Volume III Part 46 (2/2)
APPENDICES.
No. I.
THE ATHEIST'S TRAGEDIE.[677]
All you that have got eares to heare, Now listen unto mee; Whilst I do tell a tale of feare; A true one it shall bee:
A truer storie nere was told, As some alive can showe; 'Tis of a man in crime grown olde, Though age he did not know.
This man did his owne G.o.d denie And Christ his onelie son, And did all punishment defie, So he his course might run.
Both day and night would he blaspheme, And day and night would sweare, As if his life was but a dreame, Not ending in dispaire.
A poet was he of repute, And wrote full many a playe, Now strutting in a silken sute, Then begging by the way.
He had alsoe a player beene Upon the Curtaine-stage, But brake his leg in one lewd scene, When in his early age.
He was a fellow to all those That did G.o.d's laws reject, Consorting with the Christians' foes And men of ill aspect.
Ruffians and cutpurses hee Had ever at his backe, And led a life most foule and free, To his eternall wracke.
He now is gone to his account, And gone before his time, Did not his wicked deedes surmount All precedent of crime.
But he no warning ever tooke From others' wofull fate, And never gave his life a looke Untill it was too late.
He had a friend, once gay and greene.[678]
Who died not long before, The wofull'st wretch was ever seen, The worst ere woman bore,
Unlesse this Wormall[679] did exceede Even him in wickednesse, Who died in the extreemest neede And terror's bitternesse.
Yet Wormall ever kept his course, Since nought could him dismay; He knew not what thing was remorse Unto his dying day.
Then had he no time to repent The crimes he did commit, And no man ever did lament For him, to dye unfitt.
Ah, how is knowledge wasted quite On such want wisedome true, And that which should be guiding light But leades to errors newe!
Well might learnd Cambridge oft regret He ever there was bred: The tree she in his mind had set Brought poison forth instead.
His l.u.s.t was lawlesse as his life, And brought about his death; For, in a deadlie mortall strife, Striving to stop the breath
Of one who was his rivall foe, With his owne dagger slaine, He groand, and word spoke never moe, Pierc'd through the eye and braine.
Thus did he come to suddaine ende That was a foe to all, And least unto himselfe a friend, And raging pa.s.sion's thrall.
<script>