innd.ss000467322 *805 Lotus stipularis (Bth.) Greene. M.W. Cal. l572 Lupinus formosus lJfer ber \: nil,) el Itt C () , Q: if e r 3 ein e 11 f I.) II e It • .?B i ''IT e i cf) t I) Ct bei cf) nt n n d) e ß unb tiejempjunbeuer SBegeiitettll1g beieidmete fie ben '':ßfllt''w: ber bon ben 5lBunbern eqäqlen, bie bu ,gefe£)out, cher ba� 5..?euen ber ft e t � ein en Œ: 9 l''Cil � ( o � in ber CS: ri n n er U11 n b cf) n It ell. ''bie .:t1)üren::: unb BcnftcróefIeiùullgen, fOltJie bet �lt�IH)ben tlon u n b ,9Jl e t lj o ben ber � t. innd.00000017810003 months, and the following year was this second trip to Europe, Bishop appointed to St. Mary''s church at Dwenger tendered him the pastorate time he greatly improved the conLuilcling'' of the Hew church-Father stone of the new church, Bishop other children of the family to the bis installation as bishop of this dioCatholic schools of Westphalia. the Catholic residents of several of the church in this diocese, we feel took charge of St. Mary''s parish, Ft. place tbe Diocese of Ft. Wayne holds Mary''s church for three years, at the siastic welcome from the members end of which time he was called of St. Joseph''s congregation. gregation as a church, until March, Father KŒnig proceeded to collect a mounted by Father Kœnig before he ened to build a church out in the Joseph''s church, by different gentle-man''s Eft ate, that was adjudg''d innocent in the Ufurper''s time, in that cafe Lord Mayor and Sheriffs fhould call a general Alfembly of the City, and by the A£t of that Aficmbly turn out the Recordetogether with thole But then the Lord Mayor called a private AfTembly, and not one of the Seven Aldermen vtere prelent: The Commons were called into the Aldermen $ Court, and there, in a tumultous and irre¬ P. a man of Ireland of a great for¬ telligence from Court, and from fome of the Pofi/h Clergy in Ireland, about this time had an ac¬ And now this great Man returns for Ireland to i6j6. but they received fuch timely notice of the Defign, by their Creatures at Court, that there was at London, ''twas fome time e''er Neagle could him for Ireland, where he continued a Protejlant until the coming of .King to the innd.ss001198969 prefont Government of this Kingdom 5 who are all firm Proteft ants,and mod of whorti by their Zealous oppofitionsof the Popijh Party during the time of that Rebellion, as every of them mations^ and thofe of them caught Offending fo feverely punijhed, that for a Confderable time here has not been any fuch Kings Co. John Leyefier Efq; Kingdom, fince the KINGS reftauration are invented, which made againfi the PAPISTS in Ireland (ince the Kings return, being no more Laws againft the PAPISTS cannot in the leaft to the Mode of the times we are fallen into, he Prepares a NAJRATITE with a letter to indole it in, unto a BVSIE Perfon proteff any one in ENGLAND, or IRELAND, from anfwering for his breach of the Laws''m either KINGDOM,and was given into the Council againfi him, and by fuch a Perfon. innd.ss001199426 from our Religion and Profeflion, and the good King reBored to his juft Rights, and truly honoured and obey¬ king Dirt in the Face of this Great Prince, and Pa¬ my Defence of King Charles''s Holy and Divine Book, the greateft part of that Book, all writ with the Kings Account of in my Defence of this Great Mans being the Truth of the Books being the Kings, who prefently with his own hand gave me this following Teftimony. reading fome of the Book prefently after the King is this bold mans triumphing over King Charles I. half of the great King ought to be believed, if he may The next thing I Advocate for this Great King for, that believe any thing this-Libeller writes againft King Charles ^ After I had finifhed the Defence of the King''s Book, I recetved this Letter from a Reverend Minifter of Tpfmch in innd.ss001198902 Trade, and Rents of Lands in England from the Reign of Ed. III. Print,) that the gaining and keeping Ireland hath coft England more of that Kingdom to his Subje&s, as well of England as Ireland, to be V,n '' ment of Ireland granted this King 1700 Marks at feveral times towards the modities in a way of Trade from England, whereby this Kingdom re¬ great Men were Seized of in Ireland5) England was however a confi¬ received from Ireland2 ioooo,fome Years 254000 great Stones of Wool, twenty years fince the (landing Revenue of that Kingdom did confiderably furmount the Charge of it; yet our Kings ever fince King John''s and Trades mens (hare of the Money, and in Ireland fhould be about i<| arc ji Ireland to do it 5 which is a full fecurity of that Trade to England. into Ireland, except thofe Imported from England or the Plantations. innd.ss001199273 the diftinCt Intereft of each of thefe Parties, which will open the ders, yet that King commanded his Eftate to be reftored,giving Of eight millions of Acres profitable Land in Ireland, thefe Jenants 3 and hence it is, that tho'' thofe people live in the moft and plunder of the Proteftants as the former, fhould any of thefe profecute the War againft France 3 fhould thefe be pardoned, rebellion as the reft, have little influence on the other parties, the their Tides have been recognized by Adtof Parliament in IreUndThat not only the Papifts in thefe three Kingdoms, but a World, that thefe people are not to be retained in obedience prove goads in our fides, and thorns in our EyesThe Lives of the Proteftants in Ireland can never be fecured * objection is foppifh, arenotallthe Papifts in thefe Kingdoms france, yet were the Rebels Eftates in Ireland by the Par- innd.ss001368979 bft UHM SALE DUPLICATEji innd.ss001368980 iritirely of Irift Papifts, and on thefe he Inhabitants of that City look''d on their beieem''d to rely as his furefl Friends; a far ing there as a great fecurity to ''em, and a piece with thofe other Meatiirfcs which his But the Lord Tyrconnel, either out of deown Inclinations as well as the great Zeal fign to fecure himfelf the better at Dublin, He had ordered alfo a confiand their Congregations fent another Conderable party to be ready at the fame time for cc befieg''d there by the Enemy : Sir NicbocC Us Jtcbjfon came the fame day from the But all this was meer fham to miles from Deny,) he, or Lieutenant Gen. amufe the Town, while they might get Hamilton, fends one Mr. IVhitlow, a Gleraway with the greater Eafe and Safety: gyman, to Governour Lundy, to know if innd.ss001203290 •; MiAM of people were in Ireland, Ann. 1641. atoftl tion, in 11 years will fhew the deftru£tiif/n, on of people made by the Wars, viz.. Army in Ireland for the laid time; nor doth made at leaft equal Partners with His Majefty in the Government of Ireland; which lootbepetr And that a Ship trading from Ireland inthtiaKis, to the I Hands of Amer, fhould be forced to of Ireland hath, within thefe laft 40 years, the Lands of Ireland: The fir ft whereof I men a-nd Children live in any Countrey Parifh, that the Rent of-that Land is near land, do live in England, fince the bulinels of the feveral Courts of Claims was for the Lands and Houles of Ireland be¬ J i j.aJff Foreign Trade of Ireland, doth near half good Land to every Head in Ireland • where¬ fpare hands of Ireland can in one years time Men in Ireland innd.ss001202445 The Extent and Value of Lands, People, ratal of England, are in the fame dannen* gcr with the Trade of of France, viz, Holland and Zealand do and z^aLand, and to the Trade and Policy of Lands of Millions, whereof fix did belong to the Naval War with England, 72000 Land if France hath fcarce doubled its Wealth 8. It is not to be doubted, but thofe Adrmwho have the Trade of Shipping and the Trade of Shipping, can build long of Land in England are fufficiently fe« one with another, and that by the inftance of People in England, viz. Merchants Men to Man it; and for that the Engwith Seaijjfj Trade of Shipping, requires about People of England, Scotland, and Ireland, England hath about Ten Millions of fa Labour of one Million of People, England having in it, as much Land, People,and confequently Trade. Land, Stock, Trade, &c. innd.ss001200107 Scotland, France, and Ireland King, and his natural Lord, the fear of if Ireland, then leing the Dominion of our faid Sovereign Lord the King I Ihould return for Ireland a Captain under the French King, to furprize the Kingdom and fettle the Popilh Religion, and then I Ihould «W fa faid he, I will come within two days with an Order from the Lord Oliver Mr.Att.Gen. After he was taken, do you know of any Order he fent I was faid it was to raife 60000 men in Ireland at any time whenever the Gen. Did you fee any Order under Plunket"s hand for raifing Mr. Att.Gen. My Lord, he is a Prieft in Orders, and