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A04988 A Catholicke apologie against the libels, declarations, aduices, and consultations made, written, and published by those of the League, perturbers of the quiet estate of the realme of France Who are risen since the decease of the late Monsier, the Kings onely brother. By E.D.L.I.C.; Apologie catholique. English Belloy, Pierre de, ca. 1540-1613.; Aggas, Edward, attributed name. 1585 (1585) STC 15137; ESTC S108196 138,975 314

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A CATHOLICKE APOLOGIE AGAINST THE LIBELS DECLARATIONS ADVICES AND CONSVLTATIONS MADE WRITTEN and published by those of the League perturbers of the quiet Estate of the Realme of France Who are risen since the decease of the late Monsier the Kings onely brother By E. D. L. I. C. Answere a foole according to his folly least he should thincke him selfe wise Prouerb 26. ❧ Imprinted at London for Edward Aggas THE PREFACE to the Reader O Christian and Catholick Frenchman neuer was there offered better meanes then at this time to discouer and smel out the subtelties of our enemies with what money Sathan vsually paieth his seruants whē we see some of thē so blinded that beeing vppon the poynt of their destruction they promise to themselues all assuraunce still coueting to conceale their abhominable wickednesse with sleights shiftes and lyes Neuerthelesse when they do most hide themselues they are foonest spied For to say the trueth what goodlier or more apparant pretēce could the perturbers of the quiet of our Fraunce take holde of then Religion and the reliefe of the people but as the enemie of trueth hath allured thē vnto him by lyes so hath hee for their repaste left them no other foode vpon his Table and yet doth that also faile them when they make it an vsuall messe and trueth remaineth Mistresse According hereto the lyes and horrible slaūders that to this day haue bene spued foorth against the King of Nauarre the Lord Prince of Condie by certaine straungers enemies to this Crowne the Royall Progenie vnder the pretence of zeale of Religion doth ouerthrowe them because cōtinually they haue sought to perswade our souraigne Lord the King and all the French Nation that these Princes were his euill seruaunts Rebels and disobedient persons enemies to his Estate in the preseruation and encrease whereof they haue greater interest then any other worldly person next vnto his Maiestie vnto whom they haue the honor very nerely to appertaine As also in truth we are hartely to giue GOD thankes especially in that after so many false and slaunderous inductions made vnto the most Christian Maiestie against these two Princes his good kinsmen and most faithfull subiects and seruants by whose reliefe this feeble weake and pale Realme hath oftentimes escaped falling it hath pleased him to open the Kings eyes to let him perceiue that all the illusions vnto him presented tended only to the ouerthrow of himself his Crowne and Estate in offering hetherto to his viewe one thing in liewe of an other For herevpon his Maiestie smelling out the causes of passed mischiefe hath finally in earnest done as the good Phisitiō who whē he seeth his Patient pale weake faint and grieuously sicke beginneth his cure with bringing him to his bed discharging him frō all painfull toyle causing him to take some rest euen so our King casting his eyes vpō his poore realm afflicted with ciuill warres which so long haue bene kindled vnder a false and slaunderous pretence to the end to begin the cure hath first sought to set it in peace that after some time of rest he might haue better opportunitie to heale the rest of the causes of the disease to put from about him those who vnder his authoritie had by their false wicked perswasiōs so hardly entreated it Which when his euill Councellors perceiued seeing that they could no longer goe forward in the same path they haue sought with open play to compasse that which so lōg they had craftely practised now haue plainly shewed that it was the State Crowne that they leueled at procuring the writing of diuers Libels aduices and consultations of their suffragās to the end not only to diminish and blemish the King of Nauarres vndoubted lawfull succession if it should please God to worke his will of the Kings Maiestie without leauing any issue Male but also to aduaūce their own false slaunderous and supposed titles and pretēces Howbeit although the said Lord King of Nauarre neede not yet to pleade his cause or presently to aunswere all these sleights and counsailes of the wicked in respect of the sufficient terme small likelihood of occasion euer to put the same in executiō cōsidering the King is thāks be to God yong in health in good disposition together with the small interest that in my opinion the sayd Lord King of Nauarre pretendeth to any such successiō as being a Prince both wise circumspect such a one as hath not so smal forecast but that he knoweth vndoubtedly that the greatest wealth reliefe good hap contentation that may redound to him cōsisteth in the prosperitie health long and happie life of the King his Lord to the ende perpetually to be vnder him the same that he is to liue vnder his liking in his protection wherby vnder the fauour wherof he shalbe not only preserued from the cōspiraties which his enemies worke against him but also which is more if it please God to encrease him he shal alwaies be by the King fauoured aduanced vnto whō he hath the honor to be the first Prince of his bloud Neuerthelesse how euer it be I do not thinke that any man at this day cā with reason and iudgement conceiue any bad or sinister opinion of the sayde Lorde King of Nauarre though he lay open his iust causes sith those that haue no right and for whō there can be no likelihood at all are so impudent rash vndiscreete as to bring to the barre a matter wherevpon euen their most affectionate seruāts durst not before haue thought which to saye the trueth is one of the cōsideratiōs that moued me to set hand to the pen to the aunswering of such diffamatorie Lybelles discourses aduices cōsultatiōs as within this yeere haue come to my hands and I protest that I haue done it without either cōmaundemēt or commission of the sayd Lord King of Nauarre vnto whom I neuer had the honor to approach neither is it of any affectiō or desire to aduaunce the Religiō that he professeth sith my self am and all my life time haue bene a Catholick and liued vnder the authoritie of the Apostolicke Romish Church But the onely cause hath bene that being borne a Frenchman I haue thought it my duetie to vphold the rightful cause of the French Princes vnto whome after his soueraigne Maiestie for whose seruice we are naturally bounde and holden to procure all honor wealth prosperitie to maintain and defend them from slaūders and such deceipts as Sathan would stirre vp against their excellēcie greatnesse besides that euery mā may perceiue that these Tragedies are kindled to the vtter ruine losse fubuertion of this miserable Realm so as the loue of my Countrey Christian piety and that compassiō that I take in beholding my fellow Citizens and my self with them in daunger to consume our selues in that fire that by those ciuill warres which vnder this
that Religion which with vniforme consent haue so many hundred yeres bene receiued in the Church especially considering that himself could not abide to haue his owne brought into bondage Moreouer with you ye trompets of sedition I doe agrée that then he should be no more able then now that such as would perswade him that the third part of the French are Huguenots are no good Arithmeticians also that for our preseruation in that estate wherein we now liue we neede no more but to set against him our walles I would therefore aske you what cause you should haue to feare that he would endeuour to force you to liue in any other Religion thē the same wherein he find you and your selues doe desire when in so doing he may happen to haue but euill successe and therewithall lose the loue of the whole worlde were not this as much as according to the Prouerbe to goe about to shaue an Egge 16 As also the obiection that they make namely that in the lands of Bearne and low Nauarre where he is soueraigne the Catholick Apostolick Romish Religion is not permitted is in trueth full of subteltie slaunder and enuie for hereunto he doth pertinently in my opinion aunswere that in respect of the land of Bearne it was not he that forbad it neither are his aduersaries able to proue any inhibition thereof in his name or frō him but contrariwise he assureth himselfe that it will appeare that immediatly or soone after the decease of the late Queene of Nauarre his mother his Maiestie by the Lord of Grāmont dispatched his Letters into the country of Bearne importing that his will was to restore and therein to set vp againe the exercize of the sayd Religion Vpon which commandement the States being assembled they denyed to put the same in executiō fearing such troubles and seditions as might ensue the people beeing haughtie mutinous and difficult enough to bee contented together with such small store of Catholickes in the sayde Countrey to prosecute the execution thereof if need should require What would you then haue him to doe more He did not the harme but wēt about to cure it there was none that desired to take his