The Wonderfull yeare.
1603.
Thomas Dekker.
Note on the
e-text: this Renascence
Editions text was transcribed by Risa S. Bear, July 2000, from the
Bodley Head Quarto text of 1924.
The source text is that in the British Museum, E. 1940; misprint
corrections
by G. B. Harrison in 1924 have been retained. Any errors that have
crept
in are the fault of the transcriber. The text is in the public domain.
Content unique to this presentation
is copyright © 2000 The University of Oregon. For nonprofit and
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T H E
VVonderfull yeare.
1 6 0 3.
Wherein is shewed the
picture of London, ly-
ing sicke of the Plague.
At the ende of all (like
a mery Epilogue to a dull Play) cer-
taine Tales are cut out in sundry fashions, of purpose
to shorten the liues of long winters nights,
that lye watching in the darke for vs.
Et me rigidi legant
Catones.
L O N D O N
Printed by Thomas Creede, and are to be solde
in Saint Dontones Church-yarde
in Fleet-streete.
TO
HIS VVEL-
RESPECTED GOOD
friend, M. Cutbert Thuresby, VVa-
ter-Bayliffe of London.
BOokes are but poore gifts,
yet Kings receiue them: vpo[n] which I presume, you will not
turne This
out of doores. Yet cannot for shame but bid it welcome, because it
bringes
to you a great quantitie of my loue: which, if it be worth litle, (and
no maruell if Loue be solde vnder-foote, when the God of Loue
himselfe
goes naked) yet I hope you will not say you haue a hard bargaine,
Sithe[n]ce
you may take as much of it as you please for nothing. I haue clapt the Cognizance
of your name, on these scribled papers, it is
their liuery:
So that now they are yours: being free fro[m] any vile imputation, saue
only, that they thrust themselues into your acquiantance. But generall
erros, haue generall pardons: for the title of other mens names, is the
common Heraldry which all those laie claime too, whose crest is
a Pen-and-Inckhorne. If you read, you may happilie laugh; tis my desire
you should, because mirth is both Phisicall, and wholesome
against
the Plague: with which sicknes, (to tell truth) this booke is,
(though
not sorely) yet somewhat infected. I pray, driue it not out of your
companie
for all that; for (assure your soule) I am so iealous of your health,
that
if you did but once imagine, there were gall in mine Incke, I would
cast
away the Standish, and forsweare medling with anie more Muses.
To the
Reader.
AND why to
the Reader? Oh good Sir! theres as sound law to make you giue
good
words to the Reader, as to a Constable when hee
carries his
watch about him to tell how the night goes, tho (perhaps) the one
(oftentimes)
may be serued in for a Goose, and the other fitly furnish the
same
messe: Yet to maintaine the scuruy fashion, and to keepe Custome
in reparations, he must be honeyed, and come-ouer with Gentle
Reader,
Courteous Reader, and Learned Reader, though he haue no
more Gentilitie
in him than Adam had (that was but a gardner) no more Ciuilitie
than a Tartar, and no more Learning than the most errand
Stinkard, that (except his owne name) could neuer finde any thing
in
the Horne-booke.
How notoriously therfore do good wits dishonor,
not only their Calling, but euen their Creation, that
worship Glow-wormes
(in stead of the Sun) because of a litle false glistering? In
the
name of Phoebus what madnesse leades them vnto it? For he that
dares
hazard a pressing to death (thats to say, To be a man in Print)
must make account that he shall stand (like the olde Weathercock ouer
Powles
steeple) to be beaten with all stormes. Neither the stinking
Tabacco-breath
of a Sattin-gull, the Aconited sting of a narrow-eyed Critick,
the faces of a phantastick Stage-monkey, nor the Indeede-la of
a
Puritanicall Citizen must once shake him. No, but desperately resolue
(like
a French Post) to ride through thick & thin: indure to see his
lines
torne pittifully on the rack: suffer his Muse to take the Bastoone,
yea, the very stab, & himselfe like a new stake to be a marke for
euery Hagler,
and therefore (setting vp all these rests) why shuld he regard what
fooles
bolt is shot at him? Besides, if that which he presents vpon the Stage
of the world be Good, why shuld he basely cry out (with that old
poeticall
mad-cap in his Amphitruo)Iouis summi causa claré plaudite,
beg a Plaudite for God-sake! If Bad, who (but an Asse)
would
intreate (as Players do in a cogging Epilogue at the end of a filthie
Comedy)
that, be it neuer such wicked stuffe, they would forbeare to hisse, or
to dam it perpetually to lye on a Stationers stall. For he that can so
cosen himselfe, as to pocket vp praise in that silly sort, makes his
braines
fat with his own folly.
But Hinc Pudor! or rather Hinc Dolor,
heeres the Diuell! It is not the ratling of all this former haile-shot,
that can terrifie our Band of Castalian Pen-men from
entring
into the field: no, no, the murdring Artillery indeede lyes in the
roaring
mouthes of a company that looke big as if they were the sole and
singular Commanders
ouer the maine Army of Poesy, yet (if Hermes muster-booke
were searcht ouer) theile be found to be the most pitifull pure
fresh-water
souldiers: they giue out, that they are heires-apparent to Helicon,
but an easy Herald may make them meere yonger brothers, or (to
say
troth) not so much. Beare witnes all you whose wits make you able to be
witnesses in this cause, that heere I meddle not with your good Poets, Nam
tales, nusquam sunt hic amplius, If you should rake hell, or (as Aristophanes
in his Frog sayes) in any Celler deeper than hell, it is hard to finde
Spirits of that Fashion. But those Goblins whom I now am
co[n]iuring
vp, haue bladder-cheekes puft out like a Swizzers breeches (yet
being prickt, there comes out nothing but wind) thin-headed fellowes
that
liue upon the scraps of inuention and trauell with such vagrant soules,
and so like Ghosts in white sheets of paper, that the Statute of Rogues
may worthily be sued vpon them, because their wits haue no abiding
place,
and yet wander without a passe-port. Alas, poore wenches (the nine
Muses!)
how much are you wrongd, to haue such a number of Bastards lying vpo[n]
your hands? But turne them out a begging; or if you cannot be rid of
their
Riming company (as I thinke it will be very hard) then lay your heauie
and immortall curse vpon them, that whatsoeuer they weaue (in the
motley-loome
of their rustie pates) may like a beggers cloake, be full of stolne
patches,
and yet neuer a patch like one another, that it may be such true
lamentable
stuffe, that any honest Christian may be sory to see it. Banish these Word-pirates,
(you sacred mistresses of learning) into the gulfe of Barbarisme:
doome them euerlastingly to liue among dunces: let them not once lick
their
lips at the Thespian bowle, but onely be glad (and thanke Apollo
for it too) if hereafter (as hitherto they haue alwayes) they may
quench
their poeticall thirst with small beere. Or if they will needes be
stealing
your Heliconian Nectar, let them (like the dogs of Nylus,)
onely lap and away. For this Goatish swarme are those (that
where
for these many thousand yeares you went for pure maides) haue taken
away
your good names, these are they that deflowre your beauties. These are
those ranck-riders of Art, that haue so spur-gald your lustie wingd Pegasus,
that now he begins to be out of flesh, and (euen only for
prouander-sake)
is glad to shew tricks like Bancks his Curtall. O you
Bookes-sellers
(that are Factors to the Liberall Sciences) ouer whose Stalles these
Drones
do dayly flye humming; let Homer, Hesiod, Euripides, and some
other
mad Greekes with a band of the Latines, lye like musket-shot in their
way,
when these Goths and Getes set vpon you in your paper fortifications;
it
is the only Canon, vpon whose mouth they dare not venture, none but the
English will take their parts, therefore feare them not, for such a
strong
breath haue these chese-eaters, that if they do but blow vpon a booke
they
imagine straight tis blasted; Quod supra nos; nihil ad nos, (they
say) that which is aboue our capacitie, shall not passe vnder our
commendation.
Yet would I haue these Zoilists (of all other) to reade me, if euer I
should
write any thing worthily: for the blame that knowne-fooles heape vpon a
deseruing labour, does not discredit the same, but makes wise men more
perfectly in loue with it. Into such a ones hands therefore if I
fortune
to fall, I will not shrinke an inche, but euen when his teeth are
sharpest,
and most ready to bite, I will stop his mouth only with this, Hæc
mala sunt, sed tu, non meliora facta.
Reader.
WHereas there
stands in the Rere-ward of this Booke a certaine mingled Troope of
straunge
Discourses, fashioned into Tales, Know, that the intelligence which
first
brought them to light, was onely flying Report: whose tongue (as it
often
does) if in spreading them it haue tript in any materiall point, and
either
slipt too farre, or falne too short, beare with the error: and the
rather,
because it is not wilfully committed. Neither let any one (whom those
Reports
shall seeme to touch) cauill, or complaine of inury sithence nothing is
set downe by a malitious hand. Farewell.
THE VVONDER-
full yeare.
VErtumnus
being attired in his accustomed habit of changeable silke, and newly
passed
Vertum-
nus God
of the
yeare.
Descrip-
tion of
the Spring. |
through the first and principall Court-gate of heauen: to whom for a
farewell,
and to shewe how dutifull he was in his office, Ianus (that beares two
faces vnder one hood) made a very mannerly lowe legge, and (because he
was the onely Porter at that gate) presented vnto this King of the
Moneths,
all the New-yeares gifts, which were more in number, and more worth
then
those that are giuen to the great Turke, or the Emperour of Persia:
on went Vertumnus in his lutie progresse, Priapus, Flora,
the Dryades, and Hamadryades, with all the woodden
rabble
of those that drest Orchards & Gardens, perfuming all the wayes
that
he went, with the sweete Odours that breathed from flowers, hearbes and
trees, which now began to peepe out of prison: by vertue of which
excellent
aires, the skie got a most cleare complexion, lookte smug and smoothe,
and had not so much as a wart sticking on her face: the Sunne likewise
was freshly and very richly appareled in cloth of gold like a
Bridegroome,
and in stead of gilded Rosemary, the hornes of the Ramme, (being the
signe
Vpon the
23. of
March the
Spring
begins,
by reason
of the
Sunnes
entrance
into Aries.
|
of that celestiall bride-house where he lay, to be marryed to the
Spring)
were not like your common hornes parcell-gilt, but double double-gilt,
with the liquid gold that melted from his beames, for ioy w[h]ereof the
Larke sung at his windowe euery morning, the Nightingale euery night:
the
Cuckooe (like a single sole Fidler, that reeles from Tauerne to
Tauerne)
plide it all the day long: Lambes friskte vp and downe in the vallies,
kids and Goates leapt too and fro on the Mountaines: Shepheards sat
piping,
country wenches singing: Louers made Sonnets for their Lasses, whilest
they made Garlands for their Louers: And as the Country was frolike, so
was the Citie mery: Oliue Trees (which grow no where but in the Garden
of peace) stood (as common as Beech does at Midsomer) at euery mans
doore,
braunches of Palme were in euery mans hand: Streetes were full of
people,
people full of ioy: euery house seemde to haue a Lorde of misrule in
it,
in euery house there was so much iollity: no Scritch-Owle frighted the
silly Countryman at midnight, nor any Drum the Citizen at noone-day;
but
all was more calme than a still water, all husht, as if the Spheres had
bene playing in Consort: In conclusion, heauen lookt like a Pallace,
and
the great hall of the earth, like a Paradice. But O the short-liu'de
Felicitie
of man! O world of what slight and thin stuffe is thy happinesse! Iust
in the midst of this iocund Holy-day, a storme rises in the West:
Westward
(from the toppe of a Ritchmount) descended a hidious tempest,
that
shooke Cedars, terrified the tallest Pines, and cleft in sunder euen
the
hardest hearts of Oake: And if such great trees were shaken, what
thinke
you became of the tender Eglantine, and humble Hawthorne; they could
not
(doubtlesse) but droope, they could not choose but die with the terror.
