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Pleasant dialogues and dramma's

selected out of Lucian, Erasmus, Textor, Ovid, &c. ... By Tho. Heywood

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The Queene feasting the King at Somerset house, upon his Birth-day, hers falling in the same weeke, this was there spoken unto them.
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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The Queene feasting the King at Somerset house, upon his Birth-day, hers falling in the same weeke, this was there spoken unto them.

VVee cannot read in any flourishing state,
Whether by King swaid or by optimate,
A greater blessing hapning to one Nation,
By two such births, beneath one constellation.
For being in one moneth, one weeke; small let October.
There was, these two blest birth-dayes had not met:
Yet hath the powerfull hand of heaven so guided,
(Though) by small distance of two dayes divided:
These starres who then, their influence had alone
Are now combin'd, fixt in one glorious Throne:
From whose joynt rayes another's risen since,
(Lusterd from both) a sweet and hopefull Prince.
O may he from your vertues so much gaine,
That little Charles may prove our Charlemaine.
To them both at parting.
The Romanes of their birth-dayes had such care,
They kept them sacred, and not one might dare,
In all their families to worke, but play,
Observing that, as an high festivall day.

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The Emperours birth-dayes were cald Albæ, white,
As the sole lustre, and their Kingdomes light.
In you: how much doth heaven your Nations blesse,
To enjoy two such: the greater, and the lesse.