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A19395 Conspiracie, for pretended reformation viz. presbyteriall discipline. A treatise discouering the late designments and courses held for aduancement thereof, by William Hacket yeoman, Edmund Coppinger, and Henry Arthington Gent. out of others depositions and their owne letters, writings & confessions vpon examination: together with some part of the life and conditions, and two inditements, arraignment, and execution of the sayd Hacket: also an answere to the calumniations of such as affirme they were mad men: and a resemblance of this action vnto the like, happened heretofore in Germanie. Vltimo Septembris. 1591. Published now by authoritie. Cosin, Richard, 1549?-1597. 1592 (1592) STC 5823; ESTC S108823 96,463 116

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day to helpe to burne them to worke vpon my body with intent to make mee call backe my sayde wordes of protestation concerning the trueth of this religion which if I would not doe sayde they but could endure the torments that they would inflict then they all would bee of my religion and would make mee Emperour ouer all Europe This tale to them that had minds afore prepared and tooke Hacket by reason of his most earnest protestations prayers shewe of zeale pretended fauour with God and such like to be a man that would not tell an vntrueth for all the worlde seemed no way vnprobable or to be discredited so that these three principall actors hauing aswell among themselues as with others often conferred hereabouts both by word and writing were by the midst of Trinitie terme become most resolute for the aduancing of their designements For in a letter written by Coppinger about that time to the aforesaid I. Thr. it is thus contained Mine owne deare brother my selfe and my two brethren who lately were together with you in Knight ryders streete doe much desire conference with you which will aske some time The businesse is the Lords owne and hee doth deale in it himselfe in a strange and extraordinarie maner in poore and simple creatures Much is done since you did see vs which you will reioyce to heare of when wee shall meete and therefore I beseech you so soone as you receiue this letter hasten an answere in writing to my sisters house therein aduertise I beseeche you when I may come to speake with you for delayes are dangerous and some of the great enemies beginne to be supursued by God as they are at their wits end The Lordmake vs thankeful for it who keepe vs euer to himselfe to doe his will and not ours By occasion also of hearing Master Charke on a Fryday about that time at the Blacke fryers Coppinger saith he was thereupon moued by God spirite to write vnto him a letter which beareth date the 9. day of Iuly last In which letter amongs other things thus hee writeth vnto him I doe not denie good Syr but that I haue nowe a good long time taken a strange and extraordinarie course such as hath offered occasion of susption of my not onely doing hurt to my selfe Note but also to the best sort of men now in question and to the cause it selfe But by what warrant I haue done this that is all for if the holy Ghost haue bene my warrant and carryeth mee into such actions as are differing from others of great note in the Church of God what flesh and blood dare speake against me This is it that I desire at your hands and at all the rest of Gods seruants that you forbeare to censure me and such others as shall deale extraordinarily with me in the Lords busines committed to our charge iudge of vs by the effects that followe which if you hereafter see to be wonderfull great then are all ordinarie men placed in callings within this land to feare and to call themselues to examination before the Iustice seate of God and see whether they haue walked faithfully before God and man in seeking the saluation of the soules of the people and the aduancement of Christs kingdome Note and the ouerthrowe of Antichristes And if all and euery one in their places shall be forced to confesse to haue fayled in not discharge of their dueties let them acknowledge their sinne and repent before plagues and punishments fall vpon them The waste of the Church cannot be denyed to be great so that there is place for extraordinary men though temporizing Christians will not admit this therefore Gods mercies shall appeare to be wonderfull great if amongst vs he haue raysed vp such as I knowe hee hath and hereafter I doubt not by Gods grace but I with the helpe of the rest shal be able to auowe against all gainesayers whatsoeuer My desire heretofore hath bene to haue counsayle and direction from others but nowe by comfortable experience I finde that the action which the Lorde hath drawen me into is his owne and he wil direct it himselfe by the holy Ghost and haue the full honour of it and therefore I wayte vpon him and yet most hartily craue the prayers of the Saints that they will beseech God