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A13415 All the vvorkes of Iohn Taylor the water-poet Beeing sixty and three in number. Collected into one volume by the author: vvith sundry new additions corrected, reuised, and newly imprinted, 1630.; Works Taylor, John, 1580-1653.; Cockson, Thomas, engraver. 1630 (1630) STC 23725; ESTC S117734 859,976 638

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day Stephen Earle of Mortaigue and Bulloyne the Sonne of Stephen E●●● Bloys and Champaine was crowned at Westminster by William Corbell Archbishop of Canterbury tak● Gouernement vpon him vsurpingly compare to his ●● made to King Henry the I in the behalf of Maudth ' Empresse for the which his whole reigne was full of como● all troubles For the Empresse claiming her right great parties weere taken on each side the King had on his part his brother Henry Bishop of Winchester William Archbishop of Canterbury Roger Bishop of Salisbury Hugh Bigott late Lord Steward to King Henry the first On the Empresse part were Robert Earle of Glocester her halfe brother Dauid King of Scotland Owen and Cadwallader sent to Griffith ap Co●● Prince of Wa es and in Normandy Geffry the Empresse Husband made hauocke in the right of his ●●●● in which space the King was dangerously sicks recouered and went into Normandy appeasing the tumults and leauing his Sonne Eustace Duke there makes league with France buyes his peace with the Empresse for 5000 marks yeerely and returnes into England after which Dauid King of Scotland with his valiant Sonne Pre●● Henry wasted and spoyled call the North parts of England till by Thurstane Archbishop of York and Ralp● Bishop of Durham He was ●●●● and discomfited In ● me and space K. Stephen in diuers parts of this Kingdom was victortous chasing and killing many of those but a●●●● posed him inforcing Robert Earle of Glocester to ●●● into France ●●whilst Stephen in England ●●●● ●●●●● and Castles After in a great ●●●● the King was ●●●● at Lincolne by th' Empresse and committed ●●●● Bristow Castle but the Nobility distastins the ●●●● s●rict gouernment fell off from her to King Stephens ●● againe In these broyles more the ●●●● Char●●●● burnt in Winchester with almost the wha●●●●● med to ashes In the end Robert Eearle of Glocester was taken prisoner and ex●hanged for King Stephen● the warres more and more encreasing till at last ●●●● mercy looking on this miserable Land was pleased ●●●● Stephen should ordaine Henry the Empresse form Sonne●● Hetre after him vpon which conditions peace ●●●● blished The King aged at Douer and was buried at Feuersham October 25 1154. hauing reigned ●●●● all vexation neere 19 yeeres HENRY THE SECOND KING OF ENGLAND DVKE OF NORMANDY Guyen and Aquitaine c. TO th' Empresse Maud I was vndoubted Heyre And in her Right my Title being iust By iustice I obtain'd the Regall Chayre Fayre Rosamond I soyled with soule lust For which Heauens lustice hating deeds vniust Stir'd vp my Wife and Sonnes to be my foes Who sought to lay my Glory in the dust And he m'd me round with cruell warres and woes They poys'ned my sweete beautious tainted ●● By Isabels deuice my furious Queene My very bowels 'gainst me did oppose Such fruit hath lust such force hath iealons spleene My cursed cross●s made me curse my birth With her I liu'd raignd died and arm'd to earth Anno ●●●●●●●●●●●● RICHARD THE FIRST Surnamed CVER DE LYON KING OF ENGLAND DVKE OF NORMANDY Guyen and Aquitaine c. THrough my Creators mercy and his might Ierusalem conquer'd and set free False mis-beleeuing Iewes and Turkish spight From Iury force perforce I forc'd to flee The Realme of Cypresse was subdude by me Su●ha trembled at my prowesse bold King Tanered bought his peace and did agree And paid me threescore ounces of fine gold Whilst I abroad won Honour manifold Aspiring Iohn my brother vext my Realme In Austria I was tane and laid in hold Thus noods of griefe each way me ouer whelme At last I home return'd my ransome paid My earthly glory in a Graue was laid Anoo 1189 Iuly 6 Thursday Richard the first surnamed Cuer De Lyon or Lyons Heart was crowned at Westminster by Baldwin Archbishop of Canterbury Shortly after his Co●●●tion he sold and pawned lands and gathering a great sum of 1100000● he left England in the guidance of William Longchamp Bishop of Ely the Popes Legate and Lord Chancelor of England William king of Scotla'd being in amity with King Richard this king sailed in France with whom the French K. Philip went with their armies toward the holy Land in their voyage they touched the kingdom of Sicilia where Tancred the vsurping King of that Country gaue king Richard 6000. ounces of ● I know not whether it was for loue or feare He saild from thence and in a Tempest his Nauie was disperst and fo● wrack'd neere the I le of Cyprus whom lsakius the by courteous King of that kingdome would not harbour vnlieue but contrarily pillaged and abused king Richard and inraged landed conquerd Cyprus carrying the king and his daughter away prisoners leauing the kingdoms vds ●● two trusty Viceryes hee put againe to Sea bit ●●●●● number more then 300 he met with a great Arg●●●●●●● the Sarazens with 1500 men in her and fur●●● munition and victuals for their friends at Acon ● Argosey the King tooke after hee sailed to Acon ● ciently called Ptol omais which City he likewise conquered Philip king of France being with him and ●●●med 1500 Christians that were there in bondage The king of France weary or ennious of King Richards ●● ries returned home In the meane time Earle Iohn Kings brother driues the proud gouerning Bishop of E● out of his gouernment and this kingdome T●●●●●●● King Richard fortified Ascalon marched before Ien●● lem fought with the Salladine took 7000 C●●●●● other beasts killing the Infidels in heaps At last ●●● Duke of Burgundy forsakes the warres whereby th●●● was inforced to come to truce with the Saladine for ●●●● yeeres Hee returning in disguise like a March●● ●● discouered and taken by Leopoldus Duke of Austria ● the Emperor took him from him In the meant space ●●● the Kings brother vseth all the foule play he c 〈…〉 Crowne After 15 moneths imprisonment the king ● released paying a great Ransome be landed in England was crowned againe at Winchester for gaue his brother Iohn sailed into Normandy against his mortall e●●●● the King of France who fled from the siege of Vernoy●● so soene as he heard of Richards comming yet new●●●● arose betweene them wherein King Richard was●●● Victorius Lastly at the battell of Gisors 1192 after ●●●● sion he was most infortunately slain at the siege of ●●●● named Chaluz with an Arrow the 6 of April 119●● hauing reigned nobly and prosperously neere 10 yeere IOHN KING OF ENGLAND DVKE OF NORMANDY Guyen and Aquitaine LORD OF IRELAND c. ROmes mighty miter'd Metropolitan I did oppose and was by him depos'd He turn'd this cursed blessings to his ban And caus'd me round to be with cares inclos'd The English and the Normans me oppos'd And Lewis of France my Kingdome did molest Whilst I to all these miseries expos'd Consum'd my Kingly dayes in restlesse rest At last the Pope was pleas'd and I reblest Peace was obtain'd proclaim'd I re-inthroan'd This was my raigne with
woes opprest and prest Blest curst friends foes diuided and aron'd And after seuenteene yeeres were gone and past At Swinsted poys'ned there I dranke my last Anno 1199 Aprill 6 Tuesday Iohn ●●●●stly intruded the Crowne it being by right his nephew Arthurs who was sonne to Ieffry Duke of Britaine Iohns eldest brother howsoeuer Iohn was crowned on the 6 of May at Westminster by Hubert Archbishop of Canterbury but after a false reconciliation betwixt Philip King of France Iohn king of England and Arthur ' Duke of Britaine the said Duke Arthur was murthered some Authors in malice taxing king Iohn with the murther and some Writers altogether clearing him Hoasoeuer he had not one quiet day in his whole-Reigne his Principalities in France seazed only the French Wales in combustion Ireland in vproare Scotland preparing against him England all in confusion defender and hurliburly the King the Peeres the Prelates and Commons at perpetuall diuisioen The Pope of Rome thunders out his Excommunications against the King and all that obeyed him and interacts the whole Realme Soe that for three yeeres no Church was opened either for Gods Seruice to be exercised or Sacraments administred There was no Christian buriall allowed to any but the Carcasses of the dead were barbarously laid in vnhallowed places or cast like dogges into ditches yet all this time many of the English Nobilitie loyally serued their Soueraigne mangre the Papall Anathemizing The King went into Ireland and finding it shattered into contentions fractures ioynes and vnites it againe and returnes into England When suddenly Lewilyn Prince of Northwales who had married King Iohns daughter inuades the Marches of England but Lewilyn was soyled and Wales conquered But in the yeere 1211 the Popes set all curse beganne to fall heauy vpon king Iohn which curse also made many great Lords and other to far from the King neuerthelesse Scotland being in contention by a Traytor that claimed the Crowne there ●●● Gothred King John went thither aided his friend K. William and in that expedition set all in good peace taking the Traitor Gothred caused him to be hanged The Pope very liberally gaue the kingdome of England to Phil. of France An. 1112. More then 3000 people were burn'd drown'd on vnder London bridge in the space of 4 yeers King John made his peace with the Pope surrendred his Crown to Pandulphus the Legat for money and good words was blest and had his Crowne againe Philip of France attempts Englands inuasion his Fleet is beaten discontented sunke scattered taken by king Iohn Lewis the Dolphin of France landed at Sarawich with 650 ships came to London and tooke oaths of Allegeance of the Barons and Citizens in Pauls yet at last Lewis it forsaken of the English Lords yet holds possessions heere King Iohn being thus freed from Inuasion and Forraigne assaults was assaulted with poyson by a Monk in Swinsted Abbey hauing reigned more powerfull then fortunate 17 yeeres 5 moneths and odde dayes was interred at Worcester HENRY THE THIRD KING OF ENGLAND LORD OF JRELAND DVKE OF NORMANDY G●●en and Aquitaine c. IN toyle and trouble midst contentions broyles ●● z'd the Scepter of this famous land Then being gready wasted with the spoyles Which ●●●● I made with his French furious band But I with Peeres and people brauely mand Repald repulst expa●st insulting foes My ●●●ons did my Soueraignty withstand And wrap them●● and me in warres and woes But in each Battell none but I did lose I lost my Subiects lines on euery side From Ciuill warres no better gaining growes Friends foes my people all that fought or died My gaines was losse my pleasure was my paine These were the triumphs of my troublous raigne Anno 1216 October 19 Wednesday Henry the third the eldest sonne of King Ioha and Isabel which was the daughter of Aym●r Earle of A●golesme Thus Henry was borne at Winchester ●● first crowned at Gloucester by Peter Bishop of Winchester Iosseline Bishop of Bath and after ag●●man with his Lords he was againe crownes at Westminster by Stephen Langton Archbishop of Conterbury ●● Whitsanday God in mercy lookes gentle 〈…〉 calamities that this wofull Land pressed by forraigne