Certaine serious thoughts which at severall times & upon sundry occasions have stollen themselves into verse and now into the publike view from the author [Wyvill coat of arms] Esquire ; together w[i]th a chronologicall table denoeting [sic] the names of such princes as ruled the neighbor states and were con-temporary to our English kings, observeing throughout ye number of yeares w[hi]ch every one of them reigned.

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Title
Certaine serious thoughts which at severall times & upon sundry occasions have stollen themselves into verse and now into the publike view from the author [Wyvill coat of arms] Esquire ; together w[i]th a chronologicall table denoeting [sic] the names of such princes as ruled the neighbor states and were con-temporary to our English kings, observeing throughout ye number of yeares w[hi]ch every one of them reigned.
Author
Wyvill, Christopher, 1651?-1711.
Publication
London :: Printed by F.B. for George Badger and are to be sold at his shop ...,
1647.
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Subject terms
English poetry.
Great Britain -- Kings and rulers -- Chronology.
Cite this Item
"Certaine serious thoughts which at severall times & upon sundry occasions have stollen themselves into verse and now into the publike view from the author [Wyvill coat of arms] Esquire ; together w[i]th a chronologicall table denoeting [sic] the names of such princes as ruled the neighbor states and were con-temporary to our English kings, observeing throughout ye number of yeares w[hi]ch every one of them reigned." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A67233.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 23, 2024.

Pages

EVROPE.

NO harbour where my Sea-tost ship may lye, At Anchor, and expect felicity! So many lands run o're, and yet not see A path directing to Eternity! What hope remain's? in Europ, sure, he shall That fly's Charybdis into Scyll fall. Opinions here, as much as faces vary, Some this, some that, some think the quite contrary. Hence 'tis that every Nation may discover Her armed Natives murthering one another.

Page 14

Wa'st not from hence the King of France thought good, To drench his Sisters Nuptials in bloud? Hence all the present forreign jarrs, and those Where Tweed her flowing streames doth interpose; And as asham'd to heare warrs threats again, Hastens to hide her face within the Maine. Poor Soul, thy wearied foot-steps may in vaine Survey the universe, return again As farre from satisfaction as before, Vnlesse divine direction thou implore; Lord teach my wary thoughts so to decline, All devious paths, as to keep close to thine.
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