to blesse all his seruants that he hath set aworke in his owne businesse And I further beseech you to shewe this Letter to Master Trauerse and Master Egerton and all the rest of the godly Preachers in the Citie and iudge charitably of me and others and let euery one looke to his owne calling that therin he may deale faithfully and let vs iudge our selues not iudge one another further then we haue warrant After this letter it hapned that M. Charke preached in the same place againe the next Sunday after at which time Coppinger tooke him selfe to be particularly meant by one part of the sermon Whereupon hee wrote a letter to another Preacher as I doe gather the thursday after viz. 15. of Iuly wherby he thus signifieth M. Charke told the people that there were some persons so desperate that they would willingly thrust themselues vpon the rockes of the lande and waues of the sea This I tooke to be spoken principally to my selfe therefore I thought good to aduertise you that he spake the trueth in those words but he touched not mee but himselfe and the rest of the ministers of the lande who haue not onely runne desperately themselues vpon the rockes and waues but carryed the whole shippe whereby they all bee in danger of shipwracke and shoulde haue perished if the Lorde had not immediatly called three of his seruants to helpe to recouer it who are not onely sent from God to his Church here but also elsewhere through the worlde My calling is specially to deale with Magistrates Another hath to doe with Ministers who hath written a letter to you of the Citie but it cannot be deliuered hardly this day The other third is the chiefest who can neither write nor reade for he is the Lords Executioner of his most holy will This letter is thus subscribed The Lords messenger of mercy Ed. Coppinger These three therefore strongly fansying to themselues such extraordinarie callings and standing resolute by all meanes to aduaunce that which they falsely call Reformation and beeing thus seduced and bemoped by Hacket it is no marueile though they entred further as by degrees into many lewde dangerous and traiterous attempts For first hauing conceaued mortall hatred against two great and and worthie Counsailors of this estate who they thought woulde not a little stop the course they had taken and hinder the purpose which they pursued Coppinger therefore by Hackets aduice directed seuerall letters vnto some honourable personages whereby he signified that certaine treasons were entended euen against her Maiesties owne sacred person meaning after to appeach those two thereof and hoping by
vnawares prophesied truely for he was the greatest Prophet of Gods iudgements against the whole world that euer was but that they both were greater then he for Coppinger himselfe was he said the greatest that euer was and last Prophet of mercie and that he must describe the newe and holie Ierusalem with the seuerall places of ioy that the elect should enioy after this life and that they the said Coppinger and Arthington were ordained to separate the Lambes from the Goates before the Lord Iesus at the last day Whereat it is saide they were both astonished considering their owne vnwoorthines and vnfitnes crying out against themselues and their sinnes yet submitting themselues to the direction of Gods spirite which they were assured should sufficiently furnish them to doe him that seruice which himselfe did command Then Coppinger proceeded to tell further that Hacket was greater then either of them and that they two must obey him in whatsoeuer he commanded but told not then what nor howe great he was other then king of Europe which title was afore this time concluded of amongs them Hereupon according to Coppingers commandement Arthington offered to honour Hacket with his title of the king of Europe and to demeane himselfe toward him accordingly But Hacket himself herein dispensed with him vntill the time should come that he was to honour him before others bidding him withall to be of good cheere for saith he I serue a good Captaine who makes so deare accompt of me that all the diuels in hel nor men in earth cannot take my life from me Then Coppinger for confirmation of the like vnto them two also saide that Arthington and himselfe were possessed not onely with propheticall but also with Angelicall spirits which Arthington taking to be true by a great burning that he felt in himselfe after that time did therupon fansie to himselfe that no power in earth nor hell could hurt either of them because they had the spirite of Angels and they were subiect to no power but to God alone And that God being the master of the whole worke all things should prosper with them they onely seeking his glory which he saith he vowed with himselfe to deale throughly in his office to rebuke the world of sinne to denounce iudgements against whomsoeuer the spirit should moue him without feare or fauour of men or of diuels in hel which