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A35353 Cathedrall newes from Canterbury shewing, the Canterburian Cathedrall to bee in an abbey-like, corrupt, and rotten condition, which cals for a speedy reformation, or dissolution : vvhich dissolution is already foreshowne, and begun there, by many remarkeable passages upon that place, and the prelats there : amongst which passages of wonder is, the Archbishop of Canterburies passing-bell, rung miraculously in that cathedrall / recorded and published by Richard Culmer ... Culmer, Richard, d. 1662. 1644 (1644) Wing C7478; ESTC R209928 28,341 30

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to see some Manuscripts which I was sending to Oxford in that Study hung my picture taken by the life and comming in I found it fallen downe upon the face and lying on the floore the string being broken by which it was hanged against the wall I am almost everyday threatned with my ruine in Parliament God grant this be no Omen This the Archbishop hath written and if any doubt of it he may see the Book which is now in Mr. Prin's custody I read in Duplessis Mistery of iniquity that when the Prelacie of Rome began to be ●●aken by Luther's thundring and some Princes joyning with him against the Pope the Image of St. Peter whose Successor the Pope falsly pretends to be standing aloft with keyes in his hand the keyes were struck out of the Images hand in a Tempest And Sir Francis Bacon in his History of Henry the 7th tels us that Philip the young King of Spaine who bare the Spread-Eagle in his Armes being in London the Gilded Eagle a lane in forme of an Eagle standing on the then Spired Steeple of the Cathedrall called Pauls in London fell downe in a Tempest and in the fall brake downe the signe of the Eagle hanging at a doore in Pauls Church-yard which was then much noted as Ominous to that Prince who not many dayes after fell from his Life and Kingdome And not long after this Parallell fall of the Arch-Bishops Armes the Arch-Bishop himselfe fell from as high as Lambeth nay from the Lords House in Parliament as low as the Tower of London for no lesse crime then High Treason And twelve other Bishops being high flowne above the high Court of Parliament in their proud Protestation did fall as low as that Tower also for their just deserts And a litle after that Episcopacie it selfe began to fall by that noble Act of Parliament against the High Commission Court by which Act the iron teeth of the Beast were knockt out and the Sting of abused Excommunication was pluckt out of his Tayle And since that which makes the fore recited fall at Canterbury more observable as predigious and betokening the ruine of Prelacie as proud Welsey Cardinall and Arch-Bishop said of the fall of his Crosier staffe at Yorke a litle before his owne fall and deserved death malum omen that is ani'l token The Kings Majesty casually passing through Canterbury in his Journey with the Queene to Dover staying a litle at Canterbury did at Canterbury and no where else in all England signe the Bill against the Votes of Bishops in Parliament which Act threw downe our Lofty Lordly Prelates from the Pinacle of their ambition And this Bill was not onely signed at Canterbury where the Armes of the Primat or prime Prelat of al England were so demolished in the Metropolitan Cathredral or prime Seat or Throne of the Beast called a Cathedrall but which is most observable it was signed at arained Abbey adjoyning to that Cathredrall And that Abbey in which the very first Bill and Act of Parliament against Bishops was signed by his Majesty was the Abbey of Austin the Monke who was the very first Arch-Bishop of Canterbury that ever was and a most superstitious persecutor and bloudy Incendiary of Church and State which is Recorded to his Litle LAUD and was buried at Canterbury in that Abbey where Episcopacy it self hath now received a deadly wound by the Royall assent to that Bill And since that Bill was signed another Bill hath passed Both Houses of Parliament whereby all that cursed prelaticall Hierarchy of Arch-Bishops Bishops Deanes Arch-Deacons c. is cut downe root and branch and hath its finall Doome and Down-fall Prelate remember the Pincale And as for the Canterburian Arch-Prelate whose Coate-Armes Badges of Honour were so cast downe his charge Impeachment of high Treason now brings him to a dishonourable low posture at the Bar of the highest Court of Justice where it will shortly appeare what these prodigious falls portended a sparrow not falling to the ground without the divine providence I find in the recited Diary or day-booke written with the Arch-Bishops own hand word for word thus 1628. Ian. 31. Saturday night I lay in Court I dreamed that I put off my Rochet all save one steeve and when I would have put it on againe I could not find it 1638. Feb. 12. Tuesday night I dreamed that K. C. was to be married to a Ministers Widow and that I was called up to doe it no Service-booke could be found and in mine owne booke which I had I could not find the order