A Full and Particular RELATION Of that Strange, Horrible, and (in England) Unheardof Murder, Which was Committed on the Body of the late Famous Dr. CLENCH, In an Hackney-Coach, near Leaden-Hall-Market; on Monday-Night, the 4 th'. of this Instant Jan. 1692. LAST Night, being Monday the Fourth Instant, about a quarter past Nine, Dr. Clench went from John's Coffeehouse in Fullers-Rents, to his late dwellinghouse in Brown-low Street; where he had not been long, before a Messenger came to desire him to come to Two Gentlemen, who were at the Devil Tavern near Temple-Bar, in order to Visit a Person of considerable Account, who was dangerously ill; upon which he immediately went with the said Messenger, not ordering his Coach or Coachman to Attend him, but being come to the Gentlemen, at the aforesaid Tavern, they persuade him to take Coach with them, in order to go to this Patient near White Chapel; upon which they paid their Reckoning, and called a Coach to the Tavern Door; but in their way, between Temple-Bar, and Leaden-Hall-Street, these two Persons (after the Turks manner) most Barbarously Murdered the Doctor, by Strangling him; now coming near Leaden-Hall-Market, they called out to the Coachman to stop, and gave him Three-Shillings, Six pence, and bid him step into the Market, and Buy the best Capon he could light on; the Coachman innocently takes the Money, and goes into the Market according to Direction; but he was no sooner gone, but the Two Ruffians made their Escape, and the said Coachman returning soon after, with the Poulterer, bringing with them several Fowls for the Gentlemen to take their choice, but they were no sooner come to the Coach side, but they found the door of it open, the two Gentlemen gone, and (to their great surprise) the Doctor alone lying dead in the Coach; upon which soon after, the Doctor's body being brought to his own House, in Brown-low-street in Holbourn, Constables and Watchmen were sent out into several Parts, in search of the Murderers; but as yet no Account can be learned of them; what induced these Barbarous Homecides to commit this Fact is not yet known; tho' its thought it may be an inveterate Malice, and Revenge, not unlike That of Esquire Thynn. The Doctor was a very Worthy, Honest, and Charitable Gentleman; and is very much lamented by all that knew him. NOW, for the Heinousness of this Sin of Murder, I suppose none can be ignorant, that it is of the deepest Die, a most Loud crying Sin. This we may see in the first Act of this kind that ever was Committed, Abel's blood cryeth from the earth, Gen. 4. 10. Yea, the Gild of this Sin is such, that it leaves even a stain upon the Land where it is committed, such as is not to be washed out, but by the Blood of the Murderer, as appears, Deut. 19 12, 13. The Land cannot be Purged of Blood, but by the blood of him that shed it; and therefore, though in other cases, the flying to the Altar secured a Man, yet in this of Wilful Murder, no such Refuge was allowed; but such a one was to be taken thence, and delivered up to Justice, Exod. 21. 14. Thou shalt take him from the Altar, that he may die. And it is farther observable, that the only two Receipts which the Scripture mentions, as given to Noah after the Flood, were both in Relation to this sin; that of not eating blood, Gen. 9 4. being a Ceremony to beget in Men a greater horror of this sin of Murder, and so intended for the preventing of it. The other was for the punishment of it. Gen. 9 6. He that sheddeth man's blood, by men shall his blood be shed; and the reason of this stricktness is added in the next words; For in the image of God made he man: where you see this sin is not only an Injury to our Brother, but even the highest despite and comtempt towards God himself; for it is the defacing of His Image, which He hath stamped upon Man, etc. Licenced according to Order. Printed for Alex. Milbourn in Green-Arbour Court in the Little Old-Bayly. 1682.