medicine What more can the Phisition doe to his Patient but prepare him the potion which may bee to his health and for want of the which if he lose himself is he not rather to blame his owne obstinacie then him that could not make him take his appointmēt For since that time the Estates beeing diuers tymes assembled in the sayde Countrey did nener require his Maiestie to restore the sayd Catholick Romish Religion which alwaies hee offered to doe and still so long as he liue wil if they doe require it As for lowe Nauarre the exercize of Catholicke Religion is there most free yea which is more throughout that Countrey there is no assembly of the pretended reformed Religiō but onely in two places as is most euidently knowne neither hath his Maiestie innouated any thing at his cōming throughout the sayd lands of Bearne or Nauarre But what is it meete for these feares and friuolous doubtes of a matter that neuer can come to passe to destroye this poore Realme with immortall warres and so make vs miserable before the tyme crye out before we be touched and to hasten and aduaunce the sorowes of our pretended mischiefes will you begin to crucifie and tye vs to a Caucasus for our whole life tyme or will you force vs here to begin our hell Is not the King thankes bee to God yong enough in good health and of sufficient dispositiō to see the raking both of the King of Nauarre and of the rest of the Princes of his age why thē should we mistrust the grace of God 17 As for the Protestation that the sayde Lord King of Nauarre made the yere 1584. in a Synode by the Ministers of his Religiō holden in the Towne of Montauban wherby he protested and declared that he would liue and dye therein and defend the same I wot not well why wee are so slye as for that cause to blame him or bee more vehement against him then before as in deede a number of persons too much ouerruled with vnreasonable passions haue misliked it and haue thervpon gathered some sinister iudgement of the affection of the sayd Lord King of Nauarre to the Catholickes whome most hartely I beseech with me to consider First that his protestation imported not the rooting of vs out neither together with vs the Religion of the Romish Church as the League doth him and his partakers so that his protestation is simply defensiue and could not therefore be more gentle for the which wee are rather to commend then to reproue him sith our selues are bound daily to make the like profession in the Catholicke Apostolicke Romish Church also that euery faithfull Christian is likewise bound by the Sacrament of Baptisme to make the like declaration especially Kings and Princes who ought to be mirors spectakles to their subiects yea the confession of their faith should serue for a publick example in the assemblies made for the Estate of the Church such as are y e Counsailes Sinodes and other like wherein it hath euermore bene noted that Emperours Kings and Princes thereat assistant did make profession of their faithes with protestation to defend the same Hereof wee haue for testimonie Constantine the Great in the Counsaile of Nice Theodose the Yonger in the Counsaile of Ephesus Martian in the Counsaile of Calcedon Iustinian the first in the Counsaile of Constantinople Charlemaigne in the Counsaile of Francfort with infinite other Christian and Catholicke Princes Sith therefore the King of Nauarre hath bene brought vp in that Religion which he holdeth and that the King by his Edicts permitteth the free exercize thereof throughout his Realme why should wee mislike that hee assisting at an assembly thereof protesteth to liue and dye in the defence of the same especially seing that it is no let but that when by a lawfull Counsaile either generall or nationall which the King and his Counsaile shall thincke most sufficient for that purpose we shall haue perswaded him not to bee caried awaye without reason hee may immediatly returne and protest that hee hath bene misled and that hee weareth not the sworde but for the defence of the Romish Church as now hee voweth the vpholding of his owne Moreouer I would that such as are offended at the sayd Protestation should know that the occasion that moued the sayd Lorde King of Nauarre to bee present at the sayd assembly at Montauban was not small neither of small importance to the reputation of him and his Estate for it is not vnknowne to all that his enemies had raised a speech aswell among al forraine Nations and throughout Europe as also perticulerly in this Realme that the sayde Lorde King of Nauarre had put from about his person the Ministers of his Religion that hee went to Masse to be
briefe that to the ende by the death of the late Mounsier the Duke to insinuate himselfe further in his Maiesties fauour and to bee neerer vnto him he had determined to al●er his Religion Which was a subtile ●llicie both to bring him into suspition with his owne partakers and into contempt among the Catholickes so as by that meanes both parts might haue forsaken and despised him and so he might become a pray to their fayned League as a man light vnconstant and of small stedfastnesse which is one of the chiefest things that euery Christiā Prince ought to abhorre especially in causes of Religiō which we may not lightly chāge neither without great notice of the cause and the discourse thereof publickly argued in the Church of God but especially in our awne consciences Wherefore good men neither ought ne cā mislike that the sayd Lord King of Nauarre doth protest to liue and dye in his Religion permitted vnder the Kings authoritie by his Maiesties Edicts published euen by y e decree of the States of the Realm neither are wee to terme him an hereticke or obstinate person vntill wee haue lawfully by a free vniuersall or nationall Counsaile whether shall seeme most expedient condemned that opinion which he holdeth Will ye likewise that I shewe you what mistrust the Catholickes may conceiue of his goodnesse and singuler clemencie Then would I pray the most passionate to consider and looke vpon his famelie They shall finde the same to consist for the most part of Catholicke Officers But of what sorte Euen such as are neerest about his person who haue him in their hāds vpon their honors and consciences to whom he committeth himselfe and vpon whom of himself he doth depend as vpon his keepers Maisters of his Guardrobe Stewardes and many others who before his face with his liking and contentation being in his trayne do ordinarely go to the Masse assist at the deuine Seruice ministred after the maner of the Catholick Romish Church To be brief euen with this qualitie he acknowledgeth thē for his good faithfull and loyall seruants This could they not assure themselues of neither yet serue him with good hearts beeing such men of honor as they are if in his behauiours they could perceiue any mistrust which is the nource of hatred and mallice against the professors of their Religion or if they could finde which were easie to doe that he did euill entreate or forbid them to serue God after their maner and so sought to bee the tormentor of their consciences To conclude al these cōsiderations alledged against the King of Nauarre which are neither true neither of any outwarde apparence cannot in y e cōsciences of good men truely Frēch debarre him from beeing sufficient and capable of the Crowne of France yea further I say that the same notwithstanding he is your true and lawfull King to whome onely you are bound to obeye in cace during his life the sayde occasion of substitution should fall out which God forbid and which also neither he ne wee ought or should desire if either wee were Christians either els did beare any iot of hartie good will or affection to our King 18 To proceede let vs see whether a king houlding the Scepter or raigning ouer any estate especially ouer ours may appoint and nominate any other successor then him whom nature and the Lawe of the Realme haue giuen him This question I do not moue without cause for in trueth the perturbers of the peace of this Crowne and such as iniustly do pretend to set thereinto a foote haue made a League which they entitle Holy but al good med doe truely name Bloody with the Pope the Spanierd and the Sauoyan the conspired enemies to France and the Royall blood thereof through whose helpe they hope to leauy an Army wherwith to come into the hart of the Realme onely say they simply to sommon the most Christian King to name a successor at their deuotions Oh what an execrable mischiefe to seeke to force vs to enfringe the successiue lawe of this Realme whereof we haue so many worldes enioyed the blessed good hap What impudency those that haue not almost whereof to liue in their owne houses to goe about to preuent and ouerthrowe the order and Estate of so great an Empire This is a wonderfull bouldnesse to endeuour to compell so mightie a Monarcke as the French King and their owne lorde being yong healthy and such a one as it if please God hee may graunt him the blessing of the posteritie of Abraham to choose him a man to be his Heir But the French men doe assure them selues that they haue a King that is of better bringing vp then so one that is valeant feareth God and is ielous of his honour yea such a-one as would not for the getting of the whole worlde make such a breache in his conscience reputation vertue and memory that our Children should