Reader, here you'l plainly see iudgement perverted by these three, a priest, a judge, a patentee written by Thomas Heywood. Heywood, Thomas, d. 1641. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A43605 of text R11542 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing H1791). Textual changes and metadata enrichments aim at making the text more computationally tractable, easier to read, and suitable for network-based collaborative curation by amateur and professional end users from many walks of life. The text has been tokenized and linguistically annotated with MorphAdorner. The annotation includes standard spellings that support the display of a text in a standardized format that preserves archaic forms ('loveth', 'seekest'). Textual changes aim at restoring the text the author or stationer meant to publish. This text has not been fully proofread Approx. 9 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 5 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. EarlyPrint Project Evanston,IL, Notre Dame, IN, St. Louis, MO 2017 A43605 Wing H1791 ESTC R11542 11824239 ocm 11824239 49619 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A43605) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 49619) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 496:24) Reader, here you'l plainly see iudgement perverted by these three, a priest, a judge, a patentee written by Thomas Heywood. Heywood, Thomas, d. 1641. [2], 6 p. s.n.], [London : 1641. Illustration (wood-cut) on t.p., representing the three characters (i.e. Archbishop Laud, Lord keeper Finch, and Alderman Abell). Caption title: Bishops, iudges, monopolists. In verse. Reproduction of original in Huntington Library. eng Great Britain -- History -- Charles I, 1625-1649 -- Poetry. A43605 R11542 (Wing H1791). civilwar no Reader, here you'l plainly see iudgement perverted by these three: a priest, a judge, a patentee. Written by Thomas Heywood. Heywood, Thomas 1641 1442 4 0 0 0 0 0 28 C The rate of 28 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words. 2002-05 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2002-06 SPi Global Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2002-07 Mona Logarbo Sampled and proofread 2002-07 Mona Logarbo Text and markup reviewed and edited 2002-08 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion Reader , Here you 'l plainly see Iudgement perverted By these three : A Priest , A Iudge , A Patentee . Written by Thomas Heywood . ¶ Printed in the happy yeare of Grace , 1641. Bishops , Iudges , Monopolists . Bishops . WHat strange earths tremor doth so agitate The late firme scite of our Episcopate ! That what was layd a thousand yeares ago , With hundreds added ( as our Annals show ) Whose high Towers have their heads so proudly borne , Should suddenly be from their groundsils torne ? Is it because their structures were so great , They made the groaning earth beneath them sweat ? Is it because no bound could circumscribe Th'expansed power of that Levitick Tribe ? Or that they had ingrost into their hands Such ample purchase of the temporall lands ? That , not with their due Decimates content , Both Tythe and Totall must encrease their rent ? Or as Prelati , steering the Church helme , They thought t' out-brave the Pares of the Realme ? Nay more than that , an higher straine had runne , As divers proud priests had before them done ? As Wolstan , Becket , Wolsey , who durst write , I and my King , even in his Soveraignes sight : And their successors , like ambitious growne , Would make the Miter levell with the Crowne ? Or that our modern Prelates have of late Sought to raise new combustions in our State ; And as Incendiaries , thought to devour Their Countries freedome with their purse and power ? Or that inclining to the Arminian Sect , And preaching in the Romish Dialect , They labor'd 'mongst us Protestants to intrude What our Reformed Church did quite exclude ? New Cannons , Oathes and Altars , bending low , To where , in time the Images must grow ? Reviving antient and forgot Traditions , Grounded upon old Popish superstitions . Or that a strange sinister course they tooke , In altering the Scottish Service booke ; By which two sister kingdomes were constraind To open wars , ( which stiffely they maintaind . ) Or that so far beyond all rationall bounds , By their rough censures in the high Commission , Not sparing Priest , the Lawyer , nor Physitian ? Their Ex Officio Oathes , their Ius Divine , And Clergy Courts ( which conscience should refine ) More full of bribes , corruption , and blacke staine , Than the lay benches they so much disdaine . Yet could I wish , though all these have been prov'd , Th' offendors once being punisht