A Monumental Column.
John Webster.
Note: this Renascence
Editions text was converted by Malcolm Moncrief-Spittle from Dyce,
Alexander
(Rev.): The Works of John Webster. London: Edward Moxon, 1857, and
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made available to Renascence Editions. The text is in the public
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A
Monumental Column.
A
Monumental Columne,
Erected to the liuing Memory of the euer-glorious Henry, late Prince of
Wales. Virgil. Ostendent terris hunc tantum fata. By John
Webster.
London, Printed by N. O. for William Welby dwelling in Pauls
Church-yard
at the signe of the Swan. 1613, forms a portion of a tract, the general
title of which (in white letters on a black ground) runs thus:
Three Elegies on the most lamented Death of Prince Henrie,
The
first}
{Cyril Tourneur.
The second} written
by
{John Webster
The
third}
{Tho. Heywood.
London Printed for William Welbie.
1613.
4to.
Prince
Henry died,
to the great grief of the whole nation, on the 6tht of November, 1612,
in his nineteenth year.
TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE SIR
ROBERT
CARR, VISCOUNT ROCHESTER, KNIGHT OF THE MOST NOBLE ORDER OF THE GARTER,
AND ONE OF HIS MAJESTY'S MOST HONOURABLE PRIVY COUNCIL.
My right
noble
lord,
I present to your voidest leisure of survey these few sparks found out
in our most glorious prince his ashes. I could not have thought this
worthy
your view, but that it aims at the preservation of his fame, than which
I know not anything (but the sacred lives of both their majesties and
their
sweet issue) that can be dearer unto you. Were my whole life turned
into
leisure, and that leisure accompanied with all the Muses, it were not
able
to draw a map large enough of him; for his praise is an high-going sea
that wants both shore and bottom. Neither do I, my noble lord, present
you with this night-piece to make his death-bed still float in those
compassionate
rivers of your eyes: you have already, with much lead upon your heart,
sounded both the sorrow royal and your own. O, that care should ever
attain
to so ambitious a title! Only, here though I dare not say you shall
find
him live, for that assurance were worth many kingdoms, yet you shall
perceive
him draw a little breath, such as gives us comfort his critical day is
past, and the glory of a new life risen, neither subject to physic nor
fortune. For my defects in this undertaking, my wish presents itself
with
that of Martial's;
O utinam mores animumque effingere possem!
Pulchrior in terris nulla tabella foret.
Howsoever, your protection
is able
to give it noble lustre, and bind me by that honourable courtesy to be
ever
Your honour's truly devoted servant,
JOHN WEBSTER.
A
MONUMENTAL COLUMN.
A
FUNERAL ELEGY.
THE greatest of the kingly
race
is gone,
Yet with so great a reputation
Laid in the earth, we cannot
say
he's dead,
But as a perfect diamond set
in
lead,
Scorning our foil, his glories
do
break forth,
Worn by his maker, who best
knew
his worth.
Yet to our fleshy eyes there
does
belong
That which we think helps
grief,
a passionate tongue:
Methinks I see men's hearts
pant
in their lips;
We should not grieve at the
bright
sun's eclipse,
But that we love his light: so
travellers
stray,
Wanting both guide and conduct
of
the day.
Nor let us strive to make this
sorrow
old;
For wounds smart most when
that
the blood grows cold.
If princes think that ceremony
meet,
To have their corpse embalm'd
to
keep them sweet,
Much more they ought to have
their
fame exprest
In Homer, though it want
Darius'
chest:
To adorn which in her deserved
throne,
I bring those colours which
Truth
calls her own.
Nor gain nor praise by my weak
lines
are sought:
Love that's born free cannot
be
hir'd nor bought.
Some great inquisitors in
nature
say,
Royal and generous forms
sweetly
display
Much of the heavenly virtue,
as
proceeding
From a pure essence and
elected
breeding:
Howe'er, truth for him thus
nuch
doth importune,
His form and value both
deserv'd
his fortune;
For 'tis a question not
decided
yet,
Whether his mind or fortune
were
more great.
Methought I saw him in his
right
hand wield
A caduceus, in th' other
Pallas'
shield:
His mind quite void of
ostentation,
His high-erected thoughts
look'd
down upon
The smiling valley of his
fruitful
heart:
Honour and courtesy in every
part
Proclaim'd him, and grew
lovely
in each limb:
He well became those virtues
which
grac'd him.