warres and ciuill discord It all turned to a happy ●●●● betwixt the King and his Lords which continued a long time Gualo the Popes Legate the Bishop of Winchester William Marshall Earle of Pombroke being the protector of the Kings Realme the King ●●●●●●●●●● old by whose good gouernment Lewts the ●●●●●● of France with all his French Armies were exp●●ed out of the kingdome The King forg●●e all of the La●●●● the had taken part with Lewis but he made the Clerg●●● great sines Alexander the King of Scotland was married to the Leaytane sister to King Henry at which misiery Dragons were●●●●●●●●●●●●●● the ●●●●●● coun●●●●● fellow said he ●●● Iesus Christ sheuing the markes ●●● were of Nayles in his hands feet ●er the which bla●●●● my bewa● Crucified at a place called Atterbury neare the Towne of Banbury Some say hee was 〈…〉 two walls and started at Cathnes in Scotland The Bishop did excem 〈…〉 the people because they would ●● pay their Tithes for the which they burned the Bishop aliue for reward of which wicked act their King caused 400. of the chife offenders to be ●arged golded ●●●●●●● dr●● and put the Earle from his Earledoms Iohn King of Ierusclem came into England to ●raue ●● de●●f King Henry But the King was so busied here that he co●al●● ayd him K. Henry with a great Arm went into Britaine against Lewis King of France and spoyled the C●●●● mighty till at last a Peace was co●●l●ded The Emperor Fred●rick married the Lady Isabell the King ●●●● Eig●●●● Iewes were hanged for cru●●ring a ●●●●dre Lincolne Richard Earle of Cornwall the Kings●●● ther was made King of the Romanes The King l●●●●●●●● lands in France except the Duchy of Aquitaine Wales was in insurrection Ireland in rebellion England in a hurty-burly ●●stoy all Diuision betwixt the King and his ●●● Lords Anno 1233. 5 Sunnes were ●e●u 〈…〉 ●●●●●● in the East one in the West one in the South ●● in the North ●●●●● the fifth in the m●●st of the firmament The King entertaines Poictouines out of France and giues them places of great honour in Court and ●●●●●●● which made the English Barons raise At●●● agan●●●● King The Earl of Leicester and Gloucester ●●●●the King of England in the battell at Lewes The Lord Chiefe iustue●●●'d in Westminster-●●● ●●●●● after all these ones the King dyed in peace hauing reigned 56 yeeres ●●● burried at Westminster 127● EDWARD THE FIRST KING OF ENGLAND LORD OF IRELAND DVKE OF AQVITAINE c. MY Victories my Valour and my strength My actions and my neuer-conquer'd name ●ere spred throughout the world in bredth lēgth ●● mortall deeds I want immortall Fame ●●ebellious Wales I finally did tame ●● made them Vassalls to my princely Sonne ●●red Scotland fierce with
former Seruants of seuer all Offices in his Maiesties House and other Esquires his ma●stres seruants of good qualitie The Gentlemen of his Maiesties Chappel in Surplaices and rich Copes the Sergeant of the Vestry accompanying them Chaplaines Doctors of Phisicke Doctors of Diuinity Knights Gentlemen of the Priuy Chamber Gentlemen of the Bed-chamber to the Prince Baronets Barons younger sonnes Knights of the Priuy-Councell Viscounts eldest sonnes a Veluet cushen cart●ed by an Esquire The Comptroller Treasurer Steward and Chamberlain to his Grace bearing white Staues Barons of Ireland Scotland and England Bishops Earles eldest Sons Viscounts Earles of Scotland and England The Duke of Linox eldest Sonne The Arch-Bishop of Canterbury The Mace The Purse The Iora Keeper Preacher Sergeant Trumpetter and foure Trumpets The Great Banner borne by an Earles Sonne accompanied with an Herald The chiefe mourning Horse couered with blacke Veluet and garnished with Eschochens of Tassata with Shaffron and Plumes led by M r. Harton Clauell His Graces Hatchinements borne as followeth The Gauntlets and Spurres The Helme and Crest and the Sword borne by three Heralds The Targe and Coate of Armes borne by two Kings of Armes Then the ●●uely Effigies or representation of his Grace drowne in a Chariot by sixe goodly Horses garnished as the former couered with a Canopy of black Veluet The Pall supported two Earles Sons and two Marquesses Sons The Fo●●● going on each side the Chariot and likewise ten small Banners carried by 10. Knights 5 of Scotland and 5 of England round about the Chariot two Principall Gentlemen riding at his head and feet in the said Chariot Then folowed Garter principall King of Armes accompanied with a Gentleman ● sher who went bareheaded the Duke of Linox chief Mourner The Lord Tresurer and Lord President of the Councell his supporters 10 other Assistants The Lord Priuy Seale and Duke of Buckingham The Marquis Hamilton and Earle Marshall The Lord Chamberlaine of his Maiesties House and the E. of Sussex the E. of Southampton and E. of Essex the E. of Salisbury and E. of Exceter The M r of the Horse to his Grace in close mourning leading the Horse of Honor ●●●●●● furnished Thus past this sad shew from his Graces House in Holborne to Westminster where the Funerall Rites being solemnely ended his Graces liuely Effigies was le●● in the Abby of S t. Peter vnder a Rich Hearse FINIS GREAT BRITAINE ALL IN BLACKE OR A short Elegie written in the manner of AEquiuoques in a sad and dutifull remembrance of the Royall Prince HENRY OH for a Quill of that Arabian Wing That 's hatcht in embers of Sun-kindled fire Who to her selfe her selfe doth issue bring And three in one is Young and Dam and Sire Oh that I could to Virgils veine aspire Or Homers Verse the golden-languag'd Greeke In polish'd phrases I my lines would tyre Into the depth of Art my Muse would seeke Mean time she 'mongst the linguish'd Poets throngs Although she want the helpe of Forraigne Tongs TO write great Britaines wo how am I able That hauing lost a peerelesse Princely Sonne So wise so graue so stout so amiable Whose Vertues shin'd as did the mid-dayes Sunne And did illustrate all our Hemispheare Now all the world affoords not him his pheare His Royall minde was euermore dispos'd From vertue vnto vertue to accrue On good deserts his bountie he dispos'd Which made him follow'd by so braue a crue That though himselfe was peerlesse many a Peere As his Attendants dayly did appeare In him the Thundrers braine-borne daughter Pallas Had tane possession as her natiue Clime In him and his terrestriall heau'nly Palace Was taught how men by vertuous deeds shal clime So that although his yeeres were in the spring He was true honours Fount and valors Spring So firme so stable and so continent So wise so valiant and so truly chaste That from his Microcosmos continent All heau'n-abhorred hel-hatch'd lust was chac'd Hee ran no vicious vice alluring grace To staine the glory of his Royall race His soule from whence it came is gone againe And earth hath tane what did to earth belong He whilom to this Land was such a Gaine That mem'ry of his losse must deeds belong All states and sexes both the young and graue Lament his timelesse going to his Graue Man-murdring death blinde cruell fierce and fell How dost thou gripe him in thy meagre armes By thy rude stroke this Prince of Princes fell Whose valor brau'd the mighty God of Armes Right well in peace he could of peace debate Dreadlesse of dreadfull danger or debate Robustuous rawbon'd monster death to teare From vs our happy hope we did enioy And turne our many ioyes to many a teare Who else might ioyfully haue liu'd in ioy As wind on thousands all at once doth blow By his deaths stroke so millions feele the blow Well could I wish but wishing is in vaine That many millions and amongst them I Had slue'd the bloods from euery flowing veine And vented floods of water from each eye T' haue sau'd the life of this Maiestike Heyre Would thousand soules had wandred in the ayre But cease my Muse thou farre vnworthy art To name his name whose praise on hie doth mount Leaue leaue I say this taske to men of Art And let his soule rest to sweet Zions Mount His Angell spright hath bid the world adue And earth hath claim'd his body as a due Epitaph Here vnder ground great HENRIES corps doth be If God were pleas'd I wish it were a lye IOHN TAYLOR THE MVSES MOVRNING OR FVNER ALL SONNETS ON THE Death of IOHN MORAY Esquire TO THE WHOLE AND ENTIRE NVMBER OF THE Noble and Ancient name of Morayes Iohn Taylor dedicates these sad Funerall Sonnets Sonnet 1. VVHen King Corbredus wore the Scottish Crowne The Romanes did the Britaine Land afflict But Corbred ioyn'd confederate with the Pict By whom Queen ●eadaes foes were ouerthrowne The Morayes then to haue their valour knowne Did first the Romane forces contradict And made them render vp their liues so strict That horse and foot and all were beaten downe Loe thus began the Morayes honour'd Race Of memorable Ancient worthy fame And since the fiue and fiftieth yeere of Grace ●● Scotland hath suruiu'd that noble name To whom aliue and to my dead friends hear so In duty heere I consecrate this verse Hee that is euer obliged to your Noble name IOHN TAYLOR Sonnet 2. WEepe euerlastingly you Nymphs diuine Your very Quintessence is waste and spent Sigh grone and weepe with wofull languishment Dead is the life that made your Glories shine The heau'nly numbers of your Sacred nine He tun'd as an Aetheriall Instrument So sweet as if the Gods did all consent In him their Consort wholy to combine Weepe Muses euerlastingly lament Eclipsed is your Sire Apollo's shrine Grim Death the life hath from your Champion rent And therefore sigh grone weepe lament and pine And let the Lawrell rot consume and wither Dye Muses
his other sinnes he play the Thiefe And steale mens goods they all will sentence giue He must be hang'd he is vnsit to liue In the Low Countryes if a wretch doe steale But bread or meat to feed himselfe a meale They will vnmercifully beat and clowt him Hale pull and teare spurne kicke flowt him But if a Drunkard be vnpledg'd a Kan Drawes out his knife and basely stabs a man To runne away the Rascall shall haue scope None holds him but all cry * Run Thiefe Run Lope Scellum Lope Thus there 's a close conniuence for all vice Except for Theft and that 's a hanging price One man 's addicted to blaspheme and sweare A second to carowse and domineore A third to whoring and a fourth to fight And kill and slay a fist man to backbite A sixt and seuenth with this or that crime caught And all in generall much worse then naught And amongst all these sianers generall The Thiefe must winne the halter from them all When if the matter should examin'd be They doe deserue it all as much as he Nor yet is Thieuery any vpstart sinne But it of long antiquity hath bin And by this trade great men haue not disdain'd To winne renowne and haue their states maintain'd Grest Alexanders conquests what were they But taking others goods and lands away In manners I must call it Martiall dealing But truth will terme it rob'ry and flat stealing For vnto all the world it is well knowne That he by force tooke what was not his owne Some Writers are with Tamberlaine so briefe To stile him with the name of Seythian Thiefe * Plutar●b Licurgus lou'd and granted gifts beside To Thieues that could steale and escape vnspide But if they taken with the manne were They must restore and buy the bargaine deere Thieues were at all times euer to be had Examples by the good Thiefe and the bad And England still hath bin a fruitfull Land Of valiant Thieues that durst bid true men stand One Bellin