spirit he saith then moued him according to his hatred afore conceiued against thē and his opinion that they were traitors against the Queenes Maiestie to vtter and to declare his detestation he had against the aforesayd three woorthie Counsellors being by their places the greatest subiects in the land But herein may be said with the Poet Quis tulerit Gracchos de seditione querentes Verrem de furto who can with any patience indure such seditious companions as these to appeach others of treason but especially so loiall honourable and woorthie Counsellors as they three are knowen to the world to be By the way we may note the subtill managing and cariage of this action by Hacket and Coppinger in this one principall point which Arthington himselfe also now obserueth videlicet in that they opened not at any time Hackets chiefe pretended office vnto Arthington videlicet to represent and to participate with Iesus Christes office of seuering with his fanne the good from the bad vntill the very time they were to goe into the streetes to doe the message that Hacket enioyned them For hereby they preuented a doubt of driuing Arthington backe who seemed a man so seruiceable for their purpose as that hee was woorthie to bee still retained by them and the rather for that hee had not yet finished the writing vp of Hackets historie that was to bee annexed to the Prophesie vntill late that Thursday night which was afore their rising for they might haue feared if leisure had serued him to haue considered of it and examined it at full how this could be least it might haue made him at least to stagger and be doubtfull of it Besides Hacket kept as Arthington now gathereth that honour wholy to himselfe to proclaime it to them both together as it were by a voyce frō heauen at that very instant whē they should receiue their charge of him and thereby haue no time to reason against it being straight way to go forward as obedient persons to him in all things Thus that Thursday passed on On Friday morning Coppinger sent his man Emerson by fiue of the clocke in the morning vnto Arthingtons lodging but his wife would not then awake him so he sent for him againe at sixe and they two then went together vnto Coppinger Then Coppinger and Arthington determined that Friday morning beyng the 16. day of Iulie last betwixt sixe and seuen of the clocke in the forenoone to go vnto a certaine Gentlemans man 's house about the Citie of good behauiour and they forsooth to honour him to be chiefe Gouernour vnder her Maiestie which they also did that Morning and promised vnto him accordingly that he should so be Leauing also with him both the sayd Prophesie and Hackets historie to peruse but the good gentleman was vnwilling to deale either with them or their papers any way They staied not there aboue halfe an houre From thence they came betwixt 8. and 9. of the clocke in the morning vnto Wiggintons chamber being prisoner in the Counter in Woodstreete with whom hauing much speech and conference part whereof is touched before among other things they signified vnto him as Arthington confesseth that they were prouoked to pronounce him the holiest minister of all others for dealing so plainly and resolutely in Gods causes aboue all ministers which God would manifest one day to his comfort Wigginton at his examination confesseth such conference by him at that time to haue bene had with them and as hee was enioyned by those who examined him hath reported it by writing somewhat largely He therein also setteth down a conference had by him about the same matters with Hacket himselfe comming to him thither alone as he saith the selfe same Friday morning some while after the other two were departed from him It may be gathered by his owne narration that betwixt the time of Coppinger and Arthingtons talke with him Wigginton had set downe article-wise and distincted with number the seuerall heads of their speeches had with him And after he also enquired and set downe in writing Hackets opinion likewise vnto euery of the sayd articles seuerally And albeit it need not bee questioned but that both for circumstance and matter he would set it downe the least that might bee either to his owne or any his complices disaduantage yet may it serue for the fuller vnderstāding of the whole action and for necessarie obseruation besides to touch some chiefe points of those conferences though it be but as himself telleth thē The principall points of VViggintons owne report touching conference and
