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A13415 All the vvorkes of Iohn Taylor the water-poet Beeing sixty and three in number. Collected into one volume by the author: vvith sundry new additions corrected, reuised, and newly imprinted, 1630.; Works Taylor, John, 1580-1653.; Cockson, Thomas, engraver. 1630 (1630) STC 23725; ESTC S117734 859,976 638

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Sword and Flame ●●d almost all that Kingdome ouer-run ●●ll where I fought triumphantly I won ●hrough Blood and Death my glory I obtain'd ●● in the end when all my Acts were done ●● Sepulcher was all the game I gain'd For though great Kings contend for earthly sway Death binds them to the peace and parts the fray An. Dom. 1272. Nouember Wednesday Edward the first was 35 yeares old when he beganne to reigne but at the death of his Father he was in warres in the Holy L●●d against the Saracens So that he returned not home till the next yeere a ●time hee was crowned the 14 day of December in the second yeere of his reigne the ●●●●mins●ty of ●●● Coro●●●●●●●● performed by Robert K●lwarby Ar●●●●●● of Canterbury at Westminster Thus King brought Wales wholy vnto subsection to the crowne of England he effect ●●●● peace be caused all co●●●●tred Iudges and Officers of Note to be must exemplertly p●●n●●ea with sines ●● pri●●men and bantshment A Nauy of 60 English s●●ps ou●●●ams and tooke 800 ships of France An. 1293. Sir William Wallace A Noble va●●●ant Sco● a●d warr● vpon King Edward and in the seruice of his Countrey did much ●●●●●● to England The King ca●●● this Sonne Edward being an in●●rt to be the first Prince of Wales that was of to● English blood Since when all the Kings of Englands elaest Sonnes are by right Princes of Wales 284 Iewes were executed for ●●●ptes of the Kings coyne An 1280. King Edward caused Bay●trds Castle to be buils in London now the mansion house of the Right Honourable Earle of Pemb●●●● In the 15 yeers of this kings reigne Wheate was sold for 3 d the B●she● and the next yeere being 1288 it was sold for 18 d the Bush●● which in those d●●ies was accoūted a great price but after as long as The King liued the price came to 5● the Bashell King Edwards Armi●●●ew 70000 of the Scots in one day as the ●●tt●k of Fau●●rke Sir William Wallace was betrayed taken and brought out of Scotland and executed in Smithfield has head being set on London Bridge and his quarters sent into Scotland yes be is by ●●●●● men had in Honorable remembrance The warres ●●● so set in this Kings reigne betwixt him and the Scots that as ●enerall times there were more then 130000 men slaine on both parts yet amongst all our English Kings that past before him Edward was not inferiour today he was religious valiant victorious wise affable of a comely Ma●estmall Aspect and proportion he had two wiues the first was Eleanor daughter to Ferdinand the third King of Castile the second was Margaret daughter to Philip surnamed Hardy King of France by them hee had 4 Sonnes and 10 Daughters bee reigned neere 35 yeeres and was burried at Westminster 1307. July 7. EDWARD THE II KING OF ENGLAND LORD OF IRELAND DVKE OF AQVITAINE c. SOone after was my fathers corps inter'd Whilst Fate and Fortune did on me attend And to the Royall Throne I was prefer'd With A●e Ceaser euery knee did bend But all these fickle ioyes did fading end Peirce Gaueston to thee my loue combind My friendship to thee scarce left me a friend But made my Queene Peeres People all vnkind I tortur'd both in body and in mind Was vanquisht by the Scots at Bannocki Rourne And I enfor'cd b flight some safety find Yet taken by my Wife at my returne A red-hot Spit my Bowels through did gore Such misery no slaue endured more Anno Dom. 1307 Iuly 8. Edward the second surnamed Carnaruan ●… cause he was born at Carnaruan Castle is Wales was crowned at Westminster by the hands of William Bishop of Winchester deputy for Robert Archbishop of Canterbury then absent in exile ●● 24 of February next following He was much ●●●●cted to follow the aduice and counsell of light ●●●● which caused the Nobility to rebel against him ●●● at the first he ouercame them and tooke Thomas Earle of Lancaster a Peers of the blood their chief Leader fate in iudgment himself on him at Pomfret where the Earle had iudgment giuen against him to be drawne