Dun a Hen. I. a famous Thiefe surniu'd From whom the cowne of Dunstable's deriu'd And Robin Hood b Rich. 2. with little Iohn agreed To rob the rich men and the poore to feede c Edw. 3. The Priests had here such small meanes for their liuing That many of them were enforc'd to Thieuing Once the fist Henry could rob ex'lent well When he was Prince of Wales as Storeis tell Then Fryer Tucke a tall stout Thiefe indeed Could better rob and steale then preach or read Sir Gosselin Deinuill d Edw. 2. with 200. more In Fryers weedes rob'd and were hang'd therefore Thus I in Stories and by proofe doe finde That stealing's very old time out of minde E't I was borne it through the world was spred And will be when I from the world am dead But leauing thus my Muse in hand hath tooke To shew which way a Thiefe is like a Booke A Comparison betweene a Thiefe and a Booke COmparisons are odious as some say But my comparisons are so no way I in the Pamphlet which I wrote before Compar'd a Booke most fitly to a Whore And now as fitly my poore muse alludes A Thiefe t' a Booke in apt similitudes A good Booke steales the mind from vaine pretences From wicked cogitations and offences It makes vs know the worlds deceiuing pleasures And set our hearts on neuer ending treasures So when Thieues steale our Cattle Coyne or Ware It makes vs see how mutable they are Puts vs in mind that wee should put our trust Where Fellon cannot steale or Canker rust Bad Bookes through eyes and eares doe breake and enter And takes possession of the hearts fraile Center Infecting all the little Kingdome Man With all the poys'nous mischiefe that they can Till they hape rob'd and ransack'd him of all Those things which men may iustly goodnesse call Robs him of vertue and of heau'nly grace And leaues him begger'd in a wretched case So of our earthly goods Thieues steale the best And richest iewels and leaue vs the rest Men know not Thieues from true men by their looks Nor by their outsides no man can know Bookes Both are to be suspected all can tell And wisemen e'r they trust will try them well A Booke may haue a title good and faire Though in it one may finde small goodnesse there And so a Thiefe whose actions are most vile Steales good opinion and a true mans stile Some Bookes prophane the Sacred text abuse With common Thieues it is a common vse Some Bookes are full of lyes and Thieues are so One hardly can beleeue their yea or no. Some Bookes are scurrilous and too obsceane And he 's no right Thiefe that loues not a Queane Some Book 's not worth the reading for their fruits Some Thieues not worth the hanging for their suits Some Bookes are briefe and in few words declare Compendious matter and acutenesse rare And so some Thieues will breake into a house Or cut a purse whilest one can cracke a Louse Some Bookes are arrogant and impudent So are most Thieues in Christendome and Kent Some Bookes are plaine and simple and some Thieues Are simply hang'd whilest others get reprieues Some Books like foolish Thieues their faults are spide Some Thieues like witty Bookes their faults can hide Some Bookes are quaint and quicke in their conceits Some Thieues are actiue nimble in their sleights Some Bookes with idle stuffe the Author fills Some Thieues will still be idle by their wills Some Bookes haue neither reason law or sense No more haue any Thieues for their offence A Booke 's but one when first it comes to th'Presse It may increase to numbers numberlesse And so one Thiefe perhaps may make threescore And that threescore may make ten thousand more Thus from one Thiefe Thieues may at last amount Like Bookes from one Booke past all mens account And as with industry and art and skill One Thiefe doth daly rob another still So one Booke from another in this age Steales many a line a sentence or a page Thus amongst Bookes good fellowship I finde All things are common Thieues beare no such mind And for this Thieuing Bookes with hue and cry Are sought as Thieues are for their Fellony As Thieues are chasde and sent from place to place So Bookes are alwaies in continuall chase As Bookes are strongly boss'd and clasp'd bound So Thieues are manacled when they are found As Thieues are oft examin'd for their crimes So Bookes are vsde and haue bin at all times As Thieues haue oft at their arraignment stood So Bookes are tryde if they be bad or good As Iuries and Graund Iuries with much strife Giue vp for Thieues a Verdict death or life So as mens fancies euidence doe giue The shame or fame of Bookes to dye or liue And as the veriest Thiefe may haue some friend So the worst Bookes some Knaue will still defend As Thieues their condemnation must abide Bookes are
yeeres after the cities of York Rochester and Bathe were burnt Hee reigned 18. yeeres 10 moneths and was buried at Feuersham Henry the second An Dom. 1154. THis King vnto the Empresse Maud was Heyre And lawfully obtain'd the Regall Chayre He was couragious and yet most vnchaste Which Vice his other Vertues all defac'd He lou'd faire Rosamond the worlds faire Ros● For which his wife and children turn'd his foes He made his sonne Copartner in his Crowne Who rais'd strong warres to put his Father downe Faire Rosamond at Woodstock by the Queene Was poyson'd in reuengefull iealous spleene In toyle and trouble with his Sonnes and Peere● The King raign'd almost fiue and thirty yeeres Hee neere his death did curse his day of birth Hee curst his Sonnes and sadly le●t the earth Hee at Founteuerard in his Tombe was laid And his Son Richard next the Scepter swa●d Henry the 2. In the 12. yeer of this King an earthqu●●● in Norfolk Suffolk and Eiye that made ●●●●●● shaking the sleeples and ouerthrew men that stood on this feete Nicholas Breakespeare an English man was ●●ope of Rome and was named Adrian the fourth hee gaue ●●● Lord-shippe of Ireland to King Henry Richard Cordelion An. Dom. 1189. THis braue victorious Lyon-hearted Prince The foes of Christ in ●●●y did conuince Whilst at Ierusalem he wan Renowne His Brother Iohn at home vsurp'd his Crowne And as he home return'd his owne to gaine By Austria's Duke the King was Prisoner ●ane His ransome was an hundred thousand pound Which paid in England he againe was crown'd Yet after nine full yeeres and 9. months raigne Hee with a Shot was kild in Aquit●ne His buriall at Founteuerard was thought meet At his dead Fathers second Henries feet Richard the 1. he conquered the kingdome of Cypresse and he tooke from the Infidels the Cities of Acon Ioppa and deliuered them to Christians In his 2. yeere the ●●s of the renowned King Arthur were found at Glastenbury King Richards bowels were buried at Chalne Castle in Aquitane his heart at Roane and his body at Founteuerard King Iohn An. Dom. 1199. IOhn Earle of Morton tooke the regall Seate His state his toyle his pompe his cares all great The French the Welsh the Scotsh all prou'd his foes The Pope King Iohn did from his Crowne depose His Lords rebel'd from France the Dolphin came And Wasted England much with sword and flame And after seuenteene yeeres were full expir'd King Iohn being poysoned to his graue retir'd King Iohn In the 8. yeere many men Women and cattell ● slain● with thunder and many houses burnt and the ●●●● was beaten downe with haile as bigge as goose egges Some say the King was poyson'd by a monke and others ●rite that he died of a surfeit at Newark but his life was full of troubles and after his death he was by base villaines ●●●d and l●●t naked without any thing to couer the corpes hee was buried at Worcester Henry the third An. Dom. 1216. Wars bloody wars the French in England made Strong holds Towns Towres Castles they inuade ●●t afterwards it was K. Henries chance By force perforce to force them backe to France Great discord 'twixt the King and Barons were ●nd factions did the Realme in pieces teare A world of mischiefes did this Land abide And fifty sixe yeeres raign'd the King and dy'd Henry the 3. This King was born at Winchester crowned at Glocester buried at Westminster In the 17. of his reigne on the 8. of Aprill 1233. there were 5 Sonnes in the firmament and the naturall Sun was as red as blood Edward Long-●hanks An. Dom. 1271. THis was a hardy wise Victorious King The Welshmen he did to subiection bring He Scotland wan and brought from thence by fate Their Crowne their Scepter Chaire and Cloth of state That Kingdome with oppression sore he brusde Much tyranny and bloodshed there he vsde When thirty fiue yeeres he the Crowne had kept At Westminster he with his Father slept Edward the 1. In the 13. yeere his sonne Edward was borne at Carnaruan who was the first sonne of any King of England that was Prince of Wales Edward of Carnaruan An. Dom. 1307. THe hard mis-haps that did this King attend The wretched life and lamentable end Which he endur'd the like hath ne'r bin seene Depos'd and poyson'd by his cruell Queene Which when the poyson had no force to kill Another way she wrought her wicked will Into his Fundament a red hot Spit Was thrust which made his Royall heart to split In his 8. yeere such a death that dogges and horses were good food many ate their owne children and old prisoners tore such as were newly committed in pieces and deuoured them halfe liuing The King reigned 19. yeeres 6. moneths Edward the third An. Dom. 1326. IN Peace and warre this King was right good He did reuenge his murdred Fathers blood Hee and the blacke Prince his most valiant Sonne The Field at Cressle and at Poytiers wonne At first and last in his victorious raigne Of French and Scots were six score thousand slaine And more his glory further to aduance He tooke the Kings of Scotland and of France The noble order of the Garter he At Windsor instituted caus'd to be When fifty yeeres this Land had him obaid At Westminster he in his tombe was laid In his 12. yeere he quartered the Armes of England and France as they are at this day Henry Pichard Vintuer in his Moral●y feasted at once Edward King of England Dauid King of Scotland Iohn King of France the King of Cypres the Prince of Wales the Dolphin of France with many other great Personages of Honour and Worship Richard the second An. Dom. 1377. YOng King rash co●sell lawes right neglected The good put downe the bad in State erected The Court with knaues flat'rers here did swarm The Kingdome like a Farme was let to Farme The Commons tost in Armies Routes and throngs And by soule treason would redresse soule wrongs In this Kings raigne began the Ciuill warre Vnnaturally 'twixt Yorke and Lancaster Oppression on oppression breedes Confusion Bad Prologue bad Proceeding bad Conclusion King Richard twenty two yeeres raign'd misse-led Deposed and at Po●●r●s knock'd ith'head This King was Grandchild to Edward the 3. and sonne to the black Prince he was borne at Burdeux in France and was but 11. yeeres old when he was crowned so that all his miserable Calamity may be imputed to him not hauing or not regarding good counsell Henry the fourth An. Dom. 1399. THe Crown wrong got frō the wrong'doing king More griefe then ioy did to King Henry bring France England Scotland Wales arose in Armes And menac'd Henry with most fierce Alarmes Hot Percy Dowglas Mortimer Glendowre At Shrewsbury the King orethrew their power He fourteene yeeres did raigne and then did dye At Canterbury buried he doth lye Henry the 4. Hee began his reigne the 29. of September 1399. and the 14.
