, puft Nobility?
No, no, Thou which since yesterday
hast beene
Almost about the whole world, hast
thou seene,
O Sunne, in all thy journey, Vanitie,
Such as swells the bladder of our court?
I
Thinke he which made your waxen garden,
and
Transported it from Italy to stand
With us, at London, flouts our Presence,
for
Just such gay painted things, which
no sappe, nor
Tast have in them, ours are; And naturall
Some of the stocks are, their fruits,
bastard all.
'Tis ten a clock and past; All whom
the Mues,
Baloune, Tennis, Dyet, or the stewes,
Had all the morning held, now the second
Time made ready, that day, in flocks,
are found
In the Presence, and I, (God pardon
mee.)
As fresh, and sweet their Apparrells
be, as bee
The fields they sold to buy them;'For
a King
Those hose are,'cry the flatterers;
And bring
Them next weeke to the Theatre to sell;
Wants reach all states; Me seemes they
doe as well
At stage, as court; All are players;
who e'r lookes
(For themselves dare not goe) o'r Cheapside
books,
Shall finde their wardrops Inventory.
Now,
The Ladies come; As Pirats, which doe
know
That there came weak ships fraught
with Cutchannel,
The men board them; and praise, as
they thinke, well,
Their beauties; they the mens wits;
Both are bought.
Why good wits ne'r weare scarlet gownes,
I thought
This cause, These men, mens wits for
speeches buy,
And women buy all reds which scarlets
die.
He call'd her beauty limetwigs, her
haire net;
She feares her drugs ill laid, her
haire loose set.
Would not Heraclitus laugh to see Macrine,
From hat, to shooe, himselfe at doore
refine,
As if the Presence were a Moschite,'and
lift
His skirts and hose, and call his clothes
to shrift,
Making them confesse not only mortall
Great staines and holes in them; but
veniall
Feathers and dust, wherewith they fornicate;
And then by Durers rules survay the
state
Of his each limbe, and with strings
the odds tries
Of his neck to his legge, and wast
to thighes.
So in immaculate clothes, and Symetrie
Perfect as circles, with such nicetie
As a young Preacher at his first time
goes
To preach, he enters, and a Lady which
owes
Him not so much as good will, he arrests,
And unto her protests protests protests
So much as at Rome would serve to have
throwne
Ten Cardinalls into th'Inquisition;
And whisperd 'by Jesu',so'often,that
A
Pursevant would have ravish'd him away
For saying of our Ladies psalter; But
'tis fit
That they each other plague, they merit
it.
But here comes Glorius that will plague
them both,
Who, in the other extreme, only doth
Call a rough carelessnesse, good fashion;
Whose cloak his spurres teare; whom
he spits on
He cares not; His ill words doe no
harme
To him; he rusheth in, as if 'Arme,
arme,'
He meant to crie; And though his face
be'as ill
As theirs which in old hangings whip
Christ, yet still
He strives to looke worse, he keepes
all in awe;
Jeasts like a licenc'd foole, commands
like law.
Tyr'd, now I leave this place, and
but pleas'd so
As men which from gaoles to'execution
goe,
Goe through the great chamber (why
is it hung
With the seaven deadly sinnes?); Being
among
Those Askaparts, men big enough to
throw
Charing Crosse for a barre, men that
doe know
No token of worth, but 'Queenes man',
and fine
Living, barrells of beefe, flaggons
of wine;
I shooke like a spyed Spie. Preachers
which are
Seas of Wit and Arts, you can, then
dare,
Drowne the sinnes of this place, for,
for mee
Which am but a scarce brooke, it enough
shall bee
To wash the staines away; Though I
yet
With Macchabees modestie, the knowne
merit
Of my worke lessen: yet some wise man
shall,
I hope, esteeme my writs Canonicall.