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lections of Gascoigne's pieces; the first entitled, "A hundreth sundrie flowers, bounde up in one small posie, &c. London, imprinted for Richarde Smith:" without date, but from a letter of H. W. (p. 202), compared with the printer's epist. to the reader, it appears to have been published in 1572, or 3. The other is entitled, "The Posies of George Gascoigne, Esq. corrected, perfected, and augmented by the author, 1575.-Printed at London, for Richard Smith," &c. No year, but the epist. dedicat. is dated 1576.

In the title-page of this last (by way of printer's, or bookseller's device) is an ornamental wood cut, tolerably well executed, wherein Time is represented drawing the figure of Truth out of a pit or cavern, with this legend, Occulta Veritas Tempore patet [R. s.]. This is mentioned, because it is not improbable but the accidental sight of this, or some other title-page containing the same device, suggested to Rubens that well-known design of a similar kind, which he has introduced into the Luxemburg Gallery, and which has been so justly censured for the unnatural manner of its execution.

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Wherwith Dan Cupide fled,

For feare of further flame,

When angel-like he saw hir shine,
Whome he had smit with shame.

Lo, thus was Bridges hurt

In cradel of hir kind.

The coward Cupide brake hir browe
To wreke his wounded mynd.

The skar still there remains;

No force, there let it bee:

There is no cloude that can eclipse

So bright a sunne as she.

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V. 62, In cradel of hir kind: i. e. in the cradel of her family. See Warton's Observations, vol. ii. p. 137.

The lady here celebrated was Catherine, daughter of Edmond second Lord Chandos, wife of William, Lord Sands. See Collins's Peerage, vol. ii. p. 133, ed. 1779.

VII.

Fair Rosamond.

Most of the circumstances in this popular story of King Henry II. and the beautiful Rosamond, have been taken for fact by our English historians, who, unable to account for the unnatural conduct of Queen Eleanor in stimulating her sons to rebellion, have attributed it to jealousy, and supposed that Henry's amour with Rosamond was the object of that passion.

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Our old English annalists seem, most of them, to have followed Higden, the monk of Chester, whose account, with some enlargements, is thus given by Stow : Rosamond the fayre daughter of Walter lord Clifford, concubine to Henry II. (poisoned by queen Elianor, as some thought), dyed at Woodstocke [A.D. 1177], where king Henry had made for her a house of wonderfull working; so that no man or woman might come to her, but he that was instructed by the king, or such as were right secret with him touching the matter. This house after some was named Labyrinthus, or Dedalus worke, which was wrought like unto a knot in a garden, called a Maze;1 but it was commonly said, that lastly 1 Consisting of vaults under ground, arched and walled with brick and stone, according to Drayton. See note on his Epistle of Rosamond.

the queene came to her by a clue of thridde, or silke, and so dealt with her, that she lived not long after: but when she was dead, she was buried at Godstow in an house of nunnes, beside Oxford, with these verses upon her tombe:

HIC JACET IN TUMBA, ROSA MUNDI, NON ROSA MUNDA.
NON REDOLET, SED OLET, QUÆ REDOLERE SOLET.

In English thus:

"The rose of the world, but not the cleane flowre,
Is now here graven; to whom beauty was lent:
In this grave full darke nowe is her bowre,
That by her life was sweete and redolent:
But now that she is from this life blent,
Though she were sweete, now foully doth she stinke.
A mirrour good for all men, that on her thinke."

Stow's Annals, ed. 1631, p. 154.

How the queen gained admittance into Rosamond's bower is dif ferently related. Holinshed speaks of it, as "the common report of the people, that the queene... founde hir out by a silken thread. which the king had drawne after him out of hir chamber with his foot, and dealt with hir in such sharpe and cruell wise, that she lived not long after." Vol. iii. p. 115. On the other hand, in Speed's Hist., we are told that the jealous queen found her out "by a clew of silke, fallen from Rosamund's lappe as shee sate to take ayre, and suddenly fleeing from the sight of the searcher, the end of her silke fastened to her foot, and the clew still unwinding, remained behinde: which the queene followed, till shee had found what she sought, and upon Rosamund so vented her spleene, as the lady lived not long after." 3rd edit. p. 509. Our balladmaker, with more ingenuity, and probably as much truth, tells us the clue was gained by surprise, from the knight who was left to guard her bower.