impossible that I should be fit to meddle therin So that here a christian louing answer to his great cōfort is giuē further conferēce by speech is offred the course not so much misliked as the succes only is doubted by reason of his vnfitnes that was to be an actor in it But what resolution herein was also returned from the preachers of foraine parts to this case of consciēce propounded by Coppinger may hereby not vnprobably be gathered Arthington at one of his examinations confessed that Penrie sent a letter vnto him forth of Scotland wherin he signified that Reformatiō for so they speake must shortly be erected in England herein he said that he tooke Penrie to be a prophet Now it is sure that Penrie conueied himself priuilie into England and was lurking about London at the self same time when these other prophets arose in Chepeside attending as seemeth the fulfilling of this his Prophesie al 's by their meanes How duetifully and aduisedly those that be subiects haue dealt which hauing intelligence hereof did conceale it till it burst forth of it selfe with apparant danger to her Maiestie and the whole state may thus be gathered For by this conceit of Coppingers you heare it is pretended and surmifed that a commendable cause a cause to be defended yea the very trueth of God which must preuaile is by the state suppressed and kept vnder that it is the will of God to haue such a reformation that impoachment of it is offered by the Queene Counsell and Nobles that this is a great sinne meete to be repented of by them that they must be brought to this repentance that the penaltie against any of them that refuse to be brought is to be detected as Traytors an offence deseruing death that this must bee done out of hand that the will of God in great fauour for the good of his Church was reuealed to him in this behalfe being a man of much fasting prayer rare gifts a prophet an extraordinarie man with an extraordinarie calling such as was not to be bee iudged of or discerned by meere ordinarie men and whereinto he entred not rashly or on a sudden but after many conflicts with himselfe before his yeelding to Gods extraordinarie motion and calling but submitting himselfe neuerthelesse to haue his gifts and calling tryed and allowed of by the best reformed Preachers and therefore not worthy to bee suspected or discredited that the way to bring them to this repentance was a secret mysterie such as those preachers and others whom he conferred with albeit they helde it a worke to bee wished at Gods hands yet by his talke gathered the maner of bringing it in to be so dangerous as that they feared the successe and refused to bee made accquainted with the particular wayes and meanes which hee had plotted to effect it Thereby making choise rather that Coppinger should venture to put it in practise if he remained resolute herein which they found by him of what dangerous consequence soeuer such a way might be then that they by bewraying of him to authoritie should bee any meanes to breake of and preuent his resolucion or quench his zeale And thus with opinion of safetie to themselues they merchandized the hasard of their friends life or els the rearing of sedition in the Realme with the hope that secretly they nourished to haue the Discipline which they dreame of erected Thus Coppinger remayning still more confirmed and selted in this veyne by his Pue-fellowe Wigginton about Easter terme last being as is aforesayd brought acquainted with Hacket as with a most holy man soone after would needes bring Arthington also acquainted with him as one whom vpon so small knowledge he had obserued to bee a very rare man For this purpose hee sent for Arthington to dinner or supper vnto Lawsons house necre to Paules gate where Arthington met first with Hacket together with another whom he calleth a godly man of whose ordinary talke then had Arthington liked very well but had as he saith at that time no further conference with him After which time Arthington discontinued from the Citie remained in Yorkeshire vntil Trinitie terme leauing Hacket and Coppinger behinde him piotting of their purposes together what purposes they had what counsell they entred into and what conferences they entertained betwixt themselues and with others by the euents ensuing will best bee discouered After this Hacket stayed not long in London but desired Coppingor at his departure to write vnto him what successe I. T. had withall assuring him that whensoeuer he should write for him he the said Hacket would streight way come vp againe Hereupon Coppinger writte vnto him first at the end of Easter terme and after againe very earnestly to be at London three dayes before the beginning of Trinitie terme last but he coulde not bee heere so soone by three or foure dayes When he was come he lodged the first night at Islington but sent his horse downe againe into the countrey as purposing to stay long in London Then after a night or two one of which nights hee lodged at the sayd Lawsons house by Wiggintons direction hee was prouided of a chamber and of his boord at one Ralfe kates house in Knight-rider streete by Coppingers meanes and at his charges for he cost Coppinger there eleuen shillings by the weeke But Kayes waxing weary of him in part for that he feared Hacket was a coniurer or witch in that the Camomill he saith in his Garden where Hacket either trode or sate