ON SIR JOHN ELIOT. 53 Sir Bevill Grenville. THE following epitaph to the memory of Sir Bevill Grenville, killed at Lansdown, 1643, was written by MARTIN LLEWELLYN. The ancestor referred to is the great Sir Richard Grenville. HUS slain thy valiant ancestor did lye, When his one bark a navy did defy; When now encompassed round the victorstood, And bathed his pinnace in his conquering blood, Till, all his purple current dried and spent, He fell, and made the waves his monument. Where shall the next famed Grenville's ashes standThy grandsire fills the seas, and thou the land? On Sir John Eliot. JOHN POLWHELE (died 1672), one of the ancient Cornish family of Polwhele of Polwhele. Sir John Eliot was one of the ancestors of the Earl of St. Germans, and one of the chief patriots of the time of Charles I., dying in prison in the Tower. EER a musitian lyes whose well-tuned tongue * * * * * For innocence, sad widdowes' orphans' teares To Chloris. JOHN BULTEEL. The family of Bulteel is of French origin, and has long been settled in Devonshire. HLORIS, 'twill be for either's rest If We soon shall part, or soon agree. Know then though you were twice as fair, And though the graces of your mind With a resembling lustre shined; Yet if you loved me not, you'd see, Though I a thousand times had sworn Yet if to me you proved untrue, These oaths should prove as false to you. If love I vowed to pay for hate, Or that my flame should deathless prove, HYMNUS VESPERTINUS. I bragged as cowards use to do And now my tenets I have showed, 55 Hymnus Hespertinus. HENRY GRENFIELD, born at Truro, Master of Truro Grammar HRICE blest, my God and King, Of every good and perfect thing. Thou hast preserved my ways; This and all other my past days. And now the shades come on: O living Sun, Go not out of my horizon! Stream forth thy glorious light, That I by night May count my past day's sins aright. But how shall I recall These errors all, Which under numbers will not fall? Oh, hide them in that night Which from our sight Did take and hide the world's great light! To thy all-piercing sight My darkest night Is clearer than to us noon-light. Oh, let this thought me bring To keep within, My heart and hand from secret sin! When I my clay undress, Do thou me bless From rags of all unrighteousness. Who knows where I may have My bed for grave? Oh, then, receive my soul, and save! Great Watch, on whom no sleep Doth ever creep, In grateful rest I pray me keep From all malignant things Which darkness brings— Under the shadow of thy wings; HYMNUS VESPERTINUS. Dart forth thy healthful beams, Dispel those steams Which cause or cherish hurtful dreams. Pitch round me angels' tent: And from thee sent, Let them blest visions represent: As on thy Jacob's night A ladder bright Thee on the top, my shield and light; Whilst they to thee ascend, And from thee bend By turns thy jewels to defend. So shall I, in thy arms, Circled from harms, Be lulled to bliss with sweetest charms. Whilst gently from above Thy favours prove My safeguard and my bed of love. When I awake, move me To sing of thee, And meditate on thy mercy. And with the morning's wings, As light begins, To flie to thee, great King of kings. 57 |