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A77089 A rope for a parret, or, a cure for a rebell past cure. Being an appendix or rejoynder, to A caveat to all people of the kingdom, in answer to Mercurio cœlico mastix, a scandalous and scurrilous pamphlet lately published by that arch turn-coat, George Naworth, sometimes a calculator for the bishoprick of Durham, and now an infamous lying chronologer at Oxford. Booker, John, 1603-1667. 1644 (1644) Wing B3730; Thomason E253_5; ESTC R210081 9,469 8

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For since they cast their figure made their circle about Oxford they have raised fetcht over more Barbarous Inhumane bloody Irish Rebels then ever was in England since the confusion of Languages Nay they have not onely raised the Devills in Ireland but many turbulent Spirits in England and if God prevent them not they will inflame all Christendom all the World for the Devill hath been let loose for a season but we may see by his raging his time is but short you are excellent proficients in Conjuration and Witchcraft at Oxford many of you commence Doctors remember Faustus Lopuz c. You tell me I am extreme capable to apprehend and finde a thing before I hear or see it or else I could never have found Cain or Cannibal in all your Book your lying Almanack I confesse I did not finde either of them there but reading the word Rebel so often there I thought upon Cains and Cannibals and Irish Rebels and Traytors and Naworths and N●worths and Rogues and now at last I have found out a way to make one of you You bid me remember what the Earl of Strafford said at his death yes I do and had you been the same day carryed in a Cart from Newgate up Holborne to Tiburne I cannot endure these Ornes and these Vrnes I would have left Tower Hill for I am not Vir Sanguinum I do not love to see Heads lopt off this is leap yeer I had rather see the fruit yourself hang on the Tree You bid me take heed I come not to Oxford as a Spye lest the vigilant Governour make me curse my Ascendant I tell thee I am otherwise imployed then to come to Oxford yet I thank thee for thy Councell I see day at a little hole you may chance lose your eyes when you put your head through one a little bigger a Rope I spy out your Knavery Call you him vigilant Governour I pray thee what is his name in your Rebellious Catechisme Is he not a Papist He and I have contrary Ascendants we shall never agree Procul a Jove procul a fulmine I le give thee the like advice Take heed you come not within the sound of Bow Bell for fear there be a Gibbet or Crog-Bren the Welsh her can English it set up for you where Cheapside Crosse I told you before once stood nay rather beware of ●ouse in Cornehill where one of your friends mistaking his way from Oxford going up a Ladder had a Cap pulled over his eyes against the Exchange and was hanged for a Spye Thou talkest of differences of Latitudes and Longitudes of Oxford and Durham of London and Fraucofurt I tell thee the greatest difference betwixt any two places now in the Christian World is between Oxford and London Very strange For you at Oxford have divided the King from His Parliament at London and have set three Kingdoms thou Homo trium Literarum thou Homo Trioboli together by the Ears I am no Carpenter nor Heylin nor will be of any your Religions till you be reformed But I am almost perswaded to be of Copernicus his opinion thou Brazen Nose and hope since there is no difference between England and Scotland in respect of the Nationall Covenant that all the World will shortly turn round Return you Rattle Head for we shall have a Spring at London when it is fall of Leaf at Oxford You tell me the Schollers in Oxford long to see and dispute with me whether Newcastle Coal be the Element of Fire or not Dispute with the Schollers at Oxford No! Cambridge is neerer I wonder how many Wayn load of wounded Schollers or Cart-load of their dead Carkasses were brought from the Battles of Keynton or Newbury to Oxford tell me and you shall see some part of my Arithmetick in Substraction if you use not the Rule of falsehood you Logarithme you Birken Buffle Rattlehead vel Quocunque nomine Apellaris Newcastle Coal the Element of fire No But had you some at Oxford You have an Art there can make two Eggs three you can transforme all the Elements by your Reasonlesse Railings and chopt Logique you can make a true Parliament at London to be counterfeit one at Oxford you can pretend