University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
Du Bartas

His Divine Weekes And Workes with A Compleate Collectio[n] of all the other most delight-full Workes: Translated and written by yt famous Philomusus: Iosvah Sylvester

collapse section 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
collapse section1. 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
 5. 
 6. 
 7. 
collapse section2. 
  
 1. 
 2. 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
collapse section1. 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
collapse section2. 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
collapse section3. 
 1. 
 2. 
collapse section3. 
  
  
  
 4. 
collapse section 
  
  
  
collapse section4. 
 I. 
collapse sectionII. 
  
  
  
  
 III. 
 4. 
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
 5. 
 6. 
 7. 
 8. 
 9. 
 10. 
 11. 
 12. 
 13. 
 14. 
 15. 
 16. 
 17. 
 18. 
 19. 
 20. 
 21. 
 22. 
 23. 
 24. 
 25. 
 26. 
 27. 
 28. 
 29. 
 30. 
 31. 
 32. 
 33. 
 34. 
 35. 
 36. 
 37. 
 38. 
 39. 
 40. 
  
collapse section 
  
  
 1. 
 2. 
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
 5. 
 6. 
 7. 
  
collapse section 
THE MAIDENS BLVSH:
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
 5. 
 6. 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
  
  
  
collapse section 
 1. 
 2. 
 3. 
 4. 
 5. 
 6. 
 7. 
 8. 
 9. 
 10. 
 11. 
 12. 
 13. 
 14. 
 15. 
 16. 
 17. 
 18. 
 19. 
 20. 
 21. 
 22. 
 23. 
 24. 
 25. 
 26. 
 27. 
 28. 
 29. 
 30. 
 31. 
 32. 
 33. 
 34. 
 35. 
 36. 
 37. 
 38. 
 39. 
 40. 
 41. 
 42. 
 43. 
 44. 
 45. 
 46. 
 47. 
 48. 
 49. 
 50. 
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
  
collapse section 
  
  
  


804

THE MAIDENS BLVSH:

OR JOSEPH, Mirror of Modesty, Map of Pietie, Maze of Destiny, Or rather Divine Providence. From the Latin of Fracastorius,

Translated; & Dedicated To the High-Hopefull Charles, Prince of Wales. By Iosvah Sylvester.


805

TO THE HIGH HOPEFVLL Happy Prince, Charles Prince of Wales, Dvke of Cornewall, and Earle of Chester.

Among the Preace that to Your Presence flowes,
With Ioy-full Honours, as this time requires;
In stead of costly Suites, of curious showes,
Of precious Gifts, of solemne Panegyres:
Accept a Heart which to Your Highnesse owes
Whole Hecatombes of Happy-most Desires;
Praying, All prosperous to your blowing Rose,
In All, to equall or excell Your Sire's:
That in All Vertues of a Prince complete,
All Princely Glories may attend you still:
All that may make a King as Good as Great:
All Iosephs Blessings (from th'Eternall Hill)
Whose Happy Legend comes to gratulate
Your High Creation, and Your Birth-dayes Date.

PRINCE ARTHVRS CASTLE, Chiefest Arts Chast Lvre

Now, Now, or Neuer, Daign my Harts Last Cvre.

Like sad Arion on his Dolphins Backe,
Amid the Occean of my Carefull Feares,
Nigh stript of all, Now stept in hoary haires;
Sit I (poore Relique, of Your Brothers wracke.)
My Harp-strings quauer, while my Heart-strings cracke:
My Hand growes weary, and my Health it weares;
To stirre Compassion in some Powerfull eares,
At last, to land me, and supply my lacke.
You, You alone (Great Prince) with Pities grace
Haue held my Chinne aboue the Waters brinke:
Hold still, alas! hold stronger, or I sinke.
Or haile me vp into some safer place,
Som Priuie-Groom, some Room within your Doores:
That, as my Heart, my Harpe may all be Yours.
In Effect, as in Affection, To Your Highnes seruice, Euer humbly deuoted; Iosvah Sylvesser.

806

THE MAIDENS BLVSH:

OR IOSEPH.

Chaste Muse of Muses, that in sacred Layes,
With straines vnwonted, dost delight to raise
From blacke Obliuion's sad and silent Tents,
Th'Heroick Gests and Noble Monuments
Of antike WORTHIES, and their fames reuiue
Through euery Age to All that shall suruiue;
Now, Now reuolue th'Authenticall Records
Of th'Holy Nation, whom the Lord of Lords
Chose for his Owne, (Whose Line directly came
From Princely Loines of faithful ABRAHAM):
And sweetly tun'd to th'sacred voyce of Truth,
Sing That Religious, That rare-Modest Youth
(Good Isaac's Grand-child, and great Iacob's Son)
Whom God indu'd, by Dreames) of things yer done
To tell the issue: Tell, O! tell Thou All
That He indar'd through swelling Euuies Gall;
Till at the last, tryumphing of his Foes,
Through Pharao's grace to Princely Place he rose
(As Egypt's Viceroy) by diuine Decree
Fore-sent, a Friend and Founder there to be
Of th'happy People and the holy Seed,
From Whence, should Hope of future Life proceed;
And whence Saluation should be freely giuen,
Through th'heauenly Key that should re-open Heauen.
And O! Thou Glory of Great STVARTS stemme,
Great Iacobs Heire, Great-Brittaines Ioy and Gemme,
CHARLES King of Hopes, and Hope-ful Prince of Men,
My great Mecœnas, to encheere my Pen,
Assist Thou also: and with gentle Gales
Of Helpe-full Fauour fill my Hopefull Sailes:
That maugre Enuie's Rocke and Fortunes Storme,
My sacred Voyage I may safe performe,
To th'only glory of my Ghostly Guide,
His Churches Profit, and Your Praise, beside;
While vnder IOSEPH's Wondrous Temperance,
His Pietie, His Prudent Gouernance,

807

I prophecie Your Princely Vertues Crop
(Your Parents Prayer, and Your Peoples Hope)
God say Amen. But, Tide for none doth stay:
I must aboord, I must mine Anchor waigh.
Away to Sea: the Winde is wondrous good:
Spread all our Canuas: O how swift we scud!
Through all the Western, and the Mid-land Seas,
Arriu'd already to descry (with ease)
The Coast of Ioppa and Samarian Hills,
With wealthy Sichems goodly Groues and Fields.
Already (running twixt his winding banks)
Iordan begins to wash our wel-come Planks,
Where Hebron's valley our glad Welcome sings,
And euen Mount Tabor with the Eccho rings.
Th'Old Serpent knew (for, Much to know is giuen
Vnto that Hell-god, by the God of Heauen)
It was decreed by euerlasting Date,
And promised, that there should propagate,
From Abraham's happy Stocke, a holy Stem
Which should confound th'Infernall Diadem.
In doubt whereof, perplext and vexed sore,
His Ielousie of Iacob grew the more.
The more he enuies Sichem's Shepheard-Prince;
As well because, with duer Reuerence
Did None obserue and serue th'Eternall Lord,
Nor iuster liu'd, nor righter him ador'd;
As for the goodly Blessings of his Bed,
(Twelue lusty Sonnes) likely alone to spread
Into a People holy and deuout.
Therefore he labours, and he layes-about,
With all the Engines of his hellish Hate,
That, That deere Issue to exterminate.
Especially, that louely Lad (whose Birth
Had happy Stars, presaging holy Worth;)
Ioseph, the darling of his Fathers age,
Borne of his (first-lou'd) second marriage:
Whom, Nature-grac't, the Graces nurtur'd fine
In liberall Arts, and loue of Law diuine;
Inspir'd his Soule with skill of future things;
His minde aspiring with celestiall wings:
To Elders Modest, to his equalls milde,
With Piety and Prudence past a Childe.
Now, as from flowres whence Bees their hony make,
The loathsome Spider doth his poyson take;
Hence did the Fiend in th'other Brethren hatch
Close deadly Hate, him harm-lesse to dispatch:
Nor would He let the first occasion slip
That might aduance his wily workemanship:

808

For, for the most, to each mans Inclination,
He knowes in time, to offer his Temptation.
It hapned then, vpon a Summers day,
When as the Sunne had with his parching Ray
Driuen all the Brethren all their flocks to driue
To the coole Couert that the Woods would giue;
Them-selues set round vnder a shadie Oake,
Yong Ioseph thus gently the rest bespoke.
Brothers, I'le tel you my strange Dream to night:
Heare it, I pray (what euer meane it might,
It was an odde one.) Early, when the Stars
Were all call'd in (excepting Lucifer's,
Dayes daily vsher) slumbring sweet this morne,
Me thought VVe all were in a field of Corne,
All binding Sheaues; and when we each had One,
My Sheafe, me thought, stood bolt vpright alone,
And all your Sheaues did instantly incline,
And lowely bow their bended tops to mine.
Then Iudah, nettled with no little hate
Against the Lad, began him thus to rate:
VVhy, saucy Boy, VVhat phant'sies dost thou fable?
Is this your Dreame, you deeme so admirable?
Hath not perhaps some Spirit inspir'd you so?
No doubt there hath: the spirit of VVine, I trowe.
But, pray, VVhat Augure doth your wonder bring?
That you (belike) shall of vs all be King.
Good King of Crickets, line thy Crown with Baies,
Lest drunken Vapors some Rebellion raise.
The rest concurr'd to gird the harmlesse Boy
With slouts and shouts of O God giue you ioy:
God saue your Grace, Your maiesty to come;
And tell, in Scorne, their Father all the summe.
Hee, good old man, (not without God within)
He ponders all that he had heard and seene;
As if discerning somewhat in the Lad
Of higher straine, than euery stripling had:
Yet, to conceale it from the rest he seemes,
And bids the Boy beware of guilefull Dreames.
But, He, to whom God greater Honors meant,
Sonne after dream'd of grauer Argument.
Him seem'd, that, set in stately Eminence,
Before his Feet, with humble Reuerence,
The Sunne and Moone and Eleuen Stars he saw,
Stooping vnto him in obsequious Awe.
VVhich well recording (for by heauenly grace
That Gift he had) within a little space
He tells his Brethren of his second Transe:
Who, re-incenst with ragefull Arrogance,

