Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n duke_n king_n slay_v 2,938 5 8.4265 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A68000 A declaration of the true causes of the great troubles, presupposed to be intended against the realme of England VVherein the indifferent reader shall manifestly perceaue, by whome, and by what means, the realme is broughte into these pretented perills. Seene and allowed. Verstegan, Richard, ca. 1550-1640. 1592 (1592) STC 10005; ESTC S101164 40,397 78

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

in person with great armies obtained such victories as will for euer recomend their glorie to all posterities They are also in league with a fewe Bere-bruers and Basketmakers of Holland and Zealand with a company of Apostataes and Huguenotes of Fraunce with their feed pēsioner the Chaūcelor of Scotlād who by abusing of the King hathe gottē credit to woork his ruyne And the English thus leagued with infidells heretikes and rebells cannot yet presume of any true frindship of them in their hartes For the French albeit they be Huguenotes yet are they still French vnto the English and as heretofore so euen of late they have shewed themselues vnto such as were sent from England to assist them The states of Holland and Zealand yf they could possibly thurst out the Englishe they would not let to do it And it is well knowne that some of them of chiefest auctoritie haue secretly concluded and resolued either presently vpon the Queenes deceasse or so soone as any oportunitie serueth to bring all their forces together to attempt it The freindship of Scotland although it haue cost many Englishe angels yet will it prove Scotish in the end And the great Turk and his consorts may be by the English excited to inuade some partes of Christendome neere vnto them adioyning as alredy vpon such perswasiō they haue attempted but good vnto England they can do none albeit the English would exchāge their Geneua Bible for the Turkish Alcorā because their situations are to farr distant But how so euer their new freindes may congratulate with them their old alies may rather reioyce in hauing their enmitie then their amitie For that by the vnhappy and mischieuous endes of somany of their late confederates it is obserued that to be in league with Englād is malū omē Et for proof thereof I will aleadge some examples First the Earle of Arren in Scotland after that he had by the espetiall suggestion of the English prosecuted the rebellions and dissentions in his countrie became distracted of the vse of reason and hathe these 30. yeares remayned madd The Earle of Murray bastard brother to the Scotish Queene was slaine with an harquebushe in the towne of Lythquo The Earle of Lenox was stabbed with daggers The Earle of Marr was poysoned The Earle of Murton behedded All which were regents and gouernours of the realme and sett vp by the English For I will omit recytall of diuers other Lordes and gentlemen that folowed their factions whose endes also were violēt Besydes the great nūbers that haue perished in diuers battailes In Fraunce the Prince of Coundie was slaine at the battaile of Iarnac The Admirall Shatilian massacred at Parris with mumbers of his consorts The Cardinall of Shatilian his brother was poysoned in England The Counte of Mountgomery behedded Monsieur the Duke of Aniow brother to the late King died of an extraordinary sicknesse supposed to be poysoned And what end the last French King came vnto is manifest enough As also that Lanowe being ioyned with the English forces in Britany was there slaine And to what end Nauarr shall come being as firmly leagued with the English as were the others is yet to be expected In the low Countries the Counte of Lumay before mentioned that surprised the towne of Briel and had bene the murtherer of some hundteths of Priests being bitten in the arme by an English dogg of his owne died mad raging in the towne of Liege The Prince of Orange that could neither be warned by the infortunate endes of three of his owne bretheren Henry Adolf Lodowick nor by one or two attēpts made vpon his owne person was lastly slaine with a pistol in the towne of Delf in Holland THe third calamitie whereunto England is brought is of the vulgar multytude vnsene because it is yet of them vnfelt And that is the great confusion of somany competitors to the crowne bothe within without the realme VVhich must nedes prognosticate such slaughter cruell murthers as neuer were in that nor in any other country for such quarrell VVhen the crowne of England was in contention only betweene the two howses of Yorck and Lancaster how lōg it lasted how many of the bloud Royal