for Marriage 1639. Ianu 24. Friday at night I dreamed that my father who dyed 46. years since came to me and to my thinking he was as wel as ever I saw him he asked me what I did here and after some speech I asked him how long he would stay with me hee answered he would stay till he had me away with him I am not moved with dreames yet I thought fit to remember this All this may now be seene written with the Arch-Bishops owne hand in that book of his now in Mr. Prinns custodie And the Arch-Bishop himselfe being at White-Hall in his jollity and Ruffe about 5. years since told the Right Honourable the Earl of Pembrocks and Earle of Monmouth that when he was in Oxford he dreamed that he should come to the highest and greatest preferment in Church and State that ever any Clergy man did that he should be in great favour power and authority and make great changes and alterations in the Church for sundry years but yet after al this he should be hang'd at last At which the said Lords falling into a great laughter His Majesty that now is hearing it came into the room demanded of them the cause of their mirth that he might have a share of it whereunto the truly noble Earle of Pembrooke answered that the reason of their laughter was at a dream wch the Arch-Bishop of Canterburie had newly told them Whereupon the King demanded what the dream was to which the Earle replyed that it was the Arch-Bishops own dream he was best able to relate it to his Majesty upon which the King calling the Arch-Bishop to him caused him in their presence to tel the dream over again to the King himselfe But to returne to my Cathedrall newes to tell you what hath followed those observable alarums in that Cathedrall On their Candlemas day at night 1641. Those Consecrated Images about their new Cathedral Font were all demolished taken away they knew not how nor by whom that purification was observed without Candles But a few days after some of those Idols were found in that Cathedral in a Pulpit where a Sermon had not bin preached neer 20. years before But were not those Images put into that Pulpit to preach in that Cathedral touching wooden Priests and Idol-Shepheards but of that
the old rubbish and build the Temple apace though with the sword in one hand the Trowell in the other And now the godly flock to that Cathedrall againe in such numbers that had not the Idolatrous windows in the Sermon-house bin demolished as they are the numerous Cathedrall auditors would be much annoyed with extreamity of heat Thus we see the Canterburian Babel falls a pace and Christ-Church Cathedrall in Canterburie begins to be Christ-Church indeed as that blessed Martyr Ridley wished or rather prophesied long agoe in a letter of his which is recorded in the book of Martyrs And now least that Cathedral Abbey should prove another Lichfield or Lincolne Cathedrall-Close for the enemy to fortifie and roost in The huge Citie-like gates of that Cathedrall Corporation are all taken down laid aside which was done when the Kentish Malignants began to rise against the King Parliament and Kingdom So that now when an act or Ordinance of Parliament or the Bill for the extirpation of Prelacy already passed both Houses of Parliament being signed by the King which God grant shall shortly root out all Prelacy and Cathedrall Covents then all the Cathedrall rabble at Canterbury may without knocking up their Cathedrall Porter pack away with all their Cathedrall Bagg and Baggage and Prelaticll Popish Trinkets to Lambeth Faire FINIS The Cathedrall of Canterbury once a Convent of Monkes The Citizens of Canterbury petition the Parliament against the Cathedrall there Episcopall government tyrannous Cathedrall Canons Deane Prebends Cathedrall Peticanous Singingmen Pricksong-Service Cathedrall High Altar dressed crouched to Cathedrallmeete-Service-booke-Priest Weavers Tobaccopipe-makers Taylors Butlers Servingmen Seldome-preaching Priests Huddle-Service and currycure a Cathedrall Priest The Cathedrall Sermon removed from the Sermon-house to the Popish Quire and why to get people to their Altar-worship and Piping-Service Communion Tables turned into Altars Seats and Galleries pul'd down to set up Altars A new Cathedrall Font adorned with Images and consecrated by a Lord Bishop who went round about it reading in a Booke and went up the three steps and put his head into the Font A Book called the Antiquities of Canterbury Prelates are Enemies to Preaching A Character or description of a Cathedrall Cathedrall Revenues grossely abused A Cathedrall Health drunke to Prince Rupert A Cathedrall Lasse beguiled by a Singing Man She is Arraigned for the dea h of her Childe Cathedrall ' flaunting pride The Devill the Cathedrall Landresse No Butchers meat will goe downe with a Cathedrall Prelate on All-Saints Day-Many Cathedrall Praachers but few Sermons The Prelates Tyrannous Patronage of Livings maintaines their Kingdome of darknesse Cathedrall Prelates strive to shew the Arch-bishop their forwarduesse in Popish Innovations The Prelates usher in Idolatry