The Element (taking the Destinies part, who indeed set abroach this
mischiefe)
scowled on the earth, and filling her hie forehead full of blacke
wrinckles,
tumbling long vp and downe (like a great bellied wife) her sighes being
whirlewindes, and her grones thunder, at length she fell in labour, and
was deliuered of a pale, meagry, weake child, named Sicknesse,
whom
Death (with a pestilence) would needes take vpon him to nurse, and did
so. This starueling being come to his full growth, had an office giuen
him for nothing (and thats a wonder in this age (Death made him his
Herauld:
attirde him like a Courtier, and (in his name) chargde him to goe into
the Priuie Chamber of the English Queene, to sommon her to appeare in
the
Star-chamber of heauen.
The sommons made her start, but (hauing an
inuincible
spirit) did not amaze her: yet whom would not the certaine newes of
parting
from a Kingdome amaze! But she knewe where to finde a richer, and
therefore
lightlie regarded the losse of this, and thereupon made readie for that
heauenlie Coronation, being (which was most strange) most dutifull to
obay,
that had so many yeares so powrefully commaunded. She obayed Deaths
messenger,
and yeelded her body to the hands of death himselfe. She dyes,
resigning
her Scepter to posteritie, and her Soule to immortalitie.
To report of her death (like a thunder-clap) was
able to kill thousands, it tooke away hearts from millions: for hauing
brought vp (euen vnder her wing) a nation that was almost begotten and
born vnder her; that neuer shouted any other Aue than for her
name,
neuer sawe the face of any Prince but her selfe, neuer vnderstoode what
that strange out-landish word Change signified: how was it
possible,
but that her sicknes should throw abroad an vniuersall feare, and her
death
an astonishment? She was the Courtiers treasure, therefore he had cause
The
generall
terror
that her
death
bred. |
to mourne: the Lawyers sword of iustice, he might well faint: the
Merchants
patronesse, he had reason to looke pale: the Citizens mother, he might
best lament: the Shepheards Goddesse, and should not he droope? Onely
the
Souldier, who had walkt a long time vpon wodden legs, and was not able
to giue Armes, though he were a Gentleman, had brisseld vp the quills
of
his stiffe Porcupine mustachio, and swore by no beggers that now was
the
houre come for him to bestirre his stumps: Vsurers and Brokers (that
are
the Diuels Ingles, and dwell in the long-lane of hell) quakt like aspen
leaues at his oathes: those that before were the onely cut-throates in London,
now stoode in feare of no other death: but my I
was deceiued,
the Tragedie went not forward.
Neuer did the English Nation behold so much black
worne as there was at her Funerall: It was then but put on, to try if
it
were fit, for the great day of mourning was set downe (in the booke of
heauen) to be held afterwards: that was but the dumb shew, the
Tragicall
Act hath bene playing euer since. Her Herse (as it was borne) seemed to
be an Iland swimming in water, for round about it there rayned showers
of teares, about her deathbed none: for her departure was so sudden and
so strange, that men knew not how to weepe, because they had neuer bin
taught to shed teares of that making. They that durst not speake their
sorrowes, whisperd them: they that durst not whisper, sent them foorth
in
sighes. Oh what an Earth-quake is the alteration of a State! Looke from
the Chamber of Presence, to the Farmers cottage, and you shall finde
nothing
but distraction: the whole Kingdome seemes a wildernes, and the people
in it are transformed to wild men. The Map of a Countrey so pitifullie
distracted by the horror of a change, if you desire perfectlie to
behold,
cast your eyes then on this that followes, which being heretofore in
priuate
presented to the King, I thinke may very worthily shew it selfe before
you: And because you shall see them attirde in the same fashion that
they
wore before his Maiestie, let these few lines (which stood then as
Prologue
to the rest) enter first into your eares.
NOt for applauses,
shallow fooles aduenture,
I plunge my verse into a sea of censure,
But with a liuer drest in gall, to see
So many Rookes, catch-polls of poesy,
That feede vpon the fallings of hye wit,
And put on cast inuentions, most vnfit,
For such am I prest forth in shops and stalls,
Pasted in Powles, and on the Lawyers walls,
For euery basilisk-eyed Criticks bait,
To kill my verse, or poison my conceit:
Or some smoakt gallant, who at wit repines,
To dry Tabacco with my holesome lines,
And in one paper sacrifice more braine,
Than all his ignorant scull could ere containe:
But merit dreads no martydome, nor stroke,
My lines shall liue, when he shall be all smoake.
Thus farre the Prologue, who leauing the Stage
cleere, the feares that are bred in the wombe of this altring kingdome
do next step vp, acting thus.
THe great impostume
of the realme was drawne
Euen to a head : the multitudinous spawne
Was the corruption, which did make it swell
With hop'd sedition (the burnt seed of hell.)
Who did expect but ruine, blood, and death,
To share our kingdome, and diuide our breath.
Religions without religion,
To let other blood, confusion
To be next Queene of England, and this yeere
The ciuill warres of France to be plaid heere
By English-men, ruffians, and pandering slaues,
That faine would dig vp gowtie vsureres graues :
At such a time, villaines their hopes do honey,
And rich men looke as pale as their white money :
Now they remoue, and make their siluer sweate,
Casting themselues into a couetous heate,
And then (vnseene) in the confederate darke,
Bury their gold, without or Priest, or Clarke.
And say no prayers ouer that dead pelfe,
True : Gold's no Christian, but an Indian elfe.
Did not the very kingdome seeme to shake
Her precious massie limbes? did she not make
All English cities (like her pulses) beate
With people in their veines? the feare so great,
that had it not bene phisickt with rare peace,
Our populous power had lessend her increase.
The Spring-time that was dry, had sprung in blood,
A greater dearth of men, than e're of foode :
In such a panting time, and gasping yeare,
Victuals are cheapest, only men are deare.
Now each wise-acred Landlord did dispaire,
Fearing some villaine should become his heire,
Or that his sonne and heire before his time,
Should now turne villaine, and with violence clime
Vp to his life, saying father you haue seene
King Henry, Edward, Mary, and the Queene,
I wonder you'le liue longer! then he tells him
Hees loth to see him kild, therfore he kills him,
And each vast Landlord dyes like a poore slaue,
Their thousand acres makes them but a graue,
At such a time great men conuey their treasure
Into the trusty Citie : wayts the leisure
Of bloud and insurrection, which warre clips,
When euery gate shutts vp her Iron lips,
Imagine now a mighty man of dust,
Standeth in doubt, what seruant he may trust,
With Plate worth thousands : Iewels worth farre more,
If he proue false, then his rich Lord proues poore :
He calls forth one by one, to note their graces,
Whilest they make legs he copies out their faces,
Examines their eye-browe, consters their beard,
Singles their nose out, still he rests afeard :
The first that comes by no meanes heele alow,
Has spyed three Hares starting betweene his brow,
Quite turnes the word, names it Celeritie,
For Hares do run away, and so may he :
A second shewne : him he will scarce behold,
His beard's too red, the colour of his gold :
A third may please him, but tis hard to say,
A rich man's pleasde, when his goods part away.
And now do cherrup by, fine golden nests
Of well hatcht bowles: such as do breed in feasts,
For warre and death cupboards of plate downe pulls,
Then Bacchus drinkes not in gilt-bowles, but
sculls.
Let me descend and stoope my verse a while,
To make the Comicke cheeke of Poesie smile ;
Ranck peny-fathers scud (with their halfe hammes,
Shadowing their calues) to saue their siluer dammes,
At euery gun they start, tilt from the ground,
One drum can make a thousand Vsurers sound,
In vnsought Allies and vnwholesome places,
Back-wayes and by-lanes, where appeare fewe faces,
In shamble-smelling roomes, loathsome prospects,
And penny-lattice-windowes, which reiects
All popularitie : there the rich Cubs lurke,
When in great houses ruffians are at worke,
Not dreaming that such glorious booties lye
Vnder those nasty roofes : such they passe by
Without a search, crying there's nought for vs,
And wealthie men deceiue poore villaines thus:
Tongue-traueling Lawyers faint at such a day,
Lye speechlesse, for they haue no words to say.
Physitions turne to patients, their Arts dry,
For then our fat men without Phisick die.
And to conclude, against all Art and good,
Warre taints the Doctor, lets the Surgion blood.
Such was the fashion of this Land, when the great
Land-Lady thereof left it: Shee came in with the fall of the leafe, and
went away in Spring: her life (which was dedicated to Virginitie,) both
beginning & closing vp a miraculous Mayden circle: for she was
borne
vpon a Lady Eue, and died vpon a Lady Eue: her Natiuitie & death
being
memorable by this wonder: the first and last yeares of her Raigne by
this,
that a Lee was Lorde Maior when she came to the Crowne, and a Lee
Lorde Maior when she departed from it. Three places are made famous by
her for three things, Greenwich for her birth, Richmount
for her death, White-hall for her Funerall: vpon her remounting
from whence, (to leand our tiring prose a breathing time) stay, and
looke
vpon these Epigrams, being composed,
1.
Vpon the Queenes last Remoue
being dead.
THe Queene's remou'de in solemne
sort,
Yet this was strange, and seldome seene,
The Queene vsde to remoue the Court,
But now the Court remou'de the Queene.
2.
Vpon her bringing by water
to White Hall.
THe Queene was brought by
water to White Hall,
At euery stroake, the Oares teares let fall.
More clung about the Barge : Fish vnder water
Wept out their eyes of pearle, and swom blind after.
I thinke the Barge-men might with easier thyes
Haue rowde her thither in her peoples eyes :
For howsoe're, thus much my thoughts haue skand,
S'had come by water, had she come by land.
3.
Vpon her lying dead at
White
Hall.
THe Queene lyes now at White
Hall dead,
And now at White Hall liuing,
To make this rough obiection euen,
Dead at White Hall at Westminster,
But liuing at White Hall in Heauen.