He spread his bounty with a
provident
hand,
And not like those that sow
th'
ingrateful sand:
His rewards follow'd reason,
ne'er
were plac'd
For ostentation; and to make
them
last,
He was not like the mad and
thriftless
vine
That spendeth all her blushes
at
one time,
But like the orange-tree his
fruits
he bore,-
Some gather'd, he had green,
and
blossoms store.
We hop'd much of him, till
death
made hope err:
We stood as in some spacious
theatre,
Musing what would become of
him,
his flight
Reach'd such a noble pitch
above
our sight;
Whilst he discreetly-wise this
rule
had won,
Not to let fame know his
intents
till done.
Men came to his court as to
bright
academies
Of virtue and of valour: all
the
eyes,
That feasted at his princely
exercise,
Thought that by day Mars held
his
lance, by night
Minerva bore a torch to give
him
light.
As once on Rhodes, Pindar
reports,
of old
Soldiers expected 't would
have
rain'd down gold,
Old husbandmen i' the country
gan
to plant
Laurel instead of elm, and
made
their vaunt
Their sons and daughters
should
such trophies wear
Whenas the prince return'd a
conqueror
From foreign nations; for men
thought
his star
Had mark'd him for a just and
glorious
war.
And, sure, his thoughts were
ours:
he could not read
Edward the Black Prince's life
but
it must breed
A virtuous emulation to have
his
name
So lag behind him both in time
and
fame;
He that like lightning did his
force
advance,
And shook to th' centre the
whole
realm of France,
That of warm blood open'd so
many
sluices
To gather and bring thence six
flower-de-luces;
Who ne'er saw fear but in his
enemies'
flight;
Who found weak numbers
conquer,
arm'd with right;
Who knew his humble shadow
spread
no more
After a victory than it did
before;
Who had his breast instated
with
the choice
Of virtues, though they made
no
ambitious noise;
Whose resolution was so
fiery-still
It seem'd he know better to
die
than kill,
And yet drew Fortune, as the
adamant
steel,
Seeming t' have fix'd a stay
upon
her wheel;
Who jestingly would say, it
was
his trade
To fashion death-beds, and
hath
often made
Horror look lovely, when i'
the
fields there lay
Arms and legs so distracted,
one
would say
That the dead bodies had no
bodies
left;
He that of working pulse sick
France
bereft;
Who knew that battles, not the
gaudy
show
Of ceremonies, do on kings
bestow
Best theatres; t' whom naught
so
tedious as court-sport;
That thought all fans and
ventoys
of the court
Ridiculous and loathsome to
the
shade
Which, in a march, his waving
ensign
made.
Him did he strive to imitate,
and
was sorry
He did not live before him,
that
his glory
Might have been his example:
to
these ends,
Those men that follow'd him
were
not by friends
Or letters preferr'd to him;
he
made choice
In action, not in complimental
voice.
And as Marcellus did two
temples
rear
To Honour and to Virtue,
plac'd
so near
They kiss'd, yet none to
Honour's
got access
But they that pass'd through
Virtue's;
so, to express
His worthiness, none got his
countenance
But those whom actual merit
did
advance.
Yet, alas, all his goodness
lies
full low!
0 greatness, what shall we
compare
thee to?
To giants, beasts, or towers
fram'd
out of snow,
Or like wax.gilded tapers,
more
for show
Than durance! thy foundation
doth
betray
Thy frailty, being builded on
such
clay.
This shows the all-controlling
power
of fate,
That all our sceptres and our
chairs
of state
Are but glass-metal, that we
are
full of spots
And that, like new-writ
copies,
t'avoid blots,
Dust must be thrown upon us;
for
in him
Our comfort sunk and drown'd,
learning
to swim.
And though he died so late,
he's
no more near
To us than they that died
three
thousand year
Before him; only memory doth
keep
Their fame as fresh as his
from
death or sleep.
Why should the stag or raven
live
so long,
And that their age rather
should
not belong
Unto a righteous prince, whose
lengthen'd
years
Might assist men's necessities
and
fears?
Let beasts live long, and
wild,
and still in fear;
The turtle-dove never outlives
nine
year.
Both life and death have
equally
exprest,
Of all the shortest madness is
the
best.
We ought not think that his
great
triumphs need
Our wither'd laurels. Can our
weak
praise feed
His memory, which worthily
contemns
Marble, and gold, and oriental
gems?
His merits pass our dull
invention.