809

Soone shew their Father, with his fatall Dreame,
Their rancor, spleene, and cank'red spite extreame.
Iacob, at first amazed, calls his Sonne;
And, as interp'ring, thus to chide begun:
What! Sirra, shall I, and your Mother too,
And all your Brothers bow our Necks to you?
Shall you be mounted on your Chaire of State,
And Wee come All base Beggars to your Gate?
If such a folly haue befum'd your brain,
And fill'd your phant'sie with presumption vaine,
With idle Hopes: away with those Conceits;
Trust not to Dreams, list not to such Deceits
So reason-lesse, ridiculous, and light;
Monsters, Chimæra's, shadowes of the Night:
Which (if not good) it is not God doth send,
But some Illusion of the subtle Fiend,
To traine our Weakeness to some sinfull Trap;
Or to betray vs to some dire mis-hap:
As from his Cels false Oracles hee wrests,
From flight of Birds, and Tripes of mangled Beasts.
Hast thou not heard of Belus, Anubis,
Ops, Hecate and other Deities,
Whom the blinde Heathen in their Temples haue,
Frequent their Altars, and their Rites obserue;
Waiting their Answers with the humblest Awe,
All which is hatefull to our Holy-Law?
Therefore be Wise: and looke henceforth we heare
No more such Dreames of such phantastike geare.
He, thus dismist, the rest he milde bespake
To calme their storme, and kindly bade them take
The Flocks to Field, and driue them soft and faire
To Sichem Woods, to feede in cooler aire.
Their Fathers bidding they eft-soones obay'd
(Yong Ioseph yet at home with him he staid)
Passing the fruitfull Vales and flow'ry Greenes
Of plentious Hebron, to those shadie Screenes.
But, nor the Verdure of those Hills nor Dales,
Nor song of Birds, nor shade of Woods, nor Gales
Of whispering Winds, could kill or cancell quite
Those odious Dreames they dream-on day & night:
Rather, they gather daily more Disdaine,
Sharpen their Enuy, giue their Rage the raine,
With Threats & Vows; while the euil spirit, too nigh,
Still stirres and spurres their hatefull Ielousie.
Now, twice the Sunne had run his Iourny swift,
When the next morning they prepare to shift
To Dothan's pleasant Downs for fresher Feed,
And to be further off from home (indeed);

810

And so the longer ere they could reuert;
Which they euen loath'd, and hated at the heart.
Wherefore (night after night, day after day)
When, past their wont, their Father saw them stay;
In musefull care his Ioseph cals he quicke,
And bids him Thus; I pree-thee Boy goe seeke
Thy Brethren out (on Sichem Downes they feed,
Or neere about) and bring me word with speed,
VVhat vncouth Reason of their stay there is:
My minde mis-giues me somewhat is amisse
With them, or with their Cattle: hye thee, Lad.
Away scuds Ioseph (no lesse swift then glad)
As far as Sichem: but there looking round,
Neither his Brethren, nor the Flocks he found.
Perplexed then, he calls them one by one;
Hoaw, Brothers! Ruben! Leui! Simeon!
Then, whoops and hallooes with a Treble throat,
So loud and shrill, that, to his warbling Note
With doubled Ecchoes, Woods and Caues reply:
But, not a Brother answers Eare or Eye.
By chance, a Wood-man that an Oke did shrowd,
Hearing the Lad, and knowing, call'd him lowd,
And told him thus; I heard your Brethren say
They would to Dothan: Thither, that's the way,
There shall you finde them with their Cattle safe,
In better Pasture then is heere by halfe.
Thanks thinks the Lad: and Sichem out of sight,
As swift as Roehe runs to Dothan right.
When, from a Hill, his Hatefull Brethren spi'd
Him yet farre-off: O! yonder comes (they cry'd)
Our King to-come, whom both the Sun and Moone,
And all the Stars must serue and worship soone.
We, We base Hindes, borne but for Heards & Neat,
Drudging all Day in the Suns scorching heat,
Lodging all Night in holes or hollow Trees,
Clad but in Lether, or in coursest Freeze,
And meanly fed with Bread and Water, most;
While He is set-vp with his Sod and Roast,
His Messe of Goats-Milke, and his fill of Wine,
In change of Coates, pranked and painted fine;
Snoring all night vpon his ease-full bed,
Where, from the Forge of his phantastike head,
He feignes these Dreames in meer disdain of vs:
But, Brethren, shall we, shall we suffer thus
Him and his Scorning? Shall we be so blinde
T'indure him still, till growne a Man, his minde
Growne big withall, and bearing proud vpon
His Fathers fondnesse, He supplant anon

811

Our Haps and Hopes, vsurping All our due,
And so (in fine) ful-fill his Dreames too-true?
O! We are Buzzards, Blockheads, Cowards all.
Why rather heere, where none descry vs shall,
Where all things sort, where he is come so pat,
Shall we not kill him, and make sure for that?
For, in this Pit we may him deepe interre,
And say (at home) some hungry Wolfe or Beare
(VVhereof the Desarts, not far off, haue store)
Him quicke deuoured, and to peeces tore.
While these dire Counsels they together cast,
Ruben (who all, in yeeres and pitty, past)
Cry'd, God defend, O Brethren, God defend,
Against our Brother we should so offend:
O! in his bloud doe not your hands imbrue,
Lest Heau'ns drad Vengeance that dire fact pursue
On Vs and Ours. Though no man witnesse be,
God, God himselfe is witnesse, and doth see
And here vs all: from him is nothing hid;
Hee's all an Eye that neuer closeth Lid.
But, if you needs will of the Lad be quit,
Sanz bloud or slaughter, put him in this pit,
There leaue him to his Fate. This he aduis'd;
That, rescu'd thus from present death deuis'd,
He, late at night returning to the Caue,
Might hale him vp, and th'harmless stripling saue,
To bring him safe vnto his aged Sire,
And calme at length his Brethrens enuious Ire.
Their Elders Words them All a little mou'd,
And his aduice they all at once approu'd:
Him downe vnslaine, into the pit to slide,
His worse or better Fortune to abide.
Then Ruben said; Be VVitnesse God for Me,
How cleere I am from this your Cruelty:
And as he spake, him from them far withdrew
Into the Woods, to wait what would ensue.
By this, was Ioseph (full of liuely cheere
For hauing found them) euen arriued neere;
When, fell and furious, they inclose him round,
Lay hands on him, his tender hands they bound,
With brauing Threats; Now shall you see (say they)
Your Dreames fulfill'd: Must not we all obey
Your Mightinesse? Our sheaues must stoop to you:
Yea, to your State, Sunne, Moone, and Stars must bow.
Wondring and frighted with their vncouth guise,
In vain (alas!) in vain he calls and cries
To them for pitty of his Innocence;
While inly Rage, with more Impatience

812

Still egg'd them on, with fell Erynnis brands:
And hellish Pluto (who too-ready stands,
Weening to crosse the Destinies Diuine)
Doth all their Edge 'gainst him alone incline.
When he perceiu'd (poor Boy!) no vows, no tears
Could mollifie those stony hearts of Theirs
To hold their hands, already heauing him
With violence vnto the Dungeons brim;
His Eyes lift vp towards th'Empyreall Pole,
Thus, loud he groned from a greeued soule.
Great God of Abraham, Isaac, Iacob, too,
Who kennest all things, and canst all things doe;
If I sincerely haue ador'd thee still:
If I haue gladly done my Parents Will:
If I haue liued pious and vpright;
Lord looke vpon me in this wofull plight.
Or, if it please Thee, that I heere expire;
Yet spare, O Lord, O spare mine aged Sire.
And, O! my Brethren (whom, with due respect
Of Eldership, I euer did affect)
How-euer Me you pitty not, I pray
Pitty our Father (least vntimely gray
His hoary head come to the graue for greefe)
Let not him heare it: rather say some Theefe,
Or knot of Theeues, Mee (by the way) bereft;
That some false hope may of my life be left,
To lengthen his: though heere (alas!) I lye
Dead in these sands, and hid from any eye:
And as he spake, his Teares so fast did fall,
They stopt his speech, and almost staid withall
His Brethrens rage; till Ruth-lesse Issachar
Re-fand the fire. Nay, hauing gon thus farre,
We may not now, We cannot, safe desist;
For why? whereon I need not now insist;
Your selues (said he) can quickly ghesse, I trowe,
Mischiefs enow, if now we let him goe.
Let vs therefore go on as wee decreed,
Let's let him downe. Heereto they all agreed,
With heart and hand, and did it instantly;
And then Remorselesse, on the Grasse hard by
Made no more bones, but sate them down to dinner.
O! the dull Conscience of a hardned sinner!
But, from th'Empyreall, through th'Æthereal Pole,
God looking downe vpon the harmlesse Soule,
In tender Pitty, and eternall Loue
Towards his Owne, among the Troops (aboue)
Of winged Heralds that are euer prest,
Expecting gladly his Diuine Behest,

813

Too ne he beckens, and he bids him Thus;
Right Trusty, hy thee, hy thee down from vs,
Toward Samaria, well thou knowest where,
And whom thou know'st one day ordain'd to bear
A glorious Part, in honorable Place,
Good Isaac's Grand-Child, now in pitious case,
Crying for succour from a darke deepe Cell,
Against his Brethrens enuious Furie fell:
Goe comfort him, poore heart; but in what kinde,
I need not say. Thou seest, thou know'st my min'de.
So, with his gratious All-directing. Nod,
Th'Angel, dis-mist, in th'instant spreads abroad
Æthereall wings on his Aëreall sides,
And through the woundless Welkin swifter glides
Then Zephyrus; or, then (when mounted high
VVith many Turns, and towring in the Skye)
The stout Ger-Faulcon sloopeth at the Herne,
VVith sodaine Souse, that many scarce discerne:
Such was the speed of this Celestiall Bird
(To prosecute, and execute the Word
Of his great Master) towards Dothan Downe,
Alighting first vpon Mount Tabor's Crowne
Amaz'd to see his Groues so sodaine greene,
And Lawnes so fresh, with flowery tufts betweene.
The Hill-born Nymphs with quauering warbles sing
His happy-Well-come: Caues and Rocks do ring
Redoubled Ecchoes; VVoods and VVinds withall,
VVhisper about a ioyfull Madrigall.
But th'Heauenly Herald, from the Mountain eying
The Vale about, sees there the Brethren lying
Along the Grasse, and busie at their Vittle,
And from a Hill (thence distant but a little)
Th'Arabian Merchants with their Camels, hard
(As God would haue it) driuing thither-ward:
Thence instantly he casts his gentle Eye,
On wofull Ioseph; and immediately
Descending swift, stands on the dungeons brim,
Now shining bright with sodain light from him.
VVherewith the Lad at once dismaid and ioy'd,
The sacred Torch-man (to that end employd)
In louely Shape, with sweet and liuely grace,
Thus cheeres the Lad (himselfe a Lad in Face).
Feare not, deere Ioseph, deere to God aboue.
Thy Fathers God, who All doth guide and moue,
Hath sent me hither from his heauenly Throne,
To comfort and confirme thee, in thy Mone.
First, Hence thou shalt be fre'ed: yet, behold,
Twise, as a Slaue, thou shalt be bought and sold,