haue cause atro carbone illum notare saying that he had so farre hated himselfe and his owne blood as to haue corrupted the Lawes whereby after his predecessors he doth raigne euen since the originall of the Monarchie and to haue transferred the Crowne out of his owne famely for the satisfying of the rashnesse of those who finding them selues in Armes might hasten his time to the end to cause him the sooner to leaue them his roume For what dareth not Ambition and desire to Raigne vndertake Moreouer I doe most humbly beseech his Maiestie to pardon me though I boldly shew him that it is a thing that hee may not doe Also that the Lawe of the Realme whereby him selfe is King forbiddeth hym to meddle therewith because the same taken order therin vnto whom it is commendable in the Maiestie of a Monarke to acknowledge him selfe bounden And thus was it iudged declared and put in execution by the Parliament of the Peeres of France for Charles the seauenth against the treaty which king Charles the sixt in the yere 1420. made in y e towne of Troye in Champagne at the Mariage of his daughter Lady Katherin vnto King Henrie the fifth of Englande which imported the graunt and minde of the sayd King Charles the sixt to be that the sayd King of England or his issue male comming of the sayd mariage shonld be called to y e Crowne of France the said Charles the seueuth be thereof debarred and disinherited for euer This is not now say our Maisters the first time that it hath bene and perpetually shall be obserued by y e Salick law of this florishing Crowne which the King that houldeth the Scepter cannot alter because he is but a tutor protector collector and administrator thereof salua eius substantia itaque nec donare nec perdere poterit neither otherwise dispose of the proximitie of his bloud then the law of the Realm will beare neither yet transferre it into any other hand then that whereto it apperteineth although hee
behaued our selues toward them we shall surely find that we haue left no more to doe but either to destroy our selues and perish all togither whereby the one shall not scorne the other either els to let them liue among vs one with an other in peace and libertie of conscience and neuer be so desirous to driue them into heauen with the edge of the Sword But will you haue me tell you the trueth your pompe your pride your ambition and the ignorance of yours is cause of al this mischiefe Notwithstanding you see the the Church on a flame who is there among you I will except some small number that endeuoureth to amend his life and to distribute y ● Church goods in such sort as he ought See wee not still the Kinges Courtes the Townes and Country full of superfluitie of our Bishops and other Clergie men such a number of Abbots called Commendatories who are of no professed order of Religion but doe neuerthelesse deuour the reuenues that belong to the poore so many beneficed persons with diuers Bishoprickes Abbayes Priories and Cures some in title others in commendam of the which they neuer see so much as one vnlesse it were to the ende to farme the same foorth You may see their Churches fall in decay and the Priestes whō themselues haue annoynted begge their foode the rest of the poore dye for hunger at their gates And in one word to say all these Maisters haue no money to doe their dueties w tall no not so much as to procure preaching which themselues can not doe or for performing the deuine seruice either to instruct the youth For euery one doth sufficiently know that the late King Charles the nineth whom God pardon and King Henry the third now raigning visiting and comming to those Townes wherein the principal Vniuersities of their Realme are planted did ordeine that the Clergie of certaine Dioceses should contribute some small portion toward the salaries of the Doctors and Regēts of the same yet was it neuer possible for these poore people who are the seedes of iustice and vertue to reape any one penny Our Maisters haue nowe money enough to helpe to maintaine warre against the King vnder an imaginary and false pretēce of defending the Catholicke Religion You deceiue your selues if you hope to conuert others before ye make cleane your selues no neuer looke for it for it will still be obiected vnto you that you can see a mote in other mens eyes but cannot take away the whole blocke that blindeth your selues Why follow you not the example of Moses who when he beheld and sawe Gods people offende the deuine Maiestie with Idolatrie did not take the sworde to put them to death but began to crye O Lorde this people haue sinned forgiue them or els blot mee out of thy booke which thou hast written Let vs liue well let vs reforme our selues and let vs not be so careful for the wealth of the world We haue so long cryed out against those of the pretended Religion concerning this poynt that now they can say of vs The Doctor is to blame who reproaueth other for the fault that himself hath Yea they will saye worse for still they stand vpon the defensiue you are the assailants They haue euermore acknowledged the Kings Maiestie for their soueraigne Lord and neuer contemned the Princes of his bloud as the King himselfe in his Edicts hath not sticked to confesse but you endeuour to enstale Straungers against the estate and dignitie of his Maiestie who both before he was King and since hath prodigally ventred his life and hazarded his Crowne for the glutting of your desires and putting of your ouer rude counsailes in executiō What reason therefore haue you now to match your selues with the meere enemies to the peace of the Church enemies to your Common-wealth enemies to your King and the Princes of his bloud I saye to your most Christian and Catholicke King one that feareth God and one who hath peraduenture done more then he ought for the getting by armes that contention which you do wish for I am moued so to say because in trueth I beleeue and experience hath taught vs that the more we stirre vp this euill the more it encreaseth wherefore herein the best counsaile that wise men haue left vs were to resolue our selues that if this pretended reformed Religion bee not by the decree and establishment of Gods worde it will without any warres perish and vanish of it self as haue done so many former heresies but contrariwise if it be according to the wil of the holy Ghost we may crye out at our pleasures but it will fulfill his worke 10 But my Maisters if you be not led by malice are you so blinde as to thinke that the authors of this conspiracie which they terme a holy League bee ledde by any zeale of Catholicke Religion If that were their drift wherefore haue not they also called into the same such Lords Princes of the bloud as stil continuing Catholickes and liuing according to the Romish Church were neuer so much as suspected to bee of the pretended reformed Religion We know very well that the Lord Cardinal of Bourbon whose yeres they haue seduced and whom vnder a vaine hope of smoke they make to weare the knife wherewith to embrue his hands in his owne bloud hauing wrested from him the fayrest and most of his Benefices whereof by their suggestion hee hath depriued his owne Nenewes before he altogether became vnnaturall when they bounde him to this peeuishnesse offering vnto him their fayned League to signe requested that his Neuewes the Lordes Cardinall of Vandosme Prince of Conty and Earle of Soissons might bee included in y ● same wherto these our Maisters could not intend Whereof doe they suspect the Lord Duke of Montpēsier and the Lord Prince of Dōbes his sonne both being most Catholicke Princes onely that they bee of the house of Bourbon which they seeke to roote out and so doe make accoumpt to transferre the Crowne into their owne handes trying themselues onely vpon the sayd Lord Cardinall a man worne and of small continuance so contenting themselues to make him the standerd whereby to establish their armes neither would they auctorize the rest amōg their troupes fearing least they should haue better eyes then the sayd Lorde Cardinall to discouer their wicked entents besides that if it shoulde so fall out that they shoulde come to the drawing of l●ttes for the beane in the cake the people would rather haue recourse to these Princes as to the braunches and sprigges of their Kings and those who onely in their degrees and order are capable of the Crowne of France either els least the Frēch Nobilitie should blush for shame at the preferring of the tirannous dominion of strāgers before their French Princes and lawfull Lordes This is not the first day that the house of Bourbon haue bene subiect to the enuie and malice of these Espaniolized