And now, methinks, I see him
smile
upon
Our fruitless tears; bids us
disperse
these showers,
And says his thoughts are far
refin'd
from ours:
As Rome of her beloved Titus
said,
That from the body the bright
soul
was fled
For his own good and their
affliction:
On such broken column we lean
on;
And for ourselves, not him,
let
us lament,
Whose happiness is grown our
punishment.
But, surely, God gave this as
an
allay
To the blest union of that
nuptial
day
We hop'd; for fear of surfeit,
thought
it meet
To mitigate, since we swell
with
what is sweet.
And, for sad tales suit grief,
'tis
not amiss
To keep us waking, I remember
this.
Jupiter, on some business,
once
sent down
Pleasure unto the world, that
she
might crown
Mortals with her bright beams;
but
her long stay
Exceeding far the limit of her
day,-
Such feasts and gifts were
number'd
to present her,
That she forgot heaven and the
god
that sent her,-
He calls her thence in
thunder:
at whose lure
She spreads her wings, and to
return
more pure,
Leaves her eye-seeded robe
wherein
she's suited,
Fearing that mortal breath had
it
polluted.
Sorrow, that long had liv'd in
banishment,
Tugg'd at the oar in galleys,
and
had spent
Both money and herself in
court-delays,
And sadly number'd many of her
Bv a prison-calendar, though
once
she bragged
She had been in great men's
bosoms,
now all ragg'd,
Crawl'd with a tortoise pace,
or
somewhat slower,
Nor found she any that desir'd
to
know her,
Till by good chance, ill hap
for
us, she found
Where Pleasure laid her
garment:
from the ground
She takes it, dons it; and, to
add
a grace
To the deformity of her
wrinkled
face.
An old court-lady, out of mere
compassion,
Now paints it o'er, or puts it
into
fashion.
When straight from country,
city,
and from court,
Both without wit or number,
there
resort
Many to this impostor: all
adore
Her haggish false-hood;
usurers
from their store
Supply her, and are cozen'd;
citizens
buy
Her forged titles; riot and
ruin
fly,
Spreading their poison
universally.
Nor are the bosoms of great
statesmen
free
From her intelligence, who
lets
them see
Themselves and fortunes in
false
perspectives;
Some landed heirs consort her
with
their wives,
Who, being a bawd, corrupts
their
all-spent oaths;
They have entertained the
devil
in Pleasure's clothes.
And since this cursed mask,
which,
to our cost,
Lasts day and night, we have
entirely
lost
Pleasure, who from heaven
wills
us be advis'd
That our false Pleasure is but
Care
disguis'd.
Thus is our hope made
frustrate.
0 sad ruth!
Death lay in ambush for his
glorious
youth;
And, finding him prepar'd, was
sternly
bent
To change his love into fell
ravishment.
O cruel tyrant, how canst thou
repair
This ruin, though hereafter
thou
shouldst spare
All mankind, break thy dart
and
ebon spade?
Thou canst not cure this wound
which
thou hast made.
Now view his death-bed and
from
thence let's meet,
In his example, our own
winding-sheet.
There his humility, setting
apart
All titles, did retire into
his
heart.
O blessed solitariness, that
brings
The best content to mean men
and
to kings!
Manna there falls from heaven:
the
dove there flies
With olive to the ark, a
sacrifice
Of God's appeasement; ravens
in
their beaks
Bring food from heaven: God's
preservation
speaks
Comfort to Daniel in the
lions'
den;
Where contemplation leads us,
happy
men,
To see God face to face: and
such
sweet peace
Did he enjoy amongst the
various
preace
Of weeping visitants, it
seem'd
he lay
As kings at revels sit, wish'd
the
crowd away,
The tedious sports done, and
himself
asleep;
And in such joy did all his
senses
steep,
As great accountants, troubled
much
in mind,
When they hear news of their
quietus
sign'd.
Never found prayers, since
they
convers'd with death,
A sweeter air to fly in than
his
breath:
They left in's eves nothing
but
glory shining;
And though that sickness
with
her over-pining
Look ghastly, yet in himit did
not
so;
He knew the place to which he
was
to go
Had larger titles, more
triumphant
wreaths
To instate him with; and forth
his
soul he breathes,
Without a sigh, fixing his
constant
eye
Upon his triumph, immortality.