Parliaments but you never mean to come heer you counterfeit to be tryed you dare as soon be hanged I hope we shall tell you shortly from London what Newcastle Coal is You dream of the fire of Purgatory It is an Article of your Creed but take heed you descend not Ad Inferes from whence there will be no Redemption You are a Pythagorean and talk of the Transmigration of Souls I pray thee tell me how many are at All Souls since the two Battles I told you of I am afraid to come to Oxford there will be a Resurrection there this Spring I dare not meet such Spirits or Ghosts as some of you will be shortly You speak of Effects of a contrary nature as if the Conjunction of Jupiter and Mars did not often so operate by their influences Yes One man's fall is another mans rising many times you may be hanging on a Gallows and I stand beneath to see your neck set awry when your friends pull you by your Legs to put you out of your pain You talke of Hull I le tell you that place is to keep you out and then by and by you think of Hel That place is prepared for you to let you in and all other thy Companions remember three letters hereafter You talke of the Opposition of the Sun and Mars and still are afrighted at Keynton Battle I told you before the Cause precedes the Effect if the Conjunction hapned the twentie two day you know what followed the twenty three day you are a Rebell indeed you will not leave till Britannicus hath beat out your Brains with his Battle Axe Remember Caversham Bridge and Brainford from whence you ran away You cry alas what mischief did Cheapside Crosse do I told you once before I bid you beware that Bow Bell or Rouse or Sepulchers do not ring a Knell for you and the Irish Rebels who will cry in a pitifull tone shortly O hone In another place you talk of looking thorpw a Mill-stone c. and that I go about to confirm your Predictions and that I conclude them somewhat abruptly with an c. I pray thee remember thy self in thy Almanack for 1642. in thy Epistle to the Reader in thy Verses after thy Judgement of the Eclipses yea and in the remainder of thy Judgement after that c. thou sayst I made Let me see the Fire-brands you speak of the Insurrections The intended Invasion of the Scots the Book is to be seen I 'll tell thee that Bellum Episcopale was raised by the Prelats Papists Atheists c. you have confirmed your own Predictions very well have you not yes and you shall finde the displeasure of the Scots and then what will become of your Ave Maries It is true
A ROPE FOR A PARRET OR A Cure for a Rebell past Cure BEING An Appendix or Rejoynder to A Caveat to all People of the KINGDOM In Answer to Mercurio Coelico Mastix A Scandalous and Scurrilous Pamphlet lately published by that Arch Turn-Coat George Naworth Sometimes a Calculator for the Bishoprick of DURHAM and now an Infamous Lying Chronologer at OXFORD LONDON Printed for John Partridge 1643 4. March 6. A Rope for a Parret Or * A Rope a cure for a Rebell past Cure Mr. Geor. Naworth I Know you not and therefore much wonder you should with that wicked impudence through my sides so violently seek to wound the Parliament and in it the whole Kingdom Religion Law Libertie c. You defame his Execellency the Parliaments Lord Generall the Lord Say the Lord Wharton c. Nay you cannot speak well of the dead the worthy Patriot of his Countrey Mr. Pym Take heed his Ghost appear not at Oxford and drive you all thence very shortly But what shall I say to thee thou lying Tongue can no man tame it is an ungodly evill full of deadly poyson Jam. 3.8 You are one of the Generation of Vipers read the third to the Romans from the beginning of the tenth verse to the end of the eighteenth You are one of those very people your name may be turned many wayes and you are so like in every respect that unlesse one of you or all of you come to London and take the Nationall Covenant and subscribe your true name I shall mistake one Knave for another Your friend Aulicus is sometimes like a Sculler and his brother Aquaticus together make use of Oars you row all alike with your faces from London and your backs to Oxford for you dare not do otherwise You George Naworth with your two Brethren are Homines trium literarum If you love scolding so well at Oxford there shall be a Cucking-stool ready for you at Belinsgate one after another He that is born to be hanged needs not fear drowning as some of you I mean Aquaticus have scapt many times betwixt the Old Swan the Banke side or some of