814

Transferd to Memphis, and for many a yeere
Shalt liue a Seruant and a Prisoner there.
But if thou still haue in abhomination
Strange Womens Loue, and strange gods adoration:
If still with all thy strength with all thy heart
Thou serue the Lord, and from him neuer start:
If in his Waies thou walke, and doe his Will,
He will be with thee, for thee, in thee still:
So that where-ere thou goe, what-ere thou doe,
Fauour and Fortune shall attend thee too.
And that thou maist with greater confidence
Contemne thy wrongs, and trust his Prouidence,
Knowe for a certaine, he hath destin'd thee
A high Estate, and glorious Emperie;
And time will come, when Thou with me shalt view
Thy former Dreames in euery part proue true;
When as thy Brethren with selfe-guilty brow,
And thy good Father shall before thee bow:
When thy Compassion, paying good for ill,
Shall saue their liues that meant thee first to kill:
Shall feed their mouthes that thought thee once to sterue,
And buy them seats that sold thee forth to serue;
And not alone receiue themselues to grace,
But them and theirs within thy Kingdome place;
That grown at length in number like the sand,
Thence the Almighty with a mighty hand
(In spight of Enuie and Ambitious sway)
May bring them dry-shod through the Crimson Sea,
Directed safe in all their vncouth Way,
By Fire by Night, and by a Clowd by Day;
Through the drye Desart, plentifully fed
With Quailes from Heauen, and Manna (Angels bread)
Into a Land where Milke and Hony flowe;
The happy signe of happier substance though:
Where, in due Time (O haste ye Times away.)
A Goulden Age shall see a glorious Day;
A Day full oft to be fore-typ't, fore-told,
Fore-promised by Prophets manifold;
When from the Bosome of th'Eternall Sire,
Th'Eternall Sonne (What may we So admire!)
(The Spirit o'reshadowing of a Virgin-Mother)
Shall take Man's Nature, and become your Brother;
Old Adam's Guilt, and Yours to expiate,
And wide re-open Heauen's long-locked Gate.
Concluding heere, to Heau'n the Angell hy'd.
Ioseph, though first distract and stupefi'd,
With such a Glory (and confus'd a-space)
Him re-collects, and re-erects his Face;

815

Inlie reioycing, deepely rumining,
All in his minde maturely pondering.
And future Hopes confirme him passing strong,
Gainst present feares, and all his Woes and Wrong;
That cheerely thus, with heart and hands erect,
His holy Vowes he doth to Heauen direct:
Great King of Kings, that rulest All-abroad;
My Fathers, Grandsires, and Great-grandsires God,
Almighty Guide and Guard, still gratious be
To Vs and Ours, whose trust is all in Thee.
Especially, thy fauour, Lord I craue
Towards my Father, ready for the Graue:
And as as for Mee; how-euer please thee, deale
Me sowre or sweet, or send me Woe or Weale;
It shall be welcome, and I well content.
Onely deere Father, if that Death preuent
Mine eyes (vnworthy) of that wished Day,
That long long-hoped, happy Holy-Day,
When from thy Throne (whose Glory hath no End)
Thine onely Sonne shall into Flesh descend;
At least vouchsafe me, though in shadow dim,
As in a Glasse to see and knowledge Him;
And (thorough Faith) to feele the sauing Sauour
Of this thrice-sacred, gratious, pretious Lauer.
So, with an inward and deep sigh, he ceast.
The while, Arabians (Merchants of the East)
With Camels loaden with their Countrey Ware,
Myrrhe Storax, Incense, the most choyce and rare,
Comming from Madian, towards Ægypt bound,
Were passing by, where on the grassie ground,
The Shepheard-Brethren sate to eate and talke;
And busie yet, their Teeth and Tongues did walke,
Till on the sodaine they descry'd the Men.
Whence Iudah thus begins: O Bretheren,
Behold how God doth better farre prouide,
Then we could plot (more safe for eyther side).
For, to these Merchants if we sell the Lad,
First, a good peace of Money will be had;
Next, of our Brothers bloud we shall be cleere;
And last of all, be sure no more to heare
Or newes, or noise, or name of Ioseph here,
Whether to Memph's or Marmorid's they wend.
Therefore, forthwith one to them let vs send,
The Mart to offer, and the Price to make,
As of a Slaue; and bring their answer backe.
They all agree, and one is sent away
To driue the Bargaine;; while the rest assay
About a Tree-trunke fastning fit a rope,

816

And letting 't downe, to hale their Brother vp.
And vp he comes as fresh as Maying Rose,
Or Daffadill that in a Garden growes;
As liuely Forme as yerst, as louely Face,
Shining with signes of Gods assisting Grace.
By this the Marchants with their Broker came,
To see the Ware; and did so like the same,
They stood not hucking, of the price to bate
(So good, and so good cheap, who would not ha't!)
But, who would ween (good God!) that euer He,
That was præ-destin'd to such dignitie,
To whom such Wealth and Honor should befall,
Should thus be sould, and for a price so small?
Saue that my Sauiour, Heire of Heauen and Earth,
That God-begotten, holy Virgins Birth,
Whom Angels serue, whom Cherubins adore,
To Iewes his Iudas sold for little more;
(Woe to His Soule, Woe to my Sinnes therefore!)
As, Twenty Pence. O base and cursed Thrall!
But, both sides pleas'd, Ioseph must suffer all.
Now must he mount on his new Masters packe,
Vpon his Camels double bunched backe;
To trot to Nile-ward (neuer heard-of Nile)
As proud and glad of such a Load, the while
His gentle Beast, now easiest of the Troope,
Aptest to stop, humblest at need to stoop
To this new Rider, with a cheerefull Neigh,
Lifts light his feet, and still he leads the way.
Well: Now the Brethren haue their Brother rid,
How shall his Fate, how shall their Hate be hid?
Who to their Father the sad newes shall bring?
This is the doubt: This they are hammering.
In fine, they iump; first to send home his Coat
(For they had stript him) and in bloud of Goat
Deepe dipping it, Dan is instructed fit
In this sad manner to deliuer it
To aged Iacob, doubting nothing lesse,
Than His mis-hap, or Their so Hatefulnesse.
Father (said Dan) ranging within a Wood,
Our Cur did find this Coat, thus stain'd with bloud.
Not knowing therefore, whence, nor whose it is,
Nor how it came, we thought it not amiss
To shew 't you first, and after harken further,
As you thinke fit, in case of Maime, or Murder.
But, Father Iacob had no sooner sp'yd
The spotted Coat, with bloud and durt bedy'd,
But, drown'd in Teares, he teares his hoary haire,
With Ashes sprent, and rent his garments there,

817

And cries, Alas! deere Ioseph, staffe and stay
Of all mine Age, so sodaine tane away!
O! O! My Sonne, Who? How? What did befall,
To murder Thee, to murder Me withall?
Doubtless, no Man: some sauage Beast it was,
Some hungry Boare, some hairie Beare, alas!
Where are your Brethren? Quickly all of you,
Through all the Woods go take a thorow view:
You may perhaps at last yet light on him,
Or finde at least some Part, some mangled Lim,
Some wofull Relique, which I pray bring home,
That I may giue it his last Rites, a Tombe:
Or rather, let me goe my selfe to seeke,
And finde my dead Sonne, or a Death, his Like:
And saying so, downe in a swoune he slid,
With much a-doo to be recouered.
On th'other side, sad Ruben towards night,
When th'Euening Star began to twinkle bright,
When Sheep and Shepherds to their Cotes were gone
All but himselfe, himselfe comes all alone
Vnto the Caue, and calling twice or thrice,
Why! Ioseph, Ioseph; when as none replyes,
Dismaid, and doubting, lest in their disdaine,
His Brethren there the silly Lad had slaine;
He makes a shift to cut a Holmen Pole,
And by that help, gets downe into the Hole,
Lookes round about; but finding nothing there,
Gets vp againe, as full of greefe and feare:
Then, hopeless, leaues that search to seek the others;
And by the Sheeps tracke, tracking of his Brothers,
Soone findes them out; and out of them will know
Both how, and where, they Ioseph did bestow.
They tell him truly how it did befall.
A little eas'd (though little pleas'd withall)
To heare the Lad was yet aliue and safe
(Though for his thraldome he did inly chafe)
He thus aduises; Brethren, let vs hye
Home to our Father, and our best apply
To comfort him; Let vs informe him this,
That the Arabians (as their manner is)
Spying the Lad alone vpon the VVay,
Pursu'd him, tooke him, stole him quite away;
And while he struggled from them to haue got,
With a light hurt he bloudied all his Coate.
Which let some Shepheards boy or other bring
(As hauing found it) to auer the thing;
For there be many can affirme (no doubt)
They lately sawe Arabians heere-about.

818

This fitted thus, together home they goe,
And doe their best to cheere their Fathers woe.
But though perhaps with some smal hope relieu'd,
Perpetually (alas!) he mourn'd and grieu'd,
Nor could the Torrent of his Teares retain,
Nor outward Solace inly entertaine;
But day and night a bitter life he led,
Mostly alone, although aliue, as dead.
Meane-while, the Marchant well content & glad,
Holds on his Iourney, beares away the Lad;
Wondring to see all things so sute his will,
Weather so temp'rate, and the VVindes so still,
The Waies so dust-lesse, and so durtlesse faire,
The Sunne so friendly, and so fresh the Aire;
Aboue their VVont: for, hauing Heauen to friend,
With Ioseph, Graces, Hope, and Hap do wend.
Now, hauing past Iudæa's confines quite,
From a steepe Hill, they haue anon the sight
Of stately Memphis lofty Towers and Walles,
With glittering roofes of high & sumptuous Halls.
Amid a rich and pleasant Plaine, repleat
With goodly Heards of Cattell, Sheep, and Neat,
With goodly Corne-fields, heere & there between:
And, neere the Citie, on a spacious Greene,
They might behold, as in some Martiall Muster,
Thousands of Youth in seuerall Troops to cluster;
Attending all, Some, manly Exercise;
Some, light and speedy, running for a prize:
Some, strongly actiue, wrastling for a fall,
Some, hurling Sledges, till they sweat withall:
Some, on swift Horse-backe to out-swim the winde;
Some, to shoot backward at their foes behind:
Some with their Launces ready coucht in Rest,
Wheeling about, to charge in Flanke or Brest:
Some, at the Tilt, in strong and steddy course,
To breake their Staues, or beare down man & horse.
Whereon th'Arabians, with th'Isaacian Lad,
(Now very neer) stood gazing, as right glad,
And all most greedy of so various sorts
Of Manly Proems, of so warlik sports.
An Eunuch of the Kings, one much esteem'd,
And Master of those Martiall Games (it seem'd)
Seeing those Strangers, with so much delight
Stand still so long in viewing all the Sight,
Sends to inuite them kindly to come neere;
And then perceiuing that they Marchants were,
Began to aske, What Ware, what rare deuice,
They had to sell? Nothing, said they, but Spice,