conspirators for it appeared more euidently whē the Duke of Vendosme father to the now raigning King of Nauarre maried the heire of Nauarre whom one of their predecessors was very desirous to match withall The said Lord of Montpensier should be very blinde if he could not by the welcome that the parrisans gaue him lately at Orleans with Cannon shot perceiue that it is not Catholicke Religion that they fight for but the rooting out of the royall famelie As also before whē in his absence while he was gone to accompanie the late Monsier the Duke brother to the King into Brabant they procured the taking away of the gouernement of Brittaine frō him which now they clayme to be theirs some in the right of their mother and other of their wife But I hope the King shall be able notwithstāding they endeuour to dispossesse him to make himselfe whole to y e and after to heare them in their petitions if hee finde the same reasonable Moreouer to returne to you my Maisters of the Clergie I will set you downe most pertinēt demonstrations of their zeale to the Catholicke Church and will tell you that after they had fayled of their enterprise against the Towne of Straus borowe by the spoyle whereof they hoped for meane sufficient to demaunde Mets Thoul Verdun and therewithall together with other the Townes vpon the shore of Rhine which easily they would haue forced to haue prosecuted their purpose for the rest of the Realme of Fraunce they endeuoured to winne those of the pretended reformed Religion vnto whom they promised not only such free exercize of their religiō as y ● King now raigning had permitted them but also if neede were with greater libertie and assurance and to the same ende offered to send their male children and young Cousens for hostages into Germany vnder the pretence of learning the Dutch tongue perswading the French of the sayd Religion that they should neuer liue assured vnder the King that by that which was passed they might beleeue that he would enfringe his Edicts of Pacification vpon his first oportunitie that neither y ● King of Nauarre neither the Prince of Condy had authoritie sufficient to defend them to be brief that it was their best to offer themselues into their protection who had both the men of warre the Clergie and the gouernors of the Prouinces at their deuotion To the same effect they also sent the late Lorde of May to Duke Casemire to winne hym into this League and also to practize the same with those of the pretended reformed Religion offering to commit their forces into his hands besides setting before him that he was discended of the race of Charlemagne as well as they that they might make the one a great Emperour the other a great King that the Capeti●s had ouer long enioyed their inheritance and that they were resolued no lōger to suffer it As in deede about the time of the siege of Fere the sayd May practized all that he perceiued discontented to signe the sayde conspiracie vntill he was woūded at the said siege whereof when the chief of this drift had notice he posted from Paris vnto him to get from him the Articles of the League as also after the decease of the sayd May hee sent to his house to make search amōg al the papers remēbrances of the sayd deceased Beleeue not therefore my Maisters that it is the loue of God that leadeth them either piety of Catholicke Religion but say boldly that it is no other but ambition a wicked and abhominable entent to lose and alter this Estate and to get it into their handes and so to make you bondmen to their passions or executioners of their tyrannie Wherefore I beseech you to call to minde the saying of Ioel. Awake my Maisters you that are dronken with your Wine weepe and lament for all your ioye and mirth is gone farre from you Put on your mourning weedes ye Priestes that serue at the Aulter for our land is become miserable and our fieldes doe now weepe sith they are become barren our Wines withered our Oyle diminished and our labourers brought into necessitie And againe weepe ye Clergie that serue God and in liew of other weapons say Lorde forgiue this people and forsake not thy enheritance As for your liues direct them after the example of the Apostle who sayth Wee are as young children among you or as the nurse preserueth her little ones euen so we doe merueilously loue you and doe couet not onely to teach you but to offer our liues for your preseruation Put awaye all hatred mallice guile emulation enuie and backbyting feede vpon milke that we growe therein to our saluation for almightie God is mercifull My Maisters I pray you pardon me I knowe I might haue spoken more gently vnto you but to what purpose is it only with the fingers to touch the wound or to annoynt onely the outside thereof with too easie an oyntment when you see it is tyme to crush it throughly to expell all corruption that marreth the whole body What had I bene the better to haue ministred a tent of lint when it wanted a sharpe corosiue Take therefore in good parte this that I say vnto you for it is the doctrine y ● I haue learned in the Schoole of the Catholicke Apostolicke and Romish Church the greatest Doctors whereof without humaine passions will graunt that al the Sermons and Preachings wherewith you stirre vp the people to take armes and shed bloud are no other then the deuilles Trōpets and Drommes as also surely if you seeke any other weapons then clemencie and Christian pietie doe teach and that with Tertullian you say not you had rather be killed thē kil I do foreshew vnto you the wrath of God vpon you and that vndoubtedly the prophesie of Malachie will bee verefied in you in these wordes My wrath is kindled against the Shepeheards whom I will visite among the flockes 11 Much lesse are we also to care for the complaint that some of the vnwisest of your men doe lay vpon the King for exacting some of your tenths and vsing sometimes as the necessitie of his Estate requireth the temporalties of his Churches wherein they are much to blame and do ouergreatly abuse the libertie that the conniuence of Princes haue tollerated in your predecessors in respect of their pietie and endeuours in the distribution of their meanes possessions and almoses giuen to the poore vnto whō the Church goods doe appertaine and not to you Besides that I will by the way tell you that the wealth of the Church is the onely poyson thereof for that the greatnesse thereof consisteth not in temporall goodes and worldly pompe as the deuill hath perswaded most of our Clergie but in the holy and commendable life of our Pastors and in that heauenly foode that they giue to their flockes ouer y ● which they watch night day And as Chrisostome doth well
not long before we doe not finde in any Historie that the Kings of France were euer annointed or consecrated but onely simply crowned as Gregorie of Tours maketh mention in his historie whereby it appeareth that none of our Kings of the first famely did euer obserue this ceremonie The first then that vsed it was Pepin father to Charlemaigne whome Boniface Archbishoppe of Mentz did consecrate annoint and crowne by the commaundement of Pope Zachary of Rome that in my opinion because he was the first of his race who of a priuate and perticuler person was established King against the Merouingiens After his decease Pope Stephen the second did the like to Charles sonne to the sayd Pepin when he was King of France whom also Pope Adrian againe consecrated annoynted and crowned when he was declared King of the Lombards and finally Pope Leo the third did the like to him with the Imperiall Diadem And this ceremonie haue euer since bene obserued by our Kings of France not that thereby they bee Kings but to the ende it may seeme as a testimonie that they are Christians and Catholickes and of priuate persons are become Kings to commaund the people So that in consideration hereof the first French Emperours Lewes the Meeke Lothaire Lewes the second and the rest who being by natural succession Kings were promoted to the Empire did not vse to take the title of Emperor at the day of their consecration or coronation but at such time as their father or former predecessor thought good to nominate them for their successors from which they began to number the yeeres of their Empire nothing respecting the ceremonie or solēnitie of their Coronation as appeareth by many the auncient Charters and documents of their daies Yea the Histories doe note that Charles the Fat yongest sonne to Lewes the Meek was the first that in his yeeres made mention of the day of his Coronation and tooke not vpō him the title of Augustus vntill the 8. Calendes of Ianuary ensuing in the yere 866. on which day Pope Iohn the 8. anointed and crowned him which in subteltie he thought good to note as one that obteyned not the Empire by succession for Lewes the second his neuewe last deceased had not named nor instituted hym his heire much lesse had any chosen him but the histories doe affirme that hee for a great summe of money bought the Imperial dignitie of the Pope because there were other more fitter for it then he that layd clayme thereto as his elder brother Lewes and his children Kings of Germany so that Charles fearing least as reason and iustice required they should be preferred before him thought good to aduance himselfe and to get the Pope to consecrate him To conclude therfore it is most certaine that this ceremonie doth make nothing to the right of the Kings lawful succession neither is any more then a simple token of honor in his behalfe whom nature and vsuall order hath caused to be borne or suffered to bee elected to rule and gouerne the Estate so that to weene to perswade that he that is borne to be your lawful King by the Lawes of the Realme hath no authoritie ouer you before he be consecrated annointed and crowned is a meere fallation 13 It followeth sith I haue proued vnto you that in this cace the sayde King of Nauarre whom the deepe dissemblers dare not openly in their Libelles denye to be the nearest of the bloud should be your natural true and lawfull King let vs agree together that