Westminster she buried doth abide And as the fame of this Imperiall Ma●de Is through the world by the foure winds displaid So shall her memory for euer grace Her famous birth her death and buriall place At Teuxbury Anno 1574. the 24. of February being a hard frost the Riuer of Seuerne was couered with Fl● and Beetles so that it was thought within the length of a paire of Bu●● to be 100. quarters of them the m●●●●en stopped with them but from whence they came is unknown 1582. A piece of Land of three Acres in Dorsotshire i● the Parish of Armitage was suddenly remoo●ed 600. f●●t from the place where formerly it stood King Iames. An. Dom. 1601. VVHen as Elizaes wofull death was acted When this lamenting land was halfe distracted● Whē tears each loyall heart with grief had drown'd Then came this King and made our ioyes abound Ordain'd for vs by heauenly power diuine Then from the North this glorious starre did shine The Roall Image of the Prince of Peace The blest Concorder that made warres to cease By Name a STEVVARD and by Nature one Appointed from I●houahs sacred Throne And by th' almighties hand supported euer That Treason or the Diuell should hurt him ne●●● And as his Zeale vnto his God was great Gods blessings on him were each way compleat Rich in his Subiects loue a Kings best treasure Rich in content a Riches aboue measure Rich in his Princely Issue and in them Rich in his hopefull Branches of his stemme Rich in Munition and a Nauy Royall And richer then all Kings in seruants Loyall When Hell and Rome together did conspire To blow him and his kingdome vp with fire Then did the King of King● preserue our King And all the Traytors to confusion bring And who so reckons vp from first to last The many hel-hatch'd dangers he hath past Through all his daies he will beleeue no doubt That he with heauenly pow'rs was wall'd about All Christian Princes held his friendship deare Was fear'd for loue and not belou'd for feare And P●●gan Monarchs were in League combin'd With him as farre as is the Easterne Inde ●●● like a st●●● amidst a Riuer fix'd ●● was his ●●flic● with his mercy mix'd He ●riu'd to imitate his Maker still ●ed clemency preseru'd where Law would kill He hath cur'd England and heal'd Scotlands wounds And made them both great anciēt Britains bounds ●●● bloudy deadly ●eud the caus'd ●● cease And ●●●●●'d hate he turn'd to Christian peace The mouth of warre he muzzled mute and dum He fill'd the roaring Cannon and the Drum ●●ure in peace his people si●● and dine With their owne fig-trees shaded and their vine Whilst in an vprore most of Christendome ●●e nation doth another ouercome Vnto the King of Kings let 's pratles sing For giuing vs this happy peacefull King ●●●one know so well how they should peace prefer ●●s those that know the miseries of warre ●Tis true though old and must not be forgot The warres are sweet to such as know them not Peace happy peace doth spread tranquillity Through all the bounds of Britaines Monarchy And may we all our actions still addresse For peace with God and warre 'gainst wickednesse Vnto which peace of God this King 's ascended ●o reigne in glory that shall ne'r be ended His mortall part at Westminster enter'd His soule and Fame immortally preser'd God did wonderfully preserue him vpon two seueral●● Tue●daies from 2 most dangerous treasons the one at the Towne of Saint Iohnston in Scotland on Tuesday the 5. of August 1600. where the Earle of Gowry attemptea to kill his Maiesty The other was in England in that fearfull treason and deliucrance from the Powder-plot on Tuesday the 5. of November 1606. King CHARLES TWo Williams Henries 8. I. Steuen I. Iohn Sixe Edwards Richards 3. and I. Queene Mary Elizabeth and Iames all dead and gone Our gracious Charles doth now the Scepter carry And may they liue and dye of God accurst Who wish the preiudice of Charles the first ●ust 25. Kings and Queenes of England since the Norman Conquest A BRIEFE REMEMBRANCE OF ALL THE ENGLISH MOnarchs from the Normans Conquest vntill this present TO THE HONOVRABLE AND TRVLY Noble Sir ROBERT CARR Knight one of the Gentlemen of his Maiesties Royall Bed-chamber c. T Is not in expectation of reward That I this booke vnto your hands doe tender But in my humble dutie in regard That I am bound my daily thanks to render And though my stile be harsh my learning slender My Verse defectiue and my Accent rude Yet if your Patronage be my Defender Iam defended'gainst a multitude Thus to auoyd Hell-hatch'd ingratitude My dutious Love my Liues and Life shall be To you deuoted euer to conclude May you and your most vertuous Ladie see Long happie dayes in Honour still encreasing And after death true Glorie neuer ceasing Your Honours in all seruice Iohn Taylor WILLIAM THE FIRST Surnamed the CONQVEROVR KING OF ENGLAND And DVKE OF NORMANDY BY bloody Battels Conquest and by Fate Faire Englands Crown kingdome l surpris'd Itopsie-tutuy turn'd elie Eng'ish State And Lawes and Customes new and strange deuis'd And where ● vanquisht there I tyrannaiz'd Instead of peoples loue inforcing feare Extorting Ioils I daily exercis'd And Tributes greater then the Land could beare Besides the Normans fame the more to reare The English I forbad the English tongue French Schooles of Grammer I ordayned here And gainst this Nation added wrong to wrong At last my Crown Sword scepter Cōquest braue I left I lost scarce found an earthly Graue Anno 1066 October 14 Saturday William Conqueror the sonne of Robert the 6. Duke of Normandy Ianded with a 1000. shippes furnished with men horse all warlike prouision at Hastings in Sussex and after a bloody battell with King Harold with the slaughter of nere 70000. men on both parts Hareld beeing slaine Duke William came in Triumph to London and was crowned at Westminster on Christmas day following by Aldred Archbisbop of Yorke he vsed his victorie and conquest here tyrannically dispossesing most part of the English of their lands giuing them to the Normans for which appressions he was continually molested sometimes with the Danes then with the Welsh with the Scots out of Ireland and at home amongst his owne people besides many miseries did at once afflict this Land as I. an vniuersall feauer amongst people 2 Barrennesse of the ground 3 Dearth and famine 4 Moraine of Cattell and the Church of St Pauls in London burnt and all that was in it The Country extremely ruin'd and spoyled for 60 miles space betwixt York and Durham The king pulled downe 36 Churches Townes and Villages laying the Country waste and open for 30 miles space from the City of Salisbury Southward which is now called Newforrest and was by him made a wildernes or place for beasts for his game of hunting In which place by Gods iust Iudgement his second sonne Richard
vshers of the Mortimers intollarable aspiring conetousnesse and destruction and which was most insupportable there were for all most 20 yeers space the plagues and desolation of the King and kingdomes After great coutentions were betwixt the 2 Realmes of England and Scotland a peace was concluded and Dauid-le Bruce the young Prince of Scotland was married to Iane King Edward the 3 sister K. Edward maried with the Lady Philip daughter to the Earle of Henault at Yorke with whom she liu'd 42 yeers She sounded Queens Colledge in Oxford She was mother to that mirrour of manhood and st●●●● of Chiu●● it Edward surnamed the black Prince There was a dreadfull batell sought at Hallidon hill in which were slaine 8 Earles 80 Knights and Baroness and 35000 Common soldiers on the Scots side the losses on the English side through the parciality of Writers were not set downe About the 12 yeers of this Kings reigne a quarter of Wheate was sold for 28 an Oxe 6 d a Geose 2d a fat Sheepe 6 d fixe Pidgeons and a fat Pigge for 2 d. The King claimed the Crowne of France and with 200 ships sought with 300 French ships and flew 33000 of the French This King first instituted the Honorable Order of the Garter at Windsor there being alwaies 26 in number The King sought the battell of Cressie in France wherein was slain the King of Bohemia with 10 Princes 80 Knights Baroness and 1200 Knights with 330000 Common Soldiers The King made 4 inroades into Scotland with great armies and was still victorious Anno 1338 the arms of France were quartered wth the armes of England the King prepared a great armie against France and on the Sea neere Sluce in Flanders he vanquished 400 French ships with the losse of 30000 of their men Then was France taken or halfe a yeere the wars againe renewing King Edward besieged Callice and ●ocke it An. 1347 Dauid King of Scotland was taken prisoner by one Iohn Copland an Esquire of the North. At the battell of Potiers Edward the black Prince of Wales had a glorious victory for there hee ●ocke King Iohn of France with his Sonne Phillip the Dolphin prisoners There were slaine of the French 52 Neblemen 1700 Knights and Esquires and 600 Common men 100 Ensignes and many men of note taken prisoners Dauid King of Scots was set at liberty hauing bin a prisoner 11 yeers paying 100000 marks st●●●ing Iohn K. of France after 4 yeeres imprisonment set free paying 1000000 ● for his ransome Finally neuer was English King more triumphant and fortunate in war in the fruition of a vertuous Queen 7 sons and daughters a glorious and lang reign of 50 yeeres buried at Sheene Anno Domini 1378. RICHARD THE IJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND c. A Sunshine Morne precedes a showry day A Calme at Sea ofttimes foreruns a storme All is not gold that seemes so glistring gay Foule Vice is fairest features Canker-worme So I that was of blood descent and forme The perfect image of a Royall Stock Vnseason'd young aduice did me deforme Split all my hopes against despaires blacke rock My Regall name and power was made a mock My Subiects madly in rebellion rose Mischiefe on mischiefe all in troopes did flock Oppos'd depos'd expos'd inclos'd in woes With wauering fortunes troublously I raing'd Slaine by soule mur ther peace and rest I gain'd Anno Dom. 1377 June 21 Sunday Richard the second borne as Burdeux the ●●●●● nate Grandebilde and son of the two 〈…〉 and Paragons of Armes and all Noble vertues Edward the third and his euer-famous sonne Edward the ●●●●● Prince was crowned at Westminster by the 〈…〉 mond Sudbury Archbishop of Canterbury the K●●● being but 11 yeeres old The glory of the English N●●● was in a continual Eclips the most part of this K●●g●●● his youth with all the frailties incident vn●●●● with ●●●● gouernours both of his Kingdome and person 〈…〉 main Ruines of the King almost the Realm The 〈…〉 of his fortunes after his Coronation was that 50 French ships landed at Rye in Suffex who burnt and spoyled the Towne and diuers other parts of the kingdome and ●●● Alexander Ramsey a valiant Scottish Gentlemen with but 40 men withhim tooke the Castle of Barwicke