819

And this yong Lad; VVhom, if Your Lordship like,
Accept as Yours, and freely, we beseek:
Or, if you nill accept him gratis, prize
As please your selfe; your fauour shall suffize.
Yes, said the Eunuch, I accept your Loue,
And of Your Present I so well approue,
And prize it so, You could not bring me better:
The more my hope, the more am I your debter,
Such grace his Face presageth to my minde;
So shall you neuer me vngratefull finde,
Said Potiphar: and then he takes the Lad;
And causing him to be right seemely clad,
In Silken suit, giues him a Liuory
Of Purple, garded with Embroderie.
Then on a goodly Horse he sets him vp,
The stillest, yet the stateliest in the troope.
Ioseph right ioyfull, from a bashfull Brow
Returnes dumbe Homage, with a gracefull Bow
Vnto his Lord: then, re-erect, appeares
Taller and trimmer then were all his Peeres.
Him, home before (thus furnisht) with a Guide,
Sends Potiphar vnto his louely Bride.
Now Hesperus the Euening on did bring;
When, leauing Fields, the youthfull troops do ring
About their Captaine, and attend, in State
To guard him home triumphant to his Gate.
And louely Ioseph, hauing had by this
A view of his faire Lady-Misterisse;
And of his Office, tutured at large,
VVhat him belongd in his Lords Chamber-charge,
Him humbly ranked (of his owne accord)
Among his fellowes to goe meete his Lord.
As burnisht Gold amid a heape of Sand,
Or Orient Pearle among the Pebble Strand,
Such seemed He, among tenne thousand Squires,
VVhom Men and Matrones, yong and old admires:
His pase so graue, his Face so gracious,
His eyes and Feet still so officious
About his Lord, as fixed still on Him,
VVith steadie Looks, and with as ready Limbe:
No lesse within doores then he was without,
Actiue and apt in all he went about;
On all occasions, in what-euer kinde,
Of Bodie's Labor, or of Birth of Minde.
But aboue all, his faithfull diligence,
And mature VVisdome in all Managements,
So well accepted and admired are,
That not alone vnto his Trustie Care

820

His Lord committed what before he had;
But ouer All, him onely Steward made.
For, Potithar perceiu'd that vnder Him,
What-ere he had did thriue and prosper trim:
His Fields and Flocks more fruitfull then before;
His Fauours greater, and his Honours more:
All which, inspired by some secret Test,
To this young Ioseph he ascrib'd, as Blest.
And th'Oracles of Egypt, then a-foot,
Seem'd euen to point at, and perswade vnto 't.
There was a Peach-Tree growing then amid
God Camosh Temple, to him consacred,
Which, brought from Persia long agoe, they say,
When Isis yerst did all the World suruay,
By her owne hand was planted, for Posterity,
To be a famous Monument of Verity.
Heereon, arriuing from farre wanderings,
Bright-shining Apis with change-colour'd wings,
Faire Apis settled; after whom did muster
A mighty Swarme, which hung all in a Cluster
Vpon one Bough. This wonder blowne abroad
Among the Bards, they vouch that it did boad,
Some Stranger should from forrein parts arriue;
And after him, a mighty people hyue,
Through whom the house of Potiphar should rise
To wondrous Wealth and goodly dignities.
Weening therefore these Augures all fulfild
In Ioseph now, him euery one well-will'd,
Him euery one accordingly respected,
Him euery one for this the more affected.
But, faire Iëmpsar (wife of Potiphar)
Aboue the rest, his Parts did high prefer;
Him more then All shee inlie did admire,
And still beholds him with a young desire.
Yet, ignorant what furie would ensue
The pleasing Passion she did so pursue;
VVhat wily Godling to beguile her, sought
To snare her freedome in a seruile thought;
As yet she vented neyther Sigh nor Teare:
All yet was sweet, no bitter Fit, no Feare.
Which th'enuious Prince of Styx and Acheron,
Malignant Father of confusion,
Mans deadly Foe, obseruing; and beside,
That Isaac's seed still happy multipli'd:
In fell despight, and full of desp'rate rage,
He calls a bird of his infernall Cage,
A cruell Harpy, full of wicked VVile,
A thousand waies the wisest to beguile.

821

Go, hye, saith He, my darling, hye thee quicke
To faire Iëmpsar; she is Phant'sie-sicke
Already. Therefore so insinuate,
That more and more thou her intoxicate:
Breathe in her bosome, blowe-in new infection,
Kindle the Tinder of her light affection
To such a flame, that neither Gods nor men
May be of power to put it out agen:
And, doe thy best (for that I most desire)
If possible, set Ioseph (too) a fire:
But, if on him, thou nothing canst prevaile,
Returne to her, her Phantsie re-assaile,
Fill her with Phrenzie, and with Furie double
Still burne her fell, till all her Friends she trouble:
Till with disgrace, disdaign'd and desperate,
She turne her deere Loue to as deadly Hate:
Till then, desist not; but persist and ply
To play thy Part with Art and Subtilty.
He, glad and ready for the worst of Ills,
VVith Stygian puddle halfe a Viall fills,
Blending some bitter, sharp-sweet wine withall.
Then snatching quicke one of the snakes that craule
About Alecto's grim and ghastly Browes,
Away he hies to Potiphar his House,
Within his bosome hiding what he had,
And formally iust in the Form him clad
Of Iphicle, the Lady Iempsars Nurse;
With better credit, to beguile the worse.
Then, to her Lady hauing made a ducke,
Sweet Madam (said she, fie on all ill lucke)
What sad disaster, what misfortune rife,
Hath made poore Ioseph weary of his Life?
My selfe, of late, haue seene him oft, forlorne
Sit sole and sighing, and haue heard him mourne,
Wishing for Death. And when I sought to knowe
The secret cause of his exceeding woe:
O! Mother (said he) whether I conceale it,
Needs dye I must, or whether I reueale it.
Inquire not therefore; for, tis better end,
With my sad life my sorrowe's cause vnkend.
Not so, my Sonne (said I) for oft a VVound
Discouer'd, is recouerd, and made sound;
Which, hid a while, would gangrene to the bone:
Tell boldly (Lad) art thou in loue with none?
If that be cause of thy distresse; Why Boy
Be of good cheere, Thou shalt thy Deare enioy.
Hope well, and haue well: So shalt thou; or else
I'le charme Loues Passion with some stronger spels.

822

With bashfull Blush, then said hee, Yes, I love:
Bee witnes, gods, how earnest I have strove
To strangle it! How I have labour'd long!
How loth (alas!) my Lord in thought to wrong!
More wishing Death: Death, now make good my triall:
Happy were I to live and dy so loyall.
And, saying so, on his fair Cheeks hee pours
A Sea of Tears, in Pearl and Crystall showrs:
So that, I see, without quick Remedy,
For love of you, Madame, the Youth will dy.
Alas! then said the Lady, Woe is mee
For his Misfortune and his Misery;
To mee right tragick is the tale you tell:
For, truth to say, I love him but too well,
And would enjoy him if I could or durst;
But, O! I cannot: O! I may not: first,
For sacred Lawes, for Hymen's secret yoke,
(Which never any yet, vnpunisht, broke)
For fear of danger, and dis-honours brand,
And dreadfull vengeance of my Husbands hand.
Why, my dear Daughter, damned Nurse replies,
The gods doo laugh at Lovers injuries:
And with thy Wedlock thou maist well dispense,
On so good ground of so great consequence,
As is the saving of a Life so yong,
So innocent, that never yet did wrong;
Vnless it bee a wrong to love too much,
Or dy for Love (Who would not dy for such?).
Lovers must dare, and Wise-men must not dread
The worst of Dangers that is threatened:
For, even the gods have Lovers in their guard,
And Love and Pity they will still reward.
I have a Water of a soverain vse
(Th'extracted Spirit of many a Chymick Iuyce)
Which, inly tane in a perplexed Case,
Expels the Doubt, and shews Truth's naked Face;
That, far from ambage, th'vndistract affection
May of the better freely make election.
If therefore, Madame, yet you stand divided,
What Part to take; to have your doubts decided,
I'll give it you: and, as shee spake, shee gave
The hellish philtre made of Stygian wave.
Thanks, dearest Mother, said her Ladiship:
And, taking all, not with a fearfull sip,
But full Carouse, lifting her hand on hy,
Quaft off the poison, drew the goblet dry.
This don, the Dæmon, with a Beldams face,
Towards Iosephs chamber hies with hobbling pase;

823

Where he was praying, and deuoutly praysing
The God of Gods, for his so gracious raising:
But when the false Fiend in his Portall spi'd
A heauenly Warder (both his Guard and Guide)
With threatfull brandish of a shining Blade,
More speed then good, headlong he dounward made
In dreadfull Maze; and, as the fowlest Fowle,
Transformes him quicke into a Schrieching-Owle,
Night's horrid Monster, houering long aloofe,
At last pearcht on Iempsars Chamber roofe.
The wretched Iemsar, hauing quaffed vp
The brim and bottome of the Stygian Cup,
Now all alone, she feeles her all a-fire,
Bloud, Bones, and Marrow, burning in desire;
Sad, silent, sighing, in a wondrous Fit;
And all for Ioseph, nigh beside her wit,
Now on her bed she falls, and by and by
Flings vp againe; and to and fro doth fly
From place to place; soone weary of the best,
Runs euery where, and no where findeth rest;
Like one whose brest a burning Feuer fryes,
Or whom some Serpents sting doth agonize.
At last she breakes out; and Alas! quoth Shee,
What, what is this that thus tormenteth me?
O! is it Loue? or was it not the Drinke
I tooke right now? No: it is Loue I thinke,
'Tis surely Loue, Loue in extreamity,
And but faire Ioseph gently help, I dye.
Then help, Sweet-heart, come, be thou boldly mine:
Come be my Loue, and I will still be thine.
Both liuing louing, wee'll die guiltlesse both
Of eythers blood: Be witnesse gods how loth
I would incur so fell, so foul a staine,
To kill such Louer with vnkind disdaine.
Duly and truly, while I ought and could,
I serued Hymen till (alas!) contrould
By higher Godheads more Imperiall Right:
He fauour me, as now I feele his might
Farre, farre exceed weake Womans opposition.
He will no doubt; and daigne vs both Tuition.
Sith wont, himselfe, to loue, he as a Louer
VVill pity Passions, and our pleasures couer.
Thus hauing said, impatient of delay,
Efren she calls (Efren a Maid, that aye
Vs'd, as most trusty, diligent and charie,
Her Mistresse Errands to and fro to carry)
Goe quickly Efren, seeke me Ioseph out,
And if the businesse he is now about

