Nevves from the Kings bath reporting nothing but an honest means whereby to establish an happy and much desired peace, in all His Majesties kingdoms generally. Pricket, Robert. This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A90997 of text R200141 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason E290_19). 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. 142 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 44 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. EarlyPrint Project Evanston,IL, Notre Dame, IN, St. Louis, MO 2017 A90997 Wing P3408 Thomason E290_19 ESTC R200141 99860946 99860946 113073 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. A90997) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 113073) Images scanned from microfilm: (Thomason Tracts ; 48:E290[19]) Nevves from the Kings bath reporting nothing but an honest means whereby to establish an happy and much desired peace, in all His Majesties kingdoms generally. Pricket, Robert. [2], 82 p. Printed at the authors charge:, Bristoll, : 1645. Attributed to Robert Pricket, whose initials appear on page 5. In verse. Reproduction of the original in the British Library. eng Great Britain -- History -- Civil War, 1642-1649 -- Poetry -- Early works to 1800. A90997 R200141 (Thomason E290_19). civilwar no Nevves from the Kings bath: reporting nothing but an honest means whereby to establish an happy and much desired peace, in all His Majestie Pricket, Robert 1645 22828 146 0 0 0 0 0 64 D The rate of 64 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the D category of texts with between 35 and 100 defects per 10,000 words. 2007-03 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2007-03 Aptara Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2007-08 Robyn Anspach Sampled and proofread 2007-08 Robyn Anspach Text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion NEWES FROM The King's Bath Reporting nothing but an Honest means whereby to establish an happy and much desired Peace , in all His Majesties Kingdoms Generally . Psal. 122. 6. Pray for the Peace of Ierusalem ; they shall prosper that love thee . Prov. 24. 21. My son , fear thou the Lord , and the King , and meddle not with them that are given unto change . 22 For their Calamity shall rise suddenly : and who knoweth the ruine of them both ? Eccles. 8. 2. I counsell thee to keep the Kings Commandement , and that in regard of the Oath of God . 3 Be not hasty to go out of his sight : stand not in an evill thing , for he doth whatsoever pleaseth him . 4 Where the word of a King is , there is power : and who may say unto him , What doest thou ? 5 Whos● keepeth the Commandement shall feele no evill thing , and a wise mans heart discerneth both time and judgement . BRISTOLL , Printed at the Authors Charge : 1645. The Epistle Dedicatory . THou Royall Crosse , with Age and Honour crown'd , That stand'st i' th mid'st of the Kings Bath , renown'd Both farre and neer , such Cures thy Bath hath wrought , As thousands unto thee for help have sought , Who by thy warming Waters healed were , Whose Stilts there left thereof do witnesse beare , And to thy Honour , on thy top are placed , To shew with what great vertue thou art graced : Neer to thy Springs my agitating Muse , Hath made a Book which doth report some Newes As from thy self : Her Book craves at thy hand It under thy renowned name may stand . And I the Author choose to make my moan Uuto thy self . For why ? As senselesse stone Most hearts are now become . Therefore from thee An equall good may well expected be , Through devious wayes & sundry suddain fears My Pilgrimage in this sad vale of tears Hath past , In Schools , Camp , and Court , poor I Have seen the change of times variety ; And learn'd to know worlds best prosperity Is but a state of wretched misery . I then began my thoughts for to remove , From things beneath unto those things above And then my heart all sweetning comfort borrows . From him who was a man of woe and sorrows In this base world , which then I did forsake , And once again unto my books betake My self , God then of his free grace did call Me to that Warre which is spirituall , And lawfully by Church-authority , I was admitted to the Ministry ; And being thus by Gods great mercy brought Unto his work , I have his Battels fought , Full fourty yeers , and never yet did cease , Next to the Faith , for to preserve the Peace Of holy Church , as did become a Sonne ; All her commads by me were justly done : And yet the heaps of followers did me wrong , I could not mend't but all the way along , In the whole course of my poor Ministry , I was acquainted with adversity . And did at last all means of living loose , That hope fail'd me which I to trust did choose ; The Letters from , and Orders of that Court Of High-Commission shall of me report No thing but well , who please to see them may , And hear on my behalf what truths they 'l say : But once grown poor from England then I went To Ireland , where I might with good content , Have lived but that Rebellious fatall curse Drove me from thence , to a Rebellion worse , And now poor man in this thy City Bath , I am alive as buried in my grave ; With grief I see the wofull misery Of honest , poor , dispised Poverty . The Prophet of his time did hit it right , That every one was found an Hypocrite . Yea , now that Hell-born sinne doth wound and stain . The greatest number , who as yet remain Professed Christians without Charity : In such I 'me sure ther 's most Hypocrisie : And for this cause that Book doth swiftly flie , Which lamentation , mourning , woe doth cry To every Soul . This Truth though seen , and kown , The greatest part from ill to worse are grown . And seeing this , I have the world forsook , A help from thence it is in vain to look : Yet went I on with my well-meaning Book , From first to last with hardship undertook . And though the means appears dispis'd & weak , And men may think it doth but vainly speak , To stop Rebelious course that 's grown so strong * By weaker means God hath destroy'd the throng , Of stronger Enemies as you may see , In holy Writ recorded there to be . My self , my Book poor and dispis'd though thought Yet by such means the mighty God hath brought Great things to passe , yea , works of wondrous fame . That glory might be given to his great name , A happy Peace that precious Pearl to gain . My Book with Gods assistance may obtain , Or further the Obtainment and not hinder , What may a Peace to King and Kingdom render . Kind Crosse , I pray thou wouldst accept it then , For thou art kind unto all sorts of men . To Poor , and Rich , to th' Lesser , and the Great , To all thou dost afford a warming Seat As is thy self , my Booke 's a Bath for Health , To heale the Aches of the Common-wealth , If some therein to bathe will wisely trie , It would them heale of Treasons Leprosie , And thus ( kind Crosse ) I humbly take my leave Thou wilt not me of any hope bereave . And what thou art , I must resolve to bear , My proper Crosse is unto me my share , Which I 'le take up , and joyfully will kisse , So following Christ to my eternall blisse . R. P. The Definition of a Round-head . My Muse , at first desireth to give a full and satisfactory Answer unto all those who do so often aske the Question What is a Round-head ? Answer . A Round-head is a proud Rebell , and a most Rebellious Unsound-head , Roundly , and thorowly , that is , in all things thorowout proudly rebelling against our good King Charles His Royall Person , Princely Progeny , Crown and Dignity , and Kingdom generally ; and against all the Laws and Statutes both Divine , and Humane in such Case made and provided . Behold this is a Round-head , but not a Sound-head : and Roundnesse without Soundnesse is nothing else but stinking Putrefaction , and Rottennesse : and such , and no better are all the Actions done by those who are Round-heads , but no Sound-heads . Me thinks then every good Subject should be ashamed to be such an Vnsound-head , as justly to deserve the name of a Round-head . What now doth follow , take it as it falls . As spoken to the Round-heads Generalls . To them my Muse some severall Songs doth sing , Expressing love unto Our Worthiest King . THE FIRST SONG . SX . THat Noble name Time past , and present viewing Thy Fathers tells , and what will be thy Ruine . His Fall I mourn'd , and from the dust did raise , His cast-down Honour with deserved praise , Yet for thy sake His fault I 'le briefly touch , That thou thereby mayst see thy Danger 's much . The course He steer'd was to be over strong For his good Queen , and those that did Him wrong To have remov'd . For this he did devize Both Queen , and Court on sudden to surprize . No thought He had His Queen to hurt at all , But at Her Royall feet on 's knees to fall , Present His wrongs , and humbly crave redresse : Resolved yet , by force the Queen to presse , And thus His Gracious Mistresse would compell To do what He thought Good . This was not well : Beho●d the Fault his Honour did commit And Law adjudged Him to death for it . My Noble Lord , on this but think a while , And let your Judgement not your self beguile , Can Subjects seek their Prince to over-awe , And not offend Divine , and Humane Law ? All Subjects know the Kings Supremacie : He must command and not commanded be . No Subjects Laws can make Kings to command : And if by Force such thing they take in hand , It is Rebellion , All the Learned know : All Laws of God , and Man have stil'd it so . Since Reign of Henry , of that name the first , This now Rebellion is of all the worst . ▪ Worse luck , my Lord , that in this war of all You should become Rebellions Generall : And lead an Army even in open sight , Against so good a King as ours to fight ▪ But if your Lordship say in this I lie ; I would I did ; your Honour cleer'd thereby . My Noble Lord , our good King Charles , you know● His Royall Person in the field doth show ; So do Prince Charles , and Princely Duke of York ; Both with the King by your rebellious work Are seen in Warre , by force themselves defending : The Subject fatall violence 'gainst them intending . And though you see the Royall Standert pitcht , Yet like a Mad-man , or one that 's bewitcht , You draw your Army forth all in Array , You beat Your Drums , and Colours do display , And then your Horse , your Foot most strongly guarding With Trumpets sound Rebellion still enlarging , You beat th' Alarm , and sound a Charge ▪ let flie , Like raging Fiends 'gainst Soveraign Majesty : Against His Person , Crown and Dignity : And Princes of His blest Posterity : Gainst Laws and Statutes Humane and Divine . To higher pitch can Prides Rebellion climbe ? To root out all ! What Barbarisme is this , Thy self know , Essex , See thine own amisse . When Subjects 'gainst their King such force do trie , Who saith , It is Rebellion , doth not lie . And in such work Rebellions Generall , Must heare Truth in her stile Maj●sticall : In holy Iob ( my Lord ) the words are found : And there Gods Spirit doth your sentence sound . " His head though reaching Heaven in mens account , " And though his Excellence doth clouds surmount , " Yet shall he perish , even as his own doung : Thus speaks the Spirit in the Scriptures tongue . Then Moble Earl , Be to thy self a friend : This way cannot hold prosperous to the end . But you will say , You bear your Arms 'gainst those The Kings bad Counsellours , our Countreys foes , Them to remove , and from our King expell Is that you seek ; and think it wondrous well Such course to take . Your errour to refell , Our Cronicle a story will you tell . Earl Lancaster * without his Kings consent Did raise an Army for the same intent , Which you pretend ; and bravely on did go ; Takes Gaveston that King and Countries foe Commands his death . For which unlawfull fact When once arraign'd , to justifie his act , He for himself did plead your own pretence , This lessen'd not the ill of his offence . Because as you do now , even so he did , And doing so , most justly lost his head . A Prince he was , and of the Royall Blood : Five Earledoms then in his possession stood . Yet He , and all the Lords that with him sided ; The Law for them as for himself provided . " Then ( Noble Essex ) know they happy are , " Whom others fatall harms make to beware . And let me once more work upon this heat , Whil'st I the fellow-story do repeat . Proud Lester * that Law-giver to his King , At Evesham aske what did become of him . His naked body on the ground did lie , His Head struck off , Face upward laid thereby : His privy parts were from his body cut , And they on either side his Nose were put A spectacle of shame , and infamy In him was left to all Posterity . As if that sight unto the world should tell Such Noses might like shamefull dangers smell . The Waterman that he may forward row With safer speed , looks strictly backward : So ▪ If by your Lordship this be rightly done , Your Noble self ▪ may future dangers shun . But yet me thinks some neerer president May w●ll be made your Lordships document , To shew your wayes 'gainst God himself are bent , Whi●'st you 'gainst Gods Annointed are intent : That God the Cause into his hand hath took , And bids your Lordship on your self to look . When he himself the blow did strike , which then Did rowze your Honour from your warlike Denne , 'T was when that you in Camp well form'd did lie Besieged by his Royall Majesty : Whose Royall Person though your self beheld ; Yet scorning unto Him your self to yeeld , You mann'd each Trench cast up with warlike skill , Proceeding stoutly in Rebellion still . Indeed ( my Lord ) you were encamp'd so strong , As if your works to Pirrhus did belong . Your Rampiers you so strongly up did raise Had it not been against your King , your praise Might have advanc'd the Honou● of your name : But being as it was , therein your shame Appears ; and shews it was a shamefull thing When done against the Person of Your King . You trusted to the strength of your defence , Your Sconces , Forts , Mounts , Bulworks , and from thence Your Cannon Bullets , and Case-shot let flie Against the Forces of His Majestie . Indeed you were right strongly fortified , And Roman-like with all things well supplied : And well you might , for all the Kingdoms wealth , Y' had taken from the King by open stealth . At Sea not yours , but your Kings Ships did tend , Upon your Army , ready still to send Unto your Honour all things you should want , When you in this your power your self did vaunt , Behold the mighty work of God , how he Did check your Greatnesse , and did make you see Him make his Winds a constant gale to blow , And keep from you provisions which ( you know ) You sorely wanted : This you had in view : But God would have you know 't was not for you ▪ The Ships that rode in sight could not enjoy , One blast for them into the River Foy ; Nor up that stream convey supplies expected : Our Gracious God had so your hopes rejected , Your Honour then as one amazed stands To see your Camp , and all your Armed Bands Left desolate ; your Souldiers hunger-sterved ; And nothing but despair for you reserved . In this distresse Warres Counsell you do call And there resolve your Infantry should fall To some good Composition with the King , And so their persons out of danger bring : Though Rebels , yet their blood to him was dear , As by his mercy shewed did appear . He but dis-arms them ; and doth give them leave To march away . That none might them bereave Of what they had ; nor offer violence Unto their persons , but might safely thence Unto their Rebell-Garrison repair , A Convoy granted is , which brings them there . But first ( my Lord ) of you I needs must say , That down the River Foy you ran away , Like to a brave , and Noble Generall , And left your men to th'worst might them befall , O my good Lord , full time enough you had And might a way unto your Peace have made , Not by your running from , but running to Your good King Charles , and something so to do , As might befit a Subject , low submission , And so have made your Peace on good Condition . But neither God , nor your good King could move you , To do so as your God and King might love you . But out you runne in your mis-leading way And so you do in your Rebellion stay . What is 't ( my Lord ) you , and your Armies crave ? Would you our good King Charles your Prisoner have ? Now God forbid . Two Kings * so once were kept And both of life , and Kingdoms were bereft To King , and Kingdoms woe ; when Subjects shall Upon their King in terms imperious fall , Sir , if you will not with our will complye , We will thereto enforce your Majesty . Your words have sounded to the like effect ; And thereof do your deeds your selves detect . We then must grant Our Soveraign justly stands Upon his Guard , to keep out of your hands His Royall Person . What! must Kings submit Unto their Subjects ? Can we think it fit , That Subjects should their Soveraign's Judges be Out fall their eyes that this desire to see . There is a Court where Christ the Judge doth sit , Before whose judgement-Seat we all must meet . " T is he that sayes , By me Kings rule , and Reign , " T is He will then the Right of Kings maintain : " Gainst those he will his powerfull Justice arm Who His Annointed Touch , and Prophets harm . Good David did confesse he sinn'd that day When he the lap of Sauls Coa● cut away . Is 't not a greater sinne when Subjects take , All things from their good King ; and Shipwrack make Of all belonging to his Royall State , And so their King , and Kingdom ruinate ? Before the Lord our God , of Kings the King When Subjects come to answer such a thing , Unto what help can they themselves betake , But to repent , and restitution make ? It 's long before that Judge will come some say , Judge Conscience ( know ) his Cour keeps every day , If Conscience thee condemne , thou ought'st to know Heavens Judge is greater , giving Judgements blow . The rule by which he judgeth is his Word , This doth a most un-erring Truth afford . If by this blessed Rule thou wilt be led , By it , not me , be thou thus counselled . My Noble Lord , Your Royall King behold , And then your self in Faiths obedience fold : Ask but his Pardon , 't is a Noble thing , A Noble Subject yeelds unto his King ; And such a King whose mercy doth transcend , The faults wherein his subjects can offend : Then love your King ; His Pardon once obtain'd , The love of God , and King you then have gain'd . So shall you then a Noble Subject be , And all good Subjects will rejoyce to see When to your King you reconciled are , And seek for Peace , and stop the course of warre , This is the thing for which we humbly pray , And will rejoyce to see that happy day . Then Noble Peer thy fellow-Peers perswade , That Peace 'twixt King and People may be made , So shall we all most heartily rejoyce , And praise our Gracious God with heart , and voice . The Second Song . My M●se a ●ace to Manchester doth hye As hearing there are Irish Wares to buy . R●ugh Irish Ruggs ▪ and hor●ed Beasts full many Of Irish breed , which are the worst of any , My Muse a while doth go to look on those , And see how there mongst them the Market goes . EArl Manchester , what an infectious stirre Is made by thee ? what rage doth make the spurre That drives thee on in Actions to proceed , Whereby thou mak'st thy Native Country bleed ? The Scab , the Botch , the Murrain , and the Byle Of Egypt was as thine not half so vile , That onely did on the Egyptians fall : Gods people were therewith not hurt at all . But now Reb●llion ayded by thy hand , Doth with a Plague fill all thy Native Land , And like a Lepros●e infecteth so , As all the Kingdom sensible of woe Mourns to behold the Ruine that is brought Upon her self ; by her own Children wrought . And here at thee I wonder more , the rather Because the S●nne of such a Noble Father ; That Noble Root whence thou a Branch art grown , Was to his King a faithfull Subject known , For Fourty yeers I all his wayes observ'd , And for my part I never found he swerv'd From Rules of Justice , but did think that he Might wash his hands as from Corruption free ; What others have laid to his charge of late For me to question now , 't is out of date , Because hee 's gone away to his last home , And long before this time hath known his doom . The time was when a Parliament could do it Which question 's greatest men , and makes them rue it When guilty found : That Court doth over awe The greatest Peers that sinne against the Lawe , And calls them to account : Thus Subjects all Unto that High Court's Censure stand or fall . Their power reacheth over every Soul , Except the King : Hee 's free from their controul : For they but Subjects are ; He is their King And must obeyed be in every thing , If not in active yet in passive wayes ; This ever was the Christian Subjects praise ; Who rather would his de●rest blood expend By suffering , then their God and Prince offend By damn'd Reb●llion . Noble Earl , what shame , What great dishonour hast thou brought thy name Unto ? I do not know the like was done By any of thy house before to run In such Rebellious courses : none hath stain'd Thy race that way ; none unto it hath gain'd The name of Rebell . Thou , I must confesse , A yonger brother hast , who runs no lesse , Yet in another way : He takes Romes part , And therein thou like him a Rebell art . He runs from his obedience to his King : And so do'st thou the very self same thing . Romes Soveraign Power thou seemest to deny Yet grantest not our Kings Supremacy . If good King Charles Supreme in all things be Why then do'st thou from thy obedience flee ? because therein thou would'st with Rome agree ; For shame ( my Lord ) for shame this error see . Thou had'st an Uncle by thy Fathers side , A noble Reverend Prelate that did ride In Honours Chariot for his vertuous life ; Who made Gods House his most endeared wife . Bath Church will ever sound his honoured praise ; Out of the Dust he did her beauty raise . And she doth there unto the world present His blessed memory in his Monument , I 'me su●e that he withstood Romes Popery , And did maintain Truths written verity . What makes thee then thus to degenerate , The Churches Cause ? Yes , yes , so some do prate . In Church Religion pure to keep , is 't that Hath made thee do indeed thou know'st not what ? A Proud , perverse , and peevish Puritan , Doth want no ill that can be in a Man , And yet he will Religious seem to be : O horrible ! 't is more then shame to see , That they should dare a seeming sh●w to make , As if they did all for Religions sake ! When true Religion never yet durst take Up Arms against Gods annointed , and forsake The word of truth , Religions onely stay , Which doth command all Subjects to obay Their King . And rules he ill , or well , They must not dare against Him to Rebell , When Heathen Kings the Christian world did sway , For them the Christians did most humbly pray , And low obedience to their Thrones did yeeld ; And herein they Religions Law fulfill'd . Th' Apostate Iulian had his Armies ; He Of Christians there might many thousands see , Of force sufficient him to have depos'd : Obedience yet their Christian hearts inclos'd . To datelesse shame he makes himself a debter , Rebelling 'gainst a Christian King none better . But Christians now unto Religions shame , Rebellion shrowd under Religions Name . And do by this their foule , and vile transgression , Most fouly wrong the Protestants profession . Shall Protestants , such as be of thy Faction Gainst holy truth maintain each Popish Action ? Hast thou a Bull sent from the Roman Sea , That makes thee bold to plead Rebellions plea ? Is this the way to keep out Popery ? Accurs'd is all your foule Hypocrisy : A door most wide to let Romes Popery in Is opened by thy Hands . The more 's thy sinne , Both Church and Common-wealth to over-throw : No other fruit forth from thy Root can grow Thy factious Teachers in thy mind have bred That error which hath thee so much mis-led . Yes , without doubt ; for of them there 's a swarm , Whose stinging doth both King , and Kingdom harm , A faithfull Minister as Christ should Preach : And not repugn what Christ himself doth teach ▪ Give unto God that which is Gods : do this : And unto Cesar give what Cesar's is Christ King of Kings , in him 't is Gods Command . Who are they then that dare against him stand ? Whos'ever shall against his mandates speak , With Rod of Iron he 'l them in peeces break . To give to God what 's Gods they vainly trie , Who what is Cesar's Cesar doth deny . For God , and for my King good Subjects say . And so indeed good Subject should obay . And with this truth our Humane laws comply ; Gainst God , our King , his Crown , and Dignity : Offenders sinne , Enditements fram'd are so , The Guilty found from Barre to Gallows go . And whether then think you should they be sent , Who with full purpose of their wills intent , Rob God himself when they his Churches spoile , And 'gainst their King keep a Rebellious coyle ? In Robbing him of all his proper own By Sea , and Land , Ships , Castles , Towns , all known Unto his Crown most justly to belong : Offenders when endited for such wrong , Must they not needs thereof be guilty found ? In this le● Law the following sentence sound . The Danger such what is 't that hope doth bring , But onely this the mercy of their King . Our King so good , and mercifull to see , Shall he without all mercy used be By Subjects ? ●Tis a work so mercilesse , No Tongue , nor penne can to the full expresse ; And use Religions name for their excuse , No heathen story can the like produce . Now sure that man doth make his shot the worse , Which makes Religion but his stalking Horse . Earl Manchester , wilt thou a gunning go Among those gunners workers of our woe ? What folly , nay , what fury makes thee then , To rank thy self among the worst of men ? Whose foul dishonour Trump of Fame hath whirld , With shames report even round about the world . Although some Lords their lost Estates when viewing , Will raise themselves upon their Countreys ruine , 'T is not thy cause : an Earls Estate thou hast , And never did'st thy substance vainly waste By any loose , or riotous expence ; No , no , thy breeding ba●●es thee that offence : Yet now thou do'st a fouler sinne commit , And do'st thy God , thy King , and self forget , When impiously thou fully do'st intend , In this bad Warre thy whole Estate to spend . Didst thou but spend on wanton vanity , Thou then should'st be but thine own Enemy ; But spending it upon Rebellions part , To King , and Countrey Enemy thou art . But see thy self ; consult with thy own mind , Who will not see , then such there 's none more blind . Search the Records , and truth of History , And learn to know , ( and that for certainty ) What shew so'ere may varnish thy intent , Thy actions are with high Rebellion bent Against thy King ▪ and thou shalt find them then To be against the Laws of God , and Men . If so thou do thy judgement then advance And be not led by impure Puritants . Now though I know they Calvin do alledge , And on their part his reputation pledge , I will make bold in that which I have read , To shew his words to no such sense will lead . His Institutions , Fourth Book , neer the end , Last Section saving one his words are penn'd . Whose entrance Orthodox divinely sings The Soveraign power of annointed Kings , His Song in Magistracies name he sets , And willingly the name of Kings forgets , Democracy 'gainst Monarchy doth stand , Geneva so mis-led their Calvins hand . As man might Calvin into error fall ; The Proverb is , wise Bernard sees not all . And Calvin to himself hath got this gain , His vertues pride , and Avarice did stain . But when to change his note he doth begin , A peradventure brings his matter in . And of the power of three estates he speaks , And thereby all the Laws divine he breaks . For this I 'me sure , he can no warrant bring , That Subjects may bear Arms against their King , For any cause what 's ever they pretend ; As private ones may not therein offend ; So no Authority of Subjects must , Or can allowed be their King to thrust From lawfull Rights belonging to his Crown : Kings do not grant a power to throw down Themselves ▪ nor raise they any Court so high , Themselves of Kings to make no Kings thereby . The power of Kings though Calvin's fourth Book speaketh ; i th' former part , yet in the last he breaketh ▪ What he before with weighty reasons taught ▪ And they who have by him occasion ●ought To make his words with force and power be bent , Gainst present state of Englands Government , To King , and State they proudly offer wrong ; A question then may