which the Earle of Northūberland man from him ●●●● with a great number The French did so far preuaile ●●●●● they came to Granesend and burnt and rifled it T●●● Comment arose in rebellion in diuers places as Kent ●●●● sex Surrie Suffolk Norfolk Cambridge the K●●●● men being 50000 came to London where the ●●●● cammitted many outrages vnder the cemman●● of ●●●●● solent rebels Wat Tyler and Iack Sraw who ●●●●● mated to that mischief by one Iohn Ball an●●●●●● priest but Tyler was killed by the famous Sir William Walworth Lord Maior of London the rebele dispe●●●● Iack Staw and Ball the Priest extented the Com●●●● pardoned and all at peace for a short time These Bascalls had beheaded Sinon Tibald Archbishop of Canterbury●● and Sir Robert Hales Lord Treasurer of England ●●● burnt and spoylea the Sahoy the like they had ●●● Lanibeth destroying all the Rowles and Record of ●●●●● Chancerie Iohn of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster the King vnckle was accused for Treason by a Carmilite Fryer ●●●● the Fryer was cruelly murdered and the Duke suspici●●●● cleared Barwick was wonne againe by the Scots ●●●● againe recouered by the Earle of Northumberland The French prepare a great Nauy and Army purpa ●●●● inuade England King Richard raiseth a ●●●●● intending to conquer Scotland all which desig●●●●● neither good or profitable euents 1386 mischiefe and ●● serie hauing sate long abroad began to batch the ●●●●● insulting on the one side and the people rebellious ●●● other did Bandy the regall power in to hazard The Scott enter England vnder the command of the valiant Sir William Dowglasse and are met and ●●●● tred by the Right Noble Lord Henry Hotspurre Dowglasle was staine and Hotspur taking Ireland rebel'd the King went thither in person and lest England the whilest he bring forced to surrender himselfe but Crow●●● and kingdome to his kinsman Henry Bullingbrooke Son to Iohn of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster 1400. HENRY THE IV KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND c. FRom right wrong-doing Richard I did wrest His Crowne mis-guided but on me mis-plac'd Vnciuill Ciuill warres my Realme molest And English men did England spoyle and wast The Sire the Son the Son the Father chas'd Vndutifull vnkind vnnaturall Both Yorke and Lancaster were rais'd and rac'd As Conquest did to either Faction fall But still I grip'd the Scepter and the Ball And what by wrong I won by might I wore For Prince of Wales I did my Son install But as my Martiall Fame grew more and more By fatall Fate my vitall threed was cut And all my Greatnesse in a graue was put Anno Dom. 1399 September 19 Munday Crownes misplaced on vnrightfull heads are commonly lined with
belonging to the Graff or Graue of Shomburgh a Prince of great command and eminence absolute in his authoritie and power not countermanded by the Emperour or any other further then coutesie requires and in a word he is one of the best accomplisht Gentlemen in Europe for his person port and Princely magnificence He hath there to his inestimable charge built the Towne with many goodly Houses Streets Lanes a strong wall and a deepe ditch all well furnished with munition and Artillerie with a band of Souldiers which he keepeth in continuall pay allowing euery man a Doller a Weeke and double apparell euery yeare Besides he hath built a stately Church being aboue 120. steps to the Roofe with a fa●e paire of Organs a curious ca●ued P●lpit and all other Ornaments belonging to the same His owne Pallace may well be called an earthly Paradice which if I should run into praise of the description of I should bring my wits into an intricate Labyritch that I should hardly finde the way ou● yet according to the imbecility of my memory I will only touch a little at the shadow of it and let the substance stand where it doth At the front or outward gate is a most stately Arch vpon the top whereof is erected the image of E●uy as great as a de ny Coloss ●● betweene two Dragons all guilt with gold before the gate is an iron grate to open and that as it were of flowers or worke of E 〈…〉 at which gate stands alwayes a C●●●rt of Guard and a Sentinel and at the Lower part of the Arch is the Princes title or in Capitall Letters as followeth ERNESTVS DEIGRATIA COMES HOLST Scomburgh Sternburgh c. After I was entred within the outward gate I was shewed his stables where I saw very faire and goodly horses both for warre and other v●es amongst the rest there was one naturally spotted like a Leopard or Panther and is called by the name of Leopard a stately couragious beast and so formed as If Nature had layd all her cunning aside onely to compose that Horse and indeed I mvst acknowledge he was made for the Seruice of some great Prince and not for any inferiour Person Passing further I came to another Court of Guard and ouer a Draw bridge into the inner Court where on the right hand I was conducted into the Chappell in which Chappell if it were possible that the hand of mortall men with artificiall workemanship could visibly set forth the magnificent glory of the immortal Creator then absolutely there it is but being impossible so to doe as neere as I can I will describe it the pauement is all of blacke and gray marble curiously wrought with Chequer-worke the S●ats and Pues are carued wainscot of wonderful cunning and workemanship ● the roofe is adorned with the statues of Angel and Cherubins many in num●●● all so richly guilded as it Gold were as pentifull as pewter there could not bee more liberality bestowed besides there are a faire set of Organs with a brau sweet Q●ire of Q●iristers so that when they f●g the Lures Viols Bandoraes O gans Recorders S●gbuts and other musicall instruments all strike vp together with such a glorious delicious harmony as if the Angelicall musicke of the Sphea ●● were descended into that earthly Tabernacle The Prince himselfe is a Protest●●●● very zealous in his Prayer and diligent in his attention to the Preacher who although I vndestood not yet I perceiued he was a good D●●ine who grauely and sincerely with reuerence and eloquent ●locution deliuered the bread of life to the vnderstanding Auditors In this Towne I ●●● with my brother from Saturday the la●●o August till the Thursday following which was the fifth of September When I was conducted an English ●●●● on my way by certaine of my Countrey men my Lords Musicians where wee dranke and parted onely my Brother and my Guide brought me that night to a strong walled Towne called M●nden which standeth on the Riuer o● Weazar and belongeth to the Byshop of that See O● the morrow I walked to see the Towne where I bought thirty fi●e C●eeses for eight pence which I brought into England for raritres pence and a yarda●la halte of padding for fiue So about noone we tooke a Boat to passe downe the Riuer which boat is much longer then any Westerne Barge but nothing neere so broad it was halfe laden with Lime and Cnalke and by reason the W●●blew hard we were almost choaked with ●● flying and scattering of that d●stie commodity Besides the Water was so shallow that we ran a ground three or foure times and sometimes an houre sometimes lesse before we could get a float againe which made mee and my Guide goe a shore at a Village called Peterhaghen where we hired a Waggon to Leize where we stayed all night being come into our old way againe where were a crew of strowling Rogues and Whores that tooke vpon them the name of AEgyptians Iuglets and Fortune-tellers and indeed one of them held the Goodwise with a tale the whilst another was picking her chest and stole out ten dollers which is forty shillings and she that talked with her looked in her hand and told her that if shee did not take great heed she knew by her Art that some mischance was neere her which prooued true for her money was gone the whilst her fortune was telling But I appointed a Waggon ouer night to bee ready by three of the Clocke in the morning when I arose and applyed my trauaile so hard by changing fresh Wagons so that that day I came as farre as Rodenburgh which was nine Dutch miles where I stayd that night The next day being Sunday the eighth of Semptember we took Waggon towards Buckstahoo we had a merry Boore with an hundred tatters about him and now I thinke it fit a little to describe these Boores their natures habits and vnmannerly manners In our English tongue the name Bore or Boore doth truely explaine their Swinish condition for most of them are as full of humanity as a Bacon-hog or a Bore and their wiues as cleanly and courteous as Sowes For the most part of the men they are clad in thin buckerom vnlined bare legged and foored neyther band nor scarce shirt no woollen in the world about them and thus will they run through all weathers for money by the Waggons side and though no better apparelled yet all of them haue Houses Land or manuall meanes to liue by The substantiall Boores I did meet aboue 120. of them that Sunday with euery one a Hatchet in his hand I mused at it and thought they had beene going to fell Wood that day but my Guide told me they were all going to Church and that instead of Cloakes they carried Hatchets and that it was the fashion of the Country whereupon it came to my mind Cloake quasi Cleaue-oake ergo the Boores weare Hatchets in steed of Cloakes There are other fashion