824

Be not too earnest, and too instant too,
But what he may as well heereafter doe,
Bid him forth-with to come and speake with Mee.
Wingd with her words, about it straight runs she:
And, after summons, Ioseph comes anon
Vp to his Lady; who then all alone,
First with a Blush, and bashfull glanse among,
From quiuering bosome, with a shiuering tongue,
Thus breakes the Ice (still bidding him come neerer)
Deare, my deare Ioseph, then mine own Eyes dearer.
Shall I intreat thee, what I might command,
To answer truly what I shall demand?
Madame, said he, Should I be false to you?
What ere it be, I sweare to tell you true.
I heare (quoth she) that thou art deepe in Loue:
If it be true (thou must thy Truth approue)
Thou maist not hide it; though my selfe were she,
For whom thou sufferest, thou must tell it me:
Confesse it freely: and I must confesse
As much to Thee; for, Thee I loue no lesse:
So, louing Both, we shall haue mutuall Fewell,
Nor Thou to Mee, nor I to Thee be cruell:
Ioyne hands, ioyne hearts, how happy manifold!
How great! how graç't! how will I heape thee gold!
Thus she protests, and with a sodaine kisse
Vpon his Lips she seales her Promises.
He, red for shame, selfe-sadly ruminates
His Heauenly Angels sacred Caueats
Against Temptations and Attempts vniust,
Of Idoles seruice, and vnlawfull Lust:
Internall praying for supernall Strength,
In modest manner Thus replies at length:
Madame, what euer of my Loue you heare,
How-euer feruent, or how deepely-deere;
If you haue heard it, as (perhaps) impure,
Vnchaste, vnhonest Loue; I you assure
None loue I so; nor wish I (I protest)
So to be lov'd: and of my Lady, least.
My Lord, you knowe, hath nothing from me kept,
I all command, onely your selfe except:
And shall I then, disloyall, Traitor proue
Vnto my Lord; and to My God aboue?
No, God forbid: No, rather let me dye;
And in the sands vnburied euer lye,
A prey to Birds and Beasts: and as he spake,
Her and her Chamber did he quick forsake.
Shee, seeing then her Hopes so sodaine dasht,
Her selfe deluded; as with Lightning flasht,

825

Stands first a while mouelesse, amaz'd and mute;
Then grindes a Groan, and many sighes pursue't;
Then wrings her hands, falls backward on her bed,
Distract in minde, her colour pale and dead.
All which obserued by that Diueld-Owle,
Vpon the Roofe, he putteth off the Fowle,
And re-puts-on Nurse Iphicle a space,
To visit Iempsar in so pitious Case.
Alas! quoth she, What ailes my Lady deere?
My tender Nursling, What hath hapned heere?
Why are you daunted and deiected so?
Be of good Cheere; be of good Comfort: Lo,
I, I am heere; looke, on me, looke, my Lamb,
Your helpe at need, your louing Nurse I am.
At name of Nurse, her somewhat she erects,
And with these Taunts a frowning glance reflects:
Nurse, once a Nurse, or Mother more then Nurse,
But now a Step-dame, or some Furie worse.
Thou, thou hast kill'd mee, thou hast quite vndone me:
Thou toldst me, Ioseph was enamoured on me
Deep, to the Death; and when I come to proue him,
Alas! he loues not, nor will let me loue him:
Nay, Prayers, Proffers, Presents cannot moue him.
Thou, thou hast made me make my selfe a mocke;
To shame my Name, to staine my House and Stocke,
To wrong my Lord, to breake my Faith, to fall;
Thou wert the Author, thou the cause of all.
What wanteth more, but with a murderous blade,
This guilty Soule to send to endlesse shade?
False Iphicle doth her as sharpe reproue;
Ah, foolish woman, vnexpert in Loue:
What wonder was it, if a bashfull boy,
Vntraind, vntoucht (as Virgin) first were coy
To heare of Loue, a Nouice, yet a Stranger,
Doubtfull of you, perhaps; fearefull of danger.
Twas not the course: you haue miscarried it.
Then be not hartlesse, neither hopelesse yet;
For I will once more vndertake the matter,
Ile chide his rudnesse, and instruct him better
How to behaue him: Haue you Patience
But for three daies, and on the fourth from hence
Will reigne a gracious Starre, whose milde Aspect
On Loue and Louers gently doth reflect;
Vnder whose Radiance, in Coniunction sweet,
Hymen and Cupid in one instant meet.
With these her Words Iëmpsar, part re-cheard,
Her sinking heart againe a litale rear'd:
Then Goe, said she, the Gods grant better speed:

826

And that we may the better now succeed,
VVe will the while the sacred Powers implore,
Frequent their Altars, and their Shrines adore.
Next morning therefore, by what time the Sun
VVith glittering Rayes had gilt the Horizon,
Iëmpsar decks her, goodly to behold,
In Scarlet, set with Iewels and with Gold
(But much more goodly for her louely grace,
And natiue Beauties of her Forme and Face)
And to the Temple with a Traine she tends,
Of Matrons, Maidens, Seruants, Neighbors, Friends.
Among the rest, the Steward also went,
Faire-featur'd Ioseph, with his Eyes downe bent,
As inlie pitying with a griefe vnshowne,
His Ladies Passions as he did his owne:
For, he suppos'd her gaite to Church had bin
To seeke for Mercy, and forsake her sinne:
But, nothing lesse; Shee all the gods requires,
To friend her loue, and further her desires:
And so the next day, and the next ensuing,
And euery day still greater Gifts renuing,
The reaking Entrailes of her Offrings viewing.
But, when the fourth, long-wished, wel-come day
Tytan 'gan burnish with his burning Ray,
Haile, happy day (said shee) haile holy Lights,
That fauours Louers, and that loue delights:
And by your power and gratious Iuflnence,
Preserue the VVorlds perpetuall Increments.
And then she sends for the beloued Lad:
Who, selfely good, suspecting nothing bad,
Supposing now his Mistresse minde reclaim'd,
At least from daring what before she aim'd,
Comes instantly: Shee, by the Nurse seduc't,
Presuming All to her content conduc't;
No sooner spies him, but she springs for haste,
About his necke her Iuory Armes she cast:
Shee holds him, hugs him, saying, Welcome Mine,
Mine, Mine thou art, and I am onely Thine:
Then, VVhy delay we? VVhy defer wee thus
Our ioynt delights, sith none can hinder vs?
VVhy burn we Day-light? Hence with Feare and Sloth.
Let's mixt our Loues. This Bed will serue vs Both.
She leaps vpon't; and like a Nay-lesse Wooer,
Holding his Cloake, she puls him hard vnto her.
The goodly Youth, as beautifull as blamelesse,
Amaz'd, asham'd, to see his Lady shamelesse,
Replyes, Alas! (Thus sharpe reprouing her)
Late Noble VVife of Noble Potiphar,

827

What mood, what madnes hath obdur'd your mind,
To dare these Pranks, vncomely and vnkinde?
To shame your Selfe, your Sex, your House, your State,
To wrong my Lord, and me vnfortunate?
These are the fruites of Ease-full Idlenesse,
Of wanton Pride, of wastfull Pamprednesse;
From whence the Fiends (our foes) aduantage cull,
To kill our Soules, and fill our Sins-sacke full:
For, 'tis not Iphicle, your Nurse, your Friend,
As you suppose: no, 'tis a hellish Fiend,
A Hag, a Furie sent from Sulphury Styx,
That thus deludes you with deceits and tricks:
Shee dar'd, and did attempt to tempt me too;
But, God forbad: she me no hurt could doe.
I saw her shrinking out as I came in:
I know the fained forme she masketh in:
I feele the Sulphury fume, the filthy Sent
She left behinde her, when away she went.
He hauing spoken; from behinde the dore,
The subtle Fury (lurking there before)
VVith sodaine rush did crush the posts in sunder;
And comming in, fills all with feare and wonder;
When ghastly squinting, griezly, Thus she spake
VVith hellish voyce: Indeed you do miss-take.
False, Iphicle I am not: I am one
Of th'Odious Sisters, sent from Acheron,
I'll make you proue it now: then forth she drew
A poysonous Snake, and it at Ioseph threw:
But, th'Heauenly Warder still repeld it back,
And all th'endeuours frustrate still did make.
Vnable therefore Him to hurt at all,
Towards Iëmpsar doth it softly crawle,
With slippery windings, wriggling to and fro:
Into her skirts at length it twineth so,
That vp it creepes, and quicke into her gets,
Gnawes all her bowells, and despitefull spets
His hellish poyson in her inmost heart.
The Lad, thus frighted, quick away did start,
To his owne Chamber: and perplext in minde,
Forgetfull he had left his cloake behinde.
Seeing him fled, and feeling in her wombe
The fretting Venome; wholly ouercome,
In ragefull fury, sodainely she falls,
And, Help, Help, Help, with a loud Cry she calls,
So loud and shrill, that all the Court it heard,
And all the house, and neighbours neere, it scar'd;
As if within had been some sodaine fire
Which instantly would to the roofe aspire.

828

Helpe, Women, Help, quicke, quickly. O! the Slaue,
The Iew, the Rascall, the yong Hebrew knaue,
Euen now (O Gods!) finding me here alone,
(O the bold Villaine! Hath the like been knowen?)
Dar'd t'haue defil'd great Potiphar his Bed;
And, but my Nurse me timely rescued,
Had rauisht me (O, horrid thing to thinke!)
But hearing Helpe, away the Slaue did slinke,
And left, for haste, his Cloak behind him heere.
With Hue and Crye, pursue him far and neere,
Lay hold on him, and lay him fast in Hold;
And let my Lord of his Abuse be told.
Thus fell Iëmpsar her complaint prefers.
All which, and more, false Iphicle auers,
And aggrauates, adiudging him exempt
From pitie, fit to hang for such attempt
So insolent, so impudent; and whets
The hearers hears. Then close away she gets,
Vnseene, and Owle-like in a Clowd inuolv'd,
Her borrow'd Body into Aire dissolv'd;
Descending swift from whence she came, to tell
Her good-ill seruice, and successe, in Hell.
Poore Ioseph then his fellowes folly seaze;
And, hasty, hurry him towards Little-Ease:
Faine would he speake, but none would hear a word;
None, none at all, and least of all his Lord,
Whom the Report already had incenst;
Yet not with Death to haue him recompenç't:
But, in a Dungeon (worse then Death) to dwell,
For worst Offenders the most loathsome Cell;
There, kept Close-Prisoner to be barely fed
With puddle-water, and with Barly-bread.
But, better kept by his supernall keeper
(Yet, more his dear, the more their woes be deeper)
A winged Watch-man shining heauenly bright,
Is sent to Ioseph (when the first sad Night
With sable Courtin had beclowded all)
Who entring (through the Wicket and the Wall)
Into the Prison, with a new-come Ray
Lightning the dungeon, driuing Night away,
With spirituall Comforts, and with speeches kinde,
Cancels his feares, and well confirmes his minde
This, from a Tower th'Ægyptian Keeper spy'd:
Some God, some God is in the Light, he cry'd.
I know, such Splendor, and the speech I heard,
If it be God, it must be needs inferd
This Lad is guiltlesse of the crime pretended.
For, Innocence iust IOVE hath aye defended.