it were meere wrong for you to withstand or resist him I say further that in this Realme there is neither lawe nor order that debarreth him from lawfull raigne and the Crowne notwithstāding he would remaine in his now professed Religion But contrariwise that such as are of and doe professe the same are declared meete and capable of all kindes of succession by infinite the Edicts Decrees and declarations of our Kings published enrouled and dayly put in execution by the Arrestes of the soueraigne Courtes and other Magistrates who vnder his Maiesties authoritie doe minister Iustice in this Estate whose common crye tendeth to obliuion and perpetuall forgetting of the passed miseries and troubles As also in trueth it is more then a Catholicke passion to compare the Huguenot with a Iewe or Turke For besides that our Kings doe auctorize and permit the one and not the other in trueth and without affection for my selfe am a Catholick and in the same faith doe wish to dye we all doe agree in our faith so as there remaineth no more but to decide for the most part of controuersie the institution of outwarde ceremonies which either the tyme or the necessitie of the peoples instruction haue procured to bee brought into y e Church be not conteined or authorized in the holy Scripture Sith therfore wee doe agree that in the first times the Christians did liue and serue GOD without them we can not now lesse doe then heare the reasons of those that craue abolition before we condemne or pronounce them Heretikes least the condemnation goe before the proofe and so they haue greater cause to complaine as already they doe that wee haue iudged them vnheard and haue ended their Proces vpon defaultes and contumacie Wherefore the● protest they are ready to pourge themselues if we would graunt them free accesse into the assembly of the church and not stand vpon the pointes of not receiuing them groūded vpon the long time that wee haue bene in possession of the obseruing of these traditiōs from hand to hand receiued by the cōsent and common agreement of the Church because if we had no other argument wee should not be able to deny but that our fathers whē they brought them in were men and therefore subiect to humaine frailtie as in many other things experience may teach vs. I will content my selfe with one onely example to our purpose Virgill Bishop of Saltzbourg in a Sermon about the yeere of our Lorde 755. saying that there were Antipodes in y e world was for the same by Boniface Archbishop of Ments accused of Heresie because by inducing the Antipodes it seemed he would also bring in an other Christ This matter was debated before Vtilo King of Bauiere who at the commaundement of Zachary denounced the sayd Virgilius to bee one of the most abhominable Heretikes that euer was So great was the obstinacie of the knowledge conceaued in this age of the Antipodes or Arteques and yet since it hath bene verefied for trueth This neuerthelesse I doe not alledge to the ende to reproue the institution of the ceremonies of the Church with which I doe dayly serue GOD especially knowing that in alteration of Lawes aud Orders necessity must be very apparent in the correction of matters long before allowed but onely to admonish all men that in as much as they are men it is no meruaile though some will be inquisitiue whether the authors
of the same were led by the will of God or whether therein they enterprised any thing repugnant thereto especially sith the question concerneth the maintenance of the peace liues and soules of so many millions of parsons who either might or are already lost vpon this quarell And this I will say more that sith the fault hath proceeded of our Prelates who haue fallen a sleepe and haue not mainteined the fare that they ought for the nourishment of their Flockes who being ignorant in the most part of the principles of their religion haue gone out of their ranck and doe perticulerly require the reasons thereof it is most necessary gently to giue them a taste of the same without sword or fire vntil the condemned bee at large heard in their defences and lawfully conuict 14 Moreouer I dare aduowe that in Realmes and Empires natural Succession receiued by the estates is of such force that the best and most Catholicke Parsons neuer enterprized against y ● progresse of the same as occasions haue bene ministred no not for Heresie although it were condemned and with all solemnitie accursed by the Church of GOD Notwithstanding vndoubtedly by other dealing they might haue hoped for better and that they were in maner assured of manifold afflictions at hand Had not certein Bishops Arriens infected Constantius whē he succeeded his father although he were very yong What was the cause that Zeno being an heritick was neuerthelesse made Emperour after his father in lawe Leo but that the Empire was atteyned for his wife AriadNe and little Leo sonne to the said Zeno whom his Grandfather had instituted to bée his heire in consideration whereof the Christians were content to beare that affliction Constantine the third and the fifth whē they were called to the Empire were heretickes but yet in asmuch as they were lawfull successors to the last deceased the Church would not meddle with them When Anastaze the first was chosen no other cause moued y e Patriarke of Constantinople and the people to force a promise from him that afterward hee should be a Catholicke or at the least that he should not make any alteration or stirre vp any broyle in the Church of God but onely because he was then an Eutichian who was condemned by the Counsaile of Chalcedon and the same is the onely caution that you may exact or require of your King in cace he were other then a Catholicke sith the Christian Church neuer desired greater assurance of the aforenamed then their faith and royall promise I might bee tedious if I should rehearse vnto you an infinite number of other examples whereby euery one may manifestly perceiue that the holy Primitiue Church neuer accoumpted it so smal a matter to violate the lawes of the Estate or to habandon that obligation that wee owe to such a Prince as is either lawfull successor to the deceased or els solemnly elected Who is he that wil not thinke the Bishoppes of those former tymes that I speake of to haue bene farre more zealous in their charge and better liuers thē the most parte of ours in respect whereof they might euen with their credite only haue sooner perswaded the people that thei gouerned for Religion and godlinesse sake to haue expelled deposed and banished those hereticall Emperours aswel as to haue admitted them into that succession that by the politick order of the Empire was vnto them due either to obey or yeeld them al fidelitie was it want of power all the world being Christian euen in the Prime of the Church about one hundred yeeres after that the Temples of the Greeke Idols had bene shut vp whereby not so much as the memorie of them remained among the subiects of this great Monarchie I will by the way rehearse vnto you a Decree of the Church made for y e posteritie of Kings least you shuld thinck me either to be led by affection or to haue told you fables Heare therfore the wordes of the Fathers assembled in a Counsaile Like as the Insolencie of wicked Kings haue euermore bene odious and abominable to the subiects so haue the people alwaies liked wel of the prouident foresight of the good who therefore could suffer or beholde a Christian offending in that poinct or that were desirous to expell the posteritie or ligne Royall from such rights and dignities as thereto doe apperteyne Such dealing doe we therefore expressely forbid in fauour of the posteritie of the most excellent Prince Chintillus we doe renew and cōfirme the decree that was made the last yere at the Synode houlden in this Church concerning the loue and good will that euery one is bound to beare to the Kings ligne and to the defence and preseruation which all subiectes of the Estate doe owe thereto to the ende the successors be not maliciously defrauded of the merites of their predecessors in the augmentation of their Crowne or their great liberalitie toward their subiects Also that none doe enterprize to hurt them because it is meete that by the authoritie of a Counsaile we do graūt peace to the succession and posteritie of those by whose meanes and vnder whose protection wee haue aforetyme bene preserued Admit therfore that the Church made this Decree in respect of that obligation that she deemed the subiectes ought to the posteritie of their Kings either for the loue and reuerence of those that had well gouerned their Commonwealths euen as GOD who is the author and holder vp of Monarchies would neuer take the Scepter wholy from Iuda for his seruaunt Dauids sake yet if our selues would but call to mind so many good Kings of this race especially the father of the house of Bourbon the Lorde S. Lewes whō for his good life the Church hath canonized and whose memorie ought to be vnto vs holy honorable we should shewe our selues most wicked periurde vnthankful and disloyall persons if wee should seeke or but make any countenaunce to thinke vpon innouating any thing against this posteritie 15 Good men are not ignorant of the pretences that these great bucklers of the faith doe take hold of which are first that the King of Nauarre being King would polute subuert abolish Catholick Religiō in France and force his subiects to become huguenots But to say the trueth this vizard is lesse then nothing for his former behauiours will presently force vs to confesse the cōtrary because our selues haue seene with what importunacie he hath besought our Kinges as beeing their subiect and perswaded them to suffer him and his partakers to liue vnder their obedience in all libertie of conscience Wherefore then should we thinke that when he were soueraign he would practize against his people any enterprize repugnant to that lawe which himselfe being in their race sought to enioye vnder the Kings his Lords Shal we presume that such a Christiā wise Prince instructed in the feare of God would become a Tyrant torment the soules of his subiects against
