A POEM UPON THE DEATH OF THE QUEEN. WHEN our admired Queen Mary dies, What Pen can writ Her Obsequies? Snatch me a Quill from Angels Wing, I'll tune my Voice to a doleful String: Malpomeny shall guide my Hand, And all the Muses round me stand. You nere were needed so before, Your Aid, your Aid I now implore; Stand near me all the Graces too, I would a Eigure make of you. Queen Mary's Mind to represent, I'll join you all with pure Cement. Yet this pure die or Tyrian Paint Will make a Colour far too faint, To Paint Her Body or Her Mind, I must have what is most refined. Old Celebrated Poets Graces Had no such Mind, had no such Faces. Such Majesty sat on Her Brow, She made the stubborn Sex to bow. All but Her conquering William She Did make to bow and bend the Knee. Such comely sweetness in Her Smile, But stay my Muse, and rest a while, To Sigh and Mourn, to Weep and be Like silent weeping Niobe. This Angel now is from us fled, The Consequences most Men dread. Propitious Heaven on us Smile, And Frown no more on this sad Isle. I must return, the subjects great, My Muse would fain sound a Retreat. Oh, how can I define a Soul? If swiftly flies from Pole to Pole: Takes all the various Figure in That are throughout this World of sin, And in the curious Brain they dwell; Have each a Room, have each a Cell. But Her Great Soul mounted much higher, Beyond the Earth, beyond the Fire. There She did fix, there she did find Objects that suited best her Mind. With Angels and archangels She Did join in Love and Harmony. She oft before to Heaven was fled, But now we sadly mourn She's dead: She will no more to us return, She how the Stars like Torches burn, And strive to light her all they way; But that the Sun more bright than they, conveys her out of Mortals sight, Mingling Her Beams with his own Light. FINIS.