University of Virginia Library

The King, and Queene, with the Princes of Wales, and Lorraine, and the Nobilitie, being entred into the gallerie, after dinner; there was seene nothing but a trauerse of white, acrosse the roome: which sodainely drawne, was discouered a gloomie obscure place, hung all with black silkes, and in it only one light, which the Genivs of the house held, sadly attir'd; his Cornucopia readie to fall out of his hand, his gyrland drooping on his head, his eyes fixed on the ground; when, out of this pensiue posture, after some little pause, he brake, and began.
GENIVS.
Let not your glories darken, to behold
The place, and me, her Genivs here, so sad;
Who, by bold Rumor, haue beene lately told,
That I must change the loued Lord, I had.
And he, now, in the twy-light of sere age,
Begin to seeke a habitation new;

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And all his fortunes, and himselfe engage
Vnto a seat, his fathers neuer knew.
And I, vncertaine what I must endure,
Since all the ends of dest'ny' are obscure.

Here a voice was heard, from behind the darknesse, which bade him,
MERCVRIE.
Despaire not, Genivs, thou shalt know thy fate.

And withall, the black vanishing, was discouered a glorious place, figuring the Lararium, or seat of the household-gods, where both the Lares, and Penates, were painted, in copper colours; erected with Columnes and Architrabe, Freeze, and Coronice, in which were placed diuers Diaphanall glasses, fill'd with seuerall waters, that shew'd like so many stones, of orient and transparent hiewes. Within, as farder off, in Landtschap, were seene clouds riding, and in one corner, a boy figuring Good Euent, attyred in white, houering in the ayre, with wings displayed, hauing nothing seene to sustaine him by, all the time the Shew lasted: At the other corner, a Mercvrie descended, in a flying posture, with his Caduccus on his hand, who spake to the three Parcae, that sate low in a grate, with an yron roofe, the one holding the rocke, the other the spindle, and the third the sheeres, with a booke of Adamant lying open before them. But first, the Genivs surpriz'd by wonder, vrg'd this doubt, by question.
GENIVS.
What sight is this, so strange! and full of state!
The sonne of Maia, making his descent
Vnto the fates, and met with good Euent.

MERCVRIE.
Daughters of night, and secrecie, attend;
You, that draw out the chayne of Destinie,
Vpon whose threds, both liues and times depend,
And all the periods of mortalitie.
The will of Iove is, that you streight doe looke
The change, and fate vnto this house decreed,
And speaking from your Adamantine booke,
Vnto the Genivs of the place it read;
That he may know, and knowing, blesse his lot,
That such a grace, beyond his hopes, hath got.

CLOTHO.
When, vnderneath thy roofe, is seene
The greatest King, and fairest Queene,
With Princes an vnmatched payre,
One, hope of all the earth, their heyre;
The other styled of Lorraine,
Their bloud; and sprung from Charlemaine:

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When all these Glories iointly shine,
And fill thee with a heat diuine,
And these reflected, doe beget
A splendent Sunne, shall neuer set,
But here shine fixed, to affright
All after-hopes of following night,
Then, Genivs, is thy period come,
To change thy Lord: Thus, Fates doe doome.

GENIVS.
But is my Patron with this lot content,
So to forsake his fathers moniment?
Or, is it gaine, or else necessitie,
Or will to raise a house of better frame,
That makes him shut forth his posteritie
Out of his patrimonie, with his name?

MERCVRIE.
Nor gaine, nor need; much lesse a vaine desire,
To frame new roofes, or build his dwelling higher;
He hath, with mortar, busied beene too much,
That his affections should continue such.

GENIVS.
Doe men take ioy in labors, not t'enjoy?
Or doth their businesse all their likings spend?
Haue they more pleasure in a tedious way,
Then to repose them at their iourneys end?

MERCVRIE.
Genivs, obey, and not expostulate;
It is your vertue: and such powers as you,
Should make religion of offending fate,
Whose doomes are iust, and whose designes are true.

LACHESIS.
The person, for whose royall sake,
Thou must a change so happie make,
Is he, that gouernes with his smile,
This lesser world, this greatest Isle.
His Ladies seruant thou must be;
Whose second would great Natvre see,
Or Fortvne, after all their paine,
They might despaire to make againe.

ATROPOS.
She is the grace of all, that are:
And as Elisa, now a starre,

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Vnto her crowne, and lasting praise,
Thy humbler walls (at first) did raise,
By vertue of her best Aspect;
So shall Bel-anna them protect:
And this is all, the Fates can say;
Which first beleeue, and then obay.

GENIVS.
Mourn'd I before? Could I commit a sinne
So much 'gainst kind, or knowledge, to protract
A ioy, to which I should haue rauish'd beene,
And neuer shall be happie, till I act?
Vouchsafe, faire Queene, my Patrons zeale in mee;
Who flye with feruor, as my fate commands,
To yeeld these keyes: and wish, that you could see
My heart as open to you, as my hands.
There might you read my faith, my thoughts—But ô.
My ioyes like waues each other ouercome!
And Gladnesse drownes where it begins to flow.
Some greater Powers speake out, for mine are dumbe.

At this, was the place fill'd with rare and choise Musique, to which was heard the following Song, deliuer'd by an excellent voice, and the burden maintain'd by the whole Quire.
SONG.
O blessed change!
And no lesse glad, then strange!
Where, wee, that loose, haue wunne;
And, for a beame, enioy a Sunne.
Cho.
So, little sparkes become great fires,
And high rewards crowne low desires.
Was neuer blisse
More full, or cleare, then this!
The present month of May
Ne're look'd so fresh, as doth this day.
Cho.
So, gentle winds breed happie springs,
And dutie thriues by breath of Kings.
The Author B. I.