doe now sufficiently lay open the trueth when vnder pretence of withstanding the King of Nauarre and hindering him from so much as the very shadowe of any vayne hope of succession they dare presently take armes against our Kings Maiestie and shake his Estate so to make themselues Lordes vnder the couerture of a sacke dipped in a fewe Imaginary rights as perniciously as lightly inuented For good men will euer confesse that it is not propter Iesum that now they runne to armes but rather for the satisfying of their insatiable ambition whereof how bad soeuer the intent be yet will the effects be more detestable except God take pittie vpon vs and the people with the Kings good seruants doe open their eyes to see clerely into this matter and to acknowledge it to be the catastrophe or last act of that Tragedie which these wicked people haue long played in this Realm vnder the shadow of zeale to Catholick Religiō with the cloke whereof they goe about to shroude the most foolish in an irreconciliable diuorce from the King their soueraigne Lord and the naturall French Princes and perticulerly against the sayde Lorde King of Nauarre the neerest in bloud to his Maiestie whose destruction lieth them more vpon then all the rest 2 In his respect I will onely say that the crime of Treazon whereof falsly they accuse him ought not to be iudged by the sole occasion sayth Modestin for the reuerence of the Princes Maiestie but for the trueth Plinie writing in commendation of Traian sayth The crime of treazon was wont to bee singuler and almost peculier to him that could not bee charged of any other matter wherefore Traian abolished the same as one that contented himself with the force of other accusations this Prince holding opinion that sueh Monarkes as were so ieloux of their Maiestie had none at all And for the same cause was this kinde of accusation likewise abolished in the tyme of Claudius Adrian Pertinax Alexander Seuerus and other good Princes who deemed other publick accusations to be sufficient for punishment of euill liuers how farre soeur they should forget themselues Howesoeuer the case standeth cōcerning the King of Nauarre he may yet more boldly speake in the presence and face of his enemies then might Cruentius Cordus beeing vnder Tyberius accused for saying that Cassius was the last Romaine when he shewed the Senat that they would punish him for his wordes because his deedes were irreprehensible For this Prince thankes be to God neuer offended his King in worde nor deede neither can his sclaunderers either generally or perticulerly taxe him of any action nere to rebellion or disobedience yea the whole pretence that these trouble some persons do take of his Religion is suppressed beaten downe by their owne ordinary and publick confession by the Princes Edicts and declarations and by infinite other writinges appro●ued in all the Courts of Parliament of this Realme And in deede the whole rebellion fellonie wherwith they may charge him is that he would not suffer the knife to cut his throate but did quietly withdrawe himselfe out of the prease when he see that his enemies would force him to beare infinite iniuries vnworthy his greatnesse Otherwise who can say that euer he refused the duetie faith obedience and subiection which hee is bound to yeeld to the King his soueraigne Lord much lesse then that he hath cōspired against his person that he hath sought to make himselfe King or enterprized any thing preiudiciall to the aduauncement and peace of the French Commonwealth Shewed hee euer any token of desire to bee named his Maiesties heire or successor Hath he chaunged his garment or augmented his Estate for his approach to the King through the euill hap and misfortune of this Realme growne vpon the losse of the late Mounsier the Kings onely brother Hath he called together his friends or craued the counsaile of Atturneyes to learne whether himselfe bee now the neerest of the bloud Royall Who can shew that euer he vsed any confederacies which iustly he might haue made as King of Nauarre and soueraigne Lord of Bearne or did euer employ any other then to the seruice of the King and wealth of this Crowne who will bee so malicious vnnaturall and sencelesse as to impute to fellonie y e withdrawing and cherishing of his fellowe Citizens the professors of the same Religion wherein hee was borne bred and brought vp euen from his cradle when he found them in like misfortune as himselfe and oppressed with the force of their aduersaries who vnder the cloake of the Kings authoritie haue often endeuoured to roote them out either the withstanding of the stripes and fortefying of himselfe for the safegarde of his life Sith so soone as it hath pleased his Maiestie to stretch forth his arme to them and to offer them such conditions of peace as himself liked of with libertie of conscience he hath not onely together with them vnarmed himselfe and yeelded his Houldes into the handes and power of his Maiestie and fallen downe at his feete but which is more haue returned their whole power together against those that haue come to his and their succour witnesse the siege of Newhauen and haue disunited themselues from all confederaties and Leagues which in respect thereof they were entered into with straungers and all this to the ende to submit them selues to the Kings good will who hath liked thereof and so confessed in all his Edictes of Pacification with other the perticuler good deedes and fauours which the sayde King of Nauarre confesseth to haue receiued of the hand and good will of his Maiestie who hath freely and liberally for the wealth of his Estate permitted to those of the sayd Religion the free exercize thereof notwithstanding the cōspired enemies to this Crowne and to the Princes of the bloud haue often gone about to bring into suspition the actions not onely of the sayd Lord King of Nauarre but also of all other the Princes of Bourbon who onely of the Royall famelie doe remaine Besides I assure my selfe if any man would endeuour as it were necessary and meete by effectual reazōs debated in a lawful assembly of Gods Church to enforme the sayde Lorde King of Nauarre that hetherto hee hath bene deceiued and that his bringing vp in his Religion hath bene very bad hee is not obstinate but easely may be reduced and brought to submit himselfe to sentence giuen by force of Gods worde In the meane tyme we cannot blame him whō his mother hath noursed brought vp in a certaine Religion publickly permitted by his Maiesties Edicts and ordenances for standing firme in the same and desiring to continue in that which he beleueth to belong to his saluation O Frenchmen is it meete the Kings Edicts should stand the wicked in stead of a bayt to roote out with the sword or guile more then barbarous to destroye the hearts liues of the Princes whō God hath graunted
Raoul Duke of Sueue he desired the Bishoppes to gather together at Bresse where in their Sinode they excommunicated and deposed the Pope and elected Clement Bishop of Rauenna to bee his successor for whose establishment the Emperour tooke Armes and entered Italie Henry the fifth was forced to Warre against Pascall who had mooued the Romaines to mutiny against him to the ende to haue slaine him because he endeuored to mainteine the auncient rightes of the Empire concerning the collations of Bishoprickes Frederick the first vnderstanding the arrogant presumption and obstinate resolution of the Popes Adrian Alexander the third and Victor importing that it lay in them to giue the Empire to whome they pleased did seauen tymes enter Italie with an army where he fought a blooddy battell in the which dyed 12000. of Pope Alexanders partakers who therewith prouoked caused the liuely Picture of the ●ame Emperour to be drawen and sent the Table to the Soudan of Egipt against whome the saide Emperor was gone withal aduertising him y t vnlesse he procured his death by treason or otherwise he should neuer haue peace wherevpon the Emperor recreating himselfe a litle from his Armye was taken and brought before this heathen who shewed him the Popes Letter togither with his Picture and yet neuerthelesse put him to his Raunsome and so sent hym home honestly as abhorring the treason of the great Priest of the Christians against this Prince who ventured his life for the maintenāce of his Religion Hereat was the Emperour so offended y t at his returne he entered Italy againe forced y e Pope to flee in counterfaite apparell after y t the Bishops had in a Synode condemned him as a traitor to the Empire yea which is more as a conspired enemie to