stay their clamorous tongue ; Where is the King that rules by Tyranny , That down doth trample his poor Comminalty ? Our good King Charles his Commons to content , Hath given them a Trienniall Parliament , A Royall favour , never given before ; Should we not therefore love our King the more ? And those last Acts made with our Kings consent , Are powerfull Objections to prevent , And shew his Subjects that in Royall love He would from them all grievances remove ; The Commons , and those trusted by them then May find just cause to rest contented men . And Calvins words , not spoken to his praise , Can give no cause Commotions up to raise ▪ To make such Laws our King is well content , As may consist with Monarchs Government . And now ( my Lord ) our noble mind to move With fervency desired Peace to love , Your Honour may be pleas'd your self t' advise By thinking on precedent Prophecies ▪ Sixth Henry sure in this a Prophet was And did forese● what things would come to passe ; Whom when confined by Imprisonment , King Edward Fourth o th' name to visit went ; With Gl●s●●●● Duke , and Richmonds , all in state , 〈…〉 two did Henry ru●na●e ) When those four Princes in one Bason wash't Successively , a smile from Henry past , Which Edward spies , and thereupon would know , The reason that did move him thereunto : Th' unhappy King as he yet smiling stands , 'T is strange , quoth he , four Kings should wash their hands Thus in one Bason . Edward presseth on To know his meaning : Henry thereupon Doth thus expresse himself ; I was ; Thou art : And Gloster will be : But for Richmonds part He shall be : speaking thus as in despite ▪ Of all that should withstand great Richmonds might . What shall be , shall be ; none shall it oppose , This force the words do in themselves inclose . And so it was ; by Conquest Richmond wonne The Crown of England , and by him was done A glorious work ; He did in one unite Those fragrant Flowers , the Red-Rose , and the White ; And so did cease that deadly bleeding Warre 'Twixt those two Houses , York , and Lancaster . That King renown'd did in his judgement see Another union which in time might be ; When Monarchs two should so in one be met , As that one Monarch over both should set A Crowned King : England and Scotland , both Their peoples should be made by sacred Oath One King to serve ; and that one to obay , Whose Royall Scepter should both Kingdoms sway . What Henry 7. foresaw to passe is brought ; The union , as you see , is firmely wrought : The Laws of God , and Nations do confirme it , Woe then to them who seek to overturn it , Our good King Charles from Henry 7 descended , Of all the Kings no one King more commended , For all the vertues that a King adorn , His Royall Head by Right the Crown hath worn , And Rightfully it doth to Him belong , This to deny , none dares do such a wrong . Shall then the Subjects of his Kingdoms bend Their strength His Kingdoms from his Crown to rend ? With England Scotland joyn'd in full consent , Shall each from other be in pieces rent ? God made the marriage ; and it is a wonder What God hath joyned that man should dare to sunder . Great Brittain now by her great union is A Lady Crown'd with everlasting blisse , If that her King and people could agree But to uphold her peacefull unity . And this to do is our good Kings desire , It is the thing which he doth most require : His profer'd love is by his Subjects slighted , And his desires of Peace with Warre requited . Division now the union dis-uniting , Sets both the Kingdoms 'gainst each other fighting . And both of them 'gainst their Monarchall King Do joyn their Forces , and their Armies bring Into the Field . Can Heathen stories tell A work that may such mischiefs paralell ? Then ( Noble Earl ) be touch't with some remorse . And now no longer do thy self enforce By civill Warre ●o spoile thy Countreys Peace , But rather cause all bloody broiles to cease : Remember Richmond shall be , Henry said , So Richmond was . Now then his Of-spring aid , And boldly say , our good King Charles shall be In spight of Foes , Our Royall King : And he Shall Rule and Reign ; and all his Subjects they With faith's Allegiance shall their King obey . Promote but this , Great Brittains joy shall then In union stand confirm'd , Amen , Amen . Renounce Rebellion , 't is thy Honours stain ; He runneth farre that never turns again : Turn to thy King , and he will turn to thee With mercy more then can deserved be . Lead on the Army under thy Command No more against , but with thy King to stand . Thy Christian love , and loyalty expresse , In working thus our Kingdoms happinesse : Thus what Charles Ancestors did once foresee Shall be establish't to Eternity . Thou shalt by such endeavours ( never fear it ) The love of God , and all good men inherit . But if thou shalt this warre continue , then Thou shalt abhorred be of God and Men ; For such a wastefull cruell warre needs must In th' issue lay this Kingdom in her durst ; And therein will Gods worship be interred ; And best of civill Government lie buried . Of this Great Isle the Old Inhabitants ▪ Did paint themselves to make their countenance Seeme to beholders gastly , grimme , and fierce ; Such Cesar ▪ found us : But we now are worse , We then were Salvages , now Christians are ; And this Rebellion makes us worse by farre Then rude Barbarians ; such wayes , we know , Do worst beseem such as for Christians go . America when first discovered ; Her People though by Heathens governed , Yet to their King were most obedient . And mongst them was such form of Government As all could well what was their own enjoy , Themselves did not as we our selves destroy : O mourning Times for every honest man , Men-eaters like to those of Magellan , Who Viper-like no whit at all will spare , Their Mothers Womb quite out to rend , and teare , Wilt thou be one of that base viperous brood ? And is to thee thy Countries spoile thy food ? Thou do'st thy self a Christian write : why then Wilt thou in sinne out-strip those Heathen men ? Who serv'd their King , and durst not him offend : Wilt thou thy evils unto that height extend ? Even Heathens shall 'gainst thee in judgement rise Unlesse some better course thou do'st devise In time : For what by Warre can mended be ? In Warre we can but our confusion see . In presence of our God conjure I thee That thou thy King , and native Countrey free From their sad fate : So that Religion true May stand establisht to the worlds wide view ; And that fair Englands people as in times Of Yore may all sit underneath their vines , And peacefully enjoy what is their own , That King , and Kingdoms blisse may still be known , And bear aloft the honour of their name , Cleer'd from Rebellion Christians stain , and shame . This to atchieve do from Rebellion cease , And Nobly wor●el●y King and Countreys Peace . Thus shalt thou make a mends for what 's a misse , And to thine Honour gain eternall blisse . The third Song . My Muse is now upon an Errand sent To view a Wall that gives no good content . Of such bad Wallers there's too many now , And one of them my Muse will shew to you . MY Muse doth now Sir William Waller see , Who loves to sight where Walls and Hedges be Twixt him and them he is to fight withall ; For then hee 'l shew himself a Souldier tall . O could his wit but handsomely contrive Before him always Woods and Hills to drive , Then would he with a Souldiers threatning looks Amaze his Foes , and burn up watry Brooks . But on plain ground if he be brought to fight , He knows full soon to save himself by slight . For after-ages this remember will , How fast he ran away at Roundway-Hill . Yet notwithstanding that his overthrow My mind to me can sundry Actions show That 't is in Warre a very Common-thing , One day to loose , another day to win●e . The Proveth bids us to remember this , One day a Mother , and a Step-dame is . But yet me thinks that erring Knight should see The hand of God , his providence to be The working cause that made him then to flie ; Even when he thought t'have gain'd the victory . For into Bristoll newes there Posting flies , That he by Conquest had driv'n to Devise His old Comrade , a Noble Generall : On whom a sudden Accident did fall , That to Devise did cause him to retire ; Which made Sir William's Pride such height aspire , That he presum'd , and so his braggs did make In three dayes space the Town Devise to take ; And unto Bristoll as a Prisoner bring That Noble Knight prov'd faithfull to his King , But in the ruffe of that his swelling pride , God did for him in Justice so provide , That he which did conceited Conquest boast , Was conquer●d and compell'd away to post , As fast as he upon his Horse could flie ; And to his Troops Ride , Ride , alo●d did cry . And well he might , for then he did behold That brave Prince Maurice coming on so bold ; One which deserves that Character to have Which Homer once ●●to Achilles gave , He wisely knew an Army to command , And to a fight would stoutly valiant stand . He first took notice of Sir William's fear ; And bids fall on they 'r running in the Rear . And then that Knight though hurt before by chance Doth from Devise into the field advance And marcheth on 'gainst them who proudly said He shall no more King Charles his party aide . And yet he did : The Noble Prince , and He The spoile of their proud Enemies did see . Though Wallers Horse had sav'd themselves by flight , Yet all his Foot amazed at the sight Stood in a Body ; knew not how to fight . And those that did , resistance being vain , Were almost all on heaps together slain : But few escap'd that were not Prisoners took ; God then that pack of Rebels had forsook : Their Colours , Ordnance , Carriages were lost And Cornets thrown from some that well were Horst , Sir William's Camp was then Camp'd under Feet ; Such just reward was for Rebellion meet : And he like a right beaten Souldier sent To Bristoll , there his sad fate to lament . Sir William Waller , think upon this thing , My Muse her lines unto thy self doth bring , That so thy wisdom might perceive Gods hand To be the strength which did thee then withstand : And sure it was to thee in mercy done , That thou no more a Rebels course should'st run , Then time was given unto thee to repent ; But thou that time hast to this time mispent , It was thy Pride , and Pride foreruns a fall : Remember this Rebellions Generall . The Royall Person of thy King lay not That thou do'st love , when in Rebellions plot Thou runn●st on , and in thy Soveraigns sight Thou da●'st against his Royall Person fight ; Whose vertues do deserve a better love , Then that thou should'st thine hand against him move . I do not know that e're I saw thine eye ; I know thine Image in Bath Church doth lie , Which I full many a time have look't upon , And seen as much as could be seen in stone . One thing I 'me sure of viewing thee enshrin'de , I often with the good Duke Humphrey din'de , There Souldier-like in Arms compleat thou art , To shew thou canst discharge a Souldiers part , With such a valiant wise dexterity , As may some great Commander dignifie . Now when my Muse did think upon thee thus , My thoughts did then their pressing griefs discusse ; That such an one as thou , so worthy a Knight Should'st 'gainst thy King so like a Rebell fight . Whereby thou canst expect unto thy name No Honour , but an everlasting shame . My thoughts then me unto a wondring led , That one of thy good parts , a Scholler bred , Should so much blindnesse to the world bewray , As not to see what 's clearer then the day . Thou needst must know the cause by thee defended , Doth stand by Law of God , and man condemned . Have Oaths , and Vowes of reason thee bereft ? Such Oathes , and Vowes are better broke then kept , Thus in Bath-Church of thee my thoughts have talked , When with a sorrowing soul I there have walked : These were my thoughts , which now I do disclose Unto thy self . Thy Anger , I suppose , I shall not to my self procure thereby , And if so be I do , yet what ca●e I ; I 'me poore enough , already made a scorn My Age by proud ones being overborn My Youth , I 'me sure , could soon the means have wrought Which them more wit , and manners might have taught . From those that are indu'd with Noble mind , I cannot but expect respect to find . I Souldiers love ; and must : A Souldier I Was of the Queens of blessed memory . In thee Sir William I do nothing hate , But that thou dost thy Countrey ●uinate . And 'gainst thy King and Countrey bearest Arms , Working thereby thy Kings and Countries harms . And though I know my lines no praise can merit , As being penn'd with a distracted spirit : Yet seeing I have heard thou learned art , In hidden words I will my mind impart Hows'ever lik't , this Truth be understood , I truly wish my King and Couuntries good . The Moon , we know , hath but a borrowed Light , She put betwixt the Sun and human sight Makes Sunnes Ecclipse , as now we see it made , Which clouds the Kingdom in a darkned shade . ●rather wish the Moons Ecclipse to see , Than by the Moon the Sunne Ecclips'd should be , That of the Moon doth Mortals little trouble , That of the Sunne doth Morrals horror double . Moons body put twixt us , and Sunnes great light , The beams of Majesty which should shine bright Are so Ecclips'd as that a pitch-black night So dark'ned hath fair Englands Hemisphere As nothing but prodigious flames appear , And Clouds of smoak , whose inside lin'd with Thunder , Our Kingdom muffles both aloft , and under : And in this storm of Subjects foul revolt , Thy self is made a tearing Thunder-bolt ; Although thou know'st , and that unto thy cost That twice thou hast thy Thundering Pieces lost ; Yet fire remains involved in thy cloud , Whose breaking forth bespeaketh ruine loud : And some fierce flames of lightning thou mak'st flie , Which may endanger Soveraign Majesty . O! what a Torrent hath our Peace uprent With bloods expence most prodigally spent , By thee encreas'd , who like a Blazing Starre Portendest nought but ruine by this War●e . A burning Comet doth not ever last : Thy flame hath burn'd too long in time forepast . It seemes thy wrath into thy mind had sent A massie wad of sl●my stuffe not spent In three yeers burning . What , is 't thy desire As Phaëton to set the world on fire ? Quench in thy self the flame thy self hast kindled ; R●pentant Teares with Faith , and Love when mingled Will do the deed , and cause thee wisely then To help to quench like fire in other men Behold thy mournfull King in sorrows share So deep , none found mongst all his Subjects are : Yet all good Subjects have enough to make Their stouter hears to quake , if not to ake , Yea , break in pieces , 'cause they all foresee The dolefull State of Englands miserie . By this accurs'd Rebellion : The whole Nation With speed now Posting unto desolation . If thou good Subject bee'st , remove those fears , That make the Land powre out such bleeding tears ; 'T is more then time this fearfull storm to cease ; And nothing can ●ffect it but a Peace , A happy Peace will both Ecclipses clear , And Sunne and Moon in glory shall appear , Each brightly shining in their proper spheare And then they will a glorious Peace uprear , When Cynthia as a Servant unto Sol With one consent a happy union shall Twixt King and Subjects make , and clouds disperse That be or shall be to our Peace averse . This to effect , Sir William reach thy hand , And for thy King with resolution stand For Peace , for Peace our Gracious King doth call , Peace is that precious Pearl will please us all . T is that will make both Church and State to flourish , Blest be each Soul the means thereto doth cherish . And blest art thou ( Sir William Waller ) when With heart , and mind to this thou say'st Amen , Amen , Amen to this Amen say I , Amen say all that love His Majesty . The Fourth Song . My Muse doth now make hast into the North , To taste a Messe of Scottish ill made Broth : And dine her self with Plummery and Keale Although she makes a very hungry meale . And sooth to say , and not at all to jest , Shee 'l tell you whom she findeth at that feast . BRave Limping Lesley Rebels welcome Guest . Thy rough and boistrous blast blows North North East A Wind that 's good for neither Man , nor Beast : And yet inclos'd in Concave of thy brest , Like Eolus thou send'st it forth from thence , And mak'st thereby a raging violence , Which doth produce a fearfull bleeding work ; All to uphold thy factious Scottish Kirk , And bring a proud and up-start Presbytrie , To Rule and sway in Englands Monarchie . And in this work to further thy int●nt , A Factious Force from England there is sent . So that the Factious in both Kingdoms are Against their King met in Rebellious Warre , Working ther● by , each Kingdoms fatall fall And this to do th'art made a Generall . Doth Scotlands Kyrk thy actions look upon , Allowing Ill , that Good may come thereon ? Gods word then sure is not the Rule whereby They order all their seeming Sanctity . All of thy Kyrk condemn I must not dare , Among them sure some Learn'd Divines there are ; Some that are just , and good , and holy men ; With all my heart I love , and reverence them . But for the most , the Swing of their intent Is unto Schisme , and Faction chiefly bent . The Brethren of the Parity are they Which in Rebellions Warre do bear most sway ; And for a true religious work allow it ; None of the Faction dare to dis-avow it . Thou of that Brother-hood a Brother art , And stand'st , though halting , strongly on their part . Say not thou art a true Religious man Thy best is but a Rebel-Puritan ; Thou giv'st a mocking taunt to Purity , And art but pure Religions Enemy . Who plainly shew'st by thy Rebellious Course Thou hast no more Religion then a Horse . Did ever Pure Religion teach this thing That Subjects might raise Warre against their King , For any Cause or seeming good pretence ? No true Religion unto such offence Doth warrant give : That false one doth of Rome , Unto whole Tenent thou doest closely come : Thus as the Devill to the Collyer cryed Like unto Like ; So thou with Rome dost side . I care not though thou take my words in Snuffe , I will not fear to give thy Pride a Cuffe . Thy self , thy words , thy works all rude and rough Are Bastard-like , base , mis-begotten stuffe . But in the wisdom of thine own conceit , If thou dost think praise on thy Actions wait , Then must I tell thee out of Wisdoms School , That thou art left more hopelesse then a Fool . The wisest King that ever Scotland bred Whose judgement was with understanding fed In things Divine to cleer each rais'd-up doubt There was like him in all the world through out Not any King . It was his full intent To state both Kingdoms in one Government . That Scholler like King , and King of Schollers He The English and the Scottish Church did see Both of one Faith : and that they might agree In Discipline with fuller unity , Considering our English Form was found More pure then that of Scotland , and more sound , His whole endeavours he did then incline That Scots might use the English Discipline . And to that end our Service-book he sent To them that they therewith might be content : Which if with Ours it did not full agree , Upon Complaint it should amended be . And rightly judging that Episcopy Was b●st agreeing unto Manarchy , He laboured that Scotlands Church might have Their learned Bishops , godly , wise , and grave . By this one Form of Discipline he knew Both Churches should be one , though they were two And might appear full strong in their defence , When in them both there was no difference . But that blest work most proudly was withstood By those that were the Factious Brother-hood , Whose malice did mischievously contrive Their Bishops all at once away to drive ; And in despight our Service book they throw Out of their Church : A better yet I trow , Nay more , I dare 'gainst any undertake Those Factious Fooles could not , can ever make Scarce one so good . Of one thing I am sure The Scriptures Test it will throughout endure . Here now begins Rebellion forth to break , And Rebels mouths most lavishly do speak Gainst Gods Annoynted , and belch out this lie , That he did mean to bring in Poperie ; A thing which never came into his thought , As knowing wel what works proud Rome hath wrought . Yet now he finds his factious Subjects all Are in their works Rome-like , Tyrannicall . And thou ( proud Generall ) a man accurst , If not the worst of all , yet next the worst , Do'st as a Chiefe in their Society Uphold this work of damn'd Impiety ; And with thee joyn our English Schismaticks , The bratts of Hagar , full of mocking tricks . Our Mother-Church you all most proudly scorn , As Hagar Sarah , and each Isaack born Of h●r blest womb , each childe of promise must With you as Off-scummes out of doore be thrust . None are a Church but those of your new faction ; Lo , how you joyn with Rome in this your action , And this your monstrous bui●ding up to reare Against your King , you proudly Arms do beare ; For why ? such sonnes of Desperation Can give themselves a Dispensation . Two famous Kingdoms thus confounded are By Civill , most uncivill barbarous warre . The secret plot which did this work contrive Got life long since , though then not seen alive . To Luds great Town was sent from Edens land , The Contract which fast joyned hand in hand This factious Crew , by Vow , and Oath to make This rue-full warre , which dangerously doth shake Of either Kingdom their most strong foundation , And threatneth both with direfull desolation . For now ye see the Scottish Covenanter His Covenant dares to English Lords preferre ; And thereby Englands Subjects sworn must be Against their King . O matchlesse Villanie ! Who takes that Oath are perjur'd every one ; From Faith and Truth they desperately are gone , No age before produc'd so vile a thing That Subiects should be sworn against their King . One thing there is our Rebels stand upon , Which doth in their Rebellion lead them on ; The King his Oath , and Oath of Subjects all Are both alike , say they , reciprocall ; And so they are ; both must indeed be kept , But know they have a different respect ; The King his Oath doth take with reverend feare To God alone : But Subjects , they do sweare To God , and to their King . If Kings offend , 'T is God alone that must with them contend , A power above them ; That which is below , I meane , Those that their Subjects be , must know They cannot move in any other sphere Then of Subjection . Whence it is most cleare , As God alone hath power 'ore the King , So Subjects must submit in every thing Unto their lawfull Prince ; who power hath To punish Subjects for their breach of Faith . Let Subjects know it is not in their part , To say unto their King , Thou wicked art . Who dares speak so ? but such as speak not well , And proudly dare against their King Rebell , And most unjustly when they but surmise The King doth 'gainst his Oath some plots devise Which he ne're minded : Then if Subjects all , On such suspect shall from obedience fall And runne into Rebellion presently , All Government is quite destroy'd thereby . If Husbands chance to break their Marriage Vow , Shall wives 'gainst Husbands straight Rebell think you ? And then again much more especially When wives are mov'd by cause-lesse Jealousie ? Yet Subjects of our King so moved are To take up Arms in this Rebellious Warre . And thou ( proud Lesley ) makes thy self a chief , In working of thy King and Countreys grief . And this must still be for Religions sake , That makes the Rebels such a coyle to make . The Turk were he to choose Religion now . He would not be Religious like to you , Scotch Generall then go gang thy way along , Help to uphold the Turkish Alchoran . At Meca there do thou a Champion set , And fight thou there for their great Mahomet , And then by that thy valiant enterprize Thou mayst command the Great Turks Janizaries , Or Generall be of his Timariot Force , And so command three hundred thousand Horse ; And rise to be of some great Bashaw's might , Or Beglebeg , a Lord of Lords in sight . Here 's Honour for thy high Ambition fit , Who mayst make choice of thy Religion yet . Then stay not here great Brittains Isle to spoile , By mischief of thy proud Rebellions broile . Thy Scottish Covenant keep among the Scots ; Our English Church and Common-wealth it blots With Treason 'gainst our King uprightly just , Who gave himself into his Subjects trust : And that so generally as none before Was known to do so in the dayes of Yore . Shall Subjects then their Soveraigns trust betray , And 'gainst their King foule parts of Treason play ? The Proverb thou dost know , it loudly rings , And tells the world that Scotland bears no Kings . Wouldst thou of such condition England make ? And spoile her honour with thy Scottish rake ? May judgement first upon thee strongly seize , And King and Kingdom of that sicknesse ease . A work 's begun which with infection strong Infects both Kingdoms by Rebellions wrong . And canst thou Lesley find within thy heart Such works to do , and take such workers part ? O strang to see ! for I have heard thy name With Honour prais'd , whereof if true the Fame , Thou art a Souldier , and with warlike skill Canst in a Battaile all thy ranges fill ; And valiantly command an Army so , As where thou marchest Honour there may go And so it might in Warre when Honourable : Rebellions praise is most abominable . Quit then thy Honour from dishonours stain ; And march no longer in Rebellions train . It 's much , too much thou hast already done ; Thy self but conquer , there 's a Conquest wonne Shall make thee great : Great glory shall they winne Who can like Conquerers o'recome their sinne . Our good King Charles , Prince Charles , & Noble Duke Set them before thee , and upon them look With heart of love : The King deserves no lesse ; And those sweet Princes do such grace expresse , As not an heart unlesse of Steel or Stone , But would be mov'd to love them every one . Against them all to fight , Offences such Do with a mischief Gods Annointed touch . And yet the Actors , they themselves will stile His Majesties most Loyall Subjects , while They 'r nothing lesse : Their actions foul and vile Do justly them from Subjects name exile . To see in this how Subj●cts do proceed ; May justly make the stoniest heart to bleed . Great Brittains Self her self doth bite and sting ; Our sinnes , our sinnes on us these judgements bring . What ? are the English now of Mad-mans Tribe To let the Scots to them a Form prescribe Of Government in Church , and Common-wealths ? And to enforce 't for King and Kingdom healths ? No Lesley , no ▪ wise England will not brook What thy base Faction now hath undertook . Feed then no longer thy deluding hope , Nor vainly give unto thy fansie scope ; For if thou do'st , thou wilt but fool thy self . And lay thy hopes upon a broken Shelf . New Covenanters , Ours , and You , Crafty Scots All base Projectors , full of cosening Plots , Shall all in Gods good time from England pack , And work no more our Kings and Countreys wrack . To Englands Rule if Scotland please to yeeld , Great Brittains Union shall be then upheld . Renown'd King Charles shall from that very day , With joy the Scepters of both Kingdoms sway . Gods true Religion then shall firmly stand ; And Brittains Isle shall be a glorious Land . No clouds shall then Ecclipse her glorious shine Among the Nations round about her clime . Her Peace shall then her safety fortifie , As City built in glorious unity . Lesley behold a wish't for happinesse Which to accomplish thou thy mind addresse , If thou indeed religious rightly art , Religion bids thee take thy Soveraigns part , And be content in Scotland to abide , And take what there God doth for thee provide ; And never henceforth any inrode make Into this Land , in Hostile way to take From Englands King and English Subjects what To thee , or any of thine belongeth not : Which yet I 'de have thee know thou couldst not do , Did not our Bastard-English help thereto . I know 't is naturall for man to erre But know that Beast-like 't is to persevere In error . Then retract ; To King submit And do what best a Subject may befit . Strive now for Peace , to Peace thy self betake , And let an happy Peace thy Period make . In Peace to live , and so in Peace to dye Will bring to thee a Peace eternally . And scorn not him whose pen these lines did write , His Youth could well in warlike Battaile fight , The Accidence of Arms long since he knew , And all the Grammer Rules of Warre did view : And can dispute the learning of that Art Even with thy self , were we both set a part . But now let 's both to shield our selves from evill Fight 'gainst