did wither vp the next night and waxed blacke therfore Coppinger prouided at his own charges like wise an other roome for him at one Walkers house by Broken wharfe where he remained vntill his apprehension Whiles Hacket was at Kayes house he vsed before after meales to pray as seemed most deuoutly and zealously but neuer for the Queenes Maiestie Hacket also tolde Kayes that if all the Diuines in England should pray for raine if hee sayde the word yet it should not rayne The first of the aforesayde letters which Coppinger writte vnto Hacket to mooue him to come vp doeth containe matter of note besides not vnfit to be knowen Brother Hacket saith he the burden which God hath layde vpon mee you being the instrument to make me bolde and couragious where I was fearefull and faint is greater then I can beare without your helpe here though I haue it where you are The workings of his holy spirite in me since your departure bee mightie and great my zeale of spirit burneth like fire so that I cannot conteine my selfe and conceale his mercies towardes mee And a little after in the same letter Master Thr is put off till the next tearme the zealous preachers as it is thought are to be in the Starre Chamber tomorowe the Lord by his holy Spirit bee with them my selfe if I can get in am mooued to be there Note and I feare if sentence with seueritie be
the aforesaid Prophesie All that Thursday was spent by them in consultation and writing Hacket being also present and assisting them But with what ioyfulnes amongs them all it is incredible if wee may beleeue their owne reportes Yet Arthington was forced for the haste that was made to haue all in readines against the Friday following and for the desire he had to yeelde vnto Hacket all satisfaction and contentment that might be to sit vp most of Thursday night writing out againe of the said historie so enlarged But on Thursday it selfe being the 15. of Iuly amongs other their actions Coppinger and Arthington writte a letter to the aforesaide T. L. which is of this tenor first at the top of it thus viz. If this letter be not endited by the holie Ghost Coppingers and Arthingtons letter vnto T. Lancaster who hath appeared in a farre greater measure to sinnefull wretches in the ende of the world euen to vs whose names are here vnder written and to a third person in calling aboue all former callings whatsoeuer Christ Iesus excepted the Lorde confound vs two with vengeance from heauen and carry vs with all violence into the bottomlesse pit If we haue not taken the name of God in vaine it standeth you vpon to reade this letter with feare and trembling with ioy and gladnes with feare that the Lorde should wooe you to doe him seruice with ioy that he offereth you honour if you accept it We two are messengers from heauen who haue a good Captaine to guide vs who haue receaued immediate callings from God to call the whole world to repentance and amendment of life otherwise they are to feare that Christ Iesus his second comming in glorie will be to them as a thiefe in the night If I Edmund Coppinger doe not preferre you before any one man in the land whatsoeuer for your wise holie louing and religious course both in the generall calling of a Christian and in your particular calling the Lord confound me bodie and soule The reason why I choose you first is because in your house in your presence and vnder God partly by your meanes I had my first extraordinarie calling though thereof as of all other things the whole honour and glorie be the Lordes And of the same minde is my brother Arthington In token of our extraordinarie loue to you we deale as we neither haue or will doe with any other for we command in the name of the Lord all creatures vpon the earth and they must obey But with you we will dispense thus farre that it shall be your choise to come and take a newe calling for a time wherein we would vse you or refuse it So wishing you to commend vs and your selfe to God before you answere vs which we expect in word and not in writing c. The messenger of mercie to the whole world if they accept me Edm. Coppinger I auouch whatsoeuer my brother hath written to be most true further I protest that you are a more holie man then any Preacher in London or throughout the whole land or else the Lorde confounde mee If it please you to come and see me ioyfull you may hope this is true The Prophet of Gods iudgements to the whole world where mercie is reiected Hen. Arthington That the perfite and enlarged historie of Hacket be briefly gathered into a summarie here set downe it will not I thinke be amisse for such as shal be desirous to know what mysteries may be therein contained which drewe these two amongs other matters into such an extraordinarie admiration and opinion of him First therefore A summe of Hackets historie there is declared whom Hacket serued then how he got the execution of the Bailywike of Oundel being void how vpon complaint of the wiues there