not be blinde may plainely spy That their insulting proud commanding Priest Is ●bsolute and onely Antichrist H'exalts himselfe ' boue all that 's called God Vpon the Emperours necke he proudly trod Hee is th'abomination void of grace That mounts himselfe into the holy place He makes the Princes of the Earth drinke vp And quaffe the poyson of his cursed Cup. Who being drunken with the dr●gs of sinne They haue his sworne and forsworne vassals beene Bewitched with his foule Inchanting charmes Gainst one another they haue rose in armes By forreine and domesticke bloudie broyles Whilst he hath fild his his coffers with their spoyles His double dealing too plaine appeares In setting Christian Princes by the eares Whilst he into his anatitious hands Hath feiz'd their persons moueables and lands And as the Christian Kings themselues made weake The Turke into their Kingdomes gan to breake And thus the Turke and Pope joynd with the deuill Haue beene the authors of all Christian euill FINIS THE BOOKE OF MARTYRS The Second Part. DEDICATED TO THE RIGHT HONOVRABLE PHILLIP EARLE OF MONTGOMERIE c. MY Lord the liues and deaths of Saints and Kings This little Booke vnto your Greatnesse sings Protection and acceptance if you giue It shall as shall Your selfe for ever liue IOHN TAYLOR VVHen the 7 Henry in his graue was laid And the eight Henry Englands Scepter sway'd Romes bloudy persecution raged more In England than in ten Kings raignes before And therefore Reader in this little Booke For euery Martyrs name thou must not looke But men of chiefest note respect and same That dyed in England onely these I name And first the Papists tyranny beganne In murthering Richard Hun a zealous man For being kept in prison by their power They closly hang'd him in the Lollards Tower And then they all in generall decreed Reporting Hun himselfe had done the deed Ann sixteene dayes iust after this was don They burn'd the foresaid corps of Richard Hun. Then to the number of full thirty fiue The surious flames did all of life depriue In seuerall places of this wofull land Because they did the Pope of Rome withstand At which time Thomas Bilney did begin To preach and teach against Antichristian sinne Where in Saint Georges Church in Ipswich Towne The Papists from the Pulpit pluckt him downe And as in dolefull prison he did lie He put his finger in the flames to try He prou'd aud God did giue him strenght to beare His death to liue with his Redeemer deare The next of note was one Iohn Frith a man Of learning great a Martyrs same he wan Then learned Luther and graue Zwinglius With Caluin Beza Occolampadius All glorious gracious reuerend lamps of light Were instruments to cleare blear'd Englands sight In Flanders William Tindall for Gods Word Was Sacrific'd to glorifie the Lord. Iohn Lambert valiantly his death did take And burn'd in Smithfield for his Sauiour sake About this time that Honourable man Lord Cromwels life and timelesse death began Hee like an Earthquake made the Abbies fall The Fryeries the Nunneries and all This famous Noble worthy Essex Earle This Iemme this Iewell this most orient pearle Was for his truth from all he had discarded And with his heads losse all his faith rewarded The next of worthy note by fire that dide Was good Anne Askew who did strong abide Rackes tortures and the cruell raging flame To magnifie her high Creators name Then gan the Kings eyes to be opended quite Inlightened by the euerlasting light He banisht Superstitious idle sables And packt the Papists hence with all their bables Then Bonner Gardner Brethren both in euill Factors and Actors bloudhounds for the Deuill Their burning fame to infamy soone saded They Godlesse gracelesse were disgracst degraded The King thus hauing this good worke begun He dyed and left the Kingdome to his Sonne Then raign'd young Edward that sweet Princely childe By whom all Popery was cleane exilde But he too good to liue mongst wicked men Th' Almighty tooke him hence to Heauen agen No sooner Edward was laid in his Tombe But England was the slaughter-house of Rome Gardner and Bonner were from prison turn'd And whom they pleas'd were eyther sau'd or burn'd Queene Mary imitating Iezabell Aduanc'd againe the Ministers of Hell Then tyranny began to tyrannize Tortures and torments then they did deuise Then Master Rogers with a saith most feruent Was burn'd and dy'd in Smith field Gods true Seruant Next vnto him did Laurence Sanders dye By fire for Iesus sake at Couentry He did embrace and kindly kisse the stake To gaine Heau'ns glory did the world for sake Good Byshop Hooper was at Gloster burn'd Cause he against the Romish Doctrine spurn'd And Doctor Taylor a true zealous man At Hadly burn'd eternall glory wan Then Byshop Ferrar next his life did spend In fire to gaine the life shall neuer end Next William Fowler first did loose his hand Then burn'd because the Pope he did withstand In Essex Thomas Hawkes with faith victorious Did dye by fire to gaine a life most glorious Master Ioha Bradford for his Sauiours sake In Smithsield burn'd a godly end did make Two reuerend Byshops Father Latimer And Ridley each of them a heauenly starre Liu'd in Gods foare and in his fauour dy'd At Oxford burn'd and now are glorisi'd Ioh● Philp●t gladly did the fire embrace And died and liues in his Redeemers grace Then that graue Father and religious man Arch-Bishop of Cranmars troubles hot began His Pompe his state his glory and his pride Was to know Iesus and him crucifide He liu'd a godly Preacher of Gods Word And dy'd a glorious Martyr of the Lord. Iohn Carcles in close Prison carefully Did change his cares for ioyes eternally But this small volum cannot well containe One quarter of the Saints in England flaine In Henries Raigne and Maries cruell Queene Eight thousand people there hath slaughtered beene Some by the Sword some Hang'd some burnt in fire Some staru'd to death in Prison all expire Twelue thousand and seuen hundred more beside Much perse●uting trouble did abide Some wrackt som whipt som tortur'd som in stocks Some doing penance with a world of mockes Some with an yron in the faces burn'd Some out of all their goods to beggry rurn'd Some barefoot bearing faggots on their shoulders We●e made a wondring stocke to the beholders All this and more much more they did endure Because they would not yeeld to liue impure But now to speake the law lesse ●ause wherefore And why these people troubled were so sore Because they would not make their plaints mones To senseles I mages dead stockes and slones Because they said the Sacramentall bread Is not the Lord which shall iudge quick and dead Because they not beleeu'd a Purgatory And held the Popes decrees an idle story Because they would not creepe vnto the crosse And change Gods sacred Word for humane drosse Because they held the Masse an Idoll soule At once which
and ●●● to King Edward the sixt Shee was crowned at Westminster the first of October 1553 by the hands of Stephen Gardner Bishop of Winchester King Edward being dead his death was concealed two daies by reason of the feare of Queene Maries alteration of the religion which King Edward had established for which cause the Lady Iane was by many of the Lords and the Londoners proclaimed Queene This Lady Iane was eldest daughter to Henry Duke of Suffolke shee was then married to the Lord Guiford Dudlty fourth sonne to Iohn Duke of Northumberland her mother was the Lady Francis the daughter of Mary the French Queene and the younger sister of King Henry the 8. Queene Mary bearing that Iane was proclaim'd Queen begain to rowse raised an Army and was first proclaimed in the City of Norwich her powers still increasing she made towards London where all supplies forsocke the Lady Iane so that she with her husband and father and the Lord Thomas Gray with others were beheaded The Queene ceases all the protestant Bishops and Clergie to bee degraded suspended or imprisoned She raised againe the Mase and with it masse of misery to this kingdome King Philip of Spaine was contracted to Queene Mary but Sir Thomas Wiat with an Armie opposed it and after much bickering was taken and executed on the Towre●●● The Lady Elizabeth the Queenes sister was wrong●●ly imprisoned and in danger to be put to death Philip King of Spaine was married to Queene Mary with●● Royall solemnity at Winchester the 25 of Iuly Anno 1454. This wofull Land was in those daies a very Achetdima or field of blood the Popes M●reban●s ●●● Church and Commonwealth with holy Water Pax Censors Oyle Spittle Creame Altars Pictures Images ● Crosses Crucifixes Beades Lights Tapers Cand●●● the Breaden god these Romish warres did cost the li●es neere 6000 people that refused them some hanged ●●● burne and diuers others suffering other deaths and ●●ties K. Philip Queen Mary send defiance into France Philip went thither in person besieged the strong ●●● of S t. Quintins and man it but shortly after the English men lost Callice which had beene the King of English Towne 21 yeeres Wherefore Queene Mary tooke ●●● griefe that she● neuer enioyed her life-long after ●●● Callice was lost the 17 of Ianuary and the Queene ●●● at Saint Iames house the 7 of Nouember following ●●● 1558 when she had reigned 5 yeeres 4 moneth●●●● daies she lieth buried as Westminster ELIZABETH QVEENE OF ENGLAND FRANCE and IRELAND Defender of the Faith c. THe griefes the feares the terrors and the toiles The sleights tricks snares that for my life were laid ●pes prisons poysons pistois bloody broyles ●● these incompast me poore harmelesse Mayd ●● I still trusting in my Makers ayde Was still defended by his power diuine ●y glory and my greatnesse was displai'd ●● farre as Sunne and Moone did euer shine Gods mingled Seruice I did re-refine From Romish rubbish and from humane drosse ● yearely made the pride of Spaine decline ●●● and all Belgia I sau'd from losse I was Arts patterne t' Armes I was a Patron I liu'd and dyed a Queene a Maid a Matron Anno Dom. 1558 Nouember 17 Thursday Lady Elizabeth borne at Greenwich second daughter to King Henry the eight sister and heire to the late Queene Mary after shee had by Gods gracious prouience past through many afflictions as scandals calumnations sundry imprisonns ●●● and hazard of her life shee was at the age of 25 yeeres and od dayes crowned Queen of England France and Ireland at Westminster by the hand of Owen Oglethorpe Bishop of Carlielc the 13 of Ianuary The first good worke of hers after her coronation was to reforme and restore and Seruice of God to the Primitiue sincerity and prayer and preaching to be vsed in the English tongue she caused all the bables of Babek and all the Romish rubbish to bee cast out of the Church shee dismissed those Bishops and others of the Clergie as would not be reformed She caused all base momes and coyneste to be supprest and to be no vallue and in their stead she ordained that no coyne but Gold and Siluer shou● passe for current in her Dominions The French King Henry at a ●l●ng was vnfortunately slaine by a Lord named Mountgomery ●●inter of the l●●●nce running into his eye An. 1559. Sorne after the French molest Scotland but by Queene Elizabeths ●yde they were expulsed The Noble Earle of Arraw in Scotland and Ericus King of Sweaden were suuer●● to marry ●●● the Queene which her Maiesty with all princely modesty refused She was after sued to by Henry Duke of Aniou brother to the French King Charles the 9. Anno 1514. The bloody massaker was in France where in the City of Paris only 10000 Protestarts were m●n thered by the Pepists The Irish fell to rebellian vnder the Earle of Tirone which rebellion put England to much cost and trouble Henry Lord Darneley King of Scots most inhumanely murdred Anno 1568 and his Queen Mary assaulted by the oppression of her rebellicus Subiects came into England and was royally welcomed One Thomas Appletree discharging his ●●ce the Queene was in her Barge vpon the Thames the bullet ranne thorow both the Armes of one of her Watermen but the Queene vnderstanding that the shot was by casualtie pardoned the offender Her mercie iustice temperance fortitude magnanimity prudence learning and incomparable wisedome would each of them fill a volume So that neither ●●● vnablenesse of me the writer nor the briefnesse which I am ●●● to in thus abstract can no waies touch the ●em of her vertues wherefore I refer the reader to the great volumes of Hollinsheds story the Reuerend learned Cambden Master speed and others who haue writen more largely of her though all of them are much short of her vnimmitable merits shee ayed the 24 of March 1602 aged 69 y●eeres 6 moneths and 7 dayes she reigned 44 yeeres ●4 months and 7 daies On the 28 of Aprill after shee was buried at Westminster IAMES Of that Name THE FIRST And I. Monarch of the whole Iland of GREAT BRITAINE c. WEre all the flatt'ry of the world in me Great King of hearts Arts great Britaines King Yet all that flattery could not flatter thee Or adde to thy renowne the smallest thing My Muse with truth and freedome dares to sing Thou wert a Monarch lou'd of God and Men. Two famous Kingdomes thou to one didst bring And gau'st lost Britaines name her name agen Thou cansedst Doctors with their learned pen The sacred Bible newly to translate Thy wisdome found the damned powder'd Den That hell had hatcht to ouerthrow thy state And all the world thv Motto must allow The peace makers are blast and so art thou Anno Dom. 1602 March 24 Thursday Iames the first of that name King of England Scotland France Ireland the first King that was ●●● in England since the Norman conquest
