Page:The principal navigations, voyages, traffiques and discoveries of the English nation 15.djvu/61

 Feeles not thy gentle applications For the health, vse, and honour of her powers! Yet shall my verse through all her ease-lockt eares Trumpet the Noblesse of thy high intent: And if it cannot into act proceed, The fault and bitter penance of the fault Make red some others eyes with penitence, For thine are cleare; and what more nimble spirits, Apter to byte at such vnhooked baytes, Gaine by our losse; that must we needs confesse Thy princely valure would haue purchast vs. Which shall be fame eternall to thy name, Though thy contentment in thy graue desires, Of our aduancement, faile deseru'd effect. O how I feare thy glory which I loue, Least it should dearely grow by our decrease. Natures that sticke in golden-graueld springs, In mucke-pits cannot scape their swallowings.

But we shall foorth I know; Golde is our Fate, Which all our actes doth fashion and create.

Then in the Thespiads bright Propheticke Fount, Me thinkes I see our Liege rise from her throne, Her cares and thoughts in steepe amaze erected, At the most rare endeuour of her power. And now she blesseth with her woonted Graces Th'industrious Knight, the soule of this exploit, Dismissing him to conuoy of his starres. And now for loue and honour of his woorth, Our twise-borne Nobles bring him Bridegroome-like, That is espousde for vertue to his loue With feasts and musicke, rauishing the aire, To his Argolian Fleet, where round about His bating Colours English valure swarmes In haste, as if Guianian Orenoque With his Fell waters fell vpon our shore. And now a wind as forward as their spirits, Sets their glad feet on smooth Guianas breast, Where (as if ech man were an Orpheus) A world of Sauages fall tame before them,