He was rain'd down to us out
of
heaven, and drew
Life to the spring; yet, like
a
little dew,
Quickly drawn thence: so many
times
miscarries
A crystal glass, whilst that
the
workman varies
The shape i' the furnace,
fix'd
too much upon
The curiousness of the
proportion,
Yet breaks it ere 't be
finish'd,
and yet then
Moulds it anew, and blows it
up
agen,
Exceeds his workmanship, and
sends
it thence
To kiss the hand and lip of
some
great prince;
Or like a dial, broke in wheel
or
screw,
That's ta'en in pieces to be
made
go true:
So to eternity he now shall
stand,
New-form'd and gloried by the
all-working
hand.
Slander, which hath a large
and
spacious tongue,
Far bigger than her mouth, to
publish
wrong,
And yet doth utter 't with so
ill
a grace,
Whilst she's a-speaking no man
sees
her face;
That like dogs lick foul
ulcers,
not to draw
Infection from them, but to
keep
them raw;
Though she oft scrape up earth
from
good men's graves,
And waste it in the standishes
of
slaves
To throw upon their ink, shall
never
dare
To approach his tomb: be she
confin'd
as far
From his sweet reliques as is
heaven
from hell!
Not witchcraft shall instruct
her
how to spell
That barbarous language which
shall
sound him ill.
Fame's lips shall bleed, yet
ne'er
her trumpet fill
With breath enough; but not in
such
sick air
As make waste elegies to his
tomb
repair,
With scraps of commendation
more
base
Than are the rags they are
writ
on. O disgrace
To nobler poesy! this brings
to
light,
Not that they can, but that
they
cannot write.
Better they had ne'er troubled
his
sweet trance;
So silence should have hid
their
ignorance;
For he's a reverend subject to
be
penn'd
Only by his sweet Homer and my
friend.
Most savage nations should his
death
deplore,
Wishing he had set his foot
upon
their shore,
Only to have made them civil.
This
black night
Hath fall'n upon 's by
nature's
oversight;
Or while the fatal sister
sought
to twine
His thread and keep it even,
she
drew it so fine
It burst. O all-compos'd of
excellent
parts,
Young, grave Mecaenas of the
noble
arts,
Whose beams shall break forth
from
thy hollow tomb,
Stain the time past, and light
the
time to come!
O thou that in thy own praise
still
wert mute,
Resembling trees, the more
they
are ta'en with fruit,
The more they strive and bow
to
kiss the ground!
Thou that in quest of man hast
truly
found,
That while men rotten vapours
do
pursue,
Thev could not be thy friends
and
flatterers too;
That, despite all injustice,
wouldst
have prov'd
So just a steward for this
land,
and lov'd
Right for its own sake,- now,
O
woe the while,
Fleet'st dead in tears, like
to
a moving isle!
Time was when churches in the
land
were thought
Rich jewel-houses; and this
age
hath bought
That time again: think not I
feign;
go view
Henry the Seventh's Chapel,
and
you'll find it true:
The dust of a rich diamond's
there
inshrin'd;
To buy which thence would
beggar
the West-Inde.
What a dark night-piece of
tempestuous
weather
Have the enraged clouds
summon'd
together!
As if our loftiest palaces
should
grow
To ruin, since such highness
fell
so low;
And angry Neptune makes his
palace
groan,
That the deaf rocks may echo
the
land's moan.
Even senseless things seem to
have
lost their pride,
And look like that dead mouth
wherein
he died:
To clear which, soon arise
that
glorious day
Which, in her sacred union,
shall
display
Infinite blessings, that we
all
may see
The like to that of Virgil's
golden
tree,
A branch of which being slipt,
there
freshly grew
Another that did boast like
form
and hue.
And for these worthless lines,
let
it be said,
I hasted till I had this
tribute
paid
Unto his grave: so let the
speed
excuse
The zealous error of my
passionate
Muse.
Yet, though his praise here
bear
so short a wing,
Thames hath more swans that
will
his praises sing
In sweeter tunes, be-pluming
his
sad hearse
And his three feathers, while
men
live or verse.
And by these signs of love let
great
men know,
That sweet and generous favour
they
bestow
Upon the Muses never can be
lost;
For they shall live by them,
when
all the cost
Of gilded monuments shall fall
to
dust:
They grave in metal that
sustains
no rust;
Their wood yields honey and
industrious
bees,
Kills spiders and their webs,
like
Irish trees.
A poet's pen, like a bright
sceptre,
sways
And keeps in awe dead men's
dispraise
or praise.
Thus took he acquittance of
all
worldy strife:
The evening shows the day, and
death
crowns life.
My
impresa to
your lordship,
A swan
flying
to a laurel for shelter, the mot, Amor est mihi causa.
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