Thus you see that both in her life and her death
shee was appointed to be the mirror of her time: And surely, if since
the
first stone that was layd for the foundation of this great house of the
world, there was euer a yeare ordained to wondred at, it is only this:
the Sibils, Octogesimus, Octauus Annus, That same terrible 88.
which
came sayling hither in the Spanish Armado, and made mens hearts colder
1603. A
more
wonder-
full yeare
than 88. |
then the frozen Zone, when they heard but an inckling of it: That 88.
by
whose horrible predictions, Almanack-makers stood in bodily feare their
trade would be vtterly ouerthrowne, and poore Erra Pater was
threatned
(because he was a Iew) to be put to baser offices, then the stopping of
mustard-pots: That same 88. which had more prophecies waiting at his
heeles,
tha[n] euer Merlin the Magitian had in his head, was a yeare of
Iubile to this. Platoes Mirabilis Annus,
(whether it be past
alreadie, or to come within these foure yeares) may throw Platoes
cap at Mirabilis, for that title of wonderfull is bestowed vpon
1603. If that sacred Aromatically-perfumed fire of wit (out of whose
flames
Phoenix poesie doth arise) were burning in any brest, I would feede it
with no other stuffe for a twelue-moneth and a day than with kindling
papers
full of lines, that should tell only of the chances changes, and
strange
shapes that this Protean Climactericall yeare hath metamorphosed
himselfe
into. It is able to finde ten Chroniclers a competent liuing, and to
set
twentie Printers at worke. You shall perceiue I lie not, if (with Peter
Bales) you will take the paines to drawe the whole volume of it
into
the compasse of a pennie. As first, to begin with the Queenes death,
then
the Kingdomes falling into an Ague vpon that. Next, follows the curing
of that feauer by the holesome receipt of a proclaymed King. That
wonder
begat more, for in an houre, two mightie Nations were made one: wilde Ireland
became tame on the sudden, and some English great ones that before
seemed
tame, on the sudden turned wilde: That same Parke which great Iulius
Cæsar inclosed, to hold in that Deere whome they before
hunted,
being new circled (by a second Cæsar) with stronger pales
to keepe them from leaping ouer. And last of all (if that wonder be the
last and shut vp the yeare) a most dreadfull plague. This is the
abstract,
and yet (like Stowes Chronicle of Decimo Sexto to huge Hollinshead)
these small pricks in this Set-card of ours, represent mighty
Countreys;
whilst I haue the quill in my hand, let me blow them bigger.
The Queene being honoured with a Diademe of Starres,
France, Spaine, and Belgia, lift vp their heads,
preparing
to do as much for England by giuing ayme, whilest she shot arrowes at
her
owne brest (as they imagined) as she had done (many a yeare together)
for
them: and her owne Nation betted on their sides, looking with
distracted
countenance for no better guests than Ciuill Sedition, Vprores, Rapes,
Murders, and Massacres. But the wheele of Fate turned, a better Lottery
was drawne, Pro Troia stabat Apollo, God stuck valiantlie to
vs.
For behold, vp rises a comfortable Sun out of the North, whose glorious
beames (like a fan) dispersed all thick and contagious clowdes. The
losse
of a Queene, was paid with the double interest of a King and Queene.
The
Cedar of her gouernment which stood alone and bare no fruit, is changed
now to an Oliue, vpon whose spreading branches grow both Kings and
Queenes.
Oh it were able to fill a hundred paire of writing tables with notes,
but
to see the parts plaid in the compasse of one houre on the stage of
this
new-found world! Vpon Thursday it was treason to cry God saue king Iames
king of England, and vppon Friday hye treason not to cry so. In
the morning no voice heard but murmures and lamentation, at noone
nothing
but shoutes of gladnes & triumphe. S. George and S.
Andrew
that many hundred yeares had defied one another, were now sworne
brothers: England and Scotland (being parted only with
a
narrow Riuer,
and the people of both Empires speaking a language lesse differing than
english within it selfe, as the prouidence had enacted, that one day
those
two Nations should marry one another) are now made sure together, and
king Iames his Coronation, is the solemne wedding day.
Happiest of all
thy Ancestors (thou mirror of all Princes that euer were or are) that
at
seauen of the clock wert a king but ouer a peece of a little Iland, and
before eleuen the greatest Monarch in Christendome. now
_________Siluer Crowds
Of blisfull Angels and tryed Martys tread
On the Star-seeling ouer Englands head :
Now heauen broke into a wonder, and brought forth
Our omne bonum from the holesome North
(Our fruitfull soueraigne) Iamus, at whose dread
name
Rebellion swounded, and (ere since) became
Groueling and nerue-lesse, wanting bloud to nourish,
For Ruine gnawes her selfe when kingdomes flourish,
Nor are our hopes planted in regall springs,
Neuer to wither, for our aire breedes kings :
And in all ages (from this soueraigne time)
England shall still be calde the royall clime.
Most blisfull Monarch of all earthen powers,
Seru'd with a messe of kingdomes, foure such bowers
(For prosperous hiues, and rare industrious swarmes)
The world containes not in her solid armes.
O thou that art the Meeter of our dayes,
Poets Apollo! deale thy Daphnean bayes
To those whose wits are bay-trees, euer greene,
Vpon whose hye tops Poesie chirps vnseene :
Such are most fit, t'apparell Kings in rimes,
Whose siluer numbers are the Muses chimes,
Whose spritely caracters (being once wrought on)
Out-liue the marble th'are insculpt upon :
Let such men chaunt thy vertue, then they flye
On Learnings wings vp to Eternitie.
As for the rest, that limp (in cold desert)
Hauing small wit, lesse iudgement, and least Art :
Their verse! tis almost heresie to heare,
Banish their lines some furlong, from thine eare :
For tis held dang'rous (by Apolloes signe)
To be infected with a leaprous line.
O make some Adamant Act (n'ere to be worne)
That none may write but those that are true-borne :
So when the worlds old cheekes shall race and peele,
Thy Acts shall breath in Epitaphs of Steele.
By these Comments it appeares that by this time
The ioyes
that fol-
lowed
vpon his
pro-
clayming. |
King Iames is proclaimed: now does fresh blood leape into the
cheekes
of the Courtier the Souldier now hangs vp his armor, and is glad that
he
shall feede vpon the blessed fruites of peace: the Schollar sings
hymnes
in honor of the Muses, assuring himselfe now that Helicon will
bee
kept pure, because Apollo himselfe drinkes of it. Now the
thriftie
Citizen casts beyond the Moone, and seeing the golden age returned into
the world againe, resolues to worship no Saint but money. Trades that
lay
dead & rotten, and were in all mens opinion vtterly dambd, started
out of their trance, as though they had drunke of Aqua
Cælestis,
or Vnicornes horne, and swore to fall to their olde occupations.
Taylors
meant no more to be called Merchant-taylors but Merchants, for their
shops
were all lead foorth in leases to be turned into ships, and with their
sheares (in stead of a Rudder) would they haue cut the Seas (like
Leuant
Taffaty) and sayld to the West Indies for no worse stuffe to make hose
and doublets of, than beaten gold: Or if the necessitie of the time
(which
was likely to stand altogether vpon brauery) should presse them to
serue
with their iron and Spanish weapons vpon their stalls, then was there a
sharpe law made amongst them that no workman should handle any needle
but
that which had a pearle in his eye, nor any copper thimble, vnlesse it
were linde quite through, or bumbasted with Siluer. What Mechanicall
hardhanded
Vulcanist (seeing the dice of Fortune run so sweetly, and resoluing to
strike
whilst the iron was hote) but perswaded himselfe to bee Maister or head
Warden of the company ere halfe a yeare went about? The worst players
Boy
stood vpon his good parts, swearing tragicall and busking oathes, that
how vilainously soeuer he randed, or what bad and vnlawfull action
soeuer
he entred into, he would in despite of his honest audience, be halfe a
sharer (at least) at home, or else strowle (thats to say trauell) with
some notorious wicked floundering company abroad. And good reason had
these
time-catchers to be led into this fooles paradice, for they sawe mirth
in euery mans face, the streetes were plumd with gallants, Tabacconists
fild vp whole Tauernes: Vintners hung out spicke and span new Iuy
bushes
(because they wanted good wine) and their old raine-beaten lattices
marcht
vnder other cullors, hauing lost both company and cullors before. London
was neuer in the high way to preferment til now; now she resolued to
stand
vpon her pantoffles: now (and neuer till now) did she laugh to scorne
that
worme-eaten prouerbe of Lincolne was, London is, &
Yorke
shall bee, for she saw her selfe in better state then Ierusalem,
she went more gallant then euer did Antwerp, was more courted
by
amorous and lustie suiters then Venice (the minion of Italy)
more loftie towers stood (like a Coronet, or a spangled head-tire)
about
her Temples, then euer did about the beautifull forehead of Rome:
Tyrus
and Sydon to her were like two thatcht houses, to Theobals:
ye grand Cayr but a hogsty. Hinc illæ
lachrymæ,
She wept her belly full for all this. Whilst Troy was swilling
sack
and sugar, and mowsing fat venison, the mad Greekes made bonfires of
their
houses: Old Priam was drinking a health to the wooden horse,
and
before it could be pledged had his throat cut. Corne is no sooner ripe,
but for all the pricking vp of his eares is pard off by the shins, and
made to goe vpon stumps. Flowers no sooner budded, but they are pluckt
vp and dye. Night walks at the heeles of the day, and sorrow enters
(like
a tauerne-bill) at the taile of our pleasures: for in the Appenine
heigth
of this immoderate ioy and securitie (that like Powles Steeple
ouer-lookt
the whole Citie) Behold, that miracle-worker, who in one minute turnd
our
generall mourning to a generall mirth, does nowe againe in a moment
alter
that gladnes to shrikes & lamentation.
Here would I faine make a full point, because
posteritie
should not be frighted with those miserable Tragedies, which now my
Muse
(as Chorus) stands ready to present. Time would thou hadst
neuer
bene made wretched by bringing them forth: Obliuion would in all the
graues
and sepulchres, whose ranke iawes thou hadst already closd vp, or shalt
yet hereafter burst open, thou couldst likewise bury them for euer.
A stiffe and freezing horror sucks vp the riuers
of my blood: my haire stands an ende with the panting of my braines:
mine
eye balls are ready to start out, being beaten with the billowes of my
teares: out of my weeping pen does the incke mournefully and more
bitterly
than gall drop on the palefac'd paper, euen when I do but thinke how
the
bowels of my sicke Country haue bene torne, Apollo therefore
and
you bewitching siluer-tongd Muses, get you gone, Inuocate none of your
names: Sorrow & Truth, sit you on each side of me, whilst I am
deliuered
of this deadly burden: prompt me that I may vtter ruthfull and
passionate
condolement: arme my trembling hand, that it may boldly rip vp and
Anatomize
the vlcerous body of this Anthropophagized plague: lend me Art
(without
Anthro-
pophagi
are Scithians,
that feed
on mens
flesh. |
any counterfeit shadowing) to paint and delineate to the life the whole
story of this mortall and pestiferous battaile, & you the ghosts of
those more (by many) then 40000. that with the virulent poison of
infection
haue bene driuen out of your earthly dwellings: you desolate
hand-wringing
widowes, that beate your bosomes ouer your departing husbands: you
wofully
distracted mothers that with disheueld haire falne into swounds, whilst
you lye kissing the insensible cold lips of your breathlesse Infants:
you
out-cast and downe-troden Orphanes, that shall many a yeare hence
remember
more freshly to mourne, when your mourning garments shall looke olde
and
be for gotten; And you the Genij of all those emptyed families,
whose habitations are now among the Antipodes: Ioyne all your
hands
together, and with your bodies cast a ring about me: let me behold your
ghastly vizages, that my paper may receiue their true pictures: Eccho
forth your grones through the hollow truncke of my pen, and raine downe
your gummy teares into mine Incke, that euen marble bosomes may be
shaken
with terrour, and hearts of Adamant melt into compassion.
