AN ELEGY On the Most Accomplished VIRGIN Madam ELIZABETH HURNE, Who Departed this Life on the 27th. of July 1683. THou most Inexorable Tyrant Death, Who dost deprive all Humane kind of Breath; Whose Partial-Dart does pierce the Hearts of all, And ne'er regarding who it is does Fall, Dost Mow down all Mankind in General: The Good and Bad are all a Case to Thee, The Wiseman's Fate and Fool's alike we see; For all are subject to thy Tyranny. Let Youth and Beauty both of them Combine; Nay to these two we'll Wit and Virtue Join, And all in their Superlative Degree, Yet shan't the least Remorse obtain from Thee: Witness one Fact Thou Perpetrat'st of late, (Oh! the Vicissitude of Cruel Fate:) A Fact Achieved on this our British Shore, Which if the Wings of Fame so far has boar, It is Deplored its Spacious Turf all over: Fair Madam Hurne, (in whom Concentered were The Graces all,) whereby she did appear, The very Star of this our Hemisphere: Is Dead, this most Divine and Spotless Maid; With Grief, I speak't, in Death's Gold Bed is laid: But tho' she's gone, her Name doth still remain Pure, Undefiled, without a Spot or Stain, And shall Eternal Veneration gain. But Oh! my Genius faints, when Her I Name; Divine Apollo, since my Muse is lame, Transform my Pen into the Tongue of Fame, Her Meritorious Virtues to Proclaim. While yet on Earth, she might be said in Heaven, To which her Thoughts Eternally were given: And tho' she locally remained here, Her better Part, her Mind was ever there. As for her Church, she most Discreetly chose, That which the Pope and Presbyter oppose, And in its Bosom took her soft Repose. Her Dear Indulgent Mother whom she Loved, And could not brook to hear her Disapproved; But to her Loyal Precepts fixed her Mind, And ne'er to Factious Principles Inclined: Although the Vipers Pestered her a while, Vipers far worse than those of Fruitful Nile, Worse than the Cursed Dissembling Crocodile: I mean those men, who by Denomination, The World call Whigs, but I the Pest oh th' Nation: These all their little Arguments produce, In hopes they might her Loyalty Seduce; But as a Rock fixed by the Ocean side, (Each towering wave does threaten with her Pride, As if it meant her Centre to divide,) Does Laugh to see the sordid Ocean Roar, And than a Spoonful values it no more: Even so my Female Champion like a Rock, Did Unconcerned sustain the mighty Shock, And Baffled both the Shepherd and the Flock: Or like St. George who made the Dragon fall, And with his Sword the hideous Monster Sprall; So she with Reason did Confound them all, In fine, kind Heaven and Nature did bestow All the Rich Blessings that are here below, Upon her Sacred Head, and meant that she, Should be the Phoenix of our Brittany: Who Heaven Observing so Divinely clear, Judged her Unworthy any Mortal here; Therefore Advanced her to an higher Sphere: There her Transcendent Lustre to Display, And in the upper Rank of Saints Enjoy, An Happy, Joyful and Eternal Day. EPITAPH. MOurn Reader, Mourn, for in this Marble Tomb, Is Sleeping lain until the day of Doom, The Sacred Ashes of the Lovely Hurne; Who chose this Place whilst Living, for her Urn: But hold kind Reader, to Assuage thy Grief, And to afford thy Anxious Thoughts Relief; Know, that altho' her Body here doth lie, Her Soul by Angels wafted is on High, And Treads the upper Region of the Sky; Where there is neither Envy, Grief or Pain, But all in Bliss Ineffable Eternally Remain. B. Printed by N.T. Anno Dom. 1983.