Snippet: 1 of 24 (1577, Volume 3, p. 1) EEBO page image 1¶ A Treatiſe contayning a playne and perfect Deſcription of Irelande,
with an Introduction, to the better vnderſtanding of the Hyſtories,
appartayning to that Iſlande: compyled by Richard Stanyhurst, and
written to the Ryght Honorable, Syr Henry Sydney Knight, Lorde Deputie
of Irelande, Lorde preſident of Wales, Knight of the moſt noble order of the
Garter, and one of hir Maieſties priuie Counſell with|in hir realme of
England.
Compare 1587 edition:
1
_MY VERY good Lorde, there haue beene diuers of late, that with no
ſmall [...]oyle, and great commenda [...]ion, haue through|ly imployed themſelues, in [...]l|ling and packing togither the ſcrapings and fr [...]gments of the Hyſtorie of Ireland. Amõg which crow, my faſt friende,
& inwarde com|pagnion, M. Edmond Campion, dyd ſo lear|nedly bequite
himſelfe, in the penning of cer|tayne briefe notes, cõcerning that countrey,
as certes it was greatly to be lamented, that eyther hys, theame had not béene
ſhorter, or elſe his leaſure had not beene longer. For if Alexander were ſo
ra [...]iſht with Homer hys hyſtorie, that notwithſtãding
Therſites were a crabbed and a rugged dwarfe, being in out|warde
feature ſo deformed, and in inwarde conditions ſo cr [...]ked, as he ſeemed to ſtande to no better ſtéede, then to leade Apes in
h [...]ll, yet the valiaunt capitayne weighing, howe liuely the goldẽ Poet ſet
foorth the ougly da [...]|deprat in his coulours, dyd ſooner wyſhe to be Homer his
Therſites, then to be the Alexander of that doltiſh rythmour, which
vndertooke, with his woodden verſes to blaſe his famous and martiall exploytes:
howe much more ought Irelande (being in ſundry ages ſeized of diuers good and
couragious Alexanders) ſore to long, & thirſte after ſo rare a clarcke,
as M. Campion, who was ſo vpright in con|ſcience, ſo déepe in iudgement, ſo
rype in elo|quence, as the countrey might haue bene wel aſſured, to haue had
their hyſtorie truely re|ported, pithily handled, and brauely poliſhed.
Snippet: 2 of 24 (1577, Volume 3, p. 1) Compare 1587 edition:
1 Howbeit, although the gloſe
of his fine a|bridgement, being macht with other mens dooings, bare a
ſurpaſſing kinde of excellen|cie, yet it was ſo hudled vp in haſte, as in
re|ſpect of a Campion his abſolute perfection, it ſéemed rather to be a work
roughly hewed, then ſmoothly planed. Vpon which grounde the gentleman being
willing, yt his ſo tender a ſuckling, hauing as yet but gréene bones, ſhould
haue béene ſwadled and rockt in a cra|dle, till in tract of tyme the ioynctes
thereof were knit, and growen ſtronger, yet notwith|ſtanding he was ſo croſt in
the nycke of thys determination, that his hyſtorie in mitching wyſe wandred
through ſundry hands, and be|ing therwithall in certaine places ſome what
tyckle tongued (for M. Campion dyd learne it to ſpeake) and in other places
ouer ſpare, it twi [...]led more tales out of ſchoole, and drow|ned weightyes matters in ſilence,
then the [...]uctor vpon better view, and longer ſearche woulde haue permitted. This
much being by the ſager ſorte poudered, and the perfection of the hyſtorie
earneſtly deſired, I as one of the moſt, that could doe leaſt, was fully
reſolued, to enriche M. Campion his Chronicle, with further additiõs. But
weighing on the other ſide, that my courſe pack thréede coulde not haue béene
ſ [...]tably knit with his ſine ſticke, & what a diſgrace it were,
hungerly to botch vp a riche garment, by clowting it with pat|ches of ſundrye
coulours, I was foorthwyth reclaymed from my former reſolution, rec|kening it
for better, that my penne ſhoulde walke in ſuch wyſe in that craggie and
bal|kiſhe way, as the truth of the matter being forepriced, I would neyther
openly borrow, nor priuily imbezell, ought to any great pur|poſe from his
hyſtorie. But as I was ham|mering that worke by ſtealthes on ye anuille, I was
giuen to vnderſtande by ſome of mine acquaintaunce, that others had brought our