What an vnmatchable torment were it for a man to
be bard vp euery night in a vast silent Charnell-house? hung (to make
it
more hideous) with lamps dimly & slowly burning, in hollow and
glimmering
corners: where all the pauement should in stead of greene rushes, be
strewed
with blasted Rosemary: withered Hyacinthes, fatall Cipresse and Ewe,
thickly
mingled with heapes of dead mens bones: the bare ribbes of a father
that
begat him, lying there: here the Chaplesse hollow scull of a mother
that
bore him: round about him a thousand Coarses, some standing bolt
vpright
in their knotted winding sheets: others halfe mouldred in rotted
coffins,
that should suddenly yawne wide open, filling his nosthrils with
noysome
stench, and his eyes with the sight of nothing but crawling wormes. And
to keepe such a poore wretch waking, he should heare no noise but
of
Toads croaking, Screech-Owles howling, Mandrakes shriking: were not
this
an infernall prison? would not the strongest-harted man (best with such
a ghastly horror) looke wilde and runne madde? and die? And euen such a
formidable shape did the diseased Citie appeare in: For he that durst
(in
the dead houre of gloomy midnight) haue bene so valiant, as to haue
walkt
through the still and melancholy streets, what thinke you should haue
bene
his musicke? Surely the loude grones of rauing sicke men; the strugling
panges of soules departing: In euery house griefe strinking vp an
Allarum:
Seuants crying out for maisters: wiues for husbands, parents for
children,
children for their mothers: here he should haue met some frantically
running
to knock vp Sextons; there, others fearfully sweating with Coffins, to
steale forth dead bodies, least the fatall hand-writing of death should
seale vp their doores. And to make this dismall consort more full,
round
about him Bells heauily tolling in one place, and ringing out in
another:
The dreadfulnesse of such an houre, is in-vtterable: let vs goe
further.
If some poore man, suddeinly starting out of a
sweete
and golden slumber, should behold his house flaming about his eares,
all
his family destroied in their sleepes by the mercilesse fire; himselfe
in the very midst of it, wofully and like a madde man calling for
helpe:
would not the misery of such a distressed soule, appeare the greater,
if
the rich Vsurer dwelling next doore to him, should not stirre, (though
he felt no part of the danger) but suffer him to perish, when the
thrusting
out of an arme might haue saued him? O how many thousands of wretched
people
haue acted this poore mans part? How often hath the amazed husband
waking,
found the comfort of his bedde lying breathlesse by his side! his
children
at the same instant gasping for life! and his seruants, mortally
wounded
at the hart by sicknes! the distracted creature, beats at death doores,
exclaimes at windowes, his cries are sharp inough to pierce heauen, but
on earth no eare is opend to receiue them.
And in this maner do the tedious minutes of the
night stretch out the sorowes of ten thousand: It is now day, let vs
looke
forth and try what Consolation rizes with the Sun: not any, not any:
for
before the Iewell of the morning be fully set in siluer, hundred hungry
graues stand gaping, and euery one of them (as at a breakfast) hath
swallowed
downe ten or eleuen liuelesse carcases: before dinner, in the same
gulfe
are twice so many more deuoured: and before the sun takes his rest,
those
numbers are doubled: Threescore that not many houres before had euery
one
seuerall lodgings very delicately furnisht, are now thrust altogether
into
one close roome: a litle noisome roome: not fully ten foote square.
Doth
not this strike coldly to ye hart of a worldly mizer? To
some,
the very sound of deaths name, is in stead of a passing-bell: what
shall
become of such a coward, being told that the selfe-same bodie of his,
which
now is so pampered with superfluous fare, so perfumed and bathed in
odoriferous
waters, and so gaily apparelled in varietie of fashio[n]s, must one day
be throwne (like stinking carion) into a rank & rotten graue; where
his goodly eies, yt did once shoote foorth such amorous
glances,
must be beaten out of his head: his lockes that hang wantonly dangling,
troden in durt vnderfoote: this doubtlesse (like thunder) must needs
strike
him into the earth. But (wretched man!) when thou shalt see, and be
assured
(by tokens sent thee from heauen) that to morroe thou must be tumbled
into
a Mucke-pit, and suffer thy body to be bruisde and prest with
three-score
dead men, lying slouenly vpon thee, and thou to be vndermost of all!
yea
and perhaps halfe of that number were thine enemies! (and see how they
may be reuenged, for the wormes that breed out of their putrifying
carkasses,
shall crawle in huge swarmes from them, and quite deuoure thee) what
agonies
will this strange newes driue thee into? If thou art in loue with thy
selfe,
this cannot choose but possesse thee with frenzie. But thou art gotten
safe (out of the ciuill citie Calamitie) to thy Parkes and Pallaces in
the Country, lading thy asses and thy Mules with thy gold, (thy god),
thy
plate, and thy Iewels: and the fruites of thy wombe thriftily growing
vp
but in one onely sonne, (the young Landlord of all thy carefull
labours)
him also hast thou rescued from the arrowes of infection; Now is thy
soule
iocund, and thy sences merry. But open thine eyes, thou Foole and
behold
that darling of thine eye, (thy sonne) turnd suddeinly into a lumpe of
clay; the hand of pestilence hath smote him euen vnder thy wing: Now
doest
thou rent thine haire, blaspheme thy Creator, cursest thy creation, and
basely descendest into bruitish & vnmanly passions, threatning in
despite
of death & his Plague, to maintaine the memory of thy childe, in
the
euerlasting brest of Marble: a tombe must now defend him from tempests:
and for that purpose, the swetty hinde (that digs the rent he paies
thee
out of the entrailes of the earth) he is sent for, to conuey foorth
that
burden of thy sorrow: But note how thy pride is disdained: that
weather-beaten
sun-burnt drudge, that not a month since fawnd vpon thy Worship like a
Spaniell, and like a bond-slaue, would haue stoopt lower than thy
feete,
does now stoppe his nose at thy presence, and is readie to set his
Mastiue
as hye as thy throate, to driue thee from his doore: all thy golde and
siluer cannot hire one of those (whom before thou didst scorne) to
carry
the dead body to his last home: the Country round about thee shun thee,
as a Basiliske, and therefore to London (from whose armes thou
cowardly
fledst away) poast vpon poast must be galloping, to fetch from thence
those
that may performe that Funerall Office: But there are they so full of
graue-matters
of their owne, that they haue no leisure to attend thine: doth not this
cut thy very heart-strings in sunder? If that doe not, the shutting vp
of the Tragicall Act, I am sure will: for thou must be inforced with
thine
owne handes, to winde vp (that blasted flower of youth) in the last
linnen,
that he shall weare: vpon thine owne shoulders must thou beare part of
him, thy amazed seruant the other: with thine owne hands must thou dig
his graue, (not in the Church, or common place of buriall,) thou hast
not
fauour (for all thy riches) to be so happie, but in thine Orcharde, or
in the proude walkes of thy Garden, wringing thy palsie-shaking hands
in
stead of belles, (most miserable father) must thou search him out a
sepulcher.
My spirit growes faint with rowing in this Stygian
Ferry, it can no longer endure the transportation of soules in this
dolefull
manner: let vs therefore shift a point of our Compasse, and (since
there
is no remedie, but that we must still bee vp and downe in this Mare
mortuum) hoist vp all our sailes, and on the merry winges of a
lustier
winde seeke to arriue on some prosperous shoare.
Imagine then that all this while, Death (like a
Spanish Leagar, or rather like stalking Tamberlaine) hath
pitcht
his tents, (being nothing but a heape of winding sheets tackt together)
in the sinfully-polluted Suburbes: the Plague is Muster-maister and
Marshall
of the field: Burning Feauers, Boyles, Blaines, and Carbuncles, the
Leaders,
Lieutenants, Serieants, and Corporalls: the maine Army consisting (like
Dunkirke) of a mingle-mangle, viz. dumpish
Mourners, merry
Sextons, hungry Coffin-sellers, scrubbing Bearers, and nastie
Graue-makers:
but indeed they are the Pioners of the Campe, that are imployed onely
(like
Moles) in casting vp of earth and digging of trenches; Feare and
Trembling
(the two catch-polles of Death) arrest euery one: No parley will be
graunted,
no composition stood vpon, But the Allarum is strucke vp, the Toxin
ringes out for life, and no voyce heard but Tue, Tue, Kill, Kill,
the little Belles onely (like small shot) doe yet goe off, and make no
great worke for wormes, a hundred or two lost in euery skirmish, or so:
but alas thats nothing: yet by those desperat salliies, what by open
setting
vpon them by day, and secret Ambuscadoes by night, the skirts of London
were pittifully pared off, by litle and litle: which they within the
gates
perceiuing, it was no boot to bid them take their heeles, for away they
trudge thick and threefold; some some riding, some on foote: some
without
bootes, some in their slippers, by water, by land, In shoales swom they
West-ward, mary to Grauesend none went vnlesse they be driuen,
for
whosoeuer landed there neuer came back againe: Hacknies, water-men
&
Wagons, were not so terribly imployed many a yeare; so that within a
short
time, there was not a good horse in Smith-field, nor a Coach to be set
eyes on. For after the world had once run vpon the wheeles of the
Pest-cart,
neither coach nor caroach durst appeare in his likenesse.
Let vs pursue these runnawayes no longer, but leaue
them in the vnmercifull hands of the Country-hard-hearted Hobbinolls,
(who are ordaind to be their Tormentors,) and returne backe to the
siege
of the Citie; for the enemie taking aduantage by their flight, planted
his ordinance against the walls; here the Canons (like their great
Bells)
roard: the Plague tooke sore paines for a breach; he laid about him
cruelly,
ere he could get it, but at length he and his tiranous band entred: his
purple colours were presently (with the sound of Bow-bell in stead of a
trompet) aduanced, and ioynd to the Standard of the Citie; he marcht
euen
thorow Cheapside, and the capitall streets of Troynouant: the
only
blot of dishonor that struck vpon this Inuader, being this, that hee
plaide
the tyrant, not the conqueror, making hauocke of all, when he had all
lying
at the foote of his mercy. Men, women, & children dropt downe
before
him: houses were rifled, streetes ransact, beautifull maidens throwne
on
their beds, and ravisht by sicknes: rich mens Cofers broken open, and
shared
amongst prodigall heires and vnthriftie seruants: poore men vsde
poorely,
but not pittifully; he did very much hurt, yet some say he did very
much
good. Howsoeuer he behaued himselfe this intelligence runs current,
that
euery house lookt like S. Bartholomewes Hospitall, and euery
street
like Bucklersbury, for poore Methridatum and Dragon-water
(being both of them in all the world, scarce worth three-pence) were
bort
in euery corner, and yet were both drunke euery houre at other mens
cost. Lazarus laie groning at euery mans doore, mary no Diues
was
within to send him a crum, (for all your Gold-finches were fled to the
woods) nor a dogge left to licke vp his sores, for they (like Currs)
were
knockt downe like Oxen, and fell thicker than Acornes.