829

Thenceforth, to Ioseph bare he great respect;
A kinde of Reverence, with a kinde Affect;
Took off the Irons from his hands and feet;
Fed, lodg'd him better, made his prison sweet;
Visits him oft, intreats him friendly faire
With loving Comforts; lets him take the Aire.
Now, twice foure Roundles Phœbe had compleat,
When, on suspicion of some treacherous feat
Of poys'ning Pharao's Bread (as went the Fame)
Two were committed from the Court (by name,
The Kings chiefe Baker, and chiefe Buttler, too)
To the same Gaile where Ioseph hath to doo.
For, now his Keeper trusted him so deep,
He made him Keeper, and of nought took keep.
In short time after, Either, in one night,
Dreamed a Dream; whence the next morrow light,
Pain'd and perplexed, what they might portend,
Too sadly serious seem'd they to perpend.
Which Ioseph noting: Gentlemen, I pray,
How hap (quoth he) you are so sad to day.
To-night (sayd they) we dreamed each a Dream,
But none we finde that can interpret them:
And that's our trouble, Can you tell them me?
Come, let me heare them, if you can, quoth he;
I may please God we may haue sight therein.
Right gladly, said the Buttler, I'll begin.
Me thought I saw a green and goodly Vine,
With three faire Branches, budding, blowing fine,
Then flowring fresh, then swelling Clusters blush,
Whose spumy Iuyce in Pharao's cup I crush,
Which with my hand into his hand I raught,
Whereof the King took-in his wonted Draught.
Then, thus the Lad: I'll tell your Dreams Portent.
First, by that goodly Vine your Life is Meant;
The Buds, Flowers, Fruits, be fruits your selfe haue bore,
Your Services, your Vertues here-tofore,
Which shall be guerdon'd, you restor'd to grace;
The three faire Branches are but three dayes space,
When in your wonted manner you shall bring
The wonted Cup vnto your Lord the King.
Then, when with Pharaoh you shall gracious be
(If I be worthy) but remember me,
And that vnworthy I am heer detain'd.
The Baker, hearing This thus right explain'd,
Said, let me also, if you please, I pray,
Report my Vision; and your Verdict say.
Me thought I had three Baskets on my head:
Two full of Flower, the third of finest Bread,

830

Made with most Art and Cunning that I might;
But, all anon the Birds devoured quite.
Then sayd the good Interpre'r: Things to come
Are known to God; Men often faile in some:
Yet, what I ghesse and gather of this matter,
I'll tell you true: I cannot, may not, flatter.
That which you saw the Baskets filled with,
Of diuers kindes, your Life betokeneth:
The Flower your former, simple and sincere;
The Bread, your later, compound (as it were)
Of all deceipts, Theft, Plotting, Poysoning,
Treason, and all discover'd to the King;
Who, for reward of these fowle Crimes, by Law
Will hang you vp: and then the Birds you saw,
Rav'ns, Vultures, Eagles, Kites, and carren Crowes,
Shall eat your Carcass, peck your Eyes and Nose.
Whithin three dayes, your Baskets number notes:
Yet I may erre, and you may change your Lots.
For, God doth change, when Men doo change from ill,
His mediate Work, not his immediate will.
This past, their Parts both divers pondering,
On the third day came Warrant from the King,
To cleare and to declare the Buttler Quit,
And hang the Baker, at first sight of it.
Accordingly, from Prison both are brought;
But, to a diuers End, with diuers thought:
Th'one with reproach, th'other with good report;
Th'one to the Cart, th'other to the Court;
Th'one to the Gallowes, th'other to be grac't
Of Prince and Peers, and in his roome re-plac't;
With Caps and Claps, with cheerfull shouts and songs
Welcom'd, rewarded, honor'd for his wrongs.
Thrice through the Zodiak had Hyperian pranç't,
And fourthly now his fiery Teem advanc't,
When quiet stretcht vpon his Ivory bed,
In sweetest sleep, well toward Morning-sted,
To mighty Pharao the Almighty sent
A double Dreame, of so deep Consequent,
That wondring much, the King awoke withall,
Conceiving it some high Prognosticall.
Wherefore, forth-with he summons farre and wide,
Through Ægypt and Chaldæa, from each side,
All that had knowledge in Astrologie,
Cunning in Spels, or Skill in Prophecie,
Or could fore-tell by Magick from below;
Or from aboue, by Oracles fore-show;
Or by in-sight of Sacrificed Heards;
By Fire, by Water, or by Flight of Birds,

831

Or by their Songs; by Sand, by Geomancy;
Or by what-ever Heathen Feat or Phantsie.
Then swarm'd the Court with Sages of all sorts,
Of divers habits, and of divers ports.
Som on their Heads wore Hornes, hairy & horrid,
Som with thick Turbands did surround their forehead,
Som with high Miters, som with trayling whoods,
Som with rich Garlands, set with precious Studs;
But, broad long-bearded all, adown their Chin,
With sad aspect, and of a sallow skin.
Whom when before him Pharaoh had admitted,
He tels his Dreams, first; then (as him befitted)
Propoundeth Honors and rich Recompence
To whom-soever shall expound the sense,
And sets them dayes, and nights, and times, and houres,
To bring their Answer: But (beyond their powers)
Daies, Nights, Times, Houres, they break, none doth appeare
T'explaine the Dreame, or the Kings doubt to cleare:
Neither their Spheres, Spels, Circles, Sorceries,
Birds, Beards, nor Miters, could decypher This.
Angry therefore, and thence forth grieuing deep,
The King would heare none, but did priuate keep.
The Buttler then remembring (at the last)
During his Durance what before had past,
(Which hitherto, as Courtiers, yet, for most,
Good Turns receiv'd, he had forgot, or crost)
How truly Ioseph by their Dreams did tell,
What to the Baker and himselfe befell;
Fell on his knees, and cryes vnto the King,
Pardon, My Liege, my stolid lingering
To tell your Highness, in this manner moov'd,
What (late) in prison I both saw and proov'd.
Your Maiesty (no doubt) remembers yet,
Your Baker and my selfe you did commit
To your High Marshals Tower; where then we found
An Hebrew Youth, a Prisoner (on false ground,
As may be ghest) late Page to Potiphar.
Both growne in time with him familiar,
Both of vs dreamed in one very night;
Both of our Dreams to Him we did recite;
Both he expounded; and both did succeed
To both of vs, as he of both did reed.
To me, sayd hee, Thou shalt in three daies space,
Returne to Court, recover Place and Grace:
But, to the Baker; Thou (said he) that day
Shalt be hangd vp, for rauening Birds a Prey,
Vnlesse thy faults thou canst so quick repent,
That change of life thy threatned death prevent:

832

(For, God doth change, when men do change from Ill,
His mediate Work, not his immediate Will.)
All which, for True, before your Eyes is cleer;
The Baker hang'd: and I your Buttler, heer.
Vpon my Life, my Lord, your hidden Dream
That Lad will read: he hath som Spirit supreame.
Herewith the King re-cheerd, and inly glad,
Commands him straight, Go, quickly fetch the Lad,
And in Our Name him instantly inlarge.
Forthwith he hies him to perform his charge;
Gets forth the Prisoner, shifts him, suits him prest,
Of his owne cost, and hath him barb'd and drest;
And then conducts him, bashfull, to the King;
Who well beholds the Lad, likes every thing;
Then questions thus: They tell me, Youth, that you
Interpret Dreams; now, tell me, Tell they true?
My gracious Lord, said Ioseph, God alone
Immediately knowes Dreams; and other none,
Saue onely such to whom that sacred Gift
Th'Almighty daignes: I may my Prayer lift
Vnto my God for you, my Lord, and shall:
It may be, He will grant this grace withall.
For, ay with speciall care he guides the things,
That long to Kings; as onely King of Kings.
A while then inly did he meditate:
Then, prayes the King his Visions to relate.
Me thought, said Pharaoh, by Niles bank I stood,
And suddenly from out the silver Flood,
Came seaven faire Kine, which ranging far and wide,
Fed in the Meads along the Rivers side,
On Ox-lips, Cowes-lips, Trifole and the rest,
Which for the Altar fat our Beasts the best.
Scarce had I turn'd mine eye, when on the shore,
Me-thought in th'instant came vp seaven Kine more,
With staring haire, too-weak to stand alone,
Ill-favoured, lank, and leane, bare skin and bone;
As, poorly fed, With Holly, Broom, and Heath,
Anatomies, or living Formes of Death.
Amaz'd with this, yet was I more anon,
When these (me thought) for hunger, set vpon
The former seaven, and so to work did fall,
That suddenly they had devour'd them all.
Heerwith I waked: and anon agen
Sweet slumber caught me, and I dreamed then
I saw seaven goodly full fair Eares of Corne,
Rise from one straw, scarce able to be borne:
And by and by, seaven other Ears there sprung
Light, chaffie, blasted, thin and closely clung,

833

Which in like manner greedily did eat
And quick consume the seaven full Eares of Wheat.
These were my Dreams, which I haue oft propounded
To many, yet by none can be expounded.
Now, if for Thee this Honor be reserv'd,
If Thee alone my deeper Dreams deserv'd;
Then, happy Youth, reioyce with all thy hart,
Eternall Fame shall trumpet thy desert:
And, with Reward we shall so richly store thee,
That in all Ægypt none shall be before thee.
Great King, said Ioseph, both your Dreams be one,
Sent down from God, to be reueal'd by none
(How-ever wise, how-ever full of Parts,
How-ever compleat in all depth of Arts)
Saue by som Vessell of his owne Election,
To whom he daignes the grace of his direction:
And therefore could your Sages nothing show,
Not knowing God, though All-things else they know.
Know this, O King: God by This Vision sends,
To let you know what shortly he intends.
Your seaven fat Bullocks are seaven fruitfull yeers,
Which through all Ægypt shall oreflowe your shiers,
While Nile, far fatter than to-fore he wont,
Shall farder spread his slimy Sweat vpon 't;
When happy Memphis shall such Plenty see,
That your old Barnes shall, all, too little be:
Your Rieks, your Garners, and your Bartons, All,
Too narrow for your Crops, too short, too small:
And, to confirme it, that it shall be so,
Your seaven full Eares but the same thing fore-show.
Now be you pleas'd, my great and gracious Prince,
To heare the rest with heed and Patience:
For, seaven poor years these seaven rich years shall follow,
Whose Penury their Plenty soon shall swallow;
When Nile shall shrink into his Chanell, nye
Leaving the Ridges and the Furrows dry,
Fields scorched, parched, burned even to dust,
Both Solstices like deawless and adust:
To Torrents gushing from the Mountain tops,
Nor (vnder Cancer) on the Æthyops
Any return of Winter's Moist again,
Nor any help of sweet and timely Rain:
So that the Husband cannot plough his Land:
Or if he could, he should but plough the sand,
And cast his Seed amid the same to burn,
Without all hope of any Crops return,
Or of increase: but rather prest, for need,
To quit his Plough, and on his Oxen feed.