Nobilitie lost their lyues and what great nūbers of thowsandes were slaine the histories of those dayes can declare But farr greater extremities are we now to expect among somany do mesticall and some externe competitors Euery one of which thinking himself to be iustly the first cā aleage many causes for the exclusion of the others And therefore in all lykely hoode each one of those that liue within the realme Ile will not forbeare hereafter to attempt by what meanes he may to preferr himself and to depresse the others For the crowne remayning among so many in equall ballance and each almost in lyke possibilitie who of them is it that will not dare to aduenture the vttermost of his meanes for the gayning of no lesse a thing then is the kingdome of England And what aucthoritie of any dissolued councel shal prohibite any of the competitors to attempt the same vpō the dereasse of the Queene VVhat great apparēce is there then of the effusion of the blood of many thowsands to what desolation is the realme lyke to be brought how fayned will then this present seeming peace be foūde whē it shall conclude in such intricate mortall warres And how infinite wilbe the cursinges and maledictions of all sortes of people vpon him that hathe caused it whē it shall appere vnto thē that as he neuer sought to cōserue thē in peace during the Queenes lyf so he neuer mēt but to leave thē in warres after her death At what tyme he may reioyce as once did the tyrāt Nero to see the citie burne which himself had set on fyre And how soone this great quarrel shalbe begun is as vncertaine as the thing that each howre is to be expected Seeing it dependeth vpō the only lyf of the Queene wherof there is as litle assurance as of the lyf of any other mortall creature and her deceasse so-much the nearer in that she is now declyning in age TO come vnto the fourth last parte cōcerning the ouer-throwe of the Nobilitie and the great and generall oppression of the people it is first to be considered that albeit the vniust molestations of other comon-wealths and the oppressions and cruelties vsed within the realme were bothe by M. Cecill begū prosecuted yet hathe he so cuningly disposed very many of his affaires into the handes of other principall actors espetially since the death of his brother Bacon that very oftē tymes his owne plottes inuentions have seemed the practizes of others Of these his actors the late Earle of Leicester the secretary VValsingham were the chiefest The former of the twaine for that he had in his youth by ouermuch attending his pleasures neglected the obseruation of many secretes which M. Cecill practized
brother and the house of Montmorancie against him for the prosecuting whereof the brother of the said Montmorancie and the Prince of Condie came into England and there receyued the somme of 50. thowsand poūdes which was past ouer by exchange by way of Antwerp and Colen for the first leuy of men and bringing in of Casimire By meanes of which forces the king was constrained to giue vnto his brother Aniow Main Towrain Tours whereby his partage was made greater thē any brother to any king of Frannce before him Now when by this meanes the French king was thus-much feebled then was the said Duke of Aniow broughte into England to be made the make-fyre betweene the two most potent realmes of Christendome Spaine and Fraunce but vnder the colour and countenance of matrimony which being in the end conuerted into a mock-mariage Monsieur receyued his errand to go into the low countries of the king of Spaine there was he made Antiduke of Brabant the which laudable deuice yf any in Englād had cōtriued except M. Cecill or yf it had euer bene practized in any other princes tyme thē in this it could haue bene no lesse then highe treason For that to put an heire apparent of Fraunce in possessiō of Flaunders is a matter of no lesse moment thē to giue dooble strengthe vnto an auncient enemy and to leaue England for a future breakfast vnto a French king But it pleased God soone to quench the fire that mōsieur was sent to kindle For the new duke of Brabant being subdued by his subiectes was in the nonage of his raigne forced with much dishonor to returne into France VVhere the remembrance of the deceatful dealinges of England and the shame that lately he had sustained in the low countries did make his owne indiscretions apparent vnto himself and so aggrauated his sicknesse that the reuenge which he threatned vnto Englād he was faine to leaue vnto God and his duchie of Brabant vnto the right owner For soone after his arryuall in Fraunce with very much grief of mynde he died Monsieur being thus departed this world it was necessarie that