and remov'd , The function might remaine , to their disgraces , To try who better might supply their places . Of Iudges . CAn Iudges be corrupt , or staggering stand , Who should be fathers both of lawes and land ? They did of old upon wilde Asses ride , An emblem , that when doubts they did decide , They should be slow in sentence , and consider The cause , ( both parties being brought together . ) Athens for them did Images devise : To intimate , nought should from them be heard , Savoring either of favor or reward . But corrupt Iudges ( such no doubt there are ) Punish the purse , and still the person spare . And I have heard from a most learned Speaker , That no Law-maker should be a law-breaker . Hee 's only a wise Iudge that stands in awe Of one God solely , one King , and one Law . But to our former Quaere ; May it bee , That in these times we any Iudge shall see , Who on the Bench being seated as a god , Should be call'd thence , and beat with a Blacke Rod ? Nor wonder is't ; when some as grave and great , Have in the same or like Judiciall Seat , ( Only to give his wit some vaine applause ) Jested and jeer'd a poore man from his Cause . But O you Judges , that your selves forget , And in the high seat of the Scornfull sit ; Who with the wicked have gon hand in hand , You in the future judgement shall not stand . But how of late are things growne out of order ? When we shall see one from a bare Recorder , R●is'd unto such an eminence of state , That quite forgetting what he was but late , He shall through all Judiciall seats aspire , Even till he g●ines the height of his desire : And then , through guilt of conscience ( none accusing ) ( His place of soveraigne trust so much abusing ) When standing eminent in the Worlds broad eye , Then like a Finch to take his wings and fly , Leaving the Purse and the Broad Seale behind him , As had they bin meere toyes , and did not mind them . But all have not the fortune to evade Their triall : for though some fly , some are stayd . When those whose livelihoods are the lawes , indeed , By which they onely can subsist and feed , ( Which such sworne Fathers should as sacred keep , And no houre in their execution sleep ) When such shall seeke to extirpe the Lawes foundation , And in the ste●d thereof bring innovation ; To them I leave the M●gna Charta's curse : Now let the better Judges judge the worse . Of Monopolists . HOw comes this swarme of Locusts to appeare More this , then any other Temperate yeere , This crew of moaths and cankers that bereaves Our flourishing Orchard both of fruit and leaves ? Who do not onely vex us here about , But pester all the Trees the Realme throughout ? I mean those Drones , that fly about in mists , Divelish Projectors , damn'd Monopolists , Who now are hid in holes and keepe a loofe , Being indeed not Parliamentall proofe . Yet may we finde them in our bread , our meat , In every draught or bit wee drinke or eat . Our Bevers and the Bootes wee plucke on , whether We have them made of Calve-skin , or Neats Leather , Our Salt and Oatmeal , Porridge are not free , But they from their ingredience must have fee : Our cloath , stuffe , lace , points , tagges , even to a pinne , Nay even the linen next unto our skinne , And needle it is sow'd with : they make Boote , Of every thing we wear , from head to foote . Nay I may speake it to them ( with a pox ) I find them even in my Tobacco box . To leave your petty feoffors and feoffees , And come to your brave skarlet Patentees . Who when our sope of sweetest oyle was made , By which they drove a good and wholsom Trade . These by an ingrost Patent coveting gaine , Compos'd it all of stinking rape , and traine : For what care they , so it may make them rich , To fill our bodyes full of scabs and itch . Which was a great cause , as some Artists guest , To bring amongst us a contagious pest . And then thinkes one , where sope hath fayl'd without , Balderdash wines within , will worke no doubt . And then comes in ( that project once begun ) New inposts upon every Pipe and Tun. The price of French and Spanish winds are raisd , How ever in their worth deboyst and craisd . The subject suffers in each draught he swallows , For which may they be doomb'd unto the gallows . Abel and Cain were shepheards ( the Text saies ) But which is strange , turnd Vintners in these days . The wicked Caine his brother Abel slew : Which in these brother Vintners proves not true . For unto this day , Caine keepes up his signe , But Abel lyes drownd in his Medium wine . Projecting Kilvert ( some say ) was the cause , Who making new Lords , had devisd new lawes . But those that would the ancient custome vary , Shall now ( 't is thought ) be made exempleary . FINIS .