Tixall Poetry/On the Death of the Countesse of Rivers

Tixall Poetry
edited by Arthur Clifford
On the Death of the Countesse of Rivers by unknown author
4302719Tixall PoetryOn the Death of the Countesse of Riversunknown author

On the Death Of

the Countesse of Rivers.



Heere lyes two miracles in one,
Of all our age, and of her owne.
A vertue, durst mentain her prime,
When vertues self was growne a crime:
A beauty, held her springing flower;
When beauty fell in winter's power.
A vertue, not kept up in cage
Of some lone cell, or hermetage;
As though her soule, lyke ours, durst try
No goodnesse but necessity:
But, to upbrade our masking age,
A vertue on the courtly stage:
Which had it formed its sceanes by her,
Had all turn'd vertues theater.
But malice grew so high, that she
And vertue made one tragedy.
A beauty, both mature and new;
Impregnable, yet pregnant too.
So Paradise made Autumn good,
Without the fall of bloome or budd.
Or, as the sun transplants his face
On every planett's looking-glasse,
Yet looses not one glorys ray
In thos epitomes of day,
Untill, by dead of night opprest,
Himself he must betake to rest,
Leaving thos budding lights full blown,
And turn'd to sunnes now every one:
So she, though printing every yeare,
Coppys of her owne caracter,
Left beauty's perfect stamp in all,
Yet wasted not th' originall,
Till heaven, in love, contriv'd her second birth,
And left thos shining epitaphs on earth.