for is Treason for his murder spoyle burning robberies to be hangd and for his shamefull flying away to be beheaded but because ●●● was of the Kings kindred he was only beheaded ●●● the last such of the Barons as had escap'd ●●● the Mortimers with the helpe of the Queene ●●● the yong Prince then come out of France newly tooke the King and imprisoned him neuer ●●● kingdome in more ●●sery then this Kings ●●● for his immoderate loue to Peirce Gau●●●● a meane Gentleman of France was the cause of the Kings and has owne destruction with the ●●● calamity of the ●●●●● kingdom This Gaueston ●●● banished hence by the Kings father was in ●●● times exil'd but at his third ●●●rne Guy ●●● Watwick took him in Warwick Castle ●●● his head to be snore off which so inraged the ●●●●●●●●ing King that bee vowed reuenge vpon all ●●● Lords others who were the causers of Gauest● death in the meane space Robert Bruce King Scots gaue King Edward a mighty ouer●●● place cal'd Bannocksbourne where the English ●●● their confederates Hollanders Brabanders ●●● landers Flemings Picards Gascognes ●●● mans Poloiners wer in number ooooo ●●● foot yet were discomfited with the losse of 5000 ●●● the King in great danger to be taken famine foul and pestilence at once afflicted England so that ●●● ple did eat one another halfe-aliue and the ●●● scarce able to bury the deed The King prepares for reuenge against his Lords for Gaueston ●●● Hugh Dispencer from meane estate to be ●●● Chamberlaine The King caused 2● of his ●●● suffer death diuers ●●●●●● He makes a second ●●● against Scotland ●●●● againe with great ●●●●●●●●●●●●●●●● This was the miserable ●●● this King who was deposed the Spencers ●●● Edward reign'd 19 years 7 months and 17 days EDWARD THE IIJ KING OF ENGLAND And FRANCE LORD OF IRELAND IN Peace and War my Stars auspicious stood False Fortune stedfast held her wauering wheele I did reuenge my Fathers butcher'd blood I forced France my furious force to feele I warr'd on Scotland with triumphing Steele Afflicting them with slaughtering Sword and Fire That Kingdome then diuided needs must reele Betwixt the Bruces and the Balliols ire Thus daily still my glory mounted higher With black Prince Edward my victorious Sonne Vnto the top of honour wee alpire By manly Princely worthy actions done But all my Triumphs fortunes strength and force Age brought to death death turn'd to a Coarse Anno 1327 Ianuary 25 Saturday Edward the 3 being borne at Windsor being 15 yeers old was crowned by Walter Reignolds Arcbishop of Canterbury ● in his 2 yeere Edward his Father was murthred The Court in those daies was seldome without a vipē for as Gaueston was the forerūner of the Spencers in ambition rapine pride and confusion So the Spencers were the
haue nam'd And thousands more in histories defam'd With partiall selfe-opinion did approue Their sensuality and Lust was Loue. When as the ods is more then day from night Or fire from water blacke from purest white The one with God one with the Deuill doth dwell Loue comes frō heauen lust doth spring from hell But the old Prouerbe ne'r will be forgot A Lechers loue is like Sir Reuerence hot And on the sudden cold as any stone For when the lust is past the loue is gone But Loue is such a blessing from on hie Who●e zealous feruency can neuer die It out-liues life and the ascending flame Mounts to the God of Loue from whence it came Lust made * Genesis Seths sons with fornication vaine Ioyne with the daughters of accursed Cain And the world suffered for their fornication Depopulation by the inundation And twenty and foure thousand Israelites Dyde for this sinne amongst the a Numbers Madi wites For the not punishing this fact almost The Tribe of b Iudges 19. 