To the right Honourable Rich. Archb. of Canterbury, H. B. wisheth G. WHen Barow and Greenwood, R.H. were to be pardoned, if they would have come to Church: they could find no bar sound but this: That none should hold them of good religion, which believed that our Lord's soul went to Hell. Archb. Wh. thought that the Creed was translated in English, after the most learned Greek: but the wicked translation English differeth from the Greek: as doth descending in souls, from ascending: and Heaven differs from Hell. Archb. Wh. thought our Lord in soul descended: and into Hell. But Bishop Elmer knew the Greek meant a going up to heaven: and had saved Barow and Greenwood, showing that by a friend to them: if a chaplain a messenger, had as he promised, spoken to the party. upon new stir, I opened the truth: and for receiving a Letter from Master james Melvin: the unable in Divinity, meant to plague in humanity. But this blue good corn to you, by E. E. help, and became your making, and the death of him that preferred you. As you were making friends, I wrote of our faith and King. For the King you brent the book, as having treason: that I called him the King of our language. I will not deny my meaning: I meant to keep you from bent to Pâ—Źiamus happiness: you & Bar. Abbas. After this, I write to the grave Father, Archb. Wh. a treatise that he was deceived. He saw it, and sent Master Geffrey K. to me, to confess error Master Rob. Beal told Q Eliz. that Archb. Wh. was deceived: and, I think, Q E. bade Archb. Wh. to confess error. But witless Bar. skopheth his yielding, and D. bilson's, as if he were an Ape, and not a body of reason, and skopheth the Sc. M. as having a mind to undo the soil that bred so senseless and so impudent a wight, and skopheth the Consent of Scripture: and skopheth the book of Scripture consent: to grave in memory how unlearned a wight he is. To Archb. Wh. I write an epistle of D. Bilson his yielding, for the matter in strife: but by feigning a journey from Heaven to Hell by the Creed: to make this fancy heard, our Christian Religion, he was much deceived. you brent these copies: and a second Impression for the King of our language. Consider how little you feared God and the King in so doing: And to teach how slender a Doctor you are in Divinity, I advertise of corruptions in your handling of religion: and of betraying the Gospel to jews, & at words you chafe: where your libels style is my warrant. Now I wish you to be a Lucifer, and light giver: But not a Babylonian Lucifer, to exalt yourself above the Gospel, for our Lord's passage hence: and I wish you not to be a Bargulus Illyricus, to cease upon other men's good: and an Orthodox, not as Cotton exceter, to burn books defensive of our religion: and I send to your judgement, the book made against you to the King, if you judge yourself, the King needeth not to be troubled. And I will bury all griefs, if you find some to answer the jew, for the honour of all Christendom: If you can not, your judgement is heavy that threatened to hinder others. But take a right course, and all willbe well. I have no mind to strive with you, but to leave you to God's judgement, where I hold your bent not good. We should hear that Saint Paul telleth: It is appointed for all men once to die: and then cometh judgement. And our years tell us, there is but a step betwixt us and death: that we should look shortly for death and judgement: and not sell our Birthright in heaven, for a mess of pottage: but look unto the blessing which God hath laid up for all that love his glorious appearance. AMEN.