An ACCOUNT of some few of the Exploits of Don Thomazo Pharmacopola (alias Deputy L— m) hastily collected against his Name-sake's Day; for the Edification and Information of the honest Inhabitants of Bishopsgate-Ward. (The First Part.) TO begin, 1st. He invaded the Charter of London, in signing an illegal Warrant to Lieutenant Colonel Quiny, to bring a Company of the trained Bands to Guildhall, to keep the Citizens from coming to swear the Sheriffs that were duly elected, viz. Mr. Papillon, and Mr. Dubois. And having thus invaded the Charter, he next voted for the Surrender of it, and was of that Committee of Common-Council in Sir W. P's Mayoralty, in the Year 1682. that drew up an Address to the King, to submit all the Privileges and Franchises of the City of London to his Majesty's absolute Disposal; and pursuant to it, he went in a Coach with six Horses to Newmarket, to lay the same at his Feet; and expected to have been Knighted, for his Treachery, in betraying the City; but the Fool came home without the expected Feather in his Cap, to his great Grief and Trouble: yet in the last Common-Council the City than had, he did, to the last Breath, strongly insist upon the gratifying of the King, according to the former Address, with the Surrender of all our Liberties and Privileges, and to submit to all the villainous Regulations that Jefferies and his fawning Creatures should impose upon us. 2dly. He went to King James with a Catalogue of those Men that he thought would be fit Tools for Parliament-men, to take off the Penal Laws and Test; amongst whom, he himself being one, was put up as a Candidate, and was troubled that he lost it. And he owned publicly, and gloried in it, that he had picked out such Men as King James was extremely pleased with. 3dly. He was one of that bloody Jury that murdered Alderman Cornish, and Mrs. Gaunt; and was one of Mr. Culliford's merciful Jury, that gave but 100000 l. Damages to the Duke of York, against him, though not a Farthing Damage proved. 4thly. He carried Goddard (Sir Samuel Dashwood's Beadle) in a Coach to the Lord Nottingham's Office, (so that the Deputy and the Beadle were Companions) to inform, contrary to their Oaths, against Capt. Foster, and Mr. Norcot, two of their Fellow-Citizens: Whence will arise this Query, Whether or no the Deputy be not guilty of Subornation, if he paid the Beadle's Coach-hire? 5thly. He was more than ordinarily zealous in the late Common-Council, against the Liberties and Franchises of the City, when he pleaded so strenuously against the Freemen of London, and would have had the Foreigners to have had equal Privileges with the Citizens, in all Elections of Common-Council-men, and Aldermen; contrary to his Oath, as he was a Freeman. 6thly. He promoted and signed a scandalous, false and groundless Petition against the Right Honourable Sir Thomas Pilkington, late Lord-Mayor of London, consisting of seven Paragraphs, with no less than six notorious Falsehoods in it; and which directly struck at our present legal and happy Settlement in the City, as most evidently appeared to the Present Parliament. To conclude for the present, I query, Whether he that was the principal Engine in the Arbitrary and Illegal Management of the Ward of Bishopsgate in the Year 1682, and afterwards of the surreptitious procuring an Act of Common-Council to divide the said Ward, by false Insinuations and Suggestions, (as hath publicly appeared since before the Common-Council, by whose Act it hath been lately reunited) whether he be a fit and proper Person to be elected again, to be as it were a sole Manager of the Affairs of that Ward, I submit to your serious Consideration; and whether, if you elect him, 'tis not in effect to make yourselves Parties, and to justify him in all his public Crimes. The present Hurry of Business will not permit the adding the second Part at present, but it may be expected upon the next occasion. Adieu.