our sinnes , the World , the Flesh , the Devill My Muse will him a Christian subject sing , That Feareth God , and honoureth the King . The fifth Song . Now that my Muse into the North is come , Shee seeks about , as hearing there are some Who side with Lesley in this shamefull Warre , Which honest men should from their heart abhorre . My Muse in seeking , one she hath found out , Doth tell his name , and so resolves the doubt . FAirfax , Farre fetcht , deer bought is good , men say , For Ladies : yet not if they strain to pay Too deer a price for all the things they buy ; Such Chap-men turn to Bank-rupts suddenly . Bank-rupt of Grace it seems that now thou art Against thy King to take Rebellions part , And such a King as England never had , Who did delight to make his Subjects glad By granting what they justly should desire ; What more could Subjects of their King require ? What fury then inflames Rebellions fire , And causeth Rebels proudly to aspire To such an height , their Soveraign to compell To do but what themselves should say is well : Although it be at once to overthrow Both King , and Kingdom ; which the Powder-blow Intended : And what that would then have wrought This now Rebellion to effect hath brought Fair England , which advanc'd in glory stood , Is now thrown down into a Sea of blood . A Jesuite , and Schismatick in evill , Are both alike the Children of the Devill . Thou Fairfax art the last , and dost so walk ; That future Ages thus of thee will talk ; He hated Rome , and yet made way to bring A Roman-like Rebellion 'gainst her King . In such a Warre wilt thou with Lesley joyn And set Religion's Stamp upon thy Coyn ? False Coyn to make by Law is Treason held , And such a work thou brought'st into the field . A Princely Generall in 's * Colours had this clause Fo● God , for King , for Countrey , for the Laws , For these to fight it is a Souldiers praise ; And who so fight their Honours name shall rai●e In future Ages unto such an height , As Honour shall on their Memoriall wait . But those that dye in foul Rebellions plot Their memory , their name shall stinck and rot . And so shall thine if still thou bearest Arms To work thereby thy Kings , and Countreys harms : And all good Laws to trample under Feet Is this a work for Noble Subjects meet ? Ignobly sure with shames reproach runne they Who will runne on in proud Rebellions way . I wonder , Fairfax , what 't is makes thee fight ? What Bugbear standeth in thy judgements sight ? Thy King hath promised by Oath and Vow Gainst Kingdoms Laws no one thing to allow . You say His Protestations Verball are : 'T were well for all you not so reall were ; Then would you not so really intend Your Gracious King unjustly to offend For whatsoere our King his word hath past Should be performed from the first to th' last , If Subjects but a Legall way would take They might be sure he wholsome Laws would make , And by their Execution give them life , And so prevent whatsoere should move to strife . What moves thee then thy Armies on to bring In Hostile manner 'gainst so good a King ? A woefull thing with Lucan 't was to spye , 'gainst Roman Eagle , Roman Eagle flye . Unto our woe our eyes are now descrying 'gainst Englands Red-crosse , Englands Red-crosse flying . And Andrew's Crosse to fill their Scottish Gorge Comes flying in against our Englands George . And English hands with strong Rebellions might Must Andrew help against themselves to fight . ' Ware England , ' ware : help not the Scots too much . Lest that mad work produce a danger , such As may effect that Anchorets Prophesie , Which Polychronicon doth testifie . * Both Kingdoms Forces firmly joyned may With boldnesse to the world most stoutly say Deal as thou wouldst be dealt with : We not care To bid our proudest foes do what they dare Our Force by Sea about the Island round Was strength enough to keep the Inland sound . By Sea and Land we now our selves destroy : Which into Mourning changeth all our Joy . We through the World our Honour might have born , But now to th' world have made our selves a scorn . And 'mong our selves we have a spo●le begun , Which all the World 'gainst us could not have done . And yet the workers of our mischief still Do all run on most desperately in ill . I●Fairfax mad or drunk ? what dulls thy sence , Thou canst not see the ill of thine offence ? Who eats a Hemlock-root in Parsneps stead , Is thereby into fits of Madnesse led . What Cup of Lethe doth thy sense beguile , And makes thee sleeping dye , and dying smile ? Awake thy self ; rowze thy distracted senses : Rebellion , Treason , are such vile offences , As throws thee down into an horrid State , That God and all Good men thy Actions hate . As Alexander once was heard to say To wise Calisthenes , the same I may Speak unto thee , That wiseman I do hate , That doth not wisely for his own estate . * Wise to thy self learn thou in time to be , That thou thy straying wayes may'st wisely see . The fear of God best wisdom doth begin ; It will thee reach to see , and know thy sinne . In thine amisse do thou thy self not cherish , Thy Judge doth say thou must repent , or pe●ish . The Prodigall comes to himself again , Shews they are mad that do in sinne remain . The Christians Faith not with Repentance joyn'd , Doth argue name of Christian falsly coyn'd : Beleeve , Confesse , Repent , and sinne forsake , These Graces do a Christian rightly make . Those men are truly mad which do suppose Themselves true Christians , whilst they do inclose Themselves in worst of sinnes : such Monsters are , And so art thou in this Rebellious warre . If thou 'lt be led by sacred Wisdoms lore , It will thee then unto thy wits restore . Thou shalt no more in fits of madnesse runne , Thy madnesse hurt enough , too much hath done Already : 't is time those fits should stay , Which to thy self , and Countrey brings decay . Two Kingdoms will but make a sad conclusion , When both of them have wrought their own confusion , Me thinks Jerusalem may cause suspition , That we our selves will bring to her condition . None but seditious Brethren mongst us are The causers of this most destructive warre . Will valiant Fairfax chief Commander be In such a Warre ? And where himself may see His Countreys Ruine joyned with his own ? O let so vile a thing no more be known : A danger when foreseen is soon prevented , It may at last untimely be lamented . This foule Rebellion not in time withstood 'T is vain to think of Kings and Countreys good . Thy warlike Hands hast thou to sinne so sold As by them still Rebellion to uphold ? Is this the way bright Honours Fame to winne , By thy persisting in so damn'd a sinne ? That Honour purchas'd is at dearest cost , When Soul and Body both thereby are lost . Not Honour then , but foule Dishonours shame Shall wait upon the memory of thy Name When thou art dead . Do therefore whilst alive Thy better thoughts within thy self revive . Each Kingdom in it self divided is , And each 'gainst other . Now the Lord of Blisse , Euen Truth it self hath spoken to us all , No Kingdom in such case can stand but fall . What hast thou done ? what is 't thou doest then ? No b●tter actions then the worst of men . Such actions do as may thy self commend , Gainst King and Countrey do no more offend . Thy Countrey now which thou hast made to bleed , To stanch her blood thy helping hand doth need . Some healing Balme unto thy Countrey bring , The Scorpions Oyl doth heale the Scorpions sting . Now then resolve with all thy greatest force , To stop and stay Rebellions wounding course : Joyn thou with those that with our King do joyn , Religion then no counterfeited Coyn Shall make to passe , but lawfull money then Shall onely passe amongst us English men : King Charles his Image Coyn shall lawfull make , And that for currant shall his Subjects take ; Though now we are enforc'd by lawlesse might Some things to do as if in Laws despight ; And that by those who should our Laws protect , Though now they do both King and Laws reject . The King mongst them doth but a Cipher stand ; Their Will's a Law , and unto their Command Both King and fellow-subjects must submit : O monstrous shame , for Heathens most unfit . Yet to maintain such Actions most unjust They take up Arms , and in their Swords do trust . 'gainst God and King when such Rebellion's rais'd , Curst be those tongues by whom it shall be prais'd . To call ill good is an accursed thing , A Curse it will at last most surely bring . Who unto Peace do bend their heart , and mind , Shall out of doubt from God a blessing find . Then Fairfax , if thou truly valiant art , Strike in for Peace , and take thy Soveraigns part . One of thy name long since in Arms I knew At Groning-Leaguer : and indeed t is true He was a valiant Captain ; Art thou so ? No more against the Lords Annointed go . No● fight again against His Maj●sty , Nor Actor be in Englands Tragedy . The Peace of Charles our Soveraign Lord the King , His Crown , and Dignity , yea , that 's the thing Which honest Subjects strongly should uphold , And so in Arms of Peace their Countrey fold . Fight thou for this , and therein valiant be , So Honour shall attend , and follow thee . Know Fairfax that I wish thy happinesse , As thou thy self dost unto Peace addresse . Peace , Glory , Honour , these shall Crown thee then , This Peace God grant unto us all , Amen . The sixth Song . Mongst Oxen now my Muse desendeth down , From Hob , to Lob ; and so cries Whoo to Brown . BRown-Bread , and Onions with a Garlike-head Is Carters meat , So Coridons are fed ; By which strong food , they thereon feeding well , Their breath is made to have a stinking smell . So ( Brown ) hath thine , what Onion ( is't I think ) Thou feed'st upon which makes thy breath to stink ? Is 't a Scotch Onion which Englands house withstood , Though now they serve it even in Broaths of Blood ? It seemes it is an Onion sharp , and sowre , Which causeth many a thousand eyes to powre Forth teares with many a sad and grieved thought To see what sowre effects are thereby wrought . But ( Brown ) art thou of that proud Browns descent Whose Schisme at first our Peace in peeces rent ? And of whose name the Brownists have their stile , Whose foolish Sect can none but Fools beguile : Yet of such Force , as it hath been a terror To those who love to please themselves in error . Those Greenway , Barrow , first did break the Ice ; Then Vdall did with Penry joyn advice . Three first were hang'd : to Scotland Penry fled , And there abroad his Schisme he proudly spred . The Brethren of the Scottish Parity Did joyn with him in all his Knavery . So that each Kingdom to their trouble felt The share which Schisme and Faction freely dealt Amongst them ; And the holy Br●thren , they Grew up together ; walked in one way , By vow , and Oath in League and Covenant knit , To serve each others turn when time should fit . Now Brownisme , though it was by Law supprest ; In Corners yet it was too much profest . And those though silenc'd would not silence keep ; But Preach at mid-night ( when 't was time to sleep ) In Woods , in Cock-lofts , Sellars , Gravel-pits , ( For some such place such Brethren best befits ) There would they pray , and there full often Preach , And to their Brother-hood Rebellion teach , And say , In cause Ecclesiasticall The King himself can have no power at all . The Church is govern'd by her Ministry , And herein they renounce his Majesty . The King himself he must a member be , Of some one Congregation : and He Must Subject be unto their Church-Divine , And must submit unto their Discipline . So Preach the Brethren of the Parity ; And what is this but down-right Popery ? But David , Salomon , each following King In holy writ sufficient warrant bring , That every King in his own Kingdom is Next unto Christ Supream : And things amisse In Church or Common-wealth , they all should be By Him reform'd . Without him you may see No thing is done : His Warrant , His Consent Is that enables Subjects to Convent , And ratifies what they conclude upon : So that without him nothing can go on Priests , High-Priests are by Kings prefer'd : They can At pleasure place , and displace any man . Kings hold their Crown from God ▪ He that is King Doth in his Kingdom rule in every thing . Such is His Dignity and Royall State , All powers else are but subordinate To Him : And Subjects ranged in their List , The powers which are of God must not resist , For if they do , 'gainst God themselves they set : And shall thereby his high displeasure get Kings take their place next under-neath their God , To Him alone they must be left . His Rod Is onely that which over-aweth them , And not the Words , nor Rodds , nor Swords of men , Who being Subjects onely must obey : These no Commission have to over-sway Their King . If Brown 'gainst this his reasons bring , Hee 'l reason like a Traytor to his King . And those his Priests who 'gainst this truth do Preach , Do Treason and Rebellion plainly teach . Mongst them too sorts of Brownists may be found , Both building on the one and self same ground . And both alike uphold Rebellion's Action : Uprais'd by Schisme , and by seditious faction . The first , least dangerous , do separate Themselves from this our Church , and dare to prate 'gainst this their Mother Nation , and deny That here the being of a Church doth lye . To build their Church to Amsterdam they runne , But lose their labour when they thither come : For why ? The States will not allow them there The honourable name of Church to bear . They an Asse-sembly are : not named Holy : So well discerned is their Factions folly . Some yeers there spent , at last from thence they go , As wise , as Walthams Calf ; for we must know They hither come , into blind Corners creep : And there 's their Church ; There they like Cocks-combs keep . And Ignorant of sound Divinity , They raile against our Churches Ministry . And on our Church this foul aspersion put That she is of the Popish Roman cut . Nay , more then this ; for thus they lay it on , They call our Church the Whore of Babilon . They learning hate ; an Ancient Fathers name Must not be us'd by them , the more 's their shame . Yet mongst themselves they reverend Fathers have Of wisdom great , of carriage finely grave . First Father Cromp the Cobler he shall stand , As being alwayes on the mending hand . And Father Wills the Weaver