PASSES Granted, By the Free-born People of ENGLAND. To several of the most eminent perjured Rebels Assembled in IUNTO at WESTMINSTER. Who are now desirous to transport themselves into New-England, to Amsterdam, or Utopia. A pass for the junto in general. To all Nations of the World Greeting. Know you; these Traytors of the English Nation; Being compelled to forsake their Station. When in one body were so prevalent, They durst to call themselves a Parliament. 'Mongst us they sat seven yeares, in which short season, They acted seven years, of Blood, and Treason. Pretending to Reform; unto our terror, They countenance'● schisms, Factions, and all error. persuading us, they meant good to our King, To make him glorious, and in every thing; To add unto his lustre, sought his Life, banished his Children, and his loyal Wife. While thousands of us, did in battle fall, Our goods, our Lands, our Wives, our Children, all. Subject to their Commands, but now we see Our error, and have found their fallacy. Th●se who escaped the gallows, that's their due, We do permit, for to reside 'mongst you. look on them, as they merit; if we hear You hang them up, we shall not shed a tear. Subscribed, by the long abused Nation of ENGLAND. PASSES GRANTED BY THE freeborn People of England. To several the most eminent perjured Rebells, assembled in junto at Westminster. Who are now desirous to transport themselves into New England, to Amsterdam, or Utopia. A pass for the Right Honourable rebel, the Lord Say. THese are to certify, to all Nations, Kindreds, and Tongues, Iewes, Gentiles, and Christians, that the bearer hereof ▪ hath shown himself in all things, a most obstinate traitor against God, and a most politic rebel against his King, and hath been a most zealous pretender, passing through many fiery trials, as the thinness of his hair can testify, yet it is at rotten at heart as an Apple Codled in pist straw, and as far from piety as Loyalty; These are therefore to require you, in the name of us the Free born People of England, to afford this Fi●e-Drake, as ample remuneration as his merits require; the People of England, leaving it to the discretion of you the Nations of the world, amongst what People soever he shall happen to reside whether you will burn him as an heretic, or Quarter him as a traitor, &c. A pass for Harry Martin, a Member of the Junto. THese are to give notice to all men whom it may concern, to the end they be no● mistaken in the ma●ners, or quality of the bearer hereof, let them know, that this is Englands arch-traitor, even Harry ▪ Martin, a slav● more salt then is the baltic Sea, a S●tyre, or a Goa●; a monster su●● as Affrica ne're bread, whose damned projections have ruined and undone our glorious King, our once refulgent Church, and splendent State, who with the aid of three more like himself, deviz'd a Declaration against his sovereign, wherein the fury endeavoured to make the People conceit, that He was guilty of his Fathers death, and was an enemy to the Common-wealth, he kept a leash of Curti●ans, in several quarters in and about London, consuming all the wealth he shared, extorted from the miserable communality, on those sophisticated Beauties who in lieu of his golden courtesies, gave him the French itch, called Gonorhea passio, his bones fight with each other in his skin, and his sick breath is more contagious then the blew steam fat toads evaporate, let none share in his cup, he hath the deadly m●lady of France; these are therefore to advertise all to 〈◇〉 Salama●der shall repair, to take strict notice of the premis 〈…〉 and to use him according to his wor●h, &c. Sir HENRY VANE, or vain his pass. TO all Nations, to whom this Certificate shall come greeting, know you that wee the freeborn people of England, have licensed this vain fellow the bearer hereof, to take his progress through the world, provided that it do not happen to him, according to Caines fear, that whosoever meeteth him kill him. Know therefore, that the bearer hereof is one, then whom, the Scicilians found no greater Torment, the emblem of Ingratitude, one whom his King once looked upon with a gracious eye and exalted to dignity, and under whom he got much wealth, by forgery, perjury, and cunning. And yet this devil in recompense of his sovereigns love, hath been on all occasions the first in speaking or acting against him; he is a mere Weathercock, not so much as a lukewarm Christian, but a very politic Atheist; These are therefore to require you on his behalf( if it be so that you are in love with your own destruction) quietly to permit and suffer him to dwell amongst you, and to spend that wealth in quiet, which he hath illegally and devilishly heaped together, out of the Plundered substance of us the freeborn people of England; or otherwise, if you be persuaded of a truth of our observation, to hang him up as a perfidious traitor, &c. A pass for the most politic Lord HERBERT, earl of Pembroke. WEe the freeborn people of England, as having experience of this worthy earl and his wisdom, he now being desirous to travail in foreign Countries, the more to take himself off from serious studies, the prying into which hath dried him up almost to a skeleton; so that his face is become the perfect resemblance of an Hatchet, do with all our souls, not unmindful of his great merit, give unto him this our pass. Know you then that the bearer hereof, is that dam ▪ me Earl, called the Earl of Pembroke, who hath sate this 7 yeares amongst other of his fraternity, who call themselves a Parliament, in the shape of this figure— O—, during which time, though he had not wit enough to bee a Statesman; yet he had wickedness sufficient to be a rebel, and to be as forward as the rest in Voting against the King, and his loyal Subjects; he had so much sense as on all occasions to run with the Wind, turn with the Tide, and vary with the chameleon; when the Presbyters were prevalent, he swore God dam-him, he was for Ruling Elders, and provincial Assemblies; when the Independents got into the saddle, he swore wounds and blood, Independency was the best and though the fool had never so much learning as to red a Chapter in the Bible ▪ nor ever attained to so much knowledge, as to construe a lesson out of Cato; yet he had the impudence and arrogance as to except the Vice-Chancelours place of Oxford, the well-spring of Learning, and the seat of the Muses; where to show that his Ideotishp had arrived to the highest perfection of folly, he turned out all the able Pillars, and Moderators of that University, and placed in their stead, a sort of snivelling Ignorant Factionists, to the ruin of that renowned academy; These are therefore to desire you not to be mistaken in the man, whose manners we ha●e in part discovered, but to use him with such honour as he deserves, &c. sergeant Wild his pass. BE it known unto all Nations, wheresoever the bearer h●r of shal come, that this pass is granted by us the Free born People of England, with much reluctancy, we rather having desired to have taken this Wild and cruel boar in our toils, and to have offered him up in sacrifice to Astera, but that it might not be accomp●ished, we have afforded him this Certificate under our hands and seals. Know then that this bearer, is one of the most perfidious, treacherous, bloody, implacable Trayto●●, that ever beholded the sun; this is the envious horseleech that sucked the blood of that loyal Martyr, captain BV●LEIGH, who was hanged, drawn and quartered as a traitor, for attempting to rescue his sovereign Lord and King, out of Prison, where he was shut up in more privacy then an Anchorite, and used more rigorously, then a Patricide, dooming him to die contrary to the express Law of the Land, and passing his sentence with mocks and scorns, and that you may be the better informed of the worth of this bearer, take notice that this is the hell-hound, whom the junto at Westminster made their chief Agent on all occasions, to prosecute to the death, all such loyal Subjects who either worshipped God, in his true Religion or gave honour to their Prince, according to their duty; this is that Caniball, whom the Traytors at Westminster, allot nothing for food but human flesh, who lately was sent down to Canterbury, and by their counterfeit seal authorised to try for their lives; divers honest men of the City of Canterbury( that assembled themselves together, more in merriment, then for any design) by a Commissioner of Oyer and Terminer, where with strong arguments, not taken from Law, but wrested, he endeavoured to bereave those innocent men of their lives, had not the jury been endued with more conscience then this jew and so brought in their Verdict as Ignoramus, these are therefote to ●e●uire you to yield him as much accommodation, as his deserts require, &c. The High and Mighty, King Oliver, his pass. ALthough it be without president, that Subjects should give a pass to their King, yet it happens to be so with us now, and with our King of clouts; and therefore to all Nations, kindr●ds, and tongues greeting. These are to certify you, that this swabberd, this Copper-nose cut-throat, alias Nol Crumwell, is one of the most desperate and seditious, incorrigible and bloody Traytors, that ever survived, by whose single violence, we have been exposed to all miseries and calamities, so great and so grievous, that never any Nation, tasted of the like; this trim Prodegia, whose heart deserves to be splin●erd with needles, and whose ▪ meat ought to be str●wed ore with Serpents teeth, hath been the ring-leader of all the rout at Westminster, the whole rabble hearkening to his pernicious advice, with as much superstitious zeal, as ever the Heathens of old to their Oracles; he had once hoped to have reduced all things to a parity, but his Levellers lost their aim, and were whipped running, and Nol, being to great a Fly to be caught in that Cobweb, scaped scotfree; and that you may be the more induced, to accommodate this Meteor, with all love and respect; take notice, that the glazing, furbushing, and quality of his Nose is such, that if you hang him up on a Gibbet, in some te●ebrous place, where many ways meet, and travellers may easily wander out of the way, the refulgencie of his Nose, will give more light then a Beacon, and which will be more advantageous; no bear, wolf, or any other ravenous, or truculent beast, will dare to come within twenty miles of him, and that you may not fail to use him courteously as aforesaid; take notice that he is a perjured villain, who once made Protestation, before the worlds eye, and the eyes of men, that he would do his utmost to restore his King to his Just Power and greatness, as before he and his Rebellious complices, had devested him, and stripped him of all, and yet afterwards broken his faith, and persecuted him with deadly spite, and endeavouring by all ways and means, to take his Life, and in his fall to roote out monarchical Government; these are therefore to desire you to use this Regicide, carefully. Subscribed by us, the freeborn( yet enslaved People of England) now upon the point to break our yoke, redeem our King, to regain our Church, and to recover our lost laws. ( To the Rebells.) Your Passes are all made ▪ n●w when you please, You ma● in winged v●ssels, plow the Seat. Hast, hast for ●ericho th●se walls upreare; For we are weary, of your working here. FINIS.