VVho say's these Romish Pageants bene too hy To be the scorne of sportfull Poesy? Certes not all the world such matter wist As are the seuen hils, for a @3Satiryst.@1 Perdy, I loath an hundreth @3Mathoes@1 tongues, An hundreth gamsters shifts, or Land-lords wrongs, Or @3Labeos@1 Poems, or base @3Lolios@1 pride, Or euer what I thought or wrote beside; When once I thinke if carping @3Aquines@1 spright To see now Rome, were licenc'd to the light; How his enraged Ghost would stampe and stare That @3Caesars@1 throne is turn'd to @3Peters@1 chayre. To see an old shorne @3Lozell@1 perched hy Crossing beneath a golden @3Canopy,@1 The whiles a thousand hairelesse crownes crouch low To kisse the precious case of his proud Toe, And for the Lordly @3Fasces@1 borne of old, To see two quiet crossed keyes of gold, Or @3Cybeles@1 shrine, the famous @3Pantheons@1 frame Turn'd to the honour of our Ladies name. But that he most would gaze and wonder at, Is th'horned Miter, and the bloudy hat, The crooked staffe, their coules strang forme and store, Saue that he saw the same in hell before, To see their broken Nuns with new-shorne heads, In a blind Cloyster tosse their idle Beades, Or Louzy coules come smoking from the stewes, To rayse the Leud Rent to their Lord accrewes, (Who with ranke @3Venice@1 doth his pompe aduance By trading of ten thousand Curtizans) Yet backward must absolue a females sinne, Like to a false dissembling @3Theatine,@1 Who when his skinne is red with shirts of male And rugged haire-cloath scoures his greazy nayle, Or wedding garment tames his stubborne backe, Which his hempe girdle dies all blew and blacke, Or of his Almes-Boule three daies sup'd and din'd, Trudges to open stewes of eyther kinde: Or takes some Cardinals stable in the way, And with some pampered Mule doth weare the day Kept for his Lords owne sadle when him list. Come @3Valentine,@1 and play the Satyrist, To see poore sucklings welcom'd to the light With searing yrons of some sowre @3Iacobite,@1 Or golden offers of an aged foole To make his Coffin some @3Franciscans@1 coule, To see the Popes blacke knight, a cloked @3Frere@1 Sweating in the channell like a @3Scauengere.@1 Whom earst thy bowed hamme did lowly greete, When at the Corner-Crosse thou did'st him meete, Tumbling his @3Rosaries@1 hanging at his belt Or his @3Barretta,@1 or his towred felt, To see a lasie dumbe @3Acholithite@1 Armed against a deuout Flyes despight, Which at th'hy Altar doth the @3Chalice@1 vaile With a broad Flie-flappe of a @3Peacockes@1 tayle, The whiles the likerous Priest spits euery trice With longing for his morning Sacrifice, Which he reres vp quite perpendiculare, That the mid-Church doth spite the @3Chancels@1 fare, Beating their emptie mawes that would be fed, With the scant morsels of the @3Sacrists@1 bread. Would he not laugh to death, when he should heare The shamelesse Legends of @3S. Christopher, S. George,@1 the sleepers, or @3S. Peters@1 well, Or of his daughter good S. @3Petronell.@1 But had he heard the Female Fathers grone, Yeaning in mids of her procession; Or now should see the needlesse tryall-chayre, (When ech is proued by his bastard heyre) Or saw the Churches, and new Calendere Pestred with mungrell Saints, and reliques dere, Should hee cry out on @3Codro's@1 tedious Toomes, When his new rage would aske no narrower rooms? | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...AT THE CLOSED GATE OF JUSTICE by JAMES DAVID CORROTHERS HERMES OF THE WAYS by HILDA DOOLITTLE BLUE-BUTTERFLY DAY by ROBERT FROST DEAD COW FARM by ROBERT RANKE GRAVES ON A FLOWER FROM THE FIELD OF GRUTLI by FELICIA DOROTHEA HEMANS IMITATIONS OF HORACE: ODE IV, 1 by ALEXANDER POPE |