that their husbands spent their thrift in Alehouses on the Sabaoth daies he by a Iustice of Peace not farre off did cause al the playing tables that could be come by to be burnt Also the light and entising behauiour of some women towards him his familiarity with them wherby his wife became iealous of him so that he was forced for her satisfaction to cleare himselfe by his oath The sundry baites laide by meanes of some of his fellowes that enuied him for the credit he had with those whō he serued to entrap him with women His attempting them in dishonest manner but with purpose onely as he there pretendeth to learne of them the practises against him The like snares laide for him by some of better place credit then the former Of his affliction in minde that he endured because he so behaued himselfe towards women yet could not learne out by them the plot laid against him Of his going into Hampshire to haue bene placed there Howe he was in a place there for the most part of 20. daies beat with a bastonado and into what pitifull state of body he was therby brought That this was done partly for his auoutching that Christ was head of the Church against the Pope and for saying that as certaine earthen pots were there by him broken so should all Papistes be broken in hell and confounded so many as rose vp against him in earth how he was forced to vse the Deputie-Lieutenant of Hampshire his aide to be safely conueied out of that Coūtrey least he shoulde bee murdered by his enemies that hee came thence to one M. Paul Wentworthes house where he remained a moneth and was vsed most Christianly and where he was most deepely exercised in the spirite Howe as he passed by the way out of Hampshire he told a Gentleman in company that was priuie to his enemies complots of a great practise intended against him and to be done in a chamber by certaine persons whome he then named aforehand insomuch as the saide Gentleman being made priuie to such purpose and knowing that he saide true affirmed surely he could coniure or else it had not bene possible to tell such things as he did where in deed he saith the Lord in the middest of his former afflictions reuealed it vnto him and further shewed him a place which he had appointed for him and howe he would bring all his enemies practises to confusion How in performance of that which was so reuealed he was afterward in a certaine place in Hartfordshire bound first in a chamber and then chained in a sincke hole of a seller and most grieuously many waies afflicted there for 20. daies together That in the greatest extremitie therof which was greater then he could expresse a Crosse came vpon his breast as he lay alwaies when his torments were at the greatest the Lord vnloosed his feete and handes from his fetters and bands neuerthelesse he lay stil til his tormentors came and bound him againe how the Lord then appeared to him and assured him that he would establish the Gospel by him and shewed him all the whoredome of Rome in the
vilanouslie afterward proclaimed traitours to bee such as they doe charge him to bee This woorthie worke of Syllogismes therefore beyng first finished his other treatise to prooue those preachers to bee hypocrites and Idolaters was straightway set vpon the stocks and began to be built on the Munday before their rising after they all had for obtaining good successe in this and the rest of their businesse humbled themselues on the Lordes day afore in fasting and prayer for so bee their woordes This latter treatise Arthington finished vp the Thursday morning next after and termed it A Prophecie of Iudgements against England whose skill in this precipitate kind of pistling the other two so magnified as that they termed him by a title mentioned in a Psalme viz. The pen of a readie writer Where as wiser men thinke they might haue looked a litle lower and he haue better compared it as the wise man doeth the like where he saieth A word in a fooles mouth is like an arrow in a dogs leg because hee will neuer leaue wrinching and fisking till he haue got it out In this prophesie hee first setteth downe the third commandement Arthingtons prophesie inferring what plagues shall light on himselfe if hee offend therein Then commeth he to his nine seuerall assertions adding to euery one of them The Lord to confound him viz. that if he thinke not himselfe to bee the vilest sinnefull wretch liuing If hee take not himselfe to bee the most ignorant in Gods booke of any man that hath professed the Gospell so long If hee acknowledge not himselfe most vnfit and vnwoorthie of all men to serue the Lord Iesus If neuerthelesse he be not extraordinarily called to do the message of God more faithfully then any preacher in England hitherto hath done If the Scripture doe not iustifie extraordinarie callings before the endes of the world If hee know not two persons within the citie of London that haue greater extraordinarie callings then himselfe videlicet