those places and Whitehall Tell your two Brethren and the rest of your friends Solamen miseris soci●os habuisse dolore You tell me you are not fearfull I should calculate the nativitie of your infamous Chronologie No! I know that well enough because I know it was conceived when the Mother was troubled with and the Father had the I pray thee be not ashamed of thy own Nativitie Was not thou born when most of the Planets especially the Luminaries were in Conjunction and much afflicted by an Opposition of Mars with Caput Gorgonis Medusae Rasdalgol Diaboli in domo Mortis read Cardaen's Aphorismes Segmont 6. circa Medium The influence is almost Verticall over Oxford Remember the Lord Strafford but once more I beleeve he had that Configuration in his Nativitie in Medio Coeli you know what a dismall Aspect he had Caput Algol was in his very forehead what a Burgundian Gregorian back blow he received I wish all Byrons all Hispaniolized Dons Frenchified Monsieurs all Romanized English-men to take heed lest their heads Hop off their shoulders I rather beleeve thou hadst the Dragons tayl in Conjunction with those dismall Starres Saturn and Mars in thy Ascendent in some Aeriall Sign For thy breath stinks and thou hast a very foul mark in thy mouth Thou knowest how strangely they dye that have this Constellation If I be mistaken in my Judgement send me the time when thou wa'st born I desire not to know the place for I hope the Scots will keep thee from ever returning to Durham And I le try if by Trutina Hermetis I can finde An sis legitimus filius Sure thou hadst a Father or else how cam'st thou at Oxford Cum Videris quod Decreta patris non Evenerint ei quod nutrit Filium tanquam suum tertus esse debes quod Adulterinus ●●t The Tree is known by the fruit and if I finde my Trutina hit then the Lord have mercy upon thee As for the word Rebell I tell thee Rogue it is thy own name I can give thee no other Title and I meant thee and all thy Adherents that have thus rent almost in peeces the most flourishing Kingdom in the Christian World Rent said I You have devided the King from His Parliament the Head from the Body of which Body you are a rotten Member t is a part of your name and many more such like as your self all of you must be cut off or else there will be a grievous pain in the Head and when the Head is unquiet akeing and distempered In what condition is the rest of the Body I bid you not ask your Quacks your Empericks at Oxford they ●l intoxicate the Head and destroy the Body No I heartily and hourly pray God that the King would return to His Parliament at Westminster where under God both the Head and the rest of the Body by the wholsome Advice and Councell of I tell thee again this thrice honoured never to be forgotten Parliament it Westminster where the true Physitians and Chirurgians of the Kingdom are in daily Consultation maugre all your opposite malice at Oxford and will cure in time all the distempers and distractions thereof But they have already Voted and resolved to cut you and many more such rotten Members as your self off that the rest may be preserved You tell me that I happened to be mistaken in a figure once erected for a Mercer of Wakefield in Yorkes●ire many strange lyes have been fathered upon me the best of it is it will not own me nor ●it If the man and his wife be reconciled and left their own home to live at Oxford it is an ill Omen I can make Anagrams as well Asse your self you shall see by and by Nemo It wa● some such Body But suppose there was such a mistake It may be the question was Radicall with you and having erected a figure for the woman she confessed where the money was Take heed you spend not your Radicall humours thus vainly thus wantonly thus lavishly Fine doings at Oxford you agree like Cats and Dogs But I am sure you divide the King from His Parliament and set the Kingdom against itself You tell me of one who in his learned Book written in defence of Astrology against Master Chambers that condemnes Horary Questions I know that learned Author Sir Christopher you know his other name better then I you Judas you long to be Chambered I shall make you cry Hey down by and by If you move a question once more I fear me it will prove Radicall indeed in such an hour that you would know your fatall destiny I will tell it you anon Thou sayest Rebellion is as the sin of Witchcraft I confesse it and I verily beleeve the Conjurers at Oxford have raised all the devils in Hell a Black Regiment