Idolatry ushers in the Plague The Cathedrall Altar-Glory which is then shame Cathedrall Prelates consultabout erecting Monuments of superstition and Idolatry Our Queenes mother led to Traitor Arch-bishop Beckets stone in that Cathedrall A Cathedrall Orator tels out Queene Mary that that Cathedrall is the gate of Heaven Cathedral Prelates persecutors of their Brethren They urged the reading of the prophane Book for Sabbath Sports A Cathedrall Nunrod hunting the GRAY on the Lords Day Cathedrall prayers against the Scots Cathedralists foment the Prelaticall War against the Scots Cathedrall Sermons The reall presence Preached for there The Scots and Gun-powdertraytours compared together in a Cathedrall Sermon The Arch bishops Speech in Star-chamber ecchoed in the Cathedrall at Canterbury Cathedrall Doctrine that a Pope gave Christ his name Altar Railes made of Consecrated wood Bishops Visitations stuffe The Scots tailed on at the Arch-bishops Visitation An Arch deacons Visitation speech for Altars as Gods sent at Church Cathedral cutting in the Kings presence Cathedrall Incendiaries Prelates plead for Tyranny and blind obedience Prelaticall pleading for Cathedrall piping and Quiretossed Service The Cathedrall Collicke or belliach More strange Malignant Cathedrall preaching Prelates allow consecrated Snuffers but no Extinguishers for bad Church Lights More Incendiary Cathedral preaching and malignant stuffe A Cathedrall Cooler A good preacher neere a Cathedrall a Miracle After the Cathedral Babels sins follow her plagues Cathedrall joy at false newes for Prelacy Prelacy built on a sandy foundation Flags of tryumph on the Cathedral steeple A Prelaticall fall at Canterburie Heaven points at Innocents at the blood of Innocents when it Prikes at Bishops and Cathedralls Prelates pull down their upholders The Arch-Bishop ruins his Arch-Bishoprick The Bish. new canons shot against heaven the bullet falls back on his own head Prelates pull downe King Prince and Church The King and Church can stand without a Bishop Cathedrall Quire rent and broken at a Consecration The Prelates hang out no more flags Prelates abhor singularity Lawn sleeves The Arch Bishops ominous fall noted More falls neer the Arch-Bishop in that tempest He notes them in his Diary Lambeth fall Croydon fall The Arch-Bishops hanged picture falls He feares his owne ruine The Arch-Bishop fals as low as the Tower of London 12. Bishops fal after him The high Commission Court felts Prelaticall excommunication falls The first fall of Episcopacy was at Canterburie there the Bill against the votes of Bishops in Parliament was signed And signed at arained Abby Signed at the house of the first Arch-Bishop of Canterburie that ever was and where hee was buried The finall fall and ruine of Prelacie The Arch-Biships ominous dreames The Bishops Rochet is lost The service-booke is lost The Arch-Bishops dead Father comes for him The Arch Bishop dreames how hee should live what death he should dye Cathedrall Images fall Images put into a cathedral pulpit and why The Prelates complain to the King for their Idols The godly cros the Prelats of Canterburie in their Popish designes The Cathedrall popish progres to the Alter in Service 〈…〉 A heavy stir about Altar service The Altar-priest like to lose his dinner A huge Massif resalutes a congying Altar Priest before the Altar The Prelates stickle for Burgesses in Parliament of their own chusing The Arch Bishops Secretary no Burgesse A Priested Cathedral Weaver votirg with Proctots and Fidlers c. for the Arch-Bishops Secretary to be Purges in Parliament A soule Prelaticall fall though Kings be neere Cathedrall Gods Altars Images Service-bookes Prick-songbookes Surplices Pipes and Cathedrall prick-song keep consort The Cathedrall high Altar removed with a vengea●ce A Sacke posset in a consec●aetd Cathedrall Basin An orderly Reformation begun in the Cathedral o● Canterburie Idolls pulled downe enemie vanqushed the same day Cathedrall painted Iesabell Mother of Harlots The first Arch-Bishop of Canterburie his Image first casually demolished The Bishops Myter breakes his neck A viraginous Shee Cathedrallist Prelates plead for Baal A Cathedrall qualme The grand Idolatrous Cathedrall window defaced The Proctors book a helpe to discover demolisht Images against his Wil. The Cathedrallists cry out for their great Diana More abhomina●le monuments of Idolalatry A Cardinalls Hat Crosses did Images without the Cathedrall demollished A supposed miracle of an 〈◊〉 nodding at 〈◊〉 demolishers Idolatry da 〈…〉 committed in that Cathedrall A caveat to those ignorant and superstitious people that cry out against the defacing of monuments of Iolatry The Divell St. Dunstan demolished Cathedrall ceveat dispersed Cathedra signifies a seate or chiar A Cathadrall Church is a seat-Church or a chaire-Church it being a seate or throne of a Romish-Beast called a Diocesan Bishop with his Prelaticall crew Good Cathedrall news from Canterburie Cathedrallists may be packing 〈◊〉 Babell is fallen 〈◊〉 fallen Alleluya