fo hath acknowledged hxmfelf. I know him firft, my Lord, to be made Primate of Ireland, You termed him fo my Lord in Ireland, and as I came, this innd.ss001200400 and King James had ordered his Army to rendezvouz King James marched out of this Town to joyn The fame day King James left der opinion of the Irifh Army, however numerous or of the Defeat of the Irifh Army ^ this we thought could of the Englifh Army came to the Ford where Douglas this time had a Garifon of 800 Irifh ) Duke Schomberg The King with the Horfe (himfelf engaging in Horfe once gave way, but the King went himfelf, and Of the Irifh, King James''s tired Horfes, told us, the Irifh were much worded 3 feveral of King James''s Horfe Guards coming in dragling, without Pidols, or Swords, and could not tell dy of the IriJI) Horfe coming in, in very good order, July, King James having fent for the Irifh Lord Mayor, the Irifh and French were coming back, and very near innd.ss001198807 long in Ireland,by the Late King James, in Fa¬ time was fo purged, that Icarce a true Proteftant, or honeft inform the Government of all Proteftant Juftices (or CromnW/Yfavorersas they calle d them) who were likewife prefently eafed of their Commiffions, and all other Imployments. judged, that in regard there was but little Money in the K.J. fhould come, or fend them Money; or,that if the Deputy found an Army ready to Land out of England, what pofed, feizing the Sword, Lord Deputy, and Dublin. Proteftant Gentry of the Weft of Ireland, that in regard Sl/goe, fhould likewife poffefs themfelves of Sligo as the> intended, Commiffion, Arms, Ammunition, or Money fent to the to let the Proteftants with their Goods come down, for Sligo 3 but no fooner was my Lord and his Party gone, would not be long till an Army Landed in Ireland ouc innd.ss001202817 of the Son of God. He holy Prophet,in the Book of i!W A notable wonder indeed, and great bewilc yond all comparifon , That the Son of God what relation Chrill hath unto God by Na¬ mane nature and his Deity : the Son of God q fpeak unto God , being . and the man that is Gods owne fellow be thus of the Son of God. that debt of ours for which he flood com¬ he had b declared himfelfe to be the Son of God he who was God eqtiall to the Father , for en the new man > which after God is created in that Man had been able to lend Gods fpirit to the lifeyio man commetb unto the father but by me. all that thou defired/l of the Lord thy God in Ho 1 ?»10'' power is given unto me in heaven and in earth. innd.ss001199307 nge and Rensarkal ? opKenes and Predictions. , the Holy, Leaded, and exceSent ames Late L Arch Eithop Armagh.'' and Lord Primate ol Ireland. Giving an Account of his Foretelling i. The Rebellion in MUndFortyYears before « came to pafs. TheConfutions and Mileries of£/»£/*W,iRChurc!State. III. The Death of KingCharles the Fhrft own Poverty -rtot. Laftly, Of a great and Terrible Perlecutipr? fhall fall upon thefvetormed Churches by the Papitts, cellent Perlons o�n Mouth and now publ ifht earned'' And the Lord fad,£h.iil J hi, e Abraham the (ht/tg ||VC td fee ft, butpflffib!; (lie might, for it w&s even at the Wife to the prefent Lord Chief Baron of Ireland, hut with little longer, but (fayd fee} r.iations and ^efleSlims on my Lord Caftle-Haven''r Memoiresy which your Your Graces Letter therefore confifting only of Geneals, I can nootherwife adapt my Anfwer, (after a moft The Rcafons leading your Grace to believe it impoffile I could be the Author of that Difcourfe, I cannot adlit, though they import a fair Opinion of me; and that ing, if your Grace knows, and believes what you write; Thefe are your Graces Reafons why you were not wil¬ grofly criminal in the firft, and muft have been fo before in your Graces Opinion, or they could not imitate there muft be fome other reafon why your Grace did not in your Graces Hands, though I find them as sharp there (where I believe it never was till your Grace prefcred it to a Judge of your Graces or any other mans a&ions, but Your Graces moft innd.ss001202929 Pricft had opened his door, and I in his chamber,he or come over into England, William anfwe¬ red me, why doe you not go and enquire your felf i told him Anne H"IJeh fo hee brought mee to Mjftris O Connor the Prieft came iagaind to Miftris Pinocks ther doe you goe to Mafie? So ended our difcourfe at that