Christian faith Phillip this mans sonne being by Innocent the 3. sclaundered amōg the Princes of the Empire was counsailed by the Bishoppes of Germany to haue his reuenge by armes Ottho the 4. being in Rome was so s●arred by the driftes of the same Innocēt that he was driuen to haue recourse to force in which conflict perished a number of the Citize●s of Rome Frederick the 2. in whose time Innocent the 4. Honore and Gregory the 9. did in Italy begin y ● quarell of y e Guelphes against the Gibelins who mainteyned them selues vnder the auncient obedience of the Empire was by the aduice of al his Princes and Prelates compelled to oppose himselfe against the practizes conspiracies which these high Priestes wrought against him The Emperour Albert King Phillip of France doubted not to bend them selues against the oppression of Boniface the eight to contemne his excommunications vntill King Phillip assembled the Prelates of Fraunce by whose sentence he was declared a Scismaticke Hereticke inuader of the holy Sea and a perturber of the peace of the Church as hauing molested all Italy with the factions of the Whites and the Blackes Henry the 7. of the house of Luxembourg to the ende to withstand Clement the third the mainteyner of Robert King of Sicill a rebellious vassall to the Empire was driuen to come to handy strokes with him and his partakers the like did Lewes of Bauier against Iohn the 23. and other y e Popes of his tyme who without either cause or reason had declared him an Hereticke because hee would not yeeld to them the Imperiall authoritie in Italy neither put the Empire into the subiection of the Bishop of Romes Sea In our tyme Lewes the 12. King of France and the Emperour Charles the fifth how dealt they most iustly with the Popes that would haue dispensed with and exceeded the boundes of their duetie To bee briefe in other the Prouinces of the Empire infinite are the examples of Kings and Princes who with the aduice of the Prelates and Nobilitie of their Dominions haue with armes withstood the ambitious and passionate practizes of the Popes in whom it had bene more seemely to haue gouerned the Church and spiritual Hierarchy and not to haue thrust their Sythes into other mens haruest whereof is without doubt proceeded the destruction and deformitie of the West Catholick Church together with the full fall of the East Church into the which by those meanes is entered the Wolfe that hath deuoured Gods flocke whereof they shall assuredly aunswere 24 Now haue wee yet the second question to enquire of for our better instructiōs in this matter That is whether the King of Nauarre bee an Hereticke His aduersaries doe say that his opinion of Religion was lately condemned in the late oecumenicall Counsaile holden at Trent Hereto he aunswereth that the same pretended Counsaile was not lawfully assembled because therein the Pope executed the roume of both Iudge and party also that such as prosecuted reformatiō in the Church were not heard To bee briefe there may be debating and many nullities may be alleadged aswell in the forme as in the decrees of the sayde Counsaile whereto neede no more respect ●ee had then to the counsaile of the wicked of which the Psalmist doth speak or vnto those that the Prophet termeth Counsailes of vanitie yea and Sainct Iohn writeth Beleeue not euery spirite but prooue whether they be of God Saiuct Hierome also teacheth vs that the doctrine of the holy Ghost is the same which is set downe in the Canonicall Scriptures against which if the Counsailes determine any thing it shall be wicked Also when the Emperor Martian in the Counsaile of Chalcedon forbad to dispute or call into question such thinges as had bene well decreed in the same holy assembly he thereby ment not to graūt free libertie to Counsailes against Gods worde but he speaketh onely of such thinges as were well and lawfully ordeined according to y e rule of the holy Scriptures by the which those that vphold the same opinion with the King of Nauarre doe pretend to shewe that the Cleargy who were assembled in the Counsaile of Trent alone haue greatly erred which their inquisition and search beeing by Gods owne mouth permitted to the Church may not well be refused Trye all sayth the Apostle and hold that which is good And in deede if the Counsayle of Trent bee aunswerable to the doctrine of Iesus Christ If the trueth hath appeared therein then neede it not to feare the tryall at the fire thereof which is the true touchstone of humaine traditions The worde of GOD is pure and feareth not the fiery tryall for it is a true saying The lawe that will not bee tryed may iustly be suspected After then that in a generall and free Counsayle all parties haue bene heard that by the onely worde of God and without affection they haue debated their cause so that finally the opinion which the sayd Lord King of Nauarre holdeth bee adiudged hereticall he is so Catholick and zealous a Prince and one that so feareth God that he wil not stick publickly in the Church to confesse he hath
stand no longer in neede will not in the meane tyme dye either through melancholy or choller so speedely quit them his roume they knowe in their Italian League Articifers enough to sende him into Abrahams bosome whereby they shall for so many good and commendable seruices done to our France bee thought more worthy to be crowned then now notwithstanding at this present they cause ouer loude to bee song their pretended merites by all the Spanish pentioners and feede Spyes in the Court at whose mouthes they set out their woundes receiued in the wasting of this Crowne after the maner of the auncient Romaines who exhibited themselues naked to the people in beggiug the Suffrages of dignities and offices Thus when through their wisedome they shal haue killed the King and the King of Nauarre who are y ● two thornes that trouble their feete for the one they will procure the singing of a Deprofundis and for the other Te Deum laudamus whereby together with an absolution sealed in leade in the Cource of Roome they shall bee whiter then Swannes For of the rest of the Princes of the bloud they make no accoumpt neither doe thincke them subiect sufficient to put thē in any chafe about the rooting of them out so greate is the furie of Sathan in these daies This is the whole story which those that loue them are forced to confesse Neuerthelesse it seemeth that we sleepe our our mishap or ratherthat we make hast to this fire euen with our backe burdens of woode to kindle it in stead of water to quench it withall 29 Hereafter I pray you what dignitie or Maiestie may restraine from vice those that are so cruell to their King as to take armes against his person against the peace of his estate whose subiects they are and against the establishment of his Realme Neither Equitie Iustice Custome Lawes respect of land loue of their fellowe Citizens or reuerence to the Magistrate can permit those men that contemne the soueraign authoritie of the Maiestie royall and such as without respect to Iustice or publick honestie doe shew them selues more cruell and barbarous in procuring vnder pretence of reformation and zeale to Catholicke Religion the engendring in France of an immortall warre the mother of all impietie wrong reuenge ruine deformation and vtter subuertion of most mightie Kingdomes and florishing Empires to blush for shame What eminencie is the Church to looke for among the execrable blasphemies and infinite sacriledges that will be committed in the warres What power what authoritie what light may wee attend of Iustice when she is snared mastered become prisoner and ouerruled by the weapons of the most vicious and corrupt persons of this Realme What honour what degree what respect may the Nobilitie hope for beeing in perpetuall hazarde to loose life children wealth peace and free cōmandement ouer their vassals and subiects What ease what profite or what encrease may the ouertoyled laborer the venterous Marchant the quiet Burgesse or any other whosoeuer in this poore Realm buyld vpon Euery one must prouide for famine pestilence fire bloud and spoyle to be briefe for all the scourges that spring of the disorder barbarousnesse ambition and insatiable desire of those who if they maye finde assistance among the French will neuer lay downe weapons but either by an establishment of a perfect tyrannie proceeding out of their affections more grieuous and inspportable to those that shall remaine then warre it selfe or els by the selfe ruine and vtter extirpation of their wretched followers together with most of the good men that shal haue withstoode them Let vs not O Frenchmen perswade our selues that this mischiefe will be a matter of three or fower moneths onely For if it be Religion for the which they seme to bring you into the fielde your selues doe knowe that our Kinges haue not spared life state meanes or friendes for the remedying thereof within these fiue and twentie yeeres which notwithstanding what effect haue so many murders such plentie of battailes and such store of bloud spilt wrought Weene you that these who so long haue found meanes to defend themselues cannot withstand you but must so easely yeeld vnto you See you not the straunger that looke vppon you and doe prepare to hasten our destruction if we bee so foolish as to beate our selues The authors of this cōspiracie being now alone are