some nevv occasion were soughte out for the continuance of M. Cecill his eternall resolution which the sinister practizes past and the iniquities of the tyme present suffred not to be ōg sought for For he foorwith discouered that the French king had entretained an il opiniō of the princes of the house of Guyse vnto the which house albeit that the King and his bretheren the late kinges before him had bene as much beholding as a king could be vnto his subiectes yet by the suggestion of a leud mignion all their manifold desertes were vngratefully forgotten And then for the better now rishing of these dislikes an extraordinarie league of amitie was concluded with the french King who soone after became so attentiue vnto good instructions that he cōmitted most horrible murthers vpon tvvo of the princes of the said house and what end himself shortly after came vnto is manifest enough But to leaue Scotland and Fraunce in those termes vvherunto they are novv led vve vvill come vnto Spaine as to the matter of greatest momēt the subiect of this discours The King vvhereof hauing left the Q. of England presently vppon Q. Maries deceasse in full possessiō of that kingdome and by sundry demonstratiōs giuen proof of his entire loue and amitie vnto her and also of his firme intention to continevv the old concord that had so long endured betweene the kinges of England and the house of Burgundie being also at peace with the French king hauing placed for the gouernmēt of the Netherlandes the Duchesse of Parma he departed into Spaine And albeit as it is wel knowne he hath euer bene a prince that by nature is disposed vnto peace yet cōsidering the greatnesse of the Turk and his incessant attemptes in the inuading of Christendome whereof some vniuersall danger mighte be feared to ensue he determined to employ such meanes as God had giuē him to withstand the intention of this comon enemy The which soone after he began to put in practize as hereafter shalbe declared But this cours of proceeding lyked not him that had designed his plots vnto other purposes and that rather sought to woork some speciall domage to the king of Spaine then to haue the potēcie of the Turck diminished And therefore for an introduction thereunto to make him odious vnto the people certaine players were permitted to scof and iest at him vpon their comō stages And the lyke was vsed in contempr of his religiō first to make it no better thē Turkishe by annexing vnto the very psalmes of Dauid as thoughe the prophet himself had bene the author thereof this ensuing meeter Preserue vs lord by thy deere woord From Turck and Pope defend vs lord That bothe would thrust out of his throne Our lord Iesus Christ thy deere sonne And after by making it farr more odious and woors then was the religion of Mahomet As diuers ministers did at diuers tymes insinuate vnto the people And one of them in a sermon at Paules crosse affirmed that it was a more better acte to assist Turks then Papistes For the which woordes the L. Buckhurst the same day reproued him at the shirif of Londons table but M. minister stoode vnto his tacling and had as it seemed learned his lesson of the superintēdent of VVinchester who published in a printed booke that it was better to sweare vnto the Turk and turkery then vnto the Pope and popery and that the Pope is a more perillous enemy to Christ then the Turk But in the meanewhyle it is a good Gospell that maketh him that tearheth vs to beleeve that Christ is the sonne of God and sauior of the world and him by whose meanes our forefathers were baptised in the name of the Father Sonne holy Ghost to be woors then he that denyeth Christ to be the sonne of God and constreyneth Christians to renounce their christendome These preparatiues being thus made the Moores that inhabited the kingdome of Granada were excited to rebellion Vnto whome althoughe the English would not openly send forces of men yet they sent them succors of powder shot artillery other munition of warr There were also certaine French pirates that vnder colour of authoritie from the Q of Nauar● that then was the prince of Condie the Shatillion and others were sent foorth to robbe and endomage the king of Spaine and his subiects all these had free passage and entrance to and from the portes and hauens of England And soone after one Kirkham and diuers other English of the westcountrey were permitted to go foorthe to robbe and spoile the Spaniardes wherof the Spanish Ambassador then resident in England instantly demaunding redresse and restitution was denied of either And the goodes thus taken by piracie were brought into diuers townes west ward and there openly sold But in the meane