I am amazed to remember what dead Marches were made
of three thousand trooping together; husbands, wiues & children,
being
led as ordinarily to one graue, as if they had gone to one bed. And
those
that could shift for a time, and shrink their heads out of the collar
(as
many did) yet went they (most bitterly) miching and muffled vp &
downe
with Rue and Wormewood stuft into their eares and nosthrils, looking
like
so many Bores heads stuck with branches of Rosemary, to be serued in
for
Brawne at Christmas.
This was a rare worlde for the Church, who had wont
to complaine for want of liuing, and now had more liuing thrust vpon
her,
than she knew how to bestow: to haue bene Clarke now to a parish
Clarke,
was better then to serue some foolish Iustice of Peace, or than the
yeare
before to haue had a Benefice. Sextons gaue out, if they might (as they
hoped) continue these doings but a tweluemoneth longer, they and their
posteritie would all ryde vppon footecloathes to the ende of the world.
Amongst which worme-eaten generation, the three bald Sextons of limping
Saint Gyles, Saint Sepulchres, and Saint Olaues,
rulde
the roaste more hotly, than euer did the Triumuiri of Rome.
Iehochanan,
Symeon, and Eleazar, neuer kept such a plaguy coyle in Ierusalem
among the hunger-starued Iewes, as these three Sharkers did in their
Parishes
among naked Christians. Cursed they were I am sure by some to the pitte
of hell, for tearing money out of their throates, that had not a crosse
in their purses. But alas! they must haue it, it is their fee, and
therefore
giue the diuell his due: onely hearbe-wiues and gardeners (that neuer
prayed
before, vnlesse it were for Raine or faire Weather,) were now day and
night
vppon their marybones, that God would blesse the labors of those
mole-catchers,
because they sucke sweetnesse by this; for the price of flowers,
Hearbes,
and garlands, rose wonderfully, in so much that Rosemary which had wont
to be sold for 12. pence an armefull, went now for six shillings a
handful.
A fourth sharer likewise (these
winding-sheete-weauers)
deserues to haue my penne giue his lippes a Iewes Letter, but because
he
worships the Bakers good Lord & Maister, charitable S. Clement
(whereas none of the other three euer had to do with any Saint) he
shall
scape the better: only let him take heede, that hauing all this yeare
buried
his praiers in the bellies of Fat ones, and plump Capon-eaters, (for no
worse meat would downe this Bly-foxes stomach) let him I say
take
heede least (his flesh now falling away) his carcas be not plagu[ed]
with
leane ones, of whom (whilst the bill of Lord haue mercy vpon vs,
was to be denied in no place) it was death for him to heare.
In this pittifull (or rather pittilesse) perplexitie
stood London, forsaken like a Louer, forlorne like a widow, and
disarmde of all comfort: disarmde I may well say, for fiue Rapiers were
not stirring all this time, and those that were worne, had neuer bin
seene,
if any money could haue bene lent vpon them, so hungry is the Estridge
disease, that it will deuoure euen Iron: let vs therefore with bag
&
baggage march away from this dangerous sore Citie, and visit those that
are fled into the Country. But alas! Decidis in Scyllam, you
are
pepperd if you visit them, for they are visited alreadie: the broad
Arrow
of Death, flies there vp & downe, as swiftly as it doth here: they
that rode on the lustiest geldings, could not out-gallop the Plague, It
ouer-tooke them, and ouer turnd them too, horse and foote.
You whom the arrowes of pestilence haue reacht at
eighteen and twenty score (tho you stood far enough as you thought
fro[m]
the marke) you that sickning in the hie way, would haue bene glad of a
bed in an Hospitall, and dying in the open fieldes, haue bene buried
like
dogs, how much better had it bin for you, to haue lyen fuller of byles
and plague-sores than euer did Iob, so you might in that extremity haue
receiued both bodily & spiritual comfort, which there was denied
you?
For those misbeleeuing Pagans, the plough-driuers, those worse then
Infidels,
that (like their Swine) neuer looke vp so high as Heauen: when Citizens
boorded them they wrung their hands, and wisht rather they had falne
into
the hands of Spaniards: for the sight of a flat-cap was more dreadfull
to a Lob, then the discharging of a Caliuer: a treble-ruffe (being once
named the Merchants set) had power to cast a whole houshold into a cold
sweat. If one new suite of Sackcloth had beene knowne to haue come out
of Burchin-lane (being the common Ward-rope for all their Clowne-ships)
it had beene enough to make a Market towne giue vp the ghost. A Crow
that
had beene seene in a Sunne-shine day, standing on the top of Powles,
would
haue beene better than a Beacon on fire, to haue raizd all the townes
within
ten miles of London, for the keeping her out.
Neuer let any man aske me what became of our
Phisitions
in this Massacre, they hid their Synodicall heads aswell as the
prowdest:
and I cannot blame them, for their Phlebotomies, Losinges, and
Electuaries,
with their Diacatholicons, Diacodions, Amulets, and Antidotes, had not
so much strength to hold life and soule together, as a pot of Pinders
Ale and a Nutmeg: their Drugs turned to durt, their simples [were]
simple
things: Galen could do no more good, than Sir Giles Goosecap: Hipocrates,
Auicen, Paraselsus, Rasis, Fernelius, with all their succeeding
rabble
of Doctors and Water-casters, were at their wits end, or I thinke
rather
at the worlds end, for not one of them durst peepe abroad; or if any
one
did take vpon him to play the ventrous Knight, the Plague put him to
his Nonplus; in such strange, and such changeable shapes
did the Cameleon-like
sicknes appeare, that they could not (with all the cunning in their
budgets)
make pursenets to take him napping.
Onely a band of Desper-vewes, some fewe Empiricall
madcaps (for they could neuer be worth veluet caps) turned themselues
into
Bees (or more properly into Drones) and went humming vp and downe, with
hony-brags in their mouthes, sucking the sweetnes of Siluer (and now
and
then of Aurum Potabile) out of the poison of Blaines and
Carbuncles:
and these iolly Mountibanks clapt vp their bils vpon euery post (like a
Fencers Challenge) threatning to canuas the Plague, and to fight with
him
at all his owne seuerall weapons: I know not how they sped, but some
they
sped I am sure, for I haue heard them band for the Heauens, because
they
sent those thither, that were wisht to tarry longer vpon earth.
I could in this place make your cheekes looke pale,
and your hearts shake, with telling how some haue had 18. sores at one
time running vpon them, others 10. and 12. many 4. and 5. and how those
that haue bin foure times wounded by this yeares infection, haue dyed
of
the last wound, whilst others (that were hurt as often) goe vp and
downe
now with sounder limmes, then many that come out of France, and
the Nether-lands. And descending from these, I could draw forth
a Catalogue of many poore wretches, that in fieldes, in ditches, in
common
Cages, and vnder stalls (being either thrust by cruell maisters out of
doores, or wanting all worldly succour but the common benefit of earth
and aire haue most miserably perished. But to Chronicle these would
weary
a second Fabian.
We will therefore play the Souldiours, who at the
end oof any notable battaile, with a kind of sad delight rehearse the
memorable
acts of their friends that lye mangled before them: some shewing how
brauely
they gaue the onset: some, how politickly they retirde: others, how
manfully
they gaue and receiued wounds: a fourth steps forth, and glories how
valiantly
hee lost an arme: all of them making (by this meanes) the remembrance
euen
of tragicall and mischieuous euents very delectable. Let vs striue to
do
so, discoursing (as it were at the end of this mortall siege of the
plague)
of the seuerall most worthy accidents, and strange birthes which this
pestiferous
yeare hath brought foorth: some of them yeelding Comicall and
ridiculous
stuffe, others lamentable: a third kind, vpholding rather admiration,
then
laughter or pittie.
As first, to relish the pallat of lickerish
expectation,
and withall to giue an Item how sudden a stabber this
ruffianly
swaggerer (Death) is, You must beleeue, that amongst all the weary
number
of those that (on their bare feete) haue trauaild (in this long and
heauie
vocation) to the Holy-land, one (whose name I could for neede bestow
vpon
you) but that I know you haue no need of it, (tho many want a good
name)
lying in that co[m]mon Innes of sick-men, his bed, & seeing the
black
& blew stripes of the plague sticking on his flesh, which he
receiued
as tokens (from heauen) that he was presently to goe dwell in the vpper
world, most earnestly requested, and in a manner coniured his friend
(who
came to enterchange a last farewell) that hee would see him goe
handsomely
attirde into the wild Irish countrey of wormes, and for that purpose to
bestow a Coffin vpon him: his friend louing him (not because he was
poore
(yet he was poore) but because hee was a Scholler: Alack that the West
Indies stand so farre from Vniuersities! and that a minde richly
apparelled
should haue a threed-bare body!) made faithfull promise to him, that he
should be naild vp, he would boord him, and for that purpose went
instantly
to one of the new-found trade of Coffin-cutters, bespoke one, and (like
the Surueyour of deaths buildings) gaue direction how this little
Tenement
should be framed, paying all the rent for it before hand. But note vpon
what slippery ground life goes! little did he thinke to dwell in that
roome
himselfe which he had taken for his friend: yet it seemed the common
law
of mortalitie had so decreede, for hee was cald into the colde companie
of his graue neighbours an houre before his infected friend, and had a
long lease (euen till doomes day) in the same lodging, which in the
strength
of health he went to prepare for another. What credit therefore is to
be
giuen to breath, which like an harlot will runne away with euery
minute.
How nimble is sicknesse, and what skill hath he in all the weapons he
plays
withall? The greatest cutter that takes vp the Mediterranean Ile in
Powles
for his Gallery to wake in, cannot ward off his blowes. Hees the best
Fencer
in the world: Vincentio Sauiolo is no body to him: He has his
Mandrittaes,
Imbrocataes, Stamazones, and Stoccataes at his fingers ends: heele make
you giue him ground, though ye were neuer worth foote of land, and beat
you out of breath, though Aeolus himselfe plaid vpo[n] your
wind-pipe.