no strōger then when they fought so sharply vnder the authoritie of King Charles the 9. and the King now raigning and were vpholden by the same meanes that now they assure them selues of out of Spayne Italy and other places You know they were chiefe of their Maiesties Counsaile Leaders of their Armyes or rather authors of all passed mischiefes enterteyning the King in that will and opinion wherein he then was namely that weapons were y e instruments to appease Gods wrath and to reunite vs in one onely Religion vntill his Maiestie vpon better aduice confessed the fruites and effects of the contrary and by the exāples of his neighbours did very wisely cōsider that the disease of Religion is so rooted in mans mynd that he were farre better to tollerate it sith we all agree in one belief and Creede of the Apostles then to hazarde his whole Estate by weening to heale vp a wounde which God willing maye by daylie conuersation bee suppled for vndoubtedly some diseases are of such a nature that it is more expedient for the Patient to beare the griefe thereof then for his cure to vse ouer daungerous and doubtfull remedies whose tryall is more sharpe and intollerable thē the disease it selfe With which counsaile truely royall fatherly and worthy a Christian and peaceable Prince these zelators of their own wealth rather then of Christianitie being offended doe now euidently shewe their bad mindes and do buyld their pretēces vpon the diuersitie of Religions vpon the oppressions of the people vpon the deformations of Iustice and vpon the distribution of Dignities notwithstanding all men knowe that in respect of the last they are better prouided and haue greater cause to praise the parting then to complaine of that honor that the King hath done them As for the rest themselues are the onely cause of all mischiefe engendred by ciuill warres which euer since the resolution vpon their forecast thei haue nourished in this Estate because it is certaine that peace is the mother of pietie establishment of Iustice and the true spring of mans ease Neither can we denie the good holy and commendable affection wherwith our most Christian and peaceable Prince set hand to the worke so long as it pleased God to let vs enioy peace whether in the example that he set vs in his Religion desire that hee shewed in reformation of Iustice or in the ease that so much as he might he procured to his good subiects What is there more to doe then fellowe countrymen but againe to sheath vp our weapons and deuoutly to pray to God to
from whom your predecessors the Kings of Nauarre are discended was wont viz. Pro lege grege setting forth in your actions as many desires of peace clemencie fatth honestie and Christian piette as they doe of violence bitternesse and perfidie being banded against the Iustice of God The ende of the second Booke ❧ THE CONTENTS OF THE THIRD part of this Booke 1. The grauitie of Treason For what causes a Prince of the bloud may bee declared vncapable of the Crowne Abuse of the crime of treason The malice supposition of the leagued against those of the pretended reformed religion 2. A true exposition of the crime of treason The King neuer suspected the K. of Nauarre of treason An infallible argument of the King of Nauarres pietie 3. The house of Nauarre discēded of the house of France The Originall of the K. of Nauarres grandfathers by both father and mother 4. The Capetz and Carliens come of the same stocke as Clouis and the Merouingiens 5. The Capetz and Carliens are of one famely The originall processe and genealogie of the Capets THE THIRD PART OF the Cath. Apologie THE third obiection that the seditious doe in their Libells disperse against the K. of Nauarre importeth him to be a rebel a traitor and a protector of Conspirators against the King and therefore an ennemy to the state and common wealth wherein hee is for those causes vnworthy to commaund 1 This obiection is not so small but that being well considered as it ought the grauitie of the offence will surpasse the discourse of our sences and vnderstandings For for that onely offence came death into the world and Adam was banished Paradise Also by humaine pollicy offenders therein being thereof conu●et and adiudged are vnworthy all successions especially in Empires Kingdomes or other dominions although the same should fall to them by the right of natural succession as doe ours For in this cace if the neerest of the bloud Royall should be found vnthanckefull and guilty not only against the King his Lord but also against the Estate common-wealth and Maiestie of the Crowne hee and his posteritie may be attaint conuict and adiudged for euer vnworthy the succession that nature and bloud had gotten him So was it iudged by a Court of Peers of France in the yere 1457. against Iohn the second Duke of Alencon in the presence of King Charles the seauenth in the towne of Vendosme notwithstanding the sayde Sentence was afterward abolished and the iudgement made void by Letters of restitution from King Lewes the eleuēth entred published and registred in the Court of Parliament the Chambers assembled by the consent of the Kings Attorney generall Wherefore I can not with silence ouer skip such an accusation against the person of the sayd Lord King of Nauarre considering also the enormitie of such a scander against the sayde Prince who neuer had his owne life so deere or in such recommendation as the seruice honor and wealth of the Maiestie of our Kings and this Crowne as being the man whome it neerest concerneth and who hath greatest interest of all worldly parsons in the preseruation of this Estate as hauing the honor to looke so neere thereto But surely by this detestable and sclanderous discourse I see the miserie and calamitie of our France wherein withi● these 25. yeeres during the minority of our kings the mutinous seedes of quarels haue made at their pleasures forged Articles heads of Rebellion and crimes of Treason as they haue thought good y t therein as Tacitus said of y e Empire of Tiberius might be the perfection of all accusations imitating the continuall euill doings of Princes Counsailers vnder the pretence of their Maiesties seruice For it is found y t in the tyme of the said Tiberius this crime was comprehended vnder friuilous occasions as if any man had in selling of his land sould therwith the Image of Augustus or if hee had erected his owne Picture higher then the Emperors either had employed the same in any Domesticall vsage Nero put to death Cassius one of the most excellent men of his time vnder such a pretence and because hee bare the Picture of Cassius one of the murderers of Cesar in his Armes Caracalla so farre extended this crime that euē those were accused who had made their Vrine in any place where the picture of the Prince was erected and this licence extended so farre that it was offence to the Maiestie to beate a slaue or chaunge aparell before the picture of the Emperour either to carie the same into any shamelesse or foule place veluti si latrinae aut lupanari intulisset To be brief in those daies the crime of treazon was defined in the closet and secrete will of the Monarke or his flatterers as Iuuenall testifieth Nil horū verbosa grandis epistola venit A Capreis bene habet nil plus interrogo The like haue bene done in our miserable Realme when the conspired enemies of the Princes of the bloud Royall did gouerne the affayres of Estate vnder Frances the second and had afterward got holde of the person of King Charles the nineth whom they nourished in wonderfull and daungerous mistrust of his subiects whereof are proceeded so many murders massacres troubles and ciuill warres which wee haue seene and too much felt to the ruine of the subiects of this poore Fraunce by reason their Maiesties haue by these firebrands beene misenformed that the King of Nauarres partakers conspired against their Estate and refused to yeeld them that obedience which by Gods commaundement they ought and in respect thereof vnder this pretence did oftentymes cause them to be proclaymed Rebelles Traytors enemies to the Commonwealth Moreouer to make this mischiefe incurable because the innocencie of this people afflicted through the wrath and indignation of their Kinges was sufficiently knowne to their fellow coūtrymen fellow Citizēs these spirites of Satan haue sought to entāgle thē in partialities bādīg one against an other thereby to vrge thē into irrecōsiliable hatred and perpetuall mistrust whereof they might neuer conceiue cause of reunion through such excesse and iniuries as the one should doe to the other during the ciuill warres also that while the same continued themselues might haue opportunitie to practize the hearts of those whom they should finde most meete to receiue the obiect of their trayterous and disloyall ambition together that by this meanes they should diminish the loue of the people to their King perswading the most passionate that the fault was in him why Fraunce had no greater peace vnder which pretence they haue spued forth and by their creatures dispersed abroade an infinite number of diffamatorie Lybelles and more then sclaunderous discourses to the preiudice of the honor and reputation of our Prince whom neuerthelesse they went about to perswade that those of the pretended reformed Religion were the authors of these deceipts But the ende of their intents