834

Your seuen leane Bullocks, and seuen slender Eares,
Deuouring, shew these seuen deuouring yeeres.
This is your Dreame, O King; and doubled Thus,
That, more assured, more solicitous,
More speedily you may prouide before
(Thus warn'd by God) a Salue vnto this Sore.
Which, how to doe, (of me if you demand:
I would aduise you first through all the Land,
To build new Garneis, long and large enough,
From time to time to store vp all the stuffe,
That may be spared throughout all your State,
During those Yeares of Plenty fortunate;
Allowing onely for each Households need,
And for their Land, a Competence of Seed.
You must haue also Treasure ready still
To buy this Store, if well proceed you will.
And to this end, let there a man be sought
Discreet and wise, to wield it as it ought.
Let him haue power as in your Royall Name,
Through all your Kingdome to dispose the same;
And vnderneath him to subordinate
Sub-Officers, to serue him and the State.
Thus Ioseph counseld: & the while the King,
With silence, all maturely pondering,
A last breakes out in ioyfull admiration,
There is (no doubt) a Diuine Inspiration
In this yong man. Without a spirit Diuine,
Of future things, none could so deepe define:
There is none like him, none to match him neere,
In all Chaldæa, nor in Egypt heere.
Then, on his necke, shedding a showre of Ioy,
The King imbrac't, and kindely graç't the Boy;
Then, thus bespake him: Seeing God hath giuen
Thee this to know, and to foreshew, from Heauen;
I know not one so wise and so discreet,
Nor for this Office than thy selfe more meet.
Thee, next to Me, shall all my people serue,
And call thee Sauiour: Thou dost them preserue.
Then, on his backe a Purple robe he dons,
Embossed round with rich and Orient Stones;
About his necke a massie Chaine of Gold,
And on his finger (as they wont of old)
A royall Signet, a most precious Ring
(Not to be worn by any, but the King,
Or his Vice-gerent, whom he doth esteeme
And will haue deemed Second vnto Him)
Which Pharaoh there then plucked from his owne,
To put on Ioseph's, that he might be knowne

835

To be the Second to Himselfe, in all.
Then, on a Steed, the second in his Stall,
(Or seçond Chariot) in this solemne Pompe
He makes him ryde; and with the sound of Trumpe
Proclaimes before him, that they bow the knee
To his Vice-gerent, to This Second Hee,
To this Preseruer of their State; or rather
To this (adopted Sonne) their Countries Father;
This Prince of Worth; this more then Man, this Miracle,
This happy, holy, Heauen-inspired Oracle;
Who, the Kings Dreames in time interpreting,
Had sav'd themselues, their Country and their King.
With all these Honors, and with Wealth conferd,
With all applause good Ioseph is preferd,
To rule all Ægypt: which with great Dexteritie,
Wisedome and Worth, Care, Courage, and Sincerity,
He executes: And first, his Circuit rides
O're all the Land; Barnes euery where prouides,
Which in those Plentious Yeeres he fils with Store,
Of euery kinde. And, sith it is no more
Vertue to purchase than preserue what's got,
He slips no time, but prudently doth plot
To kill all Vermine, cut off all Excesse
Of Gluttony and beastly Drunkennesse;
Abates their need-less Beasts, Dogs, Mules, and Horse,
Rids idle Roagues and Vag'rants, that be worse;
And rather buyes-in, from the Coasts about,
Than by a Licence lets a Corne goe out.
Thus he proceeds: and God so blest his hand,
That all things prosper'd ouer all the Land.
There was a City call'd Heliopolis,
(Whose Surname from the Sunne deriued is)
Whose Prince (a Priest too, to Apollo's Grace)
Had one faire Daughter, (faire indeed of Face
And outward Feature; but, much more diuin'd
For inward Beauties, Graces of the minde)
Whom Phœbus, oft consulted with, had show'n,
Not to be matcht to any of their Owne
But, by a higher Fate, reserv'd to be
A Strangers Bride, with greater Dignity
To raise her Name, and honor her Posterity.
This Oracle at Ioseph points in Verity,
Thinks Phœbus Priest and great King Pharaoh, too:
And to this end th'Isaacian Prince they wooe.
When Ægypt now seuen happy yeeres had had;
All plentifull, all prosperous and glad;
It pleas'd the King, with Royall Pomp and State,
These Nuptiall Bands to knit and consummate

836

With sumptuous feasts; and to (prolong their ioyes)
With Tilts and Tourneys, Dances, Maskes, and toyes,
So long; that now the seaven rich Years, at last,
Were ended all, and all their Plenty past.
And now, Sol's Palfreys, having past the Twins,
Were posting hotly towards Cancers Innes,
When the Ægyptians could no more perceiue
Nile's over-flood, nor any mud to leave;
But, pure, vnpuddled on the sand to slide,
And in his Bottom him well-neer to hide:
Their whilome fertill soyl now serely riues,
Yawnes wide for thirst, no hope of Harvest gives:
If any seed be sowne, it never springs,
Or never buds, or never bears, or brings
Vnhappy Darnell, or dry Poppy seed,
Or is devour'd by Vermines hungry breed.
So that they live of former Years remains,
Which hardly yet the first hard Year sustains;
But men are faine to Grass and Rats to fall,
To harmless Creatures, vnclean Beasts and all.
Then, to the King, Citie and Countrey fly
To sue for Comfort, and to seek supply:
He to his Vice-roy Ioseph them refers;
He, instantly to vnder-Officers,
Who (by His Order) furnisht all their Wants,
At equall Price; yet do so high advance
The Kings advantage, that from farre and nye
The Wealth of all runs to his Treasurie;
His Checquer's full: yet had they past (alas!)
Scarce foure hard years, and had three more to pass.
What shall they do, poor soules? How will they shift?
Now nothing haue they, but their bare Lands left:
Those they would sell; but, Who (Alas!) should buy?
None hath the Purse, except the King. They try
The Prudent Vice-roy: who approues the thing,
Bargains and buys a Fift part for the King.
This Famine raging fiercely every where,
Fame bruits abroad (which came to Iacobs eare)
That yet in Ægypt they were stor'd so well,
That they had Corne enough, and som to sell:
Old Izrael therefore calling vp his Sons,
You see, faith he, our short Provisions:
You see how like we are to starue and pine,
And perish all, without the hand Divine:
I heare there's Corne in Egypt to be bought;
Me think ere now, you should your selues haue thought
It time to goe: Goe, get you quickly thither,
Take Coyne and Sacks: goe hye you all together,

837

Saue Beniamin. The other Ten agree,
And, furnisht fit, set forth immediately.
Arriv'd in Ægypt, they eft-soons enquire
The Great Corn-Master; lowting lowe, desire
Corn for their money. Ioseph knows them brim
To be his Brethren: but they know not Him.
He well remembers their vnkindness past,
(And, wrong receiv'd, draws strong revenge too fast.)
Yet, for Gods sake, his Fathers, and his Brothers
(Young Beniamin's) he spareth all these others;
And speaks to Them, but strangely and austere:
Whence? what are you? you (Sirs) that cluster there?
My Lord, Your Servants are one Iacobs Sonnes;
We come from Canaan (where our Father wonnes)
Compeld by Famine (which there rageth sore)
To seek your Favour; of your happy Store,
To daign vs for our Money what you may.
Our Father hath great Houshold to defray,
Himselfe, Eleven of Vs, our Little Fry,
Shepheards and Bondmen a great company:
And therefore hither are we come, my Lord,
To crave the Help your Favour may afford,
To saue so many liues, that may be able,
And shall be willing (som way serviceable)
To thank your Lordship: for, our Father raigns
As King in Sichem, and hee stocks the Plains
With goodly Flocks of many Thousand Sheep,
And store of Cattle of all kindes doth keep:
Vouchsafe vs therefore of your Corn, we pray,
That we may liue, what euer price we pay:
For, we come hither, not to beg, but buy.
To buy? said Ioseph; nay, I doubt to spy:
Spyes are ye all; so many sturdy Clownes
To troop at once through all our Forts and Townes,
To view and to survay our Strength and store,
And so the weakness of the Land explore.
Ye tell me of your Father and your Brother:
But, I beleeue neither the one, nor other:
Where's your Commission? Where's your Fathers Test?
Why came not that one Brother with the rest?
Or why came you so many? It is clear
You come to spy: and you shall buy it dear.
Thus, though his heart doth melt, his bowels yerne;
He faines him fierce, and bears him roughly sterne.
They, prostrate all, beseech him not suspect
Them any such. Our comming was direct,
We sweare (say they): The witness we implore
Of th'onely God our Father doth adore,

838

Our Father sent vs; Famine droue vs hither;
For Corne we come: and that we come together,
Our need, our number, and our distance, craue
At once as much as we at once can haue:
Our other Brother is but yet a Lad
(And all the comfort that our Father had)
Too young to travell such a iourney yet;
Which, vpon vs our Father laid, more fit.
We thought on no Commission: for, indeed
In such a case we thought there none should need.
Be good vnto vs, good my Lord, we pray,
Pittie our Father, and (if pittie may
Pearce you at all) pittie our Brothers case,
Pittie our Babes, the hope of all our Race.
Twixt ouer-ioyd, his eyes will needs run over;
Which, yet a while, he turnes aside to cover:
Then, thus returnes; Your cunning answer showes
That you are false. Truth needs not such a Glose:
I am resolv'd; and can beleeue no other.
By th'Life of Pharaoh, till you fetch your Brother,
You shall not hence, one Hostage shall remaine,
The rest shall goe well loden home with graine:
This favour will I doe, expect no other,
Nor moue me more, vntill you bring your brother,
To testifie your Stories are not lyes:
Else, by the Life of Pharaoh you are Spies.
(Heer, Sirra, Marshall, take them to your charge,
Look none of them be let to goe at large)
I'll giue you three dayes Respit, to revolue;
Then let me heare what herein you resolue.
They (inly prickt in their owne conscience
For cruelties committed, now long since,
'Gainst this their vnknowne Brother, now a Prince)
Among themselues debating what was best
(Seeing the Vice-Roy did so deep protest)
Thought most expedient, and resolue in briefe,
To send home Nine, loden with such reliefe,
To fetch their Brother; leaving one behinde:
Which Part, by Lot, to Simeon was assign'd;
Whom they for Hostage to the Prince present,
(Vpon the third day) with their full intent.
Then he conmmands their Sacks with Corn be fill'd:
They pay for it; but, secretly he will'd,
That each mans money should againe be put
Into his Sack, and then the Sack re-shut.
So, now their Hostage in safe custodie,
They lade their Asses, and full heavilie
Leaue Ægypt and their Brother; hying home,
Vnto Samaria: where no sooner come,