rawe hyſtorie to that rypeneſſe as my paine, therein woulde ſéeme but
néedeleſſe. Where|vpon being willing to be eaſed of the burden, and loath alſo
in lurching wiſe to foreſtall a|ny man his trauayle, I was contented, to leaue
them thumping in the forge, and quiet|lye to repayre to mine vſuall and
priſtinate ſtudies, taking it not to ſtande with good ma|ners, lyke a
flittering flye, to fall in an other man his diſhe. Howbeit, the little payne I
tooke therin was not ſo ſecretly mewed with|in my cloſet, but it ſlipt out at
one chincke or other, and romed ſo farre abroade, as it was whiſpered in their
eares, who before were in the hyſtorie buſied. The gentlemen concey|uing a
greater opinion of mée, then I was well able to vpholde, dealt very effectually
with mée, that aſwell at their inſtaunce, as for the affection I bare my natiue
countrey, I woulde put mine helping hand, to the buil|ding and perfecting of ſo
commendable a EEBO page image 574 worke. Hauing breathed for a fewe dayes on
this motion, albeit I knewe, that my worke was plumed with Doime, and at that
time, was not ſufficientlye feathered to flée, yet I was by them weighed not to
beare my ſelfe coy, by giuing mine entier friendes in ſo rea|ſonable a requeſt
a ſquaimiſh repulſe. Wher|fore, my ſingular good Lorde, her [...] is layde downe to your Lordſhippe his view a briefe diſcourſe, with a
iagged hyſtorie of a ragged Weale publicke. Yet as naked as at the firſt bluſhe
it ſeemeth, if it ſhall ſtande wyth your Honour his pleaſure (whome I take to
be an experte Lapidarie) at vacant houres to inſearche it, you ſhall finde
therein ſtones of ſuch eſtimatiõ, as are woorthy to be coucht in riche and
precious collets. And in eſpeciall your Lordſhip, aboue all others, in that you
haue the charge of that countrey, may here be ſchooled, by a right line to
leuell your go|uernement. For in peruſing this hyſtorie, you ſhall finde vice
puniſhed, vertue rewar|ded, rebellion ſuppreſſed, loyaltie exalted, hautineſſe
diſly [...]ed, courtiſie beloued, brybery deteſted, iuſtice embraced, polling
Officers to there parpetuall ſhame reproued, and vp|right gouernours to their
eternall fame ex|tolled. And [...]ruely, to my thinking, ſuch magi|ſtrates, as meane to haue a vigilant eye
to their charge, can not beſtow their tyme bet|ter, then when they ſequence
themſelues frõ the affayres of the wealpublicke, to recreate & quicken
their ſpirites by reading the Chro|nicles, that decipher the gouernement of a
wealepublicke. For as it is no ſmall commẽ|dacion, for one to beare the
dooings of many, ſo it breedeth great admiration, generally to haue all thoſe
qualities in one mã herboured, for which particularly diuers are eternized.
And who ſo will be addicted to the reading of hyſtories, ſhall readily finde
diuers euentes woorthy to be remembred, and ſundry ſounde examples daily to be
followed. Vpon which grounde the learned haue, not without cauſe, adiudged an
hyſtorie to be, the Marrowe of reaſon, the creame of experience, the ſappe of
wyſedome, the pith of iudgement, the library of knowledge, the kernell of
pollicie, the vn|foldreſſe of treacherie, the kalender of tyme, the lanterne of
trueth, the lyfe of memorie, the doctreſſe of behauiour, the regiſter of
an|tiquitie, the trumpet of chiualrie. And that our Iriſhe hyſtorie being
diligently héeded, yéeldeth al theſe commodities. I truſt the in|different
reader, vpon the vntwyning there|of, will not denie. But if any man his
ſto|macke ſhall be founde ſo tenderly niced, or ſo deintily ſpyced, as that he
may not, forſooth, digeſt the groſe draffe of ſo baſe a countrey, I doubt not,
but your Lordſhip, who is throu|ghly acquaynted with the woorthineſſe of the
Iſland, [...] perſwaded, [...]
[...]eaue [...]h quaint and [...]courous repaſt [...]s, to féede on their coſtly and delicate Woodcockes, & wil|lingly
to accept the louing preſent of your hearty welwiller.