cryes down theft , Although to steal the Yarn he hath not left . Then Father Talk the Patcher he will trie To Preach , though quite besides the needles eye He put his thread : Hee 'l overcast his Text , And prating speak what to his Tongue comes next . His Flock of Ge●se for good his gaggling take , Though Botcher-like he marres what he doth make . And Father Axe the Butcher hath a vain , That 's very killing : All the Calves lie slain As at his Feet ; so powerfull is his preaching , And Fools so love his Kill-Calf kind of Teaching . But Father Thunder , that 's a man of zeal , Can eat a well-siz'd Pigge even at a meal : He with his Thundring voice would Babel shake , When yet himself doth but a Babel make , The Asse though fold●d in a Lions Skin , Yet when to bray he doth but once begin , He proves himself a Long-card-Asse to be And brayeth forth his Asse-like fool●ry . Then Father Bear , that swinish grunting grub , A ●reacher strange , O how hee 'l thump a Tub. And Tr●sh the T●nker , in he fiercely comes , The Drummer of those rattling Kettle-Drummes ; Among them all a noise they make as good , As do the Cataracts of Nilus flood ; Of which experience for a truth doth tell They 'r all made deaf who neer their noise do dwell . In that same Nilus Cro●adiles do breed Who love themselves upon mankind to feed . And so those Preachers spoken of before , Make lean their flock to fat themselves the more . And then forsooth Fine simpering Mistrisse Pegge Who likes her best must have the Capons Legge . And all of them have wondrous gifts in Prayer : Petitions such as strongly pierce the Aire . The same Petition they will oft repeat , And bring themselves and Hearers to a sweat . With voyce , and gesture strangely violent 'gainst King , Church , State , they shew their discontent . They backward , forward , to and again do trace , As if they running were the Wild-Goose chace : Their zeal so drives themselves they know not whither : And praying thus , they 'l pray four houres together . These by their powerfull zeal , and zealous power , To Widdows Houses creep , and them devour . All men of Spirit , Holy Fathers named , Who have our Church and true Religion shamed . And these proud Fools they dare their King controll , For Church upholders these their names enroll . This is good stuffe , like Popish Friety , Fit to uphold the Churches Dignity . All Brownists , those without , and they within Our Church ▪ are equall in Rebellions sinne . These Brownists do our Bishops next oppose , And in their zealous pride affi●m of those , That Limbs of Roman Antichrist they be , By which the world their Ignorance may see And laugh thereat : For plainly it appears That Rome her self in first three hundred yeers Had Ruling Bishops numbred thirty two , Who onely had in their own See to do . And most of them who dyde not in their bed , For Christs his Cause to Martyrdom were led ; For whom to dye they were exceeding g'ad , This Honour they , those Ruling Bishops had . And yet when Constant●●e was pleas'd to call First Nicene Councel● truly Generall ▪ Then under him , and his ●mperiall Sea● There came together in that Councell Great Three Hundred Eighteen Bishops , And all these Were Ruling Bishops in the● severall Sees ▪ That Blessed Councell to the Church gave Peace And did her bloody Persecutions cease . And after that were Bishops thirty three , Which sa●e Succ●ssively i th' Roman See O're them the Emperour was Soveraign Lord Unto whose Ruling power with one accord They all did humbly yeeld themselves ▪ And they Next under God did His command obey . Unto the yeer six hundred ●ive 't is cleer , Full fifty five Romes Bishops did appear , Who were to th' Emperour true Subjects ●ound , The word of Truth had laid no other ground . But in the yeer six hundred , neer the end The Roman Bishop sixty six no friend Was found to God , or Church : For then by name Came Boniface the third , past Grace , and shame ; He first the stile of Vniversall took , And proudly did all Bishops over look : That Time , and person , if observed well , Doth unto us a speciall secret tell , The Yeer six hundred , Bishops sixty six , The learned do the Beasts name rightly fix On him for Antichrist so long fore-told In Holy Scriptur● where it stands enroll'd ▪ How Vniversall Priest he came to be , The story of the Church doth let us see . When Ph●cas had the Emperour Maurice slain , Unto himself the Empire then to gain ▪ He prayes that Boniface would then comply With him in that his Treasons Villany . And Vowes if he but once the Empire get ; That Boniface in Church Supream shall set ▪ Be Vniversall Bishop : onely he In Christian world the highest Lord should be , By whose command all Bishops might be prest To yeeld obedience to his Lordly Hest : This was the match . The Empire Phocas had , And Boniface the Highest Priest was made . Thus Treason unto him conception gave ; And Murther then the Mid-wifes part would have : Ambition was his Nurse ; The Milk him fed An Emperours blood by Phocas murthered . So that the Legges whereon he proudly stood Were these , Ambition , Treason , Murther , Blood . Sith on such grounds Romes Papacy doth stand : What good is to be look't for at their hand ? Yet will I not condemn all Papists : Nor Can think 't a blessed work , ( which I abhorre ) To kill those that amongst us do remain : For some we have , free from the Jesuits strain ; Who , if the Pope himself in Arms should bring An Army 'gainst the Kingdom , and our King , To King and Countrey would their love expresse , And boldly fight against his Holinesse . Though many Papists have b●en much misled , This is the mind of those not Jesuited . And for my speaking thus let no man doubt , But still I wish to keep Romes Popery out . And though you say you saw it very plain , That Popery was coming in a main , Laws ready made , not one of them repeal'd : They justly would that mischief soon have heal'd Without Rebellions help . O bloody deed ! Against all Laws like Tyrants to proceed ! Browns Brownists then in this Rebellion , who Are now the Rebels ? Papists ? No , but you . * And though you think that now our Bishops are Most Popish : yet they never once did Warre Against our King , as you do at this day ; And y●● of them y' are not asham'd to say That in th'intention of their Policy They sought again to bring in Popery : When they but thought in one conformity To state the Church , her Peace to dignifie . If Bishops all the self same thing had minded , It had been well , as now too late we find it ; Next to the Faith the Churches Peace to keep , Which broken now makes thousand eyes to weep . Faiths Doctrine when 't is kept uprightly sound Should outward Form the Churches Peace confound ? Our God , you know , the God of Order is , Each Christian King had always power in this , In his own Kingdom to determin so , As all the Church might in one Order go In outward Form of Church-like Government . * To which because our King his purpose bent , Must your Rebellious Tongues with one Consent , Say that it was his Majesties intent Again , for sooth , to bring in Popery ? In plain Terms truth to speak , Rebels ye lye . a Though Roman Bishops now are found to swerve From Rule of Truth , must Bishops all deserve To be accompted Popes ? What have they don Since Reformation in our Church begun ? b King Edward and His Bishops they drove out Romes Popery : and with resolution stout Withstood proud R●mes usurpt Suprema●i● , And did our Churches evills remedy . Our Queen Eliza with the full consent Of Englands then most happy Parliament , Where all her Reverend Bishops joyntly met , ( For they in Parliament have alwayes set ) King Edwards Laws confirmed , and did scorn By Papall power to be overborn . King Iames with his grave Bishops did comply To write 'gainst Rome , and that most learnedly ; And in despight of Rome and Romes disdain Our Englands Church did in her Peace maintain ; And would not suffer any factious brain The honour of her setled Peace to stain . And our King Charles , and all his Bishops , they Do hold their course even in the self same way . Our good King , and his Bishops now condemned , Should rather for their care be much commended . Old Rome at first with pious Bishops fil'd , Our now-Religion was by them upheld . Their Bishops all for first six hundred years , As ours now are , they were , as it appears When Bishop Iewel's Challenge could not gain One Romish Bishop able to maintain Romes now-Religion , in those points we fall Away from that which we do Popery call Why are our Bishops then so much despized ? No new Religion is by them devised . The old Religion is by them revived : Who never yet so vil●● thing contrived As you haue done ▪ when for Religions sa●e You do most vile Rebellion lawfull make . Of Bishops Protestants I know this thing , None ever prov'd a Traitor to his King . Let Brownists then our Bishops let alone , And know themselves for Rebels every one . For what though some defects there might be found In some of them ? Yet firmly stands this ground , A personall defect ne're takes away The Lawfulnesse of Place , but still that may Be kept : For this the Rule hath alwayes bin , Uphold the place but take away the sin . But now the place must quite unlawfull be When some defects we do in persons see . Way given to this , what Place can firmly stand ? Behold what course the Factious take in hand . But ( which is strange ) as Bishops they defie , So they against our Churches Prayers do crie , And say the Church of Christ is much abus'd , When those good Prayers of our Church are us'd . The Church to give set forms of Prayer ! Now fic , Where 's then the Spirit , which immediately Inspires the Church , and all her Ministry To pray to God , and that effectually ? Know , Moses did set forms of Prayer prescribe To Israels people , even to every Tribe Which should be us'd when they in hand did take Their ●ourney with Gods Holy Arke to make , Both at the taking up when they began Their daily March and when at even they came Unto their Resting Place . Like holy forme By those by whom the Glorious Arke was born Was us'd in Prayer . These Form●Moses gave Unto the Church : Doth he deserve to have It said , Fie on Him , for his doing so ? What God allows who dare to it say no ? Gods word a form of blessing doth expresse And wills his Church in blessing so to blesse . Then fie on those who cannot now ab●de Set forms of Prayer , but do them deride . Know , holy David Songs of Prayer and Praise Did form and penne , that thereby he might raise The hearts of all Gods People up on high To pray unto , and praise the Majesty Of our great God , with Prayers and Praises fit , Which might in them an holy zeal beget : And then those Psalms unto the Church he sent , Which there unto our God he did present . Was then ( think you ) the Church of God abus'd By them by whom those holy forms were vs'd ? Our holy Common-Prayer-book first pen'd By those who did for Christ their blood expend , Should not I think ) be as it is , depraved By wilfull Fools , who will a Masse-book have it . Those that compiled it Romes Masse did hate , And Englands Church in true Religion state . Those then by whom that Book is now refused , By them God and his Church is most abused . And yet at this we need not wonder much ; For why ? their pride and arrogance is such , As even that Prayer which Christ himself did make They most blasphemously in scorn do take . When Barrow stood at Tyburn in a Cart , Under the Gallows , praying in his heart , The lookers on to him did humbly say , In the Lords ●rayer , Sir , let 's hear you pray : He shal't his head ; and did refuse to do it , And so was hang'd : Their pride may bring them to it . But yet there do some other things remain Which ( they accompt ) do so Religion stain , As those to use they highly do disdain . And would all others should with them refrain To touch such trash , or neer them once to come , As being Reliques of the Church of Rome . In outward things who do Religion place , To true Religion do a foule disgrace . But what things are they that their Conscience scare ? O , Monstrous things ! Such as most fearfull are , I 'le shew you them : and so you 'l cleerly see . What terrible , and fearfull things they be . Our harmlesse Ceremonies do them fright ; Our Gesture , Habit ; each of them a Spright , And scares them . Now by this you may descrie The strangenesse of their fearfull foolerie . Should things indifferent Divisions make ? When Truth commandeth that for Christ his sake , To every Ordinance of man , not bent Against the Faith , we be obedient . The Conscience should be rul'd by Rule of faith : And what I say I 'me sure the Scripture saith . But factious Fools to give themselves content Have worse then Roman Souldiers basely rent The unscam'd Coat of Christ in pieces : and To justifie their work , in Arms they stand . So that our Brown with Brownists now consents Even to dispute with cutting Arguments . Browne , no lesse fearfull seemes thy Cocks-comb head , Then Lion Rampant in Cake Ginger bread . But stay ( my Muse ) thy mark thou tak'st amisse , For Browne will say that he no Brownist is : No ? Is he not ? He is as bad , or worse , As now appears by his Rebellious course . Though Brownists from our Church do separate , They cannot thereof overthrow the state So dangerously as those amongst us staying , Who still appear our Churches Peace betraying . Here the Triumviri which first begin To lead the way unto Rebellions sin Are Burton , Bastwick , and their brother Prynne The stinking Sink of honoured Lincolnes-Inne . These three the Church and Common-wealth would sway , All men of greatest Understanding . They Would seem to see all dangers imminent , And seeming ones with mischief to prevent ; These lay their Plot upon which ground now stands The Armies of Rebellions armed hands . I know them all , and for them have been sad To see that they no more discretion had . In every thing that counsell is not just Which thus prescribeth , To be sure , mistrust . Mov'd by meere jealousies ( the more 's their guilt ) They throw down Out-works where no Fort is built . For what they saw they should not so have spoken , The Lyon sleeps when yet his eyes are open . There was a care Romes Popery to withstand , Even in those things which then were tool in hand● Yet they crie out , Saile not too neer Romes Gates Lest Popery