20 and 21. ●5000 were slaine of the Israelites and there remained of the Heniamites onely 600. Beniamin were slaine and lost May this be call'd loue Then call vertue vice And euery bawdy house a Paradise If lust were loue it would not like a Wolfe Drowne Louers hearts in desperations Gulfe A Theban c For Aut gona the daughter of Oedipus and Iocasta Ha●on himselfe madly kill'd On his too deere deers Tombe his heart bloud spild For Phaon a poore Watermans sweet sake Faire Sapho from a rocke her d The more foole-shee though shee were a Poetesse necke shee brake Phea●ra for her Hippoli●us they say Did hang her selfe and make a Holli-day And e Shee was daughter to Li●urgus King of Thrace Phillis for f Sonne to Thesens Demophoon did as much I le neuer loue if Loues effects be such To quench the Carthaginian g Dido for Entas burned her selfe Queenes desire Shee burnt her selfe vpon a pile of fire If either Pr●amus or Thisby had Not beene starke fooles or else exceeding mad The doting idle misconceiuing Elues So desperately had ne'r fore-done themselues Thus all the difference betwixt loue and lust Is one is iust the other is vniust Search but in Histories and men may find Examples beyond numbring of this kind How of both Sexes and each state and sort Of people from the cottage to the Court Haue madly run this course some hang'd some drownd Burnt staru'd stab'd thēselues with many a woūd Or pin'd away like Coxcombs euer crauing To haue the thing that 's neuer worth the hauing In Antwerp many filthy Whores I saw That for their Trading were allowde by Law And I in Pragus did see a street of Whores An English mile in length who at their doores Did stand and ply rich clad and painted rare More hard then euer I plyde for a fare Th' Italian Stewes to make the Pope good cheere Payd twenty thousand Duckets in a h Almost euery yeere a ducket is more than 8 shillings which summe is 8000l yeere Besides they giue a Priest t' amend his fee The profit of a Whore or two or three Me thinkes it must be bad Diuinity That with the Stewes hath such affinity 'T is a mad Doctrine Lechery should pay A Church-mans stipend that should preach pray And in those stewes where women are so common In entertaining all refusing no man Whereas a father with a Whore may lye Which done his sonne his place may hap supply And then an Vnkle or a Brother may Succeed each other in that damned play For no propinquity or no degree Of kin that haut there that can sweare th' are free From this commixion and which is worst A Whore may haue a bastard borne and nurst And growne a woman and to this trade set her May be a Whore to him that did beget her Or to her brothers or to all her kin Shee may be prostituted in this sin And therefore to conclude this point I muse That Christian Common-wealths allow a Stewes I thinke that Thieues as well allow'd should be As Whores and Whoremasters should thus be free They from the Heathen doe examples bring That Whoring is a rare commodious thing There was an ancient vse in Babylon When as a womans stocke was spent and gone Her liuing it was lawfull then to get Her carkasse out to liuerie to let And Venus did allow the Cyprian Dames To get their liuings by their bodies shames Lieurgus did a Law in Sparta make That all men might their barren wiues forsake And by the same Law it ordained was Wiues might vnable husbands turne to grasse And the wise Solon the Athenian Allow'd whores to be free for any man And though these things the Pagan people did Yet Christian gouernments these things forbid But ther 's no Common-wealth maintains the same But where the a Not in any place but where Romes supremacie is allowed Pope is Landlord of the game The Stewes in England bore a beastly sway Till the eight b Anno Regni 37. Henry banish'd them away And since those common whores were quite put downe A damned crue of priuate whores are growne So that the diuell will be doing still Either with publique or with priuate ill Thus much for whoring I must say agen It hath produced many valiant men Braue Bastards haue beene famous Conquerours And some great Lords and Kings and Emperours As Hercules Ioues mighty Bastard-sonne And c So sayes Cornelius Agrippa but I ●●●de it otherwise in Quintus Curtius Alexander King of Macedon Clodouee King of France from Bastardie And William Conqueror from Normandie These and a number more I could recite Besides the vnknowne numbers infinite And sure that wretched man that married is Vnto a wife dispos'd to this amiss Is mad to wrong himselfe at all thereby With heart-griefe and tormenting iealousie If he hath cause for 't let him then forsake her And pray God mend her or the diuell take her If she hath no cause to be iealous then He 's worthy to be made the scorne of men Thus cause or no cause man himselfe should arme That iealousie should neuer doe him harme The Nicholaitans to auoid the paine Of iealousie amongst them did ordaine That all their married wiues