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A53414 An exact and faithful narrative of the horrid conspiracy of Thomas Knox, William Osborne, and John Lane, to invalidate the testimonies of Dr. Titus Oates, and Mr. William Bedlow by charging them with a malicious contrivance against the E. of Danby, and the said Dr. Oates with an attempt of sodomy wherein are exemplified from the originals I. Four forged letters dictated by Thomas Knox, II. Five false informations, one paper of memorials, and one other information against Dr. Oates for sodomy, forged by Knox in the names of Lane and Osborne, III. The informations, depositions, examinations, and confessions of the said Knox, Osborne, and Lane, taken upon oath before Sir William Waller and Edmund Warcup, Esq., IV. An account of some depositions taken before the Lords Committees of Secresie, relating thereunto, V. The breviates of the councel for the King at the trials of the said Knox and Lane, Nov. 25, 1679, wherein full satisfaction is given to the world of the whole cause, by the particular evidences of the witnesses in behalf of the King / published by the appointment of me, Titus Oates. Oates, Titus, 1649-1705. 1680 (1680) Wing O41; ESTC R4560 41,985 38

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us all I confess that we are not touch't and healed is not your Majesties fault but our own who lye pining and languishing under our Maladies and perhaps as uncivilly as unjustly complaining of others when we should complain of our own sluggishness that we make not our frequent Addresses to your Majesties Grace and Favour for this divine Medicine 't is past your Majesties Obligations and I believe your Skill too to cure a People whether they will or no 't is but decent we complain to though not of the Physitian that we may learn to prize restored health at greater rates and testifie the gratitude of those that have been at the Shrine of AEsculapius by some Noble Fee which I dare promise you for a through-cure would be the most noble that ever a saved Nation tendered to their Preservers I know not how I am fallen into this odd way of expressing my self I am sure I ought to beg your Majesties pardon that I have imitated those affected modes of expressions which your great Soul does justly scorn But I shall pursue the Humour no further then to represent to your sacred Majesty that as some learned Observators have proved that English Simples are most congenial to English Bodies and work more benignly upon us than all the far-fetcht and dear-bought Drugs of Pontus so the Wholsom Laws and Customs of your own Kingdom duly and properly applyed will work more glorious and admirable effects to the composing all our differences preventing all recidivations and relapses then all your boasted Catholicons of our exotick chymical Empiricks and at once disappoint Hell and Rome and preserve your Majesties Person and our Religion if your Majesty pleases Which is the daily prayers and humble petition to the King of Kings Whitehal Decemb. 4th 1679. Your Majesties Most humble Most loyal Subject and Serant Titus Oates The Introduction 'T Is the great unhappiness of extraordinary surprizing evils that they disarm us at once of Counsel and Self-defence and render our Reasons Tongues and Hands most unserviceable when we have most need of their service As little griefs are querulous and talkative shallow brooks loquacious when great sorrows like deep rivers slide away without noise Such is the posture of our souls in reference to dangers if they be ordinary we know perhaps what to advise upon what to say what to do but if extream we are no longer Masters of Wisdom we lose the freedom of the Tongues to plead our Cause and the use of our Hands to make a just and vigorous opposition against those evils I know not how but so it is our implacable enemies the Papists have got the Gorgons Head or the great secret of the Torpedo that we seem all to be Petrified and turned into sensless Statues whilst they cut our throats and practice at their own leisure our final Ruine Had the Protestants of France burnt the smallest Village had they murdered the meanest Peasant had they attempted the least disturbance of the Civil or Ecclesiastical Government they must not have expected due forms of Law nor the picking out of the guilty Individuals to be sacrificed to Justice but Popish fury had let it self loose in some universal Massacre to the utter extirpation of the name of Hugonots for they that have once done the same thing without the least provocation may be presum'd ready to do it upon a very slighty occasion But they must thank the goodness of our Natures or rather the excellency of our Laws and Religion that we have proceeded with them in other methods and have chosen to oppose Law to violence Patience to fury Moderation and Mercy to malice and cruelty rather than to stain our Religion with the least blot of precipitated Revenge But were I worthy to be their Counsellor I would mildly warn them not to provoke English men any further nor awaken their just indignation with repeated importunities who knows what an exasperated people may do there 's none can be guarranty against the Rage of a Nation blown up to a flame by the bellows of continued and renewed and growing Insolencies It had been happy for us and them too if the unanimous Resolve of the Late House of Commons had reduced the restless Papists to more moderation in their Villanies I will remind them fairly of it May 11. 1679. Resolved Nemine contradicente That this House will stand by His Majesty with their lives and fortunes and that if it shall happen that His Majesty shall be taken away by any untimely death which God forbid this House will avenge the same to the utmost upon the Papists The wisdom justice and reasonableness of which Vote is founded visibly upon that Act of Parliament 27 Eliz. 1. whereby the people are authoriz'd to prosecute with the utmost extremities the bloody Papists who with unwearied endeavours were contriving the Death of that Queen of famous and blessed memory in hopes to better their condition by the succession of one who gave proof to the loss of her Head of her addictedness to the Romish Heresie and Idolatry I meet with nothing in story that can parallel the obstinacy of our Romish Conspirators except perhaps that of the desperate Soldier who laid hold on the Enemies Galley and when his right hand was cut off yet he seized it with the left and when that was also topt off he fastened his teeth to the Vessel resolving tooth and nail to hold his hold till his head taken off too put a period at once to his life and bruitish Courage The Justice of the Nation had already cut off their right hand the Jesuites or at least some of the fingers of the right hand It has not spared their laity the left hand in their bold and bloody Conspiracies and yet they proceed at the same undaunted rates of pertinacy and will do so till the heads of the Faction which influence the whole body with spirit life and activity be separated by the same stroke of exemplary Justice from it That they have formed the most horrid treason against the Person life and government of his Sacred Majesty against the Protestants and the Protestant Religion that they have endeavourd to corrupt all the evidence which providence has summond in to discover their villanies that they have devilishly suborned Knights of the Post to take away the credibility of their testimony and with the same malice peculiar to themselves have now at last attempted to devolve the Odium and Guilt of their abominable villanies upon the innocent Protestants is now so notorious as to be past a Question with all mankind whom either Interest or Impudence has not so far gulled that they are given up to Infidelity And yet amongst all those worthy persons whom God has raised up as Saviours and deliverers to England there is none against whom their poisoned spleen does more swell than ag●inst Him who being the first and fullest Evidence against them had drawn all the lines of their