It is observable, that none of the old writers attribute Rosamond's death to poison (Stowe, above, mentions it merely as a slight conjecture); they only give us to understand, that the queen treated her harshly; with furious menaces, we may suppose, and sharp expostulations, which had such effect on her spirits, that she did not long survive it. Indeed, on her tomb-stone, as we learn from a person of credit,2 among other fine sculptures, was engraven the figure of a cup. This, which, perhaps, at first was an accidental ornament (perhaps only the chalice), might in after-times suggest the notion that she was poisoned; at least this construction was put upon it when the stone came to be demolished after the nunnery was dissolved. The account is that "the tombstone of Rosamund Clifford was taken up at Godstow, and broken in pieces, and that upon it were interchangeable weavings drawn out

2 Tho. Allen, of Glouc. Hall, Oxon, who died in 1632, aged 90. See Hearne's rambling discourse concerning Rosamond, at the end of Gul. Neubrig. Hist. vol. iii. p. 739.

and decked with roses red and green, and the picture of the cup, out of which she drank the poison given her by the queen, carved in stone."

Rosamond's father having been a great benefactor to the nunnery of Godstow, where she had also resided herself in the innocent part of her life, her body was conveyed there, and buried in the middle of the choir; in which place it remained till the year 1191, when Hugh, bishop of Lincoln, caused it to be removed. The fact is recorded by Hoveden, a contemporary writer, whose words are thus translated by Stow: "Hugh, bishop of Lincolne, came to the abbey of nunnes, called Godstow, and when he had entred the church to pray, he saw a tombe in the middle of the quire, covered with a pall of silke, and set about with lights of waxe: and demanding whose tomb it was, he was answered that it was the tombe of Rosamond, that was some time lemman to Henry II. who for the love of her had done much good to that church. Then, quoth the bishop, take out of this place the harlot, and bury her without the church, lest Christian religion should grow in contempt; and to the end that, through example of her, other women being made afraid, may beware, and keepe themselves from unlawfull and advouterous company with men."-Annals, p. 159.

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History further informs us, that King John repaired Godstow nunnery, and endowed it with yearly revenues, "that these holy virgins might releeve with their prayers the soules of his father king Henrie, and of lady Rosamund, there interred." 3 In what situation

her remains were found at the dissolution of the nunnery, we learn from Leland: "Rosainundes tumbe at Godstowe nunnery was taken up [of] late; it is a stone with this inscription, Tumba Rosamundæ. Her bones were closid in lede, and withyn that bones were closyd yn lether. When it was opened, a very swete smell came owt of it."4 See Hearne's discourse above quoted, written in 1718; at which time, he tells us, were still seen by the pool at Woodstock the foundations of a very large building, which were believed to be the remains of Rosamond's labyrinth.

To conclude this (perhaps too prolix) account, Henry had two sons by Rosamond, from a computation of whose ages, a modern historian has endeavoured to invalidate the received story. These were William Longue-espé (or Long-sword), Earl of Salisbury, and Geoffrey, Bishop of Lincolne.5 Geoffrey was the younger of Rosamond's sons, and yet is said to have been twenty years old at the time of his election to that see in 1173. Hence this writer concludes, that King Henry fell in love with Rosamond in 1149, when in King Stephen's reign he came over to be knighted by the King of Scots; he also thinks it probable that Henry's commerce with this lady "broke off upon his marriage

3 Vide reign of Henry II. in Speed's History, writ by Dr. Barcham, Dean of Bocking.

4 This would have passed for miraculous, if it had happened in the tomb of any clerical person, and a proof of his being a saint.

5 Afterwards Archbishop of York, temp. Rich. I.

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