prevaile : thus talk't these Mates . Those that would in the way of Truth prevaile , Must sailing unto Heav'n by Hells Gates sa●●e . And yet their course in all things wisely steere , As Rocks , and Shelves , and Sands they never feare . The Churches Ship in this worlds Sea thus sailing , 'gainst Rocks , & Shelves , and Sands shall be prevailing . And those that thus in sailing wisely strive , At last in Heavens fair Haven shall arrive But they so ill a course ( like wise-ones ) took , As on a Dangerous Rock the Ship is strook : And must into a generall shipwrack fall , If this Rebellious Warre continue shall . In which thou ( Brown ) a great Commander art , And Brownist art in taking of their part . But all this while I cannot but admire What things they are these Rebels do require : Is it the true Religion to uphold ? This to defend , our King is wondrous bold . His Royall person into th'Field to bring , And to his Subjects say , Behold your King Compleat in Arms Religion to defend , And for the same his dearest blood to spend . And in this Cause Prince Charles with valiant spirit Doth nobly seek true Honours fame to merit : And in th'atchievement of this glorious work , We may behold the Princely Duke of York . This sight but seen should make Rebellion cease , And move all Subjects to embrace a Peace So often offered by his Royall Grace : Why should not this in every Heart take place ? If in this warre the Royall blood be spilt , Can England ever wash away the guilt ? What is your ayme ? All Papists out to root ? Is this the mark whereat your minds do shoot ? This but suspected , Papists on their Guard Would stand : and so your Market might be marr'd . They do not want the best Intelligence : There 's not a Kingdom , but they hear from thence . And whatsoere against them is debated , Is by some speedy means to them related . And sure it is , that they did understand Three Kingdoms Schismaticks joyn'd hand in hand A strong Rebellion by degrees to raise , Whose first beginning should be Scotlands praise . And in that work , although most closely arted , The Papists knew they chiefly should have smarted : Have been destroyed every Mothers Child ; At best should be perpetually exil'd . This Myne perceiv'd , a Counter Myne was wrought , Which to effect in Ireland first was brought . Not Papists there , they Schismaticks did call ; As here not Schismaticks were Papists all . First Irelands Myne did spring ; and up were blown The Protestants of English Nation . Thus did this bloody Warre take its beginning , From Web of woe our Schismaticks were spinning For Papists . Now when Ireland thus br●ke forth , Resolved to go on by Vow , and Oath , Our Parliament was trusted to addresse Some present means Rebellion to suppresse . And Moneys raised were to this intent , That presently an Army should be sent To Ireland : but then suddenly did break Rebellion forth here mongst our selves to speak The Truth ) contrived long before : Rebellion here increasing more , and more , By Moneys here for Irelands cause collected , An home-bred sad Rebellion was protected . Which spareth no mans lively-hood , nor life , But strikes at all : and still doth grow more ri●e . Wherein our good King Charles hath saddest share . His sorrows being deep beyond compare , His Royall Heart from grief to grief proceeding , To see that all his Kingdoms lye a bleeding . Herewith when as my mourning Muse had met , Teers from my eyes my blotted Papers wet . The more , because Our King still offer'd Peace : Yet Rebels would not from Rebellion cease . What hearts have they ? whence do they draw their might ? 'gainst King so good can any subject fight ? But next unto pretens'd Religions cause , They say they fight for to maintain the Laws Of Englands Kingdom , and the Subjects Right : For these they bring their Armies forth to fight . O shamelesse boldnesse , that dares this averre ! When all the Kingdoms Laws by this their Warre They overthrow , so much as in them lies : T' uphold the Kingdoms Laws , His Majesties Great Care is known : he nothing more desires ; The Magna Charta's that which he requires Should stand in force , of Englands Laws the ground . And in that Magna Charta there is found A solemn Curse which doth most sharply speak 'gainst those who shall our Laws foundation break , Though not pronounc'd at our Great Courts down setting , Yet still it speaks , a Curse on those begetting Who shall our Kingdoms National Laws destroy : And Childrens Children may that Curse enjoy . But this Rebellion Subjects Right doth seek As it the former doth : for both alike Are over-thrown by it . The Laws maintain The Subjects Right : by Law the Subjects gain Their just propriety in every thing : This to uphold our just and righteousse King Commands his Judges : wherein if they faile , The Law doth then against themselves prevaile . Faine would the King at White-Hall Palace be , That thence he might his Reverend Judges see In Order each unto their Courts to passe : O what a singular blessed sight it was . For Christ himself doth say , Kings reign by me , I Judges make my Justice to decree . The King and Judges out of this way kept , The Kingdom is of her just Laws bereft , Who are they then that Subjects Right debarre ? The King , or those that 'gainst the King make Warre Admit some wrongs 'gainst Law the Subjects grieved , Were they not by our Gracious King relieved In those last Statutes which he pleas'd to make . But now for making Laws new wayes we take . The Subject dares against his Soveraigns will Make Laws , what Age can president such ill ? That lawlesse man the Antichrist of Rome Within the bounds of Law will never come : Divine , and Humane Laws , he breaks them all : And Ruleth by a power Tyrannicall : He standing on high terms doth proudly say That he will never any King obey . His will is that which for a Law shall stand . The greatest King must yeeld to his Command . That Court whose pride unto such height is Tric't Is sure therein a very Antichrist : And every one of Antichrist a Limbe Who hoyseth Sailes , and doth his Tacklings trimme ( Like men of Warre ) such Actions to defend As do against his King and Countrey bend . Your Preachers , your seditious Preachers are The Whelps that crie up this Rebellious Warre : " And say , if the Kings party overcome , " Woe to us all , the Kingdom is undone . " And Popery then the upper-hand shall have : " This , this , ( deer Br●thren ) all the Papists crave . " Withstand them then : prevent our misery " Which will be wrought by Papall Tyranny . " Our Laws will all be then quite overturned : " And Christ's deer Flock with fire , and Fagot burned . " Let all good Christians then ( as Scripture saith ) " With might and main strive to defend the Faith : " Religions Cause is that we have in hand : " This to defend 'gainst King and Ke●sar , stand . " Gods word doth warrant that in Cases such " We cannot shew our love and zeal too much . Such lies they do with monstrous zeal expresse , And non-sence words , and that in great exc●sse : They box their Desks , and Pulpits bottom stamp , Are drawn awry as with Convulsions Cramp . If loud and fast their lying Tales they tell , Th●y 〈◊〉 Chu●ch men , Pr●●●h most monstrous well . These are the zealous men , for so they 'r call'd , That have 〈◊〉 so dangerou●●y ●enthrali'd ; These and th●● followers full of zeal Igrant : But all true ●nowledge and discretion want . And hence it is they in their zeal desire To set , and see the Kingdom all on fire . Yet some thing else Rebellion goes about , Which is to root our Kingdoms Honour out : The many headed Beast sole Rule would have ; Our Honour then lies buried in that Grave . A Noble people once the English were ; And did aloft their Honour Nobly beare : And shall we now dishonourably choose New shame to get , and Antient Honour loose ? From best to worst , from Monarchy to fall To Oligarchy , bafest Rule of all ? Brave Noble mindes in England Nobly bred O're us to Rule : Let not that Hydra's head King Charles advance , to 's Honours him restore ; And state this Kingdom as it was before , With this let all most wisely be content ; And strive no more for change of Government . Their seeking so the thing for which they sought Hath a most miserable ruine brought Upon this Land ; The Kingdom rent and torn , Is like a City ruin'd , and forlorn . Those things which did her Glory best adorn Rebellion spoiles , and makes of them a scorn . Those two most famous Vniversities Fair Englands Beauty , and her Starre-bright eyes , From whence there did such glorious Lights arise , As that the splendour of their glorious shine , Did spread it self through every Zone , and Clime In all the world , Is 't not a wonderous sight To see , as now , that Sunne-like shining light To be Eclips't whose once most heavenly rayes Was honoured with such deserved praise ? Those goodly Halls , and Stately Colledges The Seed-plots of the liberall Sciences , The fountain-heads of every pleasant spring About whose Banks did all the Muses sing , Where Schollers liv'd , and some so wondrous rare , As might for learning with the world compare ; From whence was wont into the Church to flow Those blessed means which made her glory grow , And bring forth fruit of greatest dignity , A Reverend , Grave , and Learned Ministry . Who being Orthodox with Spirit bold , The Truth 'gainst Romes false Doctrines did uphold . But now our Church whoso but looks upon her , Shall see her rob'd of all her pristine Honour : And Schollers are enforc't to lay aside Their learned Books , and for themselves provide As Souldiers furnished in compleat Arms , To shield themselves from present threatned harms , And save their lives , and all their Colledge-Lands , Out of the reach of Rebels spoyling hands . No Heathens yet would once dare to deface Their Idol-Gods , nor to the ground to raze Their Pagan Temples : But we now farre worse Then they , have rob'd our God ▪ and brought a curse Upon us all , which may cradicate Our Kingdoms Glory , and so leave her state As wholly ruin'd , waste , and desolate . And this to do Rebell on doth not stay , But runneth on , even in the ready way . For next the Church what did our Kingdom grace They seek to spoile , and utterly deface , The Innes of Chan●●ry , and Innes of Court Where Englands Gentry used to resort And study there , that they might wisely learn All points of Law with Judgement to discern ; Those Houses where the Ancients ruled so As all did in a comely order go ; And able were a King to entertain With Honours due unto his Royall train : These all our Honour greatly did augment They did in them a kind of state present , Which did the glory of our Land advance , Now spoyled by Obnoxious Ignorance ; Laws Divine , Humane , Civill , Common , all Are troden down by force Tyrannicall T is then high time , we should our sinnes repent For they are cause of all our punnishment But now because a present bloody broyle The Peace of England doth destroy and spoile , What may be done a Peace for to restore To King and Kingdom ? nothing wisht for more , Why , This to do I nothing will invent But what I learn by actuall president . Romes self it seemes doth now desire a Peace ; And that all Warres in Christian world may cease Since Gregory the first , Surnam'd the Great ; Vrban the 8th who sate in Romes high seat Of all their Bishops was the very best , His like was never found among the rest . And this I think of him , that su●e he would Have been a Protestant , if that he could . He doubtlesse lov'd a Protestant in 's heart , And would not 'gainst them take the Papists part . In Germane Warres he nothing would decree On either part ; but wish't they might agree . For whil'st they striv'd each other to confound , No Peace could grow out of so bad a ground . Experience taught Romes Church this Truth to know ; When as their Priests did seeds of Treason sow , And thereby spoil'd the Protestant Estate , And did Reformed Churches ruinate . The Plots whereby they kept so great a coyle Themselves thereby at last did chiefly spoile . A Peacefull way Romes Bishop then intended , Which was of all the best to be commended . In outward form the Papists well may stand With Protestants , affording friendships hand Each unto other . That French Cardinall Who sought a Peace most wisely to enstall In that French Kingdoms Royall Government , About that work he with such wisdom went As that by him the Protestants protected , Their Faiths Allegiance never was suspected : For they themselves did as good Subjects bear Unto their King : He had no cause to fear Them any whit at all ; For , as was meet , They ready were down at their Soveraigns Feet To lay their lives their Countreys Peace to gain ; For this they would themselves to th'utmost strain . There now when Protestants and Papists meet , They do most lovingly each other greet . If such a course mongst us were wisely taken , The Sword of Warre should be no longer shaken Against our Peace . Our King should Papists find As Protestants in France to bear like mind . Then Protestants and Papists surely would Our King , and Kingdoms Peace alike uphold . And those that did attempt this way to trie , They did not deal therein unfaithfully , Shall I for this a Papist judged be ? And one that would uphold Romes Popery ? 