at the age 36 yeeres 9 monethe and 5 daies hee was crowned Westminster with his wife Queene Anne by the ●●● of Iohn Whitguist Archbishop of Canterbury The●● was a conspiracy to surprise the King and insorce him to grant a tolleration of Religion but the plot was discoue●● and the offenders were some executed some otherwise by the King elemency banished and imprisoned with good competency of meanes allowed them This king was a King of Peace and with all victorious for he did ●●● then his predecesser King Henry the 7 th who ioyned ●● Roses of Lancaster and Yorke But King Iames ●●● happily ioyned kingdomes vniting England and Scotland into one glorious Monarchy by the name and ●●● Great Britaine Anno 1605 Nouember 5 the ●●● de-plot of perdition was but by the mercy of the Almighty ●● a mis-taken deliuerie of a Letter and the deepe wisedome of the King the horrid Treason was ●●● preuented and the Traitours confounded in their ●●●●●●ked deuices King Iames was so crowned and ●●● that Germany Polland Sweaueland Russia France Spaine Holland Zealand the Arch-Duke of Austria the estate and S●●gmory of Venice The great Duke of Florence all these Princes and Potentates did ●●● Ambassadors into England to hold Amity and ●●● with King Iames. Amongst Kings he was the ●●● mirrour of Learning the Patterne and Patron of piety ●● pittie such a sweet and well composed mixture of Iustice and mercy was inuated in his Royall brest that ●●●●●● truth did meet kisse and combine together all the ●●● his most auspicious reigne like a second Sallomon gouernment was blest with peace and plenty so that be ●●● iustly be stiled vnder God The Peace-maker of ●●● Christendome and the louing father and preseruer of ●●● own people Realmes and Dominions his life was generally beloued and his death as much lamented which was ●●● of March being Sunday there being but 2 daies differ●●● or ods betwixt the accompt of the beginning and ending of his reigne for he began the 24 of March 1602 ●●● the 27 of March 1625. Two Tuesdaies were ●●nate to him for on a Tuesday the 5 of August 1602 ●● escaped a dangerous conspiracy of the Earle Cowries and on Tuesday the 5 of Nouember 1605 he wis●h of that could be called his was preferred from that Great master piece of Satan the Powder Treason and as ●● Sat●rday ●●● the 8 of May 1603 he was receiued within ioy ●●● London so on Saterday the 8 of May 1625 ●●● with grise buried at Westminster CHARLES Of that Name THE FIRST And II. Monarch of the whole Iland of GREAT BRITAINE KING OF ENGLAND SCOTLAND FRANCE and IRELAND Gods immediate VICEGERENT Supreame HEAD c. ●●●●strious Off-spring of most glorious Stems Our happy hope our Royall CHARLES the great ●●● Heyre to foure Rich Diadems With gifts of Grace and Learning high ●epleat ●●● thee th' Almighties ayd I doe intreate ●●● guide and prosper thy proceedings still ●●●●● long thou maist suruiue a Prince compleat ●●● guard the good and to subuert the ill ●●● when thy ●●● determin'd boundlesse will Thy mortall part shall made immortall be ●●●● let thy liuing Fame the world full fill ●●● bles●ed famous memory of thee And all true Britaines pray to God aboue To match thy life and fortune with their loue STEWART● CHARLES MARIE Anagramma Christ Arme vs E●● AT AL Though fe●●ds and men to ●●●● should endeuer Against their force AT AL CHRIST ARME VS EVER Anno. Dom. 1625-March 27. Sunday The ●● sall ●●●●●●●●●●●●● kingdomes hauing ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● full Iames ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● eternall Our Royall Charles the ●●● heire of his blessed Fathers Crowne and vertues ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● Westminster by the hands of the Right Reue●●nd fahter in God ●●●●●●●●●●● Iohn Williams ●●● new present Lord Bishop of Lincolne and Deane of Westminister He is Charles the first of that name and second Monarch of great Britaine ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● Vicegerent and God is his ●●●● Seueraigne he is Defender of the True ●●●● Apotlolicasll and Christian I ●●●● and that faith is his shield against all his bedily and ghostly enemies in the first yeare of his reigne he married with the illustrious and vertuous Princesse Henneretta Maria daughter to that admired Mirrer and Mars of martiallilis of Henry the 4 th the French King last of that name vopn the 22 day of Iune 1625 shee safely arrived ●●●●●● in Kent where the King stay'd till ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● and to both their ioyes and the ●●●● of this kingdome he enioyed and enioyes her This Noble P●●●ce was borne the 19 th of Nouember A no 1602 he was second and youngest Sonne to king Iames the ●●● of Scotland and first of that name of England Our last ●●● Soueraigne In the yeere 1623 ●●● into Spaine priuately and by Gods gracious assistance came backe safely from thence the 26 or October in the some yeere whose safe returne all true hearted Britaines did and doe esteem ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● and happy blessing his elemency ●●●● is manifest his Royall end princely en●●● are ample ●●● his same and Magnificenceis ●●●● sall The graces and cardinall vertues haue ●●●●●●●●●●●● taken ●●● their habitatiens in his Heroick and Mag●●●●●● brest ●●● may hee with his gracious Queene reigne our these his Dominions to the glo●●●●● of God and the good of this famous Iland with the rest of his Territories and to the ioy and comfort of his ●●● Amen ALIVING SADNES INDVTY CONSECRATED TO THE IMMORtall memory of our late Deceased all-beloued Soueraigne LORD the Peerelesse Paragon of Princes IAMES King of great Britaine France and Ireland who departed this Life at his Manour of Theobalds on Sunday the 27. of March 1625. TO THE MOST HIGH AND PVISSENT Prince CHARLES by the Grace of GOD the first of that name and second Monarch of the whole Iland of Great BRITAINE HIS VNDOVBTED ROYALTIES BEING VNITED VNDER one and the same his most glorious Crowne the Kingdomes of England Scotland France and Ireland Gods Immediate Vice-Gerent Supreme head of all Persons and Defender of the true ancient Christian Faith in these his Empires and Dominions MOst Mighty Monarch of this mourning Land Vpon the knees of my submissiue mind I begge acceptance at your Royall hand That my lamenting Muse may fauour finde My Gracious Master was so good so kinde So iust so much beloued neere and sarre Which generally did Loue and Duiy binde From all and from me in particular But as your Maiesty vndoubted are The Heire vnto his Vertues and his Crowne I pray that whether Heauen send Peace or Warre You likewise may inherit his Renowne And as Death strucke his Earthly Glory downe Left you in Maiesty and mourning Chiefe Yet through the World apparantly 't is knowne Your Sorrow is an vniuersall Griefe Let this recomfort then your Princely heart That in this Duty all men beares a part Your Maiesties most humble and obedient Subiect and Seruant IOHN TAYLOR A Funerall Elegie vpon King IAMES YOu gushing Torrents
pickt the purse damn'd the Soule Because they knew the Pope and all his crue H●● hounds whō heauern in rage on earth did spue And in a word they thus were ouer-trod Because they truly seru'd the liuing God This was the maine and onely cause of all Because they would not offer vnto B●el The Popes outragious and couragious actor Was Bishop Bonner hells most trusty factor Romes hangman and the firebrand of this Realme That with a sloud of bloud did ouerwhelme The true beleeuers of Gods holy truth He burchered not regarding age or youth With him was ioyn'd a man almost as ill Who tooke delight Gods seruants bleud to spill Cal'd Stephen Gardner Englands Chanceller And Bishop of the Sea of Winchester These two did striue each other to excell Who should doe greatest seruice vnto Hell Vntill at last God heard his seruants cry And each of them did die immediately Thus when I●honah heard the iust complaints Of his beloued poore afflicted Saints Then this too cruell Pope defending Queene The bloudiest Princesse that this land hath seene She did decease and persecution ceast And tired wofull● Englands purchast rest Queene Mary being dead her welcome death Reuin'd our ioyes in blest ELIZABETH Innumerable were her woes and cares Abundance were the subtill wiles and snares Which Sathan and his Ministers oft laid To reaue the life of that most harmelesse Maid She was accus'd abus'd reuil'd miscal'd She was from prison vnto prison hal'd Long in the Tower she shas close prisner shut Her louing seruants all way were put From thence to Windsor thence to Woodstocke sent Closely mewd vp from all the worlds content But God whose mercies euer did defend her Did in her greatest Sorrow comfort send her He did behold her from his Throne on hie And kept her as the apple of his eye Let Hell and Hell-hounds still attempt to spill Yet the Almighty guards his Seruants still And he at lest did ease her Sorrowes mone And rais'd her to her lawfall awfull throne This Royall Deborah this Princely Dame Whose life made all the world admire her fame As Iudith in Bet h●lias same was spread For cutting off great Holophernès head So our Eliza stoutly did begin Vntopping and beheading Romish sin Shee purg'd the Land of Papistry●agen Shee liu'd belou'd of God admir'd of men Shee made the Antichristian Kingdome quake She made the mighty power of Spaine to shake As farre as Sunne and Moone dispears'd her Rayes So farre and farther went her matchlesse praise She was at home abroad in euery part Loadstar and Loadstone to each eye and heart Supported onely by Gods powerfull hand She foure and forty yeares did rule this Land And then she lest her Royall Princely Seat She chang'd earths