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Flovvers of Epigrammes

Ovt of sundrie the moste singular authours selected, as well auncient as late writers. Pleasant and profitable to the expert readers of quicke capacitie: By Timothe Kendall
 

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M. ROGER ASCHAM.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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112

M. ROGER ASCHAM.

The sentence whiche Darius Kyng of Persia commaunded to bee engrauen on his Toumbe.

Darivs the Kyng, lieth buried here:
Who in riding & shoting had neuer pere.

The gracelesse grace of the Court.

To laugh, to lye, to flatter, to face:
Fower waies in Coure to win mē grace.
If thou bee thrall to none of theese,
Away good Pekegoose, hence Ihon Cheese.
Marke well my worde & marke their deede,
And thinke this verse parte of thy Creede.

A verse of Homer, translated into Englishe, by M. Watson.

All trauelers do gladly report great praise of Ulysses:
For that he knewe many mens maners, and saw many cities.

Of the herbe Moly, translated out of Homer.

No mortall man, wt sweat of brow, or toile of minde:
But onely God, who can do al, ye herbe doeth finde.

[112]

Of Newters.

Now newe, now old, now bothe, now neither:
To serue the worldes course, thei care not wt whether:

Master Aschams lamentation for the death of master Ihon Whitney.

Myne owne Ihon Whitney, now farewell,
now Death doeth part vs twaine:
No Death, but partyng for a while,
whom life shall ioyne againe.
Therefore my harte cease sighes and sobbes
cease sorrowes seede to sowe:
Whereof no gaine, but greater greef,
and hurtfull care maie growe.
Yet when I thinke vpon suche guiftes,
of grace as God hym lent:
My losse, his gaine, I must awhile,
with ioyfull teares lament.
Yong yeres to yeeld suche fruite in Courte,
where seede of vice is sowne:
Is sometyme redde, in some place seen,
amongst vs seldome knowne.
His life he lead, Christs lore to learne,
with will to woorke the same:
He read to knowe, and knewe to liue,
and liude to praise his name.
So fast to frende, so foe to fewe,

113

so good to euery wight:
I maie well wishe, but scarsly hope,
againe to haue in sight.
The greater ioye his life to me,
his death the greater paine:
His life in Christ so surely set,
doeth glad my harte againe.
His life so good, his death better,
doe mingle mirthe with care:
My spirite with ioye, my fleshe with greef,
so deare a frende to spare.
Thus God the good, while thei be good,
doeth take: and leaues vs ill:
That we should mende our synfull liues,
in life to tarry still.
Thus we well left, be better reft,
in heauen to take his place,
That by like life and death, at last,
we maie obtaine like grace.
Myne owne Ihon Whitney againe farewell,
a while thus parte in twaine:
Whom pain doeth part in yearth, in heauen
greate ioye shall ioyne againe.

A golden sentence out of Hesiodus.

That man in wisedome passeth all,
to knowe the beste who hath a head:

[113]

And meetly wise eke counted shall,
Who yeelds hymself to wise mennes read:
Who hath no witte, nor none will heare,
Among all fooles the bell maie beare.

A verse of Homer.

What follies so euer greate princes make:
The people therefore doe goe to wracke.

An excellent saiyng of Homer.

Who either in earnest or in sporte,
doeth frame hymself after suche sort,
This thyng to thinke, and that to tell,
my harte abhorreth as gate to hell.

A saiyng of Adrastus, out of Euripides.

What thyng a man in tender age hath moste in vre,
That same to death alwaies to kepe he shalbe sure:
Therefore in age who greately longs good fruite to mow:
In youth he must hym self apply good seede to sowe.
FINIS.