839

But, their olde Father, forthwith missing one,
Cryes, Where's your Brother? Where's my Simeon?
What, is he sick, or dead (I doubt me rather)?
Neyther, said Iuda, dead, nor sick, good Father:
Hee's well in Health, but doth for pledge remaine
In Ægypt, till we all goe back againe,
And bring with vs our Brother Beniamin:
For, such conditions must we enter in,
Or else we could haue brought you nothing thence.
The Man we dealt with, a Great Man, a Prince,
Next to the King, at our arrivall there,
Askt many questions, whence, and what we were:
Whether we had a Father, or a Brother,
In what estate, how olde; and many other.
We, doubting nothing, told him truly all:
Then, more austere, and more maiesticall,
Now I perceiue (saith he) that you are Spies,
And all your Answers are so many Lyes:
You come but to survay our Strength, and Store,
To finde our Weakness, and our Wants explore:
You tell me of your Father and your Brother;
But I beleeue neither the one, nor other.
Where's your Commission? Where's your Fathers Test?
Why came not that one Brother with the rest?
Or, Why came you so many? It is cleare,
You come to spy, and you shall buy it deare.
We answerd for our selues the best we could:
All would not serue: Th'issue was this; we should
Leaue one for Hostage, and the other Nine
Should bring home Corne, and bring him Beniamin,
Or never to returne vnto that place,
Or never dare to looke him in the face:
For, by the Life of Pharaoh, we were spies,
(That is his Oath) and all our Words were Lyes.
Good Father Iacob, having heard all this,
With many a sigh (as sorrowes manner is)
Is there, saith he, vnder the Heav'ns bright Ey,
Another Father so distrest as I?
One Sonne is lost; another, Prisoner lest
In a strange Land; another, now bereft
(By your device, or your advice at least)
And all of you (I doubt me) all the rest
To be extinct, while I surviue in feares
Of so bad news to come to my sad eares.
First would to God (so God were not displeas'd)
My dayes were ended, and my sorrowes eas'd.
Thus speaking wept he, and thus weeping spake.
His Sons with Comforts seeke his Care to slake,

840

Saying, The Godly should not feare so deep,
Sith God his servants will more safely keep.
Then to their Sacks: Each having his vnknit,
Each findes his money in the mouth of it.
Amazed all: sad Iacob, there-upon,
Sons, Sons (said he) there lackt but this alone:
This is enough to kill all Hope (as vaine).
For, if to Egypt you returne againe,
The mighty Man that fain'd you Spies before,
Will finde you Theeues now; and what need he more,
Having so sifted, and so sought your Coat,
To finde a hole, that he might cut your throat?
No, no (I sweare) my Beniamin, my Boy,
Mine onely comfort left, mine onely Ioy,
I will not hazard on so tickle ground:
You, you shall goe that are so promise-bound,
If you think good, and God will haue it so:
And when you are determined to go,
I'll giue you all the golden good I haue,
Iewels and Coyne, your brother to vn-slaue
And saue your selues; and to bestow in Corne,
If God be pleased that you shall returne.
On th'other side, against his Fathers Feares,
Sad Iudah thus intreats him, even with Tears.
Deare Father, heare vs first; and then I pray
Haue Care of vs, and of your selfe this day.
For, how shall we vnto that Man returne,
Who solemnly hath by his Pharaoh sworne,
Except we bring our brother Beniamin,
Nor we, nor he that is there cooped in,
Shall be dismist: nor shall we haue the grace
To heare his voyce, or ever see his face;
Where, God he knowes, what shall of vs become:
And how much better shall you be at home?
How will you liue? Where will you haue to feed
This multitude, if there we doe not speed?
Father, for Gods sake follow my aduice:
Vpon my perill, stand not off so nice.
This Lad will saue both vs and you, and all;
And, on my life, no hurt shall him befall:
Two tender pledges leaue I heer of mine;
If he miscary, let Them pay the Fine.
Then doubt not, Father, lay your feare aside,
And prudently for you and yours prouide.
That thus our money was return'd; no doubt,
By his direction it was brought about:
But, for a pit-fall, or for Pittie, rather,
It is vncertaine: this is certaine, Father,

841

He is reported, over all that Coast,
To be a good man, and a godly-most;
And, if the Whole be partly ghest by Part,
We saw some tokens of a tender heart:
For, while to him we there did sad relate
The sad distresses of our present state,
Of you and of our Brother, and our Brats;
Our miseries he so compassionates,
That he even wept: which though he thought to hide,
And turn'd away, yet many of vs spy'd.
Wherefore, good Father, let vs lose no time;
Prolong no longer, neither doubt the Clime,
Nor feare the man, nor faint for any thing:
We shall be safe vnder th'Almighties wing.
This, vrg'd with teares; the Old man, overcome,
Cryes, Go on Gods name, God re-guide you home:
Goe when you will, and with you take the Lad,
And some best Presents that may heer be had
In this hard time; Myrrhe, Storax, Almonds, Hony,
Cumme, Cinnamon, and therewith, double Mony,
Both for the former which you brought againe,
And for the New, if Now you shall obtaine.
And We the while will pray and pay our vowes,
To th'everlasting Patron of our house,
The Lord of Hoasts, our Fathers God and ours,
To prosper and protect you with his pow'rs.
Blushing Aurora sweetly peeping out,
When Sol againe had brought his Teem about,
The Father and the Sonnes, together all,
All vp and ready, on their knees doo fall
In due Devotion, as they daily wont:
Then to their Breakfast (not to dwell vpon 't)
Furnisht of what their Iourney did require,
Gifts, Money, Beniamin. Their tender Sire,
Weeping, Him kissing, and imbracing, Thus
Bids sad Adieu: Deare Son, Ay prosperous
Thy iourney be. If Fates thee safe restore.
Then wish I life; for Teares he could no more.
Then to the rest; imbracing, blessing all,
While all for Blessing on their knees do call.
They to their long-hard iourney fettling them,
Leaving Samariah and Ierusalem;
Past Idumæas Palmy Groues, and past
Syrbonian Moors, Arabian Desarts vast;
At length arriue on Egypts wealthy Coast,
And reach at last their Menphis wished most.
Whom gladly Ioseph entertaineth there,
And instantly lets out his Prisoner.

842

Admitted then to gracious Audience,
Thus Ruben spake: When we, Right Noble Prince,
Returned home, had to our Father done
Your high Commands, touching his younger Sonne,
Whom you required to be hither brought;
Opening our Sacks to shoot the Corne we bought,
In every Sack we found our severall Summe
(Which God he knowes, we know not, how should come.)
Our Father hearing what was come to pass,
And, seeing it, deep-sighing, cry'd, Alas!
Alas! My sonnes, I see some sad Mis-hap
Hangs over vs: and all our old good hap
Is crost and canceld. Sees Heav'ns glorious eye
Another Father so distrest as I?
Twelue sonnes I had, and one (alas!) is lost;
Another, Prisoner in a forren coast;
Another, now (mine onely comfort left)
Surrepted Thus, and You withall bereft:
And all of you to goe I wot not whither
(Made Theeues) perhaps to perish all together.
We comfort, We thus press, with all our powers;
O Father, trust our Fathers God and ours.
And for the Man that now in Ægypt swayes,
He is most iust, most gentle. Him they praise
For their Preserver, and their Father there
Pious and pure: then, What is thence to feare?
Wonne with our words, at last with much adoo,
He granted vs to bring his Darling too.
Go then, sayd he, God to and fro direct you;
And with his wings of Favour still protect you.
Take with you Beniamin; and take withall
(Such as our Countrey yeelds) these Presents small,
Gumme, liquid Storax, bitter Almonds, Honey,
Myrrhe, Cinnamon: take also double money,
To pay both for the Corne you had before,
And for as much as now you shall bring more:
And to that iust Man (as you say) commend
Me and my Sonne: pray him to stand a friend,
To pittie Him, and You, and Me, and All.
So all good Hap to Him and you befall.
While this he spake; The Prince, with much adoo
Refraining Tears, cries, Welcome all of you,
Your Selues, your Presents, and your Brother heer,
Who quits you from suspect: Be of good cheer,
Goe wash your weary Limbs from soyl and sweat,
And soon I pray come sit with me at meat.
Thus said the Prince. The servants, som prepare
Bath for their Feet; som, Vessels; som, their Fare;

843

But try and Pantry, som; som spread the Table;
And other-som, as busie in the Stable.
Him-Self the while dispatcht affaires of State,
Heard Suits for Food, appointed each their Rate;
And then returnes vnto his Guests again;
Showes them his stately House, his Stuff, his Train,
His gold and silver Plate, ingrav'n, imbost,
Couches and Carpets of a wondrous Cost;
And round about, most sumptuous to behold,
Deep Arras Hangings, all of silke and gold,
Of sundry Stories there so lively wrought,
That, almost, living were the Figures thought;
Such sprightly Postures, and so speaking Gestures,
So natiue Visages, so naturall Vestures.
Faith-famous Abra'm, after Heav'ns behest,
Leads heer his Isaac to be kill'd, as Beast.
The Lad heer loads the Asse with Holmen sprayes:
The Father makes the Pile: Hereon he layes
His bond-led, blind-led Son: his hand, heav'd vp,
An Angell holds, and there is held a Tup.
There, Iacob, flying his rough Brothers wrath,
Hyes him amaine towards his natiue Path,
His Fathers ancient Seat, and happy Realm,
Betwixt swift Tigris, and th'Euphratean Stream;
There, at a Well his Vncle's Daughter aides,
Drawing vp Water for the tender Maids:
There, on the Downes he tends their Fathers sheep,
Serving for Rachel double Prentiship.
While Isr'els glad Sons (at this wealth amaz'd,
Now full of Hope, on these things greedy gaz'd,
Great Ioseph calls (for, Supper was gone vp.)
Come, give vs Water: It is time to sup:
Then, tall, he sets him in his Ivory Chaire,
And bids them sit, and treats them wondrous faire.
Heer, Death preventing Fracastorius,
This, late begun, He left vn-ended Thus.
FINIS.