Edmund Coppinger and William Hacket If the former bee not a prophet raised vp of the Lord to bring a message of great Mercie to the land if all the people truely repent of their sinnes If the later bee not the holiest man and of the greatest power to bring fearefull iudgements vpon the whole earth that euer was borne Christ Iesus excepted If the sayd Hacket as the Messenger of Gods vengeance where mercie is refused doe not bring such great plagues vpon this realme of England the like whereof was neuer seene In these and in euery of these seuerall cases hee prayeth the Lord to confound him Whereupon he inferreth that hauing thus denounced so many fearefull woes against his owne soule as would sinke it into the bottomelesse pit of hell if hee were guiltie in any one of them Then thereupon with cheerefulnesse hee commeth to declare his message to England accusing it to bee the most rebellious though it haue bene most blessed of all other nations Then he affirmeth the citie of London and the courtes of Iustice at Westminster and the counterfeit worship of God with crosse and surplesse to bee worse then Sodome and Gomorre or the purple whoore of Rome or else desireth to be confounded Nay he preferreth Rome before London because at Rome they sinne onely of ignoraunce Of her Maiestie he saith she is least guiltie of the common sinnes but most abused of any Prince that euer was by those whom she hath most aduanced Then he speakes to three great Counsellors C. C. T. daring them to protest for their innocencies against themselues as deepely as he hath done and then if they be not swallowed vp quicke he is contented to be hanged vp in chaines at Paules crosse Note Then he threatneth them that they three shal be otherwise detected ere long all those that are their partakers when her Maiestie shall reigne and liue to see better daies if God giue her true repentance Then he sayth he will leaue all other of the Cleargie as sufficiently detected already saue such as pretend to seeke Reformation who he sayth are as guiltie in two pointes as any of the other The first point for not crying out continually against Archbishops Bishops Deanes Archdeacons and others as wicked vsurpers in the house of God The second for not crying out against the wicked Magistrates of this land because they keepe out the Elderships out of the Church and mainteine in their roome officers and offices of Antichrist Hereupon gathering thus howe can God spare this lande any longer wherein both the Magistrates and messengers of God haue dealt so vnfaithfully in the Lordes seruice Adding that the fearefull iudgements of God shall be sure to fall on the reprobate being already prepared and put into the handes of the Mightie Messenger of the Almightie God William Hacket to be powred out vpon this great Citie of London and vpon all places where repentance followeth not this publication Then he goeth about to prooue all such Preachers to be Idolaters or consenting to Idolatrie which practise or consent and suffer others to vse surplesse and crosse because he sayeth they are the markes of Antichrist Preferring herein the Papistes afore them as sinning herein onely of ignorance seeking also to engreeue their faultes in this behalfe for that they are all hypocriticall Idolaters in that neuerthelesse they professe Reformation whereunto he addeth he sayeth a secrete That this their halting and hypocrisie hath so hardned Gods heart against their requestes for bringing in the Discipline that for this vnfaithfull and vnsingle walking in their function Note he hath hitherto denied it Neither shall any one of them or all of them together haue that honour giuen to bring in Reformation For sayeth he I tell you truely the Almightie God hath put his cuppe of vengeance into his trustie and faithfull seruants hand William Hacket to powre it downe shortly vpon euery wilfull and obstinate sinner that doeth not repent vpon the notice hereof or else the Lorde confound me Lastly he giueth a charge to haue this Prophesie together with the incredible but most certain historie of the holiest seruant of God William Hacket that euer hath bene is or shall be borne Christ Iesus onely excepted with all speede possible printed and published together as in substance true saith he or else the Lorde confound me This wise prophesie is thus subscribed By the most vnwoorthie seruant but yet a faithfull Prophet of the Almightie Iesus or else his wrath confound me Henrie Arthington Whiles Arthington was about this his taske Coppinger as it seemeth was neither idle nor well occupied for he was setting down from Hackets owne mouth a long Ragmans role of Hackets torments reuelations and I knowe not what called Hackets historie For by Thursday morning Hacket hauing enlarged the first draught thereof which was at first but scribled out by Coppinger Arthington was to write out againe faire the enlarged copie that being perfited it might be annexed vnto