To witnes which, I will call forth a Dutchman (yet
now hees past calling for, has lost his hearing, for his eares by this
time are eaten off with wormes) who (though hee dwelt in Bedlem)
was not mad, yet the lookes of the Plague (which indeed are terrible)
put
him almost out of his wits, for when the snares of this cunning hunter
(the Pestilence) were but newly layd, and yet layd (as my Dutch-man
smelt
it out well enough) to intrap poore mens liues that meant him no hurt,
away sneakes my clipper of the kings english, and (because Musket-shot
should not reach him) to the Low-countries (that are built vpon
butter-firkins,
and Holland cheese) sailes this plaguie fugitiue, but death, (who hath
more authoritie there then all the seauen Electors, and to shew him
that
there were other Low-countrey besides his owne) takes a little Frokin
(one
of my Dutch runaways children) and sends her packing, into those
Netherlands
shee departed: O how pitifully lookt my Burgomaister, when he
vnderstood
that the sicknes could swim! It was an easie matter to scape the
Dunkirks,
but Deaths Gallyes made out after him swifter then the great Turkes.
Which
he perceiuing, made no more adoo, but drunke to the States fiue or sixe
healths (because he would be sure to liue well) and backe againe comes
he, to try the strength of English Beere: his old Randeuous of
madmen
was the place of meeting, where he was no sooner arriued, but the
Plague
had him by the backe, and arrested him vpon an Exeat Regnum,
for
running to the enemie, so that for the mad tricks he plaid to cozen our
English wormes of his Dutch carcas (which had beene fatted heere)
sicknesse
and death clapt him vp in Bedlem the second time, and there he
lyes,
and there he shall lye till he rot before ile meddle any more with him.
But being gotten out of Bedlem, let vs make
a iourney to Bristow, taking an honest knowne Citizen along
with
vs, who with other company travailing thither (onely for feare the aire
of London should conspire to poison him) and setting vp his
rest
not to heare the sound of Bow-bell till next Christmas, was
notwithstanding
in the hye way singled out from his company, and set vpon by the
Plague,
who bad him stand, and deliuer his life. The rest at that word shifted
for themselues, and went on, hee (amazed to see his friends flye, and
being
not able to defend himselfe, for who can defend himselfe meeting such
an
enemy?) yeelded, and being but about fortie miles from London, vsed
all the slights he could to get loose out of the handes of death, and
so
to hide himselfe in his owne house, whereupon, he calld for help at the
same Inne, where not long before he and his fellowe pilgrimes obtained
for their money (mary yet with more prayers then a begger makes in
three
Termes) to stand and drinke some thirtie foote from the doore. To this
house of tipling iniquitie hee repaires againe, coniuring the Lares
or walking Sprites in it, if it were Christmas (that if was well put
in)
and in the name of God, to succor and rescue him to their power out of
the handes of infection, which now assaulted his body: th Diuell would
haue bene afraid of this coniuration, but they were not, yet afraid
they
were it seemed, for presently the doores had their wodden ribs crusht
in
pieces, by being beaten together: the casements were shut more close
than
an Vsurers greasie veluet powch: the drawing windowes were hangd,
drawne,
and quartered: not a creuis but was stopt, not a mouse-hole left open,
for all the holes in the house were most wickedly dambd vp: mine Hoste
and Hostesse ranne ouer one another into the backe-side, the maydes
into
the Orchard, quiuering and quaking, and ready to hang themselues on the
innocent Plumb-trees (for hanging to them would not be so sore a death
as the Plague, and to die maides too! O horrible!) As for the Tapster,
he fled into the Cellar, rapping out fiue or sixe plaine Countrey
oathes,
that hee would drowne himselfe in a most villanous Stand of Ale, if the
sicke Londoner Stoode at the doore any longer. But stand there he must,
for to go away (well) he cannot, but continues knocking and calling in
a faint voyce, which in their eares sounded, as if some staring ghost
in
a Tragedie had exclaimed vpon Rhadamanth: he might knocke till
his
hands skte, and call till his heart akte for they were in a worse
pickle
within, then hee was without: hee being in a good way to go to Heauen,
they being so frighted, that they scarce knew whereabout Heauen stoode,
onely they all cryed out, Lord haue mercy vpon vs, yet Lord haue mercy
vpon vs was the only thing they feared. The dolefull catastrophe of all
is, a bed could not be had for all Babilon: not a cup of
drinke,
no, nor cold water be gotten, though it had bin for Alexander the
great: if a draught of Aqua vitæ might haue saued his
soule,
the towne denyed to do God that good seruice.
What miserie continues euer? the poore man standing
thus at deaths doore, and looking euery minute when he should be let
in,
behold, another Londoner that had likewise bene in the Frigida zona
of the Countrey, and was returning (like Æneas out of
hell)
to the heauen of his owne home, makes a stand at this sight, to play
the
Physition, and seeing the complexion of his patient that he was sicke
at
heart, applies to his soule the best medicines that his comforting
speech
could make, for there dwelt no Poticary neere enough to helpe his body.
Being therefore driuen out of all other shiftes, he leads him into a
field
(a bundle of Strawe, which with much adoe he bought for money, seruing
in stead of a Pillow.) But the Destinies hearing the diseased partie
complaine
and take on, because hee lay in a field-bedde, when before hee would
haue
beene glad of a mattresse, for very spight cut the threade of his life,
the crueltie of which deede made the other (that playd Charities part)
at his wittes end, because hee knew not where to purchase tenne foote
of
ground for his graue: the Church nor Churchyard would let none of their
lands. Maister Vicar was strucke dumbe, and could not giue the dead a
good
word, neither Clarke nor Sexton could be hired to execute their office;
no, they themselues would first be executed: so that he that neuer
handled
shouell before, got his implements about him, ripped vp the belly of
the
earth, and made it like a graue, stript the cold carcasse, bound his
shirt
about his feete, pulled a linnen night cappe ouer his eyes, and so
layde
him in the rotten bedde of the earth, couering him with cloathes cut
out
of the same piece: and learning by his last words his name and
habitation,
this sad Trauailer arriues at London, deliuering to the amazed
widdow
and children, in stead of a father and a husband, onely the out-side of
him, his apparrell. But by the way note one thing, the bringer of these
heauy tydings (as if he had liued long enough when so excellent a worke
of pietie and pittie was by him finished) the very next day after his
comming
home, departed out of this world, to receiue his reward in the
Spirituall
Court of Heauen.
It is plaine therefore by the euidence of these
two witnesses, that death, like a theife, sets vpon men in the hie way,
dogs them into their owne houses, breakes into their bed chambers by
night,
assaults them by day, and yet no law can take hold of him: he deuoures
man and wife: offers violence to their faire daughters: kils their
youthfull
sonnes, and deceiues them of their seruants: yea, so full of trecherie
is he growne (since this Plague tooke his part) that no louers dare
trust
him, nor by their good wils would come near him, for he workes their
downfall,
euen when their delights are at the highest.
Too ripe a proofe haue we of this, in a paire of
Louers; the maide was in the pride of fresh bloud and beautie: she was
that which to be now is a wonder, yong and yet chaste: the gifts of her
mind were great, yet those which fortune bestowed vpon her (as being
well
descended) were not much inferiour: On this louely creature did a yong
man so stedfastly fixe his eye, that her lookes kindled in his bosome a
desire, whose flames burnt the more brightly, because they were fed
with
sweet and modest thoughts: Hymen was the God to whome he prayed
day and night that he might marry her: his praiers were receiued, at
length
(after many tempests of her deniall and frownes of kinsfolk) the
element
grew cleere & he saw ye happy landing place, where he
had
long sought to ariue: the prize of her youth was made his own, and the
solemne day appointed when it should be deliuered to him. Glad of which
blessednes (for to a louer it is a blessednes) he wrought by all the
possible
art he could vse to shorten the expected houre, and bring it neerer:
for,
whether he feared the interception of parents, or that his owne soule,
with excesse of ioy, was drowned in strange passions, he would often,
with
sighs mingled with kisses, and kisses halfe sinking in teares,
prophetically
tell her, that sure he should neuer liue to enioy her. To discredit
which
opinion of his, behold, the sunne had made hast and wakened the bridale
morning. Now does he call his heart traitour, that did so falsly
conspire
against him: liuely bloud leapeth into his cheekes: hees got vp, and
gaily
attirde to play the bridegroome, shee likewise does as cunningly turne
her selfe into a bride: kindred and friends are met together, soppes
and
muscadine run sweting vp and downe till they drop againe, to comfort
their
hearts, and because so many coffins pestred London Churches, that there
was no roome left for weddings, Coaches are prouided, and away rides
all
the traine into the Countrey. On a monday morning are the lustie Louers
on their iourney, and before noone are they alighted, entring (insteade
of an Inne) for more state into a Church, where they no sooner
appeared,
but the Priest fell to his busines, the holy knot was a tying, but he
that
should fasten it, comming to this, In sicknesse and in health,
there
he stopt, for sodainely the bride tooke hold of, in sicknes,
for in health all that stoode by were in feare shee should
neuer be
kept. The maiden-blush into which her cheekes were lately died, now
beganne
to loose colour: her voyce (like a coward) would haue shrunke away, but
that her Louer reaching her a hand, which he brought thither to giue
her,
(for hee was not yet made a full husband) did with that touch somewhat
reuiue her; on went they againe so farre, till they mette with For
better,
for worse, there was she worse than before, and had not the holy
Officer
made haste, the ground on which she stood to be marryed might easily
haue
beene broken vp for her buryall. All ceremonies being finished, she was
ledde betweene two, not like a Bride, but rather like a Coarse, to her
bed: That; must now be the table, on which the wedding dinner
is
to be serued vppe (being at this time, nothing but teares, and sighes,
and lamentation) and Death is chiefe waiter, yet at length her weake
heart
wrastling with the pangs, gaue them a fall, so that vp shee stoode
againe,
and in the fatall funerall Coach that carried her forth, was she
brought
back (as vpon a beere) to the Citie: but see the malice of her enemy
that
had her in chase, vpon the wensday following being ouertaken, was her
life
ouercome, Death rudely lay with her, and spold her of a maden head in
spite
of her husband. Oh the sorrow that did round beset him! now was his
diuination
true, she was a wife, yet continued a maide: he was a husband and a
widdower,
yet neuer knew his wife: she was his owne, yet he had her not: she had
him, yet neuer enioyed him: heere is a strange alteration, for the
rosemary
that was washt in sweete water to set out the Bridall, is now wet in
teares
to furnish her buriall: the musike that was heard to sound forth
dances,
can not now be heard for the ringing of belles: all the comfort that
happened
to either side being this, that he lost her, before she had time to be
an ill wife, and she left him, ere he was able to be a bad husband.
Better fortune, had this Bride, to fall into the
handes of the Plague, then one other of that fraile female sex, (whose
picture is next to be drawne) had to scape out of them. An honest
cobler
(if at least coblers can be honest, that liue altogher amongest wicked
soales) had a wife, who in the time of health treading her shooe often
awry, determined in the agony of a sicknesse (which this yeare had a
saying
to her) to fall to mending aswell as her husband did. The bed that she
lay vpon (being as she thought or rather feared) the last bed that
should
euer beare her, (for many other beds had borne her you must remember)
and
the worme of sinne tickling her conscience, vp she she calls her very
innocent
and simple husband out of his vertuous shoppe, where like Iustice he
sat
distributing amongst the poore, to some, halfe-penny peeces, penny
peeces
to some, and two-penny peeces to others, so long as they would last,
his
prouident care being alway, that euery man and woman should goe
vpright.