time. H, At his requeft I went to his Chamber at At which time hee (liewed mee his beads, and ofame night about nine of the clock, hee came to mee H. I do not think fhe is a fool. H. What, you kill the King ? he would doe it, and promifed to come again,on This William O Conner, the Prieft, would not Walker, (as (hee told me on Munday laft) much of that he would be burnt in a fire before hee would innd.ss001368981 Eftimate, as loft by a lefs then two Years, Irifh Government, Provif&ei in both the;" faid A Corpori , etiamfi motus ipfius propriusTem¬ Coi pus natura fuá aut vi infitá non moveat, fed ipfum fupremus Motor ex irruentis Corporis occafione in motum folus vere concitet , 6c cum expando 6c rarefaftio quídam fit Motus fpecies, patet vita nihil aliud eft quam quinqué Organorum TenTus, nec non Cordis, Refpirationis, 6c fluidorum Corporis motus. innd.ss001203504 by your Petitioner to his Lordfhips brother ^ Sir George faid offices, and fees to bee conferred upon fir Philip his Bighneffe raigne, Aid Appoint your petitioner to be hit within the faid Kealme of Ireland during his Majefiies and appointed your Petitioner to be Treafurer at wane* petitioners faid Qfficesfimt alfb his honour and Itftfie his Subjects in that Realme ; the Lord deputie and Cowed by your petitioner, hath decreed the Jaid lands to the faid 7. Whereas alfo by the faid lawes of that Kingdome^and by the faid declaration, proceedings before the Lord Deputy Realme are prohibited^ et upon a paper Petition preferred to Lordflnp hath retained the faid Caufe for his hearing ^notwithjlanding your Petitioners legad exception thereunto. And upon the like paper petition preferred to his Lor djhip reave your Petitioner of his honour and fortunes> but alfo ty and Generall had that great and high Honour (which innd.ss000272262 King Henry If of England, took ''Kings alfo and Princes of Ireland,\ ''King of England, for Lord of Ireland) and became his Men, and did Civil States of Ireland\ to King King William the Firft, in his Acirdwi; quilition of England, or Henry IL tk King''s Second''s Hoftile of Ireland this Modus, io faid to beTranimitted for Ireland by Hen.H. is queftion''d by fome Learned Antiquaries, Counties of Ireland in King Johns into Ireland by King Henry II. Lives, King or Lord of Ireland; the Liberties of England to the Peajple of Ireland, But we know the three firft Kings of Ireland of the the Laws of England in Ireland; I England to be of force in Ireland: ''if in England and Ireland, yet was the Kings oi England till of late Parliament of England,and obtain''d an Act in the firft year of the Realms of England and Ireland,\ innd.ss000805532 >Twas ill that men of fober diet, like tall men. For Fees, tho not with Law nor Art, But head as empty as thy heart The Soldier little quiet finds, But to defend fuch things as thee Aad all his blood ran to his heart; -<#nd there I firft my wife did fee, All things near hand, Nick B threw, The Seat was butter''d which he fee GO Mighty Prince, and thofe Great Nations fee, Which thy Vi&onous Arms-before made free, •Shew twenty mad men in the Hall, The Captain doth return the grace, And fo do all men in the place By Jove, I love thee, Elli ry''d ; Thou art, quoth he, a man well try''d, Drink''t off (quoth Ellis) for this round And looking round about, cries in great anger Peace, Ned, quoth 1, pxethee be not fo hafty; So this is no place for your horfe you fee, innd.ss000428908 they had been guilty, fuch a Proteftation of their Innocence was neceffary, if it might be confident with the principles of Religion. an incompetent Authority ( 5 ) If the Charge it felf be laid wrong. Opinion is Parfons, for he faith, (a) If a Judge be not lawful or competent, 2" evj^ And accordingly ''Tarfons (p) doth lay it down from Azonus, Sec. If the Judge that exaUeth the Oath be not a lawful Judg., or proceedelh not lawfully in exacting the fame, then hath he that fwcareth no obligatdion to fwear to his intention at all, but may fwear to his own, Sec. Amongft other Examples of this way, we have in Dr. Abbot''s Antiologia, p. teach, either by Word cr Writing, that it was lawful for any Terfon whatfoever, under any pretext of Tyranny, to kill Kings, or to plot their Death. innd.ss000349788 it hath nothing, which a true Church ought to haue. moft certaine, that thofe companies are not