'Twixt Roman Church and Poperies rule therein I know not but a difference may be seen . Romes Church had once no Vniversall Power , But was in Faith and Truth a Church like our , Romes being of a Church not quite distruct , Rome still a true Church is , though much corrupt . From Rome as shee 's a Church we do not sever . But where she is corrupt , in that we leave her . The Scripture hath to us this truth revealed , We Babilon would heal , she 'd not be healed . Come out of her Corruptions then with haste , Lest staying in them we her judgements taste , Romes Church that was we must thereof allow ; We onely shunne those vile corruptions now . Which are in Rome , and do that Church deface : We dare not for our Souls such stuffe embrace . With Papists yet in outward things we may Hold such a Peace as doth not Truth gainsay . This Truth Saint Paul doth by his Doctrine reach , And so indeed doth his example preach , To Jewes a Jew , to Greeks a Grecian Paul Would shew himself , becoming all to all , That he might by his sacred Ministry Gain some to Christ . And why then may not I , In imitation of so holy a Saint , My self with those of Roman stamp acquaint ? When Paul himself doth thus the Church advise , Have Peace with all as much as in you lies . This may be done Faith kept uprightly sound , For we our Faith upon Gods word do ground . The sacred certain grounds of our Salvation Our Church will hold without an alteration ; Those Fundamentals are , and must be kept : Romes newer Creed by us to Rome is left . But to disturb the Peace of God and King , For what is but a Circumstantiall thing , A Ceremony , we , in sober sadnesse , Do utterly abhorre such factious madnesse . Who for such things themselves in Faction sute , A Bride-well School may best with them dispute . And still the better honest minds to stay , And drive from them all jealous fears away , Let no man fear in Christian world to see The Papall Monarchy advanc'd to be . Free Kings and Princes now so wise are grown , As under Christ they know to hold their own ; And not admit Romes Papall Jurisdiction Which to the world hath wrought such great affliction . Shall it again a work of praise be counted , To mount up him by whom themselves dismounted Have been so shamefully ? Kings will nor be The Stirrop-holders to Romes Papacy : The Pope , His Asse , the Emperour shall be No more brought on the stage to make up three : Romes Triple-Crowned Prince shall at no rate With what is theirs , nor they with his estate Once meddle ; He his Oare shall never thrust Into anothers boat , for that 's unjust , And so will prove when Judgement once comes thither , When He , and Rome in flames shall burn together . Christ's Church to have an Vniversall Head Besides himself , must not be seen , nor said . Pope Gregory the Great shot not beside The mark , who call'd it Antichristian pride . Deer Protestants then let your hopes not quaile , For of great power is truth , and will prevaile . All Protestants in truth who tightly are Let them the Peace of God , and King preferre . Gods Spirit which into all Truth doth lead , In Scripture for the Churches Peace doth plead : And doth beseech to mark with diligence The causers of all Schism , and difference ; And to avoid them . For indeed such are The causers , raisers of Rebellious Warre . I would to God each Brownist , Seperatist , Each Anabaptist , and each Familist The brats of strife , and workers of Division , Whose Tenets Sound Divines have in Derision , Were either banish't out of Englands ground , Or here to punish them some course were found . Laws ready made , if executed well , Have Force enough their Factions to refell . These have a new Division made , most strange , Which hath in Subjects wrought a dangerous change . The Person of the King they set a side ; And to the Laws His Royall Power divide . A strange Division whereby Subjects may Rebell against their King , yet Laws obey . When as the Laws do in the King subsist ; His Royall Person gives to them their list If Laws be none of his , whose are they then ? The Laws of Subjects given to other men Who , as themselves , are Subjects , and no more . This is a strain of wit not known before . A Constable with power is heard to say , I charge you in the Kings name to obey : His Laws then in his Person do subsist : And those who them , His Person do resist , His Crown , and Dignity , and every thing Which doth adorn the Person of a King . These are the Sophisters whose slye dispute Enwrapt the Kingdom in a Mourning Su●e . Had five of them at first been put away : It had been happy for us at this day . Westminster builded was a Monument Of Regall State , and power Magnificent . Westminster now a Monument hath built , Which staines her Glory with Rebellions guilt . That Cloud dispers't , a Sunne will shine upon her ; And her restore unto her Ancient Honour . The Kings , and Countreys Peace from her shall flow , And make them both in glory up to grow . That man , or woman is too much to blame , Whose heart and mind doth not desire the same . If Protestants would all in one agree That true Religion might upholden be , And as d●er Children of our holy Mother The Church of Christ in England love each other , And keep the truth of Faith with full consent , Submitting to our Churches Government , We then might Peace enjoy ; and every one Be both true Christian , and good Subject known . And let not Fools though they Divisions see , Think that mongst us no Church of Christ can be ; The Spouse , though black , yet like the tents of Keder She comely is ; and on the mounts of Bether * Her glorious Husband Iesus Christ is found As Roe , or Hart about that Hilly ground In Christ his Church offences will fall out , But woe to those by whom they 'r brought about : know Christ knows his own ; they him their Shep heard This Church of Christ no power can overthrow . In England Christ hath his beloved choice ; And those are they who hearken to his voice , And follow him unto their last of breath , And hee 'l pr●serve them both in life and death . His Church as Tirzah doth appear in sight Most beautifull , her glory shining bright : And as an Army terrible is shee With Banners spread : Her foes will fear to see The Majesty of Her well ordered form , Which threatneth them with a most fearfull storm . The Captain of Iehovahs Host doth lead The Battell on : He for his Church will plead : And those who will not his commands obey , He all of them will in his presence slay . This Church is Solomons delightfull Bed , For whose defence His Warr●ers expert bred About it stands , and will defend it well , As valiants for his chosen Israel . In Arms they watch their Armour shining bright , Because of fears which may be in the night , There Legions of Angels pitch their Tents ; Right glorious is the strength of that defence Which keeps the Church : In it Divisions bred Shall ne're divide the Body from her Head . There is a time in which her Warres shall cease ; The unity of Spirit in bond of Peace Shall then be kept , when Subjects , and their King Unto their God shall thankfull Praises sing . And wouldst thou ( Brown ) be of that Heavenly Quire ? A better spirit must thy soul inspire , Then that thou now dost breathe with : For above ( Know ) that there is no roome for such as love , And live in wayes of Blood , and Rebels are To God , and his Annointed : Such are farre Out of the way to Heaven . I must thee tell It is thy Case ; thy wayes lead swift to Hell : Thy soul is sick unto the death : O take Some course that may thy Soul right healthy make . I once will be thy Doctor , and will give Thee a Receipt , which us'd will make thee live Ith'state of Grace a Christian sound , and right To God-ward and thy King : That when the night Of death shall come , thou shalt thy Saviour see Unto thy endlesse joyes embracing thee . And here because the Trade thou best dost know Is that of Wood-monger , I will thee show To make a Faggot which shall do the deed , And work a perfect cure in thee with speed : A Faggot of full length , and equall size , It shall be , and beyond all wordly prize . " Take thou Repentance , Faith , Hope , Love : with these " Take Peace ; these to the purpose will thee please , Faith joynes with Truth ; Hope will not them forsake ; Loves joynes the sticks , and Peace the bond doth make Which binds the Faggot strongly up together . Such Faggots make for London : send them thither ; Lud's people move of thee to buy their wood , Wood-mongers Wharf hath none that 's hall so good . Full sure I am , were it their hearts desire Of Faggots of this kind to make their Fire , It would their cold and frozen joynts refresh , And make them new , and hearty joyes expresse ; Their Gates they 'd open , and their Bells would ring , And Bonefires make to entertain their King : And curse the day that they seduced were Against their King and Countrey to appeare In Arms : They then would learn to hate That Factious Crue which hath abus'd the state ; Yea , they would deeply then abhorre themselves , Because they have been such ungracious Elves To forward this Rebellion ; Such a Crime , Each circumstance considered , no time Before did yeeld the like . Then out of hand Knock off , and do not like a Rebell stand Against a King thou know'st right gracious is , A King so prompt to pardon thine amisse , He for his Peoples good so deerly loves The thing call'd Peace , that every stone he moves To gain it . Then unto thy King coms in , And let Rebellion be no more thy sinne . Peace is a Lady beautifull and sweet ; Who wooes her , winnes her , and doth blessings meet Which Crown the Christian heart : for she doth bring That which will make us here , and eversing . And therefo●● let all Christians undertake To follow Peace , for Iesus Christ his sake . The seventh Song . Say , not to whom , for that 's already said , By him to say who will not be afraid . LOrd Say how well thy own bru'de Ale doth taste ; And thou shalt find it sharp and sowre at last , When thou thy Generall and thy Colonell Fines , Do reap the guerdon of black Treasons lines . Say , Say no more nor of Religion bost A Rebell Schismatick th'art at the most , For true Religion never yet durst take Up Arms 'gainst Gods Annointed , and to make Rebellion seeme to be a Lawfull thing , For Subjects to rebell against their King , Was this the Roundnesse of your Round-heads plot , Roundly 'mong Rebbels to cast in their lot ▪ The Brooks whose streames your blotted hopes did nourish . One Muskets shot spoil'd all that painted flourish ; And shew'd the fall of those whose foul intents , Are masked up in Gospell Ornaments , As Sathan shining in an Angels light , Such is the glory of an Hypocrite ; And such is thine , thy base Hypocrisie , Will close thy name in endlesse infamy , Woe , woe be to thee thou hast brought a shame , On thy Religion and Professions name . Then what thou dost there 's no more shamefull thing , Then let it shame and shames confusion bring ; As recompence upon the heads of those Rebels , who are our Kings and Countreys foes . To what is said , who more can any say , How to prevent the coming of that day . When all the Sayes shall say and saying think , The sowrest dreggs of their own Ale to drink . It true repentance could possesse the mind , Then Gods Annointed they should su●rly find As God himself , most ready to forgive Say so , so do , and in so doing live , Or else run on in Treasons villany And dye a death , that dyes eternally . FINIS . Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A90997e-210 * Joshua . 6. 4. Seven Trumpets of Rams-Hornes . Judges 7. 16. G●deons 300. broken Pit hers . 1 Sam. 17. 49. Young , little , and unarmed David with a Stone and a Slinge to overcome and slay the triple armed Gyant great Goliah . Notes for div A90997e-1550 Iob. 20. 6 , 7. * In the Reign of Edw. 2. * 41. H. 3. In the time of that mad Parliament at Oxford , called , The Assembly of Rebels . This King H●n . 3. Reigned 56. yeers , and saw the fall of all his Enemies : And his Sonne Edw. 1. Reigned wondrous happily : and by his Subjects was supplied most bountifully and never contradicted by any Parliam . So may it be with our K. Charles , Amen . * Edward the 2. Imprisoned in Berkley Castle , and there cruelly murthered : and Richard the second Imprisoned in Pontefract Castle , and there murthered . Both these Kings were deposed by unlawfull Assemblies which were not rightly to be called Parliaments . Notes for div A90997e-8820 Ipsa dies mater quandoque noverca est Notes for div A90997e-14790 * William of Nassaw : Pro Deo , Pro Rege , pro Grege , pro Lege . * See Heylins Geography , of Brittish Isles . pag. 510. English men for that they wonneth them to drunkennesse , to Treason , and to rechlesnesse of Gods house , first by Danes , and then by Normans , and the third time by Scots , whom they holden least worth of all , they shallen be overcome . Then the world shall be unstable , and so divers and variable , that the unstablenesse of thoughts shall be betokened by many manner diversity of Cloathing . * Odi Sophistam qui sibi non sapit . Notes for div A90997e-17380 Brownists . Greenway . Barrow Penry . Penry flies to Scotland . They will have Kings unto them subjected . Kings Supremacy . Two sorts of Brownists . The first sort . They Rule against our Church . Their Reverend Fathers . Their zealous Prayers . They raile against Bishops . The singular piety of Roman Bishops in the first 300. yeers . Bishop's Subject to the Em●perour . Boniface the Pope the first Roman Bishop that exa●●d himself above all other Bishops . The number of the Beast 666. made up in him . How Boniface came to be Vniversall Bishop by Phocas . Many Papists good Su●jects . The Auth●rs disaffection to Popery . Our Laws of Force to keep out Popery . * The false Scandall of Bishops bringing in Popery . * His Majesty unjustly Scandalized for intending to bring in Popery . a Though the late Roman Bishops have erred from the Truth : yet the Bishops of the Church of England have stoutly defended the Truth . b Our Princes have stood for it . King Edward . Queen Elizabeth . King James . King Charles . Ol●●Romes Religion , and our now-Religion all 〈◊〉 . Brownists except against the Churches , set Forms of Prayer . And are answered . Num. 10. 25. ●0 . Num. 6. 22 , to 27. The compilers of our Common-Prayer Book . Brownists despise the Lords Prayer . Barrow . Brownist● against wholsome Ceremonies They ought not to seperate from the Church for things indifferent . The second sort of Brownists . Burton . Bastwick . Prynne . Great undertakers . Rebellion upon meere Iealousies . The Princ's Care to keep out Popery . The upholding of true Religion pretended by the Rebels ; but truly performed by King Charles . The Rebels intent to root out Papists . The Schismaticks of all three Kingdoms joyn to make up this Rebellion . Scotland must begin it . Rebellion in Ireland . The Moneys gathered for suppressing the Rebels in Ireland converted to maintain Rebellion in England . The Rebels pretend maintaining the Laws a cause of taking up Arms . The Subjects Right destroyed by this Rebellion . Seditious Ministers , the summe of their Sermons . This Rebellion would root out the honourable that the common people might rule . What is to be done to restore Peace . Pope Urban the 8. Protestants and Papists to live lovingly together . The French Cardinall . Romes Church was as ours now is . * That is to say , Divisions .