To the beds side of his plaguy wife approacheth Monsieur Cobler, to
vnderstand
what deadly newes she had to tell him, and the rest of his kinde
neighbours
that there were assembled: such thicke teares standing in the both the
gutters of his eies, to see his beloued lie in such a pickle, that in
their
salt water, all his vtterance was drownd: which she perceiuing, wept as
fast as he: But by the warme counsell that sat about the bed, the
shower
ceast, she wiping her cheekes with the corner of one of the sheetes:
and
he, his sullied face, with his leatherene apron[.] At last, two or
three
sighes (like a Chorus to the tragedy ensuing) stepping out
first,
wringing her handes (which gaue the better action) shee told the
pittifull Actæon her husband, that she had often done him
wrong: hee
onely shooke his head at this, and cried humh! which humh, she taking
as
the watch-word of his true patience, vnraueld the bottome of her
frailetie
at length, and concluded, that with such a man (and named him, but I
hope
you would not haue me follow her steppes and name him too) she
practised
the vniuersall & common Art of grafting, and that vpon her good
mans
head, they two had planted a monstrous paire of inuisble hornes: At the
sound of the hornes, my cobler started vppe like a march Hare, and
began
to looke wilde: his awle neuer ranne through the sides of a boote, as
that
word did through his heart: but being a polliticke cobler, and
remembering
what peece of worke he was to vnder-lay, stroking his beard, like some
graue headborough of the Parish, and giuing a nodde, as who should say,
goe on, bade her goe on indeed, clapping to her sore soule, this
generall
salue, that All are sinners, and we must forgiue, &c. For
hee
hoped by such wholesome Phisicke, (as Shooemakers waxe being laide to a
byle) to draw out all the corruption of her secret villainies. She good
heart being tickled vnder gilles, with the finger of these kind
speeches,
turnes vp the white of her eye, and fetches out an other. An other, (O
thou that art trained vp in nothing but to handle peeces:) Another hath
discharged his Artillery against thy castle of fortification: here was
passion predominant: Vulcan strooke the colers ghost (for he
was
now no cobler) so hardy vpon his breast, that he cryed Oh! his
neighbours
taking pitt[i]e to see what terrible stitches pulld him, rubde his
swelling
temples with the iuice of patience, which (by vertue of the blackish
sweate
that stoode realing on his browes, and had made them supple) entred
very
easily into his now parlous-vnderstanding scull: so that he left
wenching,
and sate quiet as a Lamb, falling to his old vomite of councell, which
he hasd cast vp before, and swearing (because he was in strong hope,
this
shoo should wring him no more) to seale her a generall acquittance,
prict
forward with this gentle spur, her tongue mends his pace, so that in
her
confession shee ouertooke others, whose bootes had beene set all night
on the Coblers laast, bestowing vppon him the poesie of their names,
the
time, and place, to thintent it might be put into his next wifes
wedding
ring. And although shee had made all these blots in his tables, yet the
bearing of one man false (whom she had not yet discouered) stucke more
in her stomacke than all the rest. O valiant Cobler, cries out one of
the
Auditors, how art thou set vpon? how art thou tempted? happy arte thou,
that thou art not in thy shop, for in stead of cutting out peeces of
leather,
thou wouldst doubtlesse now pare away thy hart: for I see, and so do
all
thy neighbours here (thy wifes ghostly fathers) see that a small matter
would now cause thee to turne turk, & to meddle with no more
patches:
but to liue within the compasse of thy wit: lift not vp thy collar: be
not horne mad: thanke heauen that the murther is reueald: study thou Baltazars
Part in Ieronimo, for thou hast more cause (though lesse
reason)
than he, to be glad and sad.
Well, I see thou art worthy to haue patient Griseld
to thy wife, for thou bearest more than she: thou shewest thy selfe to
be a right cobler, and no sowter, that canst thus cleanely clowt vp the
seam-rent sides of thy affection. With this learned Oration the Cobler
was tutord: layd his finger on his mouth, and cried paucos palabros:
he had sealed her pardon, and therefore bid her not feere: heer vpun
she
named the malefactor, I could name him too, but that he shall liue to
giue
more Coblers heads the Bastinado. And told, that on such a night when
he
supt there (for a Lord may sup with a cobler, that hath a pretty wench
to his wife) when the cloth, O treacherous linnen! was taken vp, and Menelaus
had for a parting blow, giuen the other his fist: downe she lights
(this
half-sharer) opening the wicket, but not shutting him out of the
wicket,
but conueis him into a by-room (being the ward-rob of old shooes and
leather)
from whence the vnicorne cobler (that dreamt of no such spirits) being
ouer head and eares in sleepe, his snorting giuing the signe that he
was
cock-sure, softly out-steales sir Paris, and to Helenaes
teeth prooued himselfe a true Troian.
This was the creame of her confusion, which being
skimd off from the stomach of her conscience, we looked euery minute to
goe thither, where we should be farre enough out of the Coblers reach.
But the Fates laying their heades together, sent a repriue, the plague
that before meant to pepper her, by little and little left her company:
which newes being blowne abroad, Oh lamentable! neuer did the old
buskind
trgedy beginne till now: for the wiues of those husbands, with whom she
had playd at fast and loose, came with nayles sharpened for the nonce,
like cattes, and tongues forkedly cut like the stings of adders, first
to scratch out false Cressidaes eyes, and then (which was
worse)
to worry her to dath with scolding.
But the matter was tooke vp in a Tauerne; the case
was altered, and brought to a new reckoning (mary the blood of the Burdeaux
grape was first shead about it) but in the end, all anger on euery side
was powred into a pottle pot, & there burnt to death. Now whether
this
Recantation was true, or whether the steeme of infection, fuming vp
(like
wine) into her braines made her talke thus idlely, I leaue it to the
Iury.
And whilst they are canuasing her case, let vs see
what dooings the Sexton of Stepney hath: whose ware-houses
being
all full of dead commodities, sauing one: that one hee left open a
whole
night (yet was it halfe full too) knowing ye theeues this
yeare
were too honest to break into such cellers. Besides those that were
left
there, had such plaguy pates, that none durst meddle with them for
their
liues. About twelue of the clock at midnight, when spirites walke, and
not a mowse dare stirring, because cattes goe a catter-walling: Sinne,
that all day durst not shew his head, came reeling out of an ale-house,
in the shape of a drunkard, who no sooner smelt the winde, but he
thought
the ground vnder him danced the Canaries: houses seemed to turne on the
toe, and all things went round: insomuch, that his legges drew a paire
of Indentures, betweene his body and the earth, the principal couenant
being that he for his part would stand to nothing what euer he saw:
euery
tree that came in his way, did he iustle, and yet chalenge it the next
day to fight with him. If he had clipt but a quarter so much of the
Kings
siluer, as he did of the Kings english, his carcas had long ere this
bene
carrion for Crowes. But he liued by gaming, and had excellent casting,
yet seldome won, for he drew reasonable good hands, but had very bad
feete,
that were not able to carry it away. This setter vp of Malt-men, being
troubled with the staggers, fell into the self-same graue, that stood
gaping
wide open for a breakfast next morning, and imagining (when he was in)
that he had stumbled into his owne house, and that all his bedfellowes
(as they were indeede) were in their dead sleepe, he, (neuer
complaining
of colde, nor calling for more sheete) soundly takes a nap till he
snores
again: In the morning the Sexton comes plodding along, and casting vpon
his fingers ends what he hopes ye dead pay of that day will
come too, by that which he receiued the day before, (for Sextons now
had
better doings than either Tauernes or bawdy-houses) In that siluer
contemplation,
shrugging his shoulders together, he steppes ere he be aware on the
brimmes
of that pit, into which this worshipper of Bacchus was falne,
where
finding some dead mens bones, and a scull or two, that laie scattered
here
and there; before he lookt into this Coffer of wormes, those he takes
vp,
and flinges them in: one of the sculls battered the sconce of the
sleeper,
whilst the bones plaide with his nose; whose blowes waking his mustie
worship,
the first word that he cast vp, was an oath, and thinking the Cannes
had
flyen about, cryed zoundes, what do you meane to cracke my mazer? the
Sexton
smelling a voice, (feare being stronger than his heart) beleeued verily
some of the coarses spake to him, vpon which, feeling himselfe in a
cold
sweat, tooke his heeles, whilst the Goblin scrambled vp and ranne after
him: But it appeares the Sexton had the lighter foote, for he ran so
fast,
that hee ranne out of his wittes, which being left behinde him, he had
like to haue dyed presently after.
A meryer bargaine than the poore Sextons did a
Tincker
meete withall in a Countrey Towne; through which a Citizen of London
being driuen (to keepe himselfe vnder the lee-shore in this tempestuous
contagion) and casting vp his eye for some harbour, spied a bush at the
ende of a pole, (the auncient badge of a Countrey Ale-house:) Into
which
as good lucke was, (without any resistance of the Barbarians, that all
this yeare vsed to keepe such landing places) veiling his Bonnet, he
strucke
in. The Host had bene a mad Greeke, (mary he could now speake nothing
but
English,) a goodly fat Burger he was, with a belly Arching out like a
Beere-barrell,
which made his legges (that were thicke & short, like two piles
driuen
vnder London-bridge) to stradle halfe as wide as the toppe of
Powles,
which vpon my knowledge hath bene burnt twice or thrice. A leatherene
pouch
hung at his side, that opened and shut with a Snap-hance, and was
indeed
a flaske for gun-powder when King Henry went to Bulloigne.
An Antiquary might haue pickt rare matter out of his Nose, but that it
was worme-eaten (yet that proued it to be an auncient Nose:) In some
corners
of it, there were blewish holes that shone like shelles of mother of
Pearle,
and to doo his nose right, Pearles had bene gathered out of them: other
were richly garnisht with Rubies, Chrisolites and Carbunckles, which
glistered
so oriently, that the Hamburgers offered I know not how many Dollars,
for
his companie in an East-Indian voyage, to haue stoode a nightes in the
Poope of their Admirall, onely to saue the charges of candles. In
conclusion,
he was an Host to be ledde before an Emperour, and though he were one
of
the greatest men in all the shire, his bignes made him not proude, but
he humbled himselfe to speake the base language of a Tapster, and vppon
the Londoners first arriual, cryed welcome, a cloth for this Gentleman:
the Linnen was spread, and furnisht presently with a new Cake and a
Can,
the roome voided, and the Guest left (like a French Lord) attended by
no
bodie: who drinking halfe a Can (in conceit) to the health of his best
friend in the Citie, which laie extreame sicke, and had neuer more
neede
of health, I knowe not what qualmes came ouer his stomach, but
immediately
he fell downe without vttering any more wordes, and neuer rose againe.