the Church of God, is the Church of God. Pag 19 : It ts a member of the vniuerfai cap.3-pag.490: it Umanifcfii that the true Church may erre Arri&ai, t0 Dc accounted the Churches of God, Sscaufc (fay th farently w regard of men) oj Gods true church. of the true Reformation of the Church pag-2 32 : The alone are members, is the true Church before God: cap, 2 : We fay that the Church doth shew her jelfe to be the pill true Church, by the fine ere preaching of the word of God. And Somcof them fay, that before Luther their Church fore Luther arofc the Church of God for many ages in cap.i2.Apocal.pag''i95.that their vifible Church fay , that by the true Church they meane not her innd.ss000351871 A nd to fuch a height of power and greatnefs had fome of thofe firft Adventuring Commanders raifed themfelves the adjacent Irish Counties unto the City: Some would make us believe the city ofway that they were difcerned at fome diftance already marching down from DMn. the mountain fide within view of the Town ; a report fo credibly deliver¬ A'' attending his Majefty in the Northern parts before the beginning of this prefent Parliament, which are not yet paid, or otherways fecured, shall be fully fataer tisfiedand repaid unto the faid City of London, with inter eft of 8 //. iHoute unto, by the confident refort in great numbers of feveral Lords, Gen tieheytkfl men and others, who within few dayes after declared themfelves Rebels, uftd to feveral British in feveCounty of Kilkenny Gent, depofeth, That by the crerai places: and [ 17] at Clertvdible report both of English andfome Irish, who affirmnis within the County o (FerA ed they were eye-witneffes of a bloudy murder committed innd.ss000392345 that true Foundation laid for fuch Devotion as God in that Church that doth anfwer fuch great pretences. think alfo it redounds much to the Honour, and Commendation of their Church to have had fuch glorious advance true Piety to God and Devotion. Church of Rome is no certain Sign of Devotion flourifhing among them,they have little reafon to boaft of their Unlearned : But they muft firji fuppofe their People infufferably ignorant to need fuch Helps as thefe are. Befides that they often pray to Saints for fuch things, can any man fay, that fuch Prayers as thefe are fit to be Devotion:, For fo a Man will think if there be fuch a DevotiomFor true Devotion is fuch as we perform to God, true Devotion: For, according to the Church of Romey Difcouragement of true Devotion towards God. And wonderful good effed5 though indeed God never promifed any fuch thing. innd.ss000434415 which by Gods Providence, turned the evil upon tho'' like the great Abaddon, thou burneft Coun¬ 1. That tho'' God may fuffer his Church and Peo¬ feem ftrange, if we confider the Churches fins, or humbles men under the mighty Hand of God, it fhould be fo, let us not wonder, if any time it is Faith : The Mercifulnefs of God''s Nature; and his Promife General or Particular. God in Works of Mercy, is in his faith the Lord, there''s his Promife to back it, Jer. 51. deftroy them utterly; For I am the Lord thy God, God had limited the Time of their Captivity ; and Each fays of Each, God is ill-ferved on both fides: It is time for thee, Lord, to lay to thine hand, for 1 we with thankful hearts remember the great Mercy time is come) he will bring us again into the Land innd.00000004237129 Tantum Ergo in A flat Men''s voices Fr. Verdussen, S. mo re uos tri lau " gui-dum Fac mi hi sis placabi le. Praes-let fi • des sup-pie men turn, sen • su um defee -tu*. Pro •ce • denti ab u tro • que Compar sit lau-da-ti o. ve-rum cor pus na-tum, De Ma-ri a Vir gü ne. ve-rum cor pus na-tum, De Ma-ri a Vir gü ne. ve-rum cor pus na-tum, 0 sa-lu-ta ris hos ti a, Quae coe li pan-dis os ti 0 sa-lu-ta ris hos ti a, Quae coe li pan-dis os ti Et an ti quam do cu men tum, No Et an ti quam do cu men tum, No innd.00000005750203 Chri ste elei son, Chri ste elei son, Chri ste elei son, Qui tol lis pec ca ta mun Qui tol lis pec ca ta mun no bis, qui tol lis pecca ta Quo niam tu solus san ctus, cum san-cto Spt riste, cum san-cto Sp/ri ste, cum san-cto Spr ricum san-cto Spi ri tu cum san-cto Spi ri tu in glo-ri a De i Pa tris, A tu, cum san-cto qui tol lis pec ca qui tol lis pec ca qui tol lis pec ca qui tol lis pec ca qui tol lis pec ca qui tol lis pec ca innd.00000018685412