Edward Farr, ed. Select Poetry of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth. 1845.
Peters Teares at the Cockes CrowingLIII. Samuel Rowlands
C
Taske them as bitter drops as ere were shed:
Send teares to earth and sighs vp to the skies;
This instant houre a soule and sorrowe’s wed.
Sweet tears and sighs, at dolour’s deere requests,
Come you and yours, my hart’s right welcome guests.
And let my teares be flouds to moist my heart;
And let my heart, ful of repentant feares,
By teares and sorrowes turne a true conuert:
At base obiections of as base a maid
With oths and curses I haue Christ denai’d.
Shrill herald to Aurorae’s earlie rising,
That oft proclaimes the day ere day be borne,
Distinguisher from pitchd-fac’d night’s disguising,
Surceas’d to heed why nature taught him crow,
And did exclaime on me for sinning so.
How farre remote your actions stand aloofe!
A coward heart kept words and deeds asunder,
Stout champion brags are quailed in the proofe.
Weake woman’s breath hath ouerthrowne a rocke,
And humane pride is daunted by a cocke.
False periur’d tongue, now are thy boastings tride;
Christ hardest fortune’s part thou vowd’st to beare,
But loe! a cocke doth crow it, thou hast lide:
Thy deedlesse words, words vnconfirmd by truth,
Haue turn’d mine eies to teares, my heart to ruth.
He chaunted not, nor ment blacke night’s descending;
But foule-fac’d sinne from scarffing words vnmaskes:
Plie, bitter teares, your suite, for wrath’s suspending;
Eies, that when Christ sweat blood, secure did slumber,
Now shed more tears then truthles tong can number.
Thou art reuolt from true felicitie:
Sigh sorrowes forth: let greefes weepe out the rest;
Weepe, wretched man, repleat with miserie:
Let neuer eies giue cheekes a space to drie,
Till teares regaine lost grace in mercie’s eie.
Weepe satisfaction, sinne’s repentant soule;
Weepe, fraile disciple, woman-daunted Peter;
Weepe, weakling, subiect to a cocke’s controule;
Weepe Christ’s deniall, worst of all thy crimes,
And ouerweepe each teare tenne thousand times.
For thy assisting aid I humblie call;
Lend mercie’s hand to raise from sinking ground,
And beeing on foot, protect against like fall.
Thy fauours, Lord, I truly doe implore,
Rising to stand, standing to fall no more.