To the Ladie Susan, Coun-
tesse Dowager of Kent, and daugh-
ter to the Duchesse of
Suffolke.
- Come you that were the Mistris of my youth,
The noble guide of my vngouern'd days;
Come you that haue delighted in Gods truth,
Help now your handmaid to sound foorth his praise:
- You that are pleas'd in his pure excellencie, (5)
- Vouchsafe to grace this holy feast, and me.
- And as your rare Perfections shew'd the Glasse
Wherein I saw each wrinckle of a fault;
You the Sunnes virtue, I that faire greene grasse
That flourisht fresh by your cleere virtue taught: (10)
- For you possest those gifts that grace the mind,
- Restraining youth whom Errour oft doth blind.
- In you those noble Virtues did I note,
First, loue and feare of God, of Prince, of Lawes,
Rare Patience with a mind so farre remote (15)
From worldly pleasures, free from giuing cause
- Of least suspect to the most enuious eie,
- That in faire Virtues Storehouse sought to prie.
- Whose Faith did undertake in Infincie,
All dang'rous trauells by deuouring Seas (20)
To flie to Christ from vaine Idolatry,
Not seeking there this worthlesse world to please,
- By your most famous Mother so directed,
- That noble Dutchesse, who liu'd vnsubiected.
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- From Romes ridiculous prier and tyranny, (25)
That mighty Monarchs kept in awfull feare:
Leauing here her lands, her state, dignitie:
Nay more, vouchsaft disguised weedes to weare:
- When with Christ Iesus she did meane to goe,
- From sweet delights to taste part of his woe. (30)
- Come you that euer since hath followed her,
In these sweet paths of faire Humilitie:
Contemning Pride pure Virtue to preferre,
Not yeelding to base Imbecillitie,
- Nor to those weake inticements of the world, (35)
- That haue so many thousand Soules insnared.
- Receiue your Loue whom you haue sought so farre,
Which here presents himselfe within your view:
Behold this bright and all directing Starre,
Light of your Soule that doth all grace renew: (40)
- And in his humble paths since you do tread,
- Take this faire Bridegroome in your Soules pure bed.
- And since no former gaine hath made me write,
Nor my desertlesse seruice could haue wonne,
Onely your noble Virtues do incite (45)
My Pen, they are the ground I write upon:
- Nor any future profit is expected;
- Then how can these poore lines goe vnrespected?
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