Anon ( as it was his fashion) enters my puffing
Host, to relieue (with a fresh supply out of his Celler,) the shrinking
Can, if hee perceiued it stoode in daunger to be ouerthrowne. But
seeing
the chiefe Leader dropt at his feete, and imagining at first hee was
but
wounded a little in the head, held vp his gowty golles and blest
himselfe,
that a Londoner (who had wont to be the most valiant rob-pots) should
now
be strooke downe only with two hoopes: and therevpon iogd him, sembling
out these comfortable words of a souldier, If thou be a man stand a thy
legges: he stird not for all this: wherevpon the Maydes being raisde
(as
it had bene with a hue and cry) came hobling into the roome, like a
flocke
of Geese, and hauing vpon search of the bodie giuen vp this verdict,
that
the man was dead, and murthered by the Plague; Oh daggers to all their
hearts that heard it! Away trudge the wenches, and one of them hauing
had
a freckled face all her life time, was perswaded presently that now
they
were the tokens, and had liked to haue turned vp her heeles vpon it: My
gorbelly Host, that in many a yeare could not without grunting, crawle
ouer a threshold but two foote broad, leapt halfe a yarde from the
coarse
(It was measured by a Carpenters rule) a nimbly as if his guts had
beene
taken out by the hangman: out of the House he wallowed presently, being
followed with two or three dozen of napkins to drie vp the larde, that
ranne so fast downe his heeles, that all the way he went, was more
greazie
than a kitchin-stuffe-wifes basket: you would haue sworne, it had beene
a barrell of Pitch on fire, if you had looked vpon him, for such a
smoakie
clowde (by reason of his owne fattie hotte steeme compassed him rounde,
that but for his voyce, hee had quite beene lost in that stincking
myst:
hanged himselfe hee had without all question ( in this pittifull
taking)
but that hee feared the weight of his in tollerable paunch, would haue
burst the Roape, and so hee should bee put to a double death. At length
the Towne was raised, the Countrey came downe vpon him, and yet not
vpon
him neither, for after they vnderstood the Tragedie, euery man gaue
ground,
knowing my pursie Ale-cunner could not follow them: what is to be done
in this straunge Allarum? The whole village is in daunger to lye at the
mercy of God, and shall be bound to curse none, but him for it: they
should
do well therefore, to set fire on his house, before the Plague scape
out
of it, least it forrage higher into the Countrey, and knocke them
downe,
man, woman, and childe, like Oxen, whose blood (they all sweare) shall
be required at his handes. At these speeches my tender-hearted Hoste,
fell
downe on his maribones, meaning indeede to entreat his audience to bee
good to him; but they fearing hee had beene pepperd too, as well as the
Londoner, tumbled one vpon another, and were ready to breake their
neckes
for haste to be gone: yet some of them (being more valiant then the
rest,
because they heard him roare out for some helpe) very desperately stept
backe, and with rakes and pitch-forkes lited the gulch from the ground:
Co[n]cluding (after they had laid their hogsheads togither, to draw out
som hoesome counsel) that whosoeuer would venter vpon the dead man
&
bury him, should haue fortie shillings (out of the common towne-purse,
though it would bee a great cut to it) with the loue of the
Churchwardens
and Side-men, during the terme of life. This was proclaimed, but none
durst
appeare to vndertake the dreadfull execution: they loued money well,
mary
the plague hanging ouer any mans head that should meddle with it in
that
sort, they all vowde to dye beggers before it should be Chronicled they
kild themselues for forty shillings: and in that braue resulution,
euery
one with bagge & baggage marcht home, barricadoing their doores
&
windowes with firbushes, ferne, and bundels of straw to keepe out
pestilence
at the staues end.
At last a Tinker came sounding through the Towne,
mine Hosts house being the auncient watring place where he did vse to
cast
Anchor. You must vnderstand hee was none of those base rascally
Tinkers,
that with a ban-dog and a drab at their tayles, and a pike-staffe on
their
necks, will take a purse sooner then stop a kettle: No, this was a
deuout
Tinker, he did honor God Pan: a Musicall Tinker, that vpon his
kettle-drum
could play any Countrey dance you cald for, and vpon Holly-dayes had
earned
money by it, when no Fidler could be heard of. Hee was onely feared
when
he stalked through some townes where Bees were, for he strucke so
sweetely
on the bottome of his Copper instrument, that he would emptie whole
Hiues,
and leade the swarmes after him only by the sound.
This excellent egregious Tinker calls for his
draught
(being a double Iugge) it was fild for him, but before it came to his
nose,
the lamentable tale of the Londoner was tolde, the Chamber-doore (where
hee lay) being thrust open with a long pole, (because none durst touch
it with their hands) and the Tinker bidden (if he had the heart) to goe
and see if hee knew him. The Tinker being not to learne what vertue the
medicine had which hee held at his lippes powred it downe his throate
merily,
and crying trilill, he feares no plagues. In hee stept, tossing the
dead
body too and fro, and was sorrie hee knew him not: Mine Hoste that with
griefe began to fall away villanously, looking very ruthfully on the
Tinker,
and thinking him a fit instrument to be playd vpon, offred a crowne out
of his owne purse, if he would bury the partie. A crowne was a shrewd
temptation
to a Tinker; many a hole might he stop, before he could picke a crowne
of it , yet being a subtill Tinker (& to make all Sextons pray for
him, because hee would raise their fees) an Angell he wanted to be his
guide, and vnder ten shillings (by his ten bones) he would not put his
finger into the fire. The whole parish had warning of this presently,
thirtie
shillings was saued by the bargaine, and the Towne like to be saued
too,
therefore ten shillings was leuyed out of hand, put into a rag, which
was
tyed to the ende of a long pole and deliuered (in sight of all the
Parish,
who stood aloofe stopping their noses) by the Headboroughs owne selfe
in
proper person, to the Tinker, who with one hand receiued the money, and
with the other struck the boord, crying hey, a fresh double pot. Which
armour of proofe being fitted to his body, vp he hoists the Londoner on
his backe (like a Schoole-boy) a Shouell and Pick axe standing ready
for
him; And thus furnished, into a field some good distance from the Towne
he beares his deadly loade, and there throwes it downe, falling roundly
to his tooles, vpon which the strong beere hauing set an e[dg]e, they
quickely
cut out a lodging in the earth for the Citizen. But the Tinker knowing
that wormes needed no apparell, sauing onely sheetes, stript him starke
naked, but first diu'de nimbly into his pocket, to see what linings
they
had, assuring himselfe, that a Londoner would not wander so farre
without
siluer: his hopes were of the right stamp, for from out of his pockets
he drew a leatherne bagge with seuen pounds in it: this musicke made
the
Tinkers heart dance, he quickely tumbled his man into the graue, hid
him
ouer head and eares in dust, bound vp his cloathes in a bundle, &
carying
that at the end of his staffe on his shoulder, with the purse of seuen
pounds in his hand, backe againe comes he through the towne, crying
aloud,
Haue yee any more Londoners to bury, hey downe a downe dery, haue ye
any
more Londoners to bury: the hobbinolls running away from him, as if he
had beene the dead Citizens ghost, & he marching away from them in
all the hast he could, with the song still in his mouth.
You see therefore how dreadfull a fellow Death is,
making fooles euen of wisemen, and cowards of the most valiant; yea, in
such a base slauerie hath it bound mens sences, that they haue no power
to looke higher than their owne roofes, but seeme by their turkish and
barberous actions to belieue that there is no felicitie after this
life,
and that (like beasts) their soules shall perish with their bodyes. How
many vpon sight onely of a Letter (sent from London) haue
started
backe, and durst haue layd their saluation vpon it, that the plague
might
be folded in that empty paper, belieuing verily, that the arme of
Omnipotence
could neuer reach them, vnlesse it were with some weapon drawne out of
the infected Citie: in so much that euen the Western Pugs receiuing
money
there, haue tyed it in a bag at the end of their barge, and so trailed
it through the Thames, least plague-sores sticking vpon shillings, they
should be naild vp for counterfeits when they were brought home.
More ventrous than these block-heads was a certaine
Iustice of peace, to whose gate being shut (for you must know that now
there is no open house kept) a company of wilde fellowes being lead for
robbing an Orchyard, the stout-hearted Constable rapt most
couragiously,
and would haue about with none, but the Iustice himselfe, who at last
appeard
in his likenesse aboue at a window, inquiring why they summond a
parlie.
It was deiliuered why: the case was opened to his examining wisedome,
and
that the euill doers were onely Londoners: at the name of Londoners,
the
Iustice clapping his hand on his brest (as who should say, Lord haue
mercie
vpon vs) started backe, and being wise enough to saue one, held his
nose
hard betweene his fore-finger and his thumbe, and speaking in that wise
(like the fellow that described the villainous motion of Iulius
Cæsar
and the Duke of Guize, who (as he gaue it out) fought a combat
together)
pulling the casement close to him, cryed out in that quaile-pipe voice,
that if they were Londoners, away with them to Limbo: take onely their
names they were sore fellowes, and he would deale with them when
time should serue: meaning, when the plague and they should not be so
great
together, and so they departed: the very name of Londoners being worse
than ten whetstones to sharpen the sword of Iustice against them.
I could fill a large volume, and call it the second
part of the hundred mery tales, onely with such ridiculous stuffe as
this
of the Iustice, but Dij meliora, I haue better matters to set
my
wits about: neither shall you wring out of my pen (though you lay it on
the rack) the villainies of that damned Keeper, who kild all she keept;
it had bene good to haue made her keeper of the common Iayle, and the
holes
of both Counters, for a number that lye there, that wish to be rid out
of this motley world, shee would haue tickled them, and turned them
ouer
the thumbs. I will likewise let the Church-warden in Thames streete
sleepe
(for hees now past waking) who being requested by one of his neighbors
to suffer his wife or child (that was then dead ) to lye in the
Churchyard,
answered in a mocking sort, he keept that lodging for himselfe and his
houshold: and within three dayes after was driuen to hide his head in a
hole himselfe. Neither will I speake a word of a poore boy (seruant to
a Chandler) dwelling thereabouts, who being struck to the heart by
sicknes,
was first caryed away by water, to be left any where, but landing being
denyed by an army of browne bill-men that kept the shore, back againe
was
he brought, and left in an out-celler, where lying groueling and
groning
on his face (amongst fagots, but not one of the set on fire to comfort
him (there continued all night, and dyed miserably for want of succor.
Nor of another poore wetch in the Parish of Saint Mary Ouereyes,
who being in the morning throwne, as the fashion is, into a graue vpon
a heape of carcases, that kayd for their complement, was found in the
afternoone,
gasping and gaping for life: but by these tricks, imagining that many a
thousand haue bebe turned wrongfully off the ladder of life, and
praying
that Derick or his executors may liue to do those a good turne,
that haue done so to others: Hic finis Priami, heres an end of
an
old Song.
Et iam tempus Equum fumantia souere colla.
FINIS.
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