greatnesse to be heauenly great Thus did this Westerne Worlds great wouder dye She fell from height to be aduanc'd more hie Terrestriall Kings and Kingdomes all must fade Then blest is she that is immortall made Her death fild woefull England full of feares The Papists long'd for change with itching eares For her decease was all their onely hope To raise againe the doctrine of the Pope But he whose power is all omnipotent Di● their vnhappy hopelesse hopes preuent Succession lawfully did leaue the Crowne Vnto a Prince whose vertue and Renowne And learning did out-stripall Kings as sarre As doth the Sunne obseure a little starre What man that is but man could bass● more Romes seauen●headed purple beastly Whore How wisely hath he Bellarmine con●uted And how diuinely hath'he ost dispated How zealously he did Cods faith desend How often on Gods word he did attend How clement pious and how gracious good Was he as fits the greatnesse of his bloud Were 't not for him how should the Mu●●s doe He was their patterne and their patron too He was th' Apollo from whose radient Beames The quinteffence of Poetry our-streames And from the splendor of his piercing rayes A world of worthy writers won the bayes Yet all the worthy vertues so transparent And so well knowne to be in him inharent Could not perswade the Papists leaue their strife With cursed treasons to attempt his life For when their disputations helpt them not They would dispute in a damn'd powder plot In which the Romists went beyond the deuill For Hell could not inuent a plot so euill But he that plac'd him on his royall Throne The God of Iacob Iudahs holy one That God for Iesus sake I doe beseech With humble heart and with vnfained speech That he or his may Britaines Scepter sway Till time the world and all things passe away But now he 's gone into Eternall bliss̄e Crowne● And with Eternall glory crowned is Long may King CHARLES weare Britaines royall And heauens best blessings raise his high Renowne FINIS GODS MANIFOLD MERCIES IN THESE MIRACVLOVS DELIverances of our Church of England from the yeare 1565. vntill this present 1630. particularly and briefly Described IOSHVA 4.21 22. 24. When your Children shall aske their Fathers in time to come What meaneth this Pillar Then yee shall let your Children know saying THESE ARE THE DELIVERIES WHICH GOD HATH VOVCHSAFED TO HIS CHVRCH IN ENGLAND SINCE THE BEGINNING OF QVEENE ELIZABETHS RAIGNE TO THIS DAY That all the People of the Earth might know the hand of the Lord that it is mightie that yee might feare the Lord your God for euer THere was a Bull in Rome was long a breeding Which Bull prou'd little better then a Calfe Was sent to England for some better feeding To fatten in his Holinesse behalfe The vertues that this Beast of Babell had In thundring manner was to banne and curse Raile at the Queene as it were raging mad Yet God be thanked she was ne're the worse The goodly Sire of it was Impious * Pius the fufh of that name Pope of Rome piu● Hee taught it learnedly to curse and banne And to our faces boldly to defie vs. It madly ouer England quickly ranne But what succe●●e it had reade more and see The fruits of it herevnder written be This Bull did excommunicate and curse the Queene ●●dep●●eth her from her Crowne it proclaimed her an Here●●●● it cursed all such as loued her it threatned damnation to all subiects as dur●t obey her and it promised the kingdome of heauen to those that would oppose and kill her This was the effect and nature of this Popish Beast which all wise godly and vnder standing men did deride and contemne 1. A Priest call'd Moort●n by the Pope assign'd Northumberland and Westmerland seduceth With whom the Duke of * Duke of Norfolke and Earle of Northumberland beheaded Earle of Westmorland fled Norfolke is combin'd The whilst the Pope nocost or charge refuseth But pawnes his challices his Beads and Crosses Giues them his gracelesse blessing for their ayde The fruit where of were heads and honors losses God still defending Englands Royall Maid Thus we by proofe must thankefully confesse That where the pope doth
curse there God doth blesse year 1569 2. Dou Iohn * He was Brother to the King of Spaine and failing of the hope be had to be Crowned King of Tums be practiseth to inuade England Wherof sailing he dyes for griefe of Austri● whom the pope incites Our Queene and kingdome both to Cap●uate And whilst he warre prepares with sub●ll slights A fained peace he doth cap●●ulate Nay more he doth perpetuall peace proclaime Thereby to make vs sleepe the more secure But Gods great Mercy made him misse his aime And what he thought most certaine proud vnsure This plot of our inuasion thus orethrowne Don Iohns ambition with his life did end Whereby th' Almighty to the world makes known That he his Church will euermore defend His vine she is his power doth guard her round And all her Enemies he will confound year 1578 3. Romes malice and Spaines practice still concurs To vexe and trouble blest Elizabeth With S●nk●l●y they combine to raise new stirs And Ireland bragging sinkely promiseth To giue vnto the popes braue Bastard Sonne Iames ' Boncatn●ag●● an ambitious boy And St●●ely from the pope a prize hath Wonne A holy Peacocks Iaile a proper toy But St●●ely was in Maurstania slaine In that great batt●ll at Alcazor fought Whereby we see his power doth still defend H●● Church which on his mercy doth depend year 1578 Pope Gregory and the king of Spaine Conspire to ●●●● Rebell●●● in Ireland by meanes of Thomas Stuke●●an English● can who was slainem the field with three Kings with ●●●●● 4. An English Priest call'd Nicholas Saunders next A consecrated Banner gets from Rome And like a trayterons wretch mistakes his text Rebelliously doth into Ireland come He with the Desmons ioynes in bloudy manner And when * Iohn Desmond was brother to the Earle of Desmond Iohn Desmond murther did commit Then by the vertue of his bable banner Applauded it and did the crime remit This good successe Romes f●●●● p●r 〈…〉 had The Earle was by a common ●●●●●●●● And * Saunders r●n mad in the wild Mountains Woods and bogs of Ireland and dyed by ●●● Saunders pind● 〈…〉 ●●●● His conscience with 〈…〉 Thus treason is accordingl● rewa●●● And still the Church of Godby ●●● is guarded year 1579 5. P●rsons and Campion a most wicked brace Of English T●a●ors Ro●●●●h ●e●uites Get from the Pope the fauour and the grace To play in England the ●●ear●●●●ites Fr●e leaue they from his Holinesse obtaine To draw true subiects from their loyalty To make our Kingdome va●●all vnto Spaine And to depo●● the Queene from Royalty At last despight the blessing of the pope Their plots were kno● ne and qvickely Parsons ●i●d But Campion dy'd at Tyburne in a Rope Hang'd all as ' t is supposed but the head God still the practice and the p'ots orethrowes O● his most deare beloued churches foes year 1581 These ●esuites walked in disguise h●ve long before they were taken sometimes like swagge●●g Ruffians sometimes like Ministers sometimes like Noblemen sometimes like souldiers and sometimes like Aparators 6. Here So●●erui●● an English Gentleman Seduc'd by Romesh Priests the Queene to kill Attempts it in the despurat ' ● sort he can And with a drawne Sword runs her bloud to spill But by the way with one or two he met Who did oppose him and his damn'd intent Whilst like a mad man he gan rage and f●et At those that did the mischiefe then preuent But ●ane he was and clos● in prison pent There to remaine till Iustice him should trye And then to haue de●erued punishment That others might example take thereby But Sommer●●● was strangled in the layle Thus God to guard his Church doth neuer faile year 1583 It was thought that Sommeruill was strangled by some that set him on works for fear● least his con●ession might haue preferred them to the Ga●●owes 7. Mendoza here Ambassador for Spaine Foule trea●on with Throckmorton practiseth To moue sedition raise a warlike trains Inuade the Realme depose Elizabeth Mendoza is discoutred and disgrac'd And out of England in disgrace was thrust Whilst in each hand he hath a Letter plac'd Which he had got from Traitors most vniust In one of them was written all the Names Of English Lords that did the Pope affect In th' other all the Hauens and the streames For shipping and our foes how to direct But God his Church our Queene and Realme desended Thr●gmorton hang'd and quarter'd all was ended year 1584 In these dangerous times the Queenes mercit was very great towards the Priests and Ies●●es for shee commanded that the seueritie of the Law might bee mittiga●ed towards them 8. The Remish Vipers neuer taking rest Most dangerous Letters trait ero●sly were writ That foraigne Princes England might mole●t The b●arer was a * His name was Creighton being taken at Sea he cast his Letters torne in pieces into the Sea for feare of being discouered but the Winde blow them into the Ship againe Scottish ●os●ite Who by Dutch Pyrates on the Sea was tane His Letters torn● hee ouer boord did fling But the Winde blowing from the raging Maine The Papers backe into the Ship did bring Which though they were in many peeces rent Were plac'd together by Sir William Wade Who found the Guise the Pope and Spaines intent Were strong combined England to inuade These proiects thus were blasted in their bud And their pretence of Harme God made our Good year 1585 9. Here William Parry hath got leaue from Rome To broach new mischiefes on our English shore And he to kill Elizabeth doth come Though shee his life had pardon'd long before His Absolution from the Pope doth show That ere the murders done it is forgiuen Nay more his Holinesse doth free bestow Vpon the ●●sitor endlesse loyes of Heauen False Parry with his Dagger purposely Went to the Queen● in dutious sort dissembling When with her lookes of awfull Maiestie She strucke the villaine full of feare and trembling Then was he tooke and hang'd as he desern'd And onely God our Church and State preseru'd year 1586 Parry was a Doctor of the Ciuil Law whom the Queene had pardoned sixe yeares before for killing of one Huge Hare yet afterward by the diuels in●ligation and the Popes abselntion and encouragement he fe●● into this treason Exceuted at Westminster 10. Here Ballard Sauage Ti●●burne Babington Gage Trauerse Tilney Windsor Charneck D●● Iones Barnewell Salisbury and Abington These fourteene into dangerous treasons run They would but kill the Queene subuert the State Make England beare the yoake of Antichrist And for thofe ends they worke both soone and late Whilst Ignorance to Erro●r is entis'd They in Saint Giles his fields their proiects layd There was the consultations of their braines And in those fields they had their wages paid Handsomly hang'd and quarter'd for their paines Thus God doth still our Church defend and blesse And those that are her foes haue ill successe year 1586 This yeare