To Day a Man, To Morrow
None.
Sir Walter Raleigh.
Note on the e-text: this Renascence
Edition was transcribed in June 2003 by Risa
S. Bear, University of Oregon Libraries, from the Ashbee facsimile
reprint.
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To day a man, To morrow
none:
OR,
SIR
Walter
Ravvleighs
Farewell to
his
L A D Y,
The night
before hee
was beheaded:
Together with his advice
concerning
HER, and her SONNE.
LONDON, Printed for R.H.
1644
Sir Walter
Rawleighs
farewell to his LADY
the night before he was
beheaded.
Together with his advice
concerning
her, and
her Sonne.
_______________________________________
Dear WIFE,
Ou
shall receive my last words in these my last lines; my love I send you
that you may keepe it when I am dead, and my counsel that you may
remember
it when I am no more. I would not with my will present you sorrows
(dear Besse) let them go to the grave with me, and be buried in
the dust.
And seeing it is not the will of God that ever I shall see you any more
in this life, beare my destruction gently, and with a heart like your
selfe.
First, I
send
you all the thanks which my heart can conceive, or my words expresse,
for
your many troubles and cares taken for me, which though they have not
taken
effect as you wished, yet my debt to you is not lesse, but I shall
never
recompence it in this world.
Secondly, I
beseech
you even for the love you bare me living, that you do not hide your
selfe
many dayes, but by your travell seek to helpe your miserable fortune,
and
the right of your poore childe: Your mourning cannot availe me that I
am
but dust.
Thirdly,
you
shall understand that my Lands were conveied (bona fide) to my
childe,
the writings were drawne at Mid summer twelve-month, as divers can
witnesse,
and I trust that my blood will quench their malice that desire my
slaughter,
and that they will not seek also to kill you and yours with extream
poverty.
To what
friend
to direct you I know not, for all mine have left me in the true time of
tyall; most sorry I am (as God knoweth) that being thus surprised with
death I can leave you no better estate; I meant you all my Office of
wines
or that I should purchase by selling it, halfe my stuffe and my jewels,
(but some for the boy) but God hath prevented all my determinations;
The
great God that worketh in all.
But if you
can
live free from want, care for no more, for the rest is but vanity.
Love God,
and
begin betime to repose your selfe on him, therein shall you finde true
and everlasting riches and endlesse comfort: for the rest when you have
travelled and wearied your thoughts over all sorts of worldly
cogitations,
you shall sit downe by sorrow in the end.
Teach your
son
also to serve and fear God whilst he is young, that the feare of God
may
grow up with him, then will God be a husband unto you, and a father
unto
him, a husband and a father that can never be taken from you.
Bayly
oweth me 1000 l. Arion 600 l. In Iersie also I have
much
owing me; the arrerages of the wines will pay your debts.
And
howsoever
(I beseech you for my soules sake) pay all poore men when I am gone: no
doubt you shall bee sought unto, for the world thinks I was very rich.
But take
heed
of the pretence of men and of their affections, for they last but in
honest
and worthy men: and no greater misery can befall you in this life, then
to become a prey, and after to bee despised: I speake it (God knoweth)
not to disswade you from marriage, for that will be best for you, both
in respect of God and the world.
As for me I
am
no more yours, nor you mine, death hath cut us asunder, and God hath
divided
me from the world, and you from me: Remember your poore childe for his
fathers sake that comforted you, and loved you in his happiest times,
I sued for
my
life (But God knowes) it was for you and yours that I desired it: for
know
it (deare wife) that your sonne is the childe of a true man, and who in
his owne heart despiseth death, and his mishapen and ugly forms.
I cannot
write
much: God knoweth how hardly I stole this time when all were asleep,
and
it is now time to separate my thoughts from the world. Beg my dead body
which living was denyed you, and either lay it in Sherborne or in
Exeter
Church by my father and mother. I can say no more, time and death call
me away. The everlasting God, infinite, powerfull, and inscrutable God,
That Almighty God which is goodnesse it selfe, mercy it selfe, the true
light and life, keep you and yours, and have mercy upon me.
Teach me to
forgive
my persecuters and false accusers, and send me to meet him in his
glorious
Kingdome.
My true
wife
farewell, God blesse my poore boy, pray for me, my true God hold you
both
in His Armes.
EVen
such is time, which takes in trust
Our youth, our age, and
all we
have,
And payes us but with age
and
dust,
Who in the darke and
silent grave,
When we have wandred all
our
wayes
Shuts up the story of our
dayes.
And
from the
earth, the grave, and dust,
The
Lord shall
raise me vp, I trust.
WALTER RAVVLEIGH.
LIke
Hermite
poore in pensive place obscure
I mean to end my dayes
with endlesse
doubt,
To waile such woes as
time cannot
recure,
Where none but love shall
ever
finde me out.
And at
my
gates despair shall linger still
To let
in
death when love and fortune will.
A Gowne of gray my
body shall
attire,
My staffe of broken hope
whereon
I stay
Of late repentance linkt
with
long desire,
The couch is fram'd
whereon my
limbs I lay.
And at
my
gates, &c.
My food shall be of
care and sorrow
made,
My drink nought else but
tears
falne from mine eies,
And for my light in this
obscured
shade
The flames may serve
which from
my heart arise.
And at
my
gates, &c.
VVALTER RAVVLEIGH.
F I N I S.
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