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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A25719 An Appendix to Mercurius reformatus, or, The new observator by the same author. 1692 (1692) Wing A3573; ESTC R30819 24,994 16

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this Book abounds with and which so many Thousands of People yet alive know to be so And yet the Author is a person of a passing good Character in France and the Book is dedicated to no less a man than the Learned Bishop of Meaux and passes among the most of the Nations abroad for a True History I am of opinion there is not in this whole pretended History one single Page without some one or two gross mistakes if not wilful Errors and to name them all were to Copy over the whole Book Only to give a hint of the rest from these few the Author will needs have Cromwell to have been a Prebendary and of Bishop William's Faction against Laud which Faction he says arose on the debate betwixt the two Archbishops for Precedence an affair some Ages older than Cromwell In short there is not one single Syncronisme right in the whole Book from the beginning to the end witness one for all He makes Duke Hamilton's Expedition into England to have fallen out in the Year 1644. and King Charles the First to have rendred himself to the Scots Three Years after I would not have mentioned this Book if I thought it not conducing to the Common-wealth of Letters but especially to Strangers to know this late practice of the French Writers that thereby they may not swallow all they write upon Trust Being upon this subject of Counterfeiting Dispatches and Papers I could instance a great many Remarkable Events that have been owing to that kind of Artifice both in Ancient and Modern Times from the knowledg of which it seems the French are the more imboldened to try the Experiment But there hapned one of the signallest effects in Britain of an Artifice of this nature some Fifty years ago that tho it be quite foreign to the purpose yet the Strangeness of it the mighty Consequences that attended it and it 's lying hitherto among the Secrets of our History will obtain me the Reader 's Fardon to give the Story of it in short Every body I believe is acquainted with the Rise of those unhappy Commotions that shook this Island during the Reign of King Charles the First and knows where to lodg them Both Nations were discontented and the Flame rose in Scotland which propagated it self at last to England and our Historians have taken care to give us all the Publick Steps of those unhappy Transactions but not without Partiality on some one side or another But there was one Secret Hindge on which the Scotch Second Invasion moved that has never to this day been committed to Print and which is a notable demonstration upon how small and unseen Springs the greatest Revolutions in the Affairs of the World do oftentimes turn When King Charles was induced to enter into Terms of Treaty with the Scots at Ríppon some of the English Nobility that had been very Instrumental to bring the King to an Accommodation and thereby deserved well of the Scots found a great Coolness and Uneasiness in the Scotch Commissioners towards them notwithstanding they had deserved so well of that Countrey The Treaty being at last concluded and the Scots fully pleased with the Terms one of the English Noblemen being very desirous to know the Reason of that Coolness that had during the whole Course of the Treaty appeared in the Scots was resolved if possible to find it out To this end having invited the Earl of Rothes and the rest of the Scotch Noblemen that had managed the Treaty to Dinner he fell upon the matter of Their coming into England and how happily the Differences betwixt the King and Them had been made up and withal how happy he thought himself in promoting so good an Agreement At length he concluded with the uneasiness he was in on the account of the Coolness he had always found in the Scotch Noblemen towards him notwithstanding of his great Zeal and Success in serving them with the King and in the whole course of the Treaty The Earl of Rothes answered He thank'd his Lordship for the good Offices he and the rest of the English Commissioners had done his Countreymen both with the King and in the Treaty But he was astonished to hear his Lordship inquire the ground of his and his Collegues Coolness towards him and some of the English Peers there present For says he it was your Lordship and They that Invited us at first into England and promised to join with us as soon as we were on English Ground and yet notwithstanding your Lordship and They were so far from making good your promise that you appear'd in Arms against us The English Noblemen being surprised at this answer at length the Earl of Rothes pull'd out of his pocket a Letter signed by Seven or Eight of the chief of the English Nobility directed to him the Earl of Rothes in name of the rest of his Countreymen Inviting them into England and promising to come in to them upon their entring this Kingdom Which Letter was yet a matter of greater astonishment when it was found a Counterfeit one and that a certain English Nobleman then present who is dead and his Family extinct long ago confess'd himself to have done it This Letter has had the luck to be oftner than once printed in several Histories of that time for a true one and I believe I am the first that have publickly advanc'd it to have been false Being safe in what I have said about it from the knowledge of two or three Noblemen yet alive whose Hands are at it and who are much better acquainted with the whole Story than I possibly can To leave so long a digression and put an end to this Appendix I shall only add a few words concerning two Passages in the foregoing Observators that has made a great noise in the World and which both Honour and Justice obliges me to clear The first is about what I wrote of a Book printed in French some fourteen Months ago if I mistake not the time Intituled Avis aux Refugès sur leur prochain Retour en France An Advice to the French Refugees upon their expected return to France This Book has occasion'd a great many others by way of Answers and Replies betwixt two of the Learnedst Men of the French Nation Monsieur Jurieu and Monsieur Bale And therein the Consistory of the French Church at Rotterdam has been oblig'd to concern themselves Monsieur Jurieu has positively accus'd Monsieur Bale of being the Author of this Book and to have written it of concert with a Cabal of other French Pensioners set a work by the Court of France I shall not meddle in the Debate betwixt those two Great Men any further than concerns my self In one of my Observators I mention'd this Book which has occasion'd so much heat and said It was concerted by the French Court and that I knew the Author This was long before there was the least word of Contest betwixt Monsieur
Jurieu and Monsieur Bale But some months thereafter the Debate growing hot betwixt them the one affirming the other denying with equal passion It fell out that Monsieur Bale among other Arguments brought by him to prove his Innocence adduced that Passage in the New Observator wherein the Author gave a hint of the Advis aux Refugés being concerted with the French Court and of his saying He knew the Author of it And thence concluded That since the Author of the Observator knew the Author of the Avis aux Refugeés and that Monsieur Bale and the Author of the Observator was not acquainted together Therefore Monsieur Bale was not the Author of the Avis aux Refugeés This Argument of Monsieur Bale's and some Papers written since by Monsieur Jurieu obliges me to give here a true Account of what I know of this Affair leaving these two learned Persons to make what use of it on either side they think fit And this I do the more willingly that Monsieur Jurieu has been pleased in several Letters to Persons of Note in England to signify his grief for some mistaken Expressions he had us'd towards me in one of his late Books on that score This Book Avis aux Refugeés had scarce appeared in France and was not yet seen in England when from a Worthy and Noble Person in France since in Chains for his Religion I had an account both of the Book it self of its being concerted with the French Court and that every body in Paris looked upon Monsieur Pellison as the Author of it In return of a letter of mine in answer to his my Friend told me That according to my desire he had employed one that was intimately acquainted with Monsieur Pellison to inquire of him the truth of that common report And that Monsieur Pellison was pleas'd to allow the Person that spoke to him to think him the Author though he would not positively confess he was so adding that it was not fit for him or for the King's service to acknowledge that Book publickly to be his though he were the Author of it In short this Worthy Gentleman gave me both his own and the universally received opinion at Paris That Monsieur Pellison was the Author of the Avis aux Refugées and backed it with a great many probable arguments needless here to be mentioned The Book it self appearing here in London a little after I took occasion to mention what my Friend told me about it and withal upon his Information said I believe I knew the Author meaning Monsieur Pellison with whom I was a little acquainted at Paris Nine Years ago In one word I was the first that ever mentioned in Print That that Book was concerted with the French Court or that it was written by a French Emissary And was very glad to find so Learned and Fam'd a Man as Monsieur Jeurieu to Print a Book some Months thereafter designedly to prove at length what I had but hinted at in an Observator though at the same time was sorry that any French Protestant much more one of Monsieur Bale's parts should be accused for it And this is all I know of an affair that has employed the Press in Holland for near a Year together The other Passage I think my self obliged to clear is about a Letter from King James the First to Doctor Abbot concerning the Canons of Bishop Overals Convocation of which Letter I publish'd an exact Copy in one of the Observators That Learned Dr. Sherlock's late Book of The Case of the Allegiance due to Soveraign Powers Stated and Resolved c. that laid such weight on this Convocation-Book was the occasion of my making some Reflections both upon the Convocation it self and the reasons of its being call'd of its medling with so nice points as the Rights of Kings and why the Canons made therein were never inforc'd with the Royal Assent Several Pamphlets written against Dr. Sherlock since that time has endeavour'd to lessen the Credit of this Letter to Dr. Abbot And some have been so good-natur'd as to question both the truth of it and the veracity of the Author that has oblig'd the World with so important a Paper Though I owe no kindness to some People that have importun'd me on this score Nor shall take any other notice of a personal reflection against me in one of their Papers of my being forc'd to flee my Countrey in the last Reign than to confess it was true and that I glory in having chose to be overwhelm'd in the ruins of my Countrey rather than to have any share in the Causes of them Tho at the same time I must tell that Gentleman I had as great offers from the Late King as any of my quality ever had if I would have accepted them And that I came not to serve the present King out of meer necessity notwithstanding of my being ruin'd in the two last Reigns Since my good Fortune rather than my Merit procured me about the same time an honourable Call from a Crown'd Head abroad to one of the best Posts that a person of my Profession could wish For which so undeserved a favour I shall ever retain the profoundest Veneration and Gratitude to that Generous Prince that offer'd it me However love to truth and the desires of some Eminent Persons both in Church and State to whom I have caus'd it to be shewn has prevail'd with me to leave the Original Letter with Mr. Baldwin for ten Days time together just after the Publishing of this Paper in order to be seen in his hands by all that please to call for it This is one trouble more that for the sake of the Publick must be put upon a Man that has in all times been firm to the interest of England and that has suffered more since this Revolution for Printing Books he thought was written for the Government than all the Booksellers in London have done for Books written against it Thus have I done with this Appendix having written it in a hurry of business and under the dismal apprehensions of the greatest disaster that can befall me on earth And tho I trouble the World with no more Observators yet I promise from time to time in some other way and under some other Title to serve my King and Countrey with my Pen when any emergency falls out that requires it FINIS BOOKS Sold by Richard Baldwin THE First Second Third and Fourth Volumes of Mercurius Reformatus Or the New Observator Containing Reflections upon the most Remarkable Events falling out from time to time in Europe and more particularly in England Christianissimus Christianandus Or Reason for the Reduction of France to a more Christian State in Europe By Marchimam Needham A New Plain Short and Compleat French and English Grammer whereby the Learner may attain in few Months to Speak and Write French Correctly as they do now in the Court of France And wherein all that is Dark Superfluous and Deficient in other Grammers is Plain Short and methodically supplied Also very useful to Strangers that are desirous to learn the English Tongue For whose sake is added a Short but very Exact English Grammar By Peter Berault Mathematical Magick Or The Wonders that may be perform'd by Mechanical Geometry In Two Books Concerning Mechanical Powers Motions Being one of the most Easie Pleasant Useful and yet most neglected part of Mathematicks Not before Treated of in this Language By J. Wilkins late L. Bishop of Chester The Devout Christian's Preparation for holy Dying Consisting of Ejaculations Prayers Meditations and Hymns adapted to the several States and Conditions of this Life and on the four last Things viz Death Judgment Heaven and Hell Vtrum Horum Or God's Ways of Disposing Kingdoms and some Clergy-mens Ways of Disposing of them The Royal Flight Or the Conquest of Ireland A New Farce The Folly of Priest-Craft A New Comedy Passive Obedience in Actual Resistance Or Remarks upon a Paper fix'd up in the Cathedral Church of Worcester by Dr. Hicks With Reflections on the present Behaviour of the Rest of the Family The Great Bastard Protector of the Little one Done out of French And for which a Proclamation with a Reward of 5000 Lewedores to discover the Author was publish'd