Come Alecto, lend me thy Torch, To find a Church-yard in a Church-porch: Poverty and Poetry his Tomb doth enclose, Wherefore good Neighbours be merry in prose.
His death, according to the most probable conjecture, may be presumed about the eleventh year of the Queen’s Reign, Anno Dom. 1570.
* * * * *
JOHN HIGGINS.
John Higgins was one of the chief of them who compiled the History of the Mirrour of Magistrates, associated with Mr. Baldwin, Mr. Ferrers, Thomas Churchyard, and several others, of which Book Sir Philip Sidney thus writes in his Defence of Poesie, I account the Mirrour of Magistrates meetly furnished of beautiful parts. These Commendations coming from so worthy a person, our Higgins having so principal a share therein, deserves a principal part of the praise. And how well his deservings were, take an essay of his Poetry in his induction to the Book.
When Summer sweet with all her pleasures
past,
And leaves began to leave the shady tree,
The Winter cold encreased on full fast,
And time of year to sadness moved me:
For moisty blasts not half so mirthful
be,
As sweet Aurora brings in Spring-time
fair,
Our joys they dim as Winter damps the
air.
The Nights began to grow to length apace,
Sir Phoebus to th’Antartique
’gan to fare:
From Libra’s lance, to the
Crab he took his race
Beneath the Line, to lend of light a share.
For then with us the days more darkish
are,
More short, cold, moist, and stormy, cloudy,
clit,
For sadness more than mirths or pleasures
fit.
Devising then what Books were best to
read,
Both for that time, and sentence grave
also,
For conference of friend to stand in stead,
When I my faithful friend was parted fro;
I gat me strait the Printers shops unto,
To seek some Work of price I surely ment,
That might alone my careful mind content.
And then he declareth how there he found the first part of this Mirrour for Magistrates, which yet took beginning from the time of King Richard the Second; But he knowing many Examples of famous persons before William the Conquerour, which were wholly omitted, he set upon the Work, and beginning from Brute, continued it to Aurelius Bassianus Caracalla Emperour of Rome, about the year of Christ 209. shewing in his Writings a great deal of Wisdom and Learning. He flourished about the beginning of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth.
* * * * *
ABRAHAM FRAUNCE.


