The Preamble to the Paralel, and the Epilogue.
Againe, this Author thinkes it no great, slander,
To say thou fitly maist be call'd a Gander.
Braue trotting traueller, thy fame he hisses,
And makes thy wit inferiour to Vlisses,
And if he laugh not at thee, much he feares,
In angry spleene thou'lt haue him by the cares.
Therefore hee'l laugh at thee, and so will I.
In hope to scape thy furious rage thereby.
Next, in the ancient famous Cambrian tongue,
To call thee noddy, he accounts no wrong.
T'interpret this, I need to goe to Schoole,
I wot not what he meanes, except a (••••••).
Robertus Riccomontanus.
A large relation this thy friend did write,
Describing thee a monstrous man of might:
And bids thee venter such another taske,
And at thy backe returne hee'll haue a caske,
Much bigger then the Heidelbergian bumbard,
To keepe thy works, that neuer can be numberd.
Christopherus Brooke Eboraconsit.
This Gentleman in some vnmeasur'd measure,
Compares thee vnto Homer and to Caesar.
Old Homers Iliads are but idle tales,
Waigh'd with thy works, thy booke will turne the cales.
And like great Caesar he doth thee commend,
For thou, like him, hast all thy trauels penn'd,
But yet, me thinks he playes the merry foxe,
And in thy praises writes a Paradoxe.
Iohannes Hoskins, Cabalisticall, or Horse verse.
Hold, holla, holla, weehee, stand, I say,
Here's one with horse-verse doth thy praise dissplay:
Without all sence, or reason, forme, or hue,
He kicks and stings, and winces thee thy due.
He maketh shift in speeches mysticall,
To write strange verses Cabalisticall;
Much like thy booke and thee, in wit, and shape,
Whilst I in imitation am his Ape.
Mount Maluora swimming on a big-limb'd guat,
And Titan tilting with a flaming Swanne,
Great Atlas flying on a winged Sprat,
Arm'd with the Hemispheares huge warming pan.
Or like the triple Vrchins of the Ash,
That lie and she through Morpheus sweet-fac'd doore,
Doth drowne the starres with a Poledauies flash,
And make the smooth-heel'd ambling rocks to ro••••
Euen so this tall Colombrum Pigmy steeple,
That bores the Butterflie aboue the spheare;
Puls AEolus taile, and Neptunes mountaines tipple••
Whilst Coloquintida his fame shall reare.
Loe thus my Muse, in stumbling iadish verse,
On horse-backe and on foot thy praise rehearse.
Pricksong.
Here's one harmoniously thy same doth raise,
With Pricksong verse to giue thee prick & praise;
But prick nor spur can make thee mend thy tro••,
For thou by nature art nor cold nor hot:
But a meere nat'rall, neutrall amongst men,
Arm'd like the bristles of a Porcupen.
If French, or Venice Puncks had fir'd or scald thee,
This man had neuer raw-bon'd Coriat call'd thee:
Thou that so many Climats hotly coasted,
I wonder much thou wast not boild nor rosted.
Yet euery man that earst thy carkasse saw,
Are much in doubt if thou bee'st roast or raw,
Iohannes Pawlet, de George Henton.
Now here's another in thy praises ran,
And would intitle thee the great god Pan.
No warming pan thou art I plainely see,
No fire-pan, nor no frying-pan canst thou be.
Thou art no creame-pan neither, worthy man,
Although thy wits lie in thy heads braine-pan.
Lionel Cranfield
This Gentleman thy wondrous trauels rips,
And nothing that may honour thee, he skips.
Thy yron memory thy booke did write,
I prethee keepe a wench to keepe it bright;
For cankerd rust, I know will yron fret,
And make thee wit and memory forget.
Left rust therefore, thy memory should deuoure,
I'd haue thee hire a Tinker it to scowre.
Iohannes Sutclin.
Now here's a friend doth to thy fame confesse,
Thy wit were greater if thy worke were lesse.
He from thy labour treats thee to giue o're,
And then thy case and wit will be much more.
Lo thus thy small wit, and thy labour great,
He summons to a peaceable retreat.
Inigo Iones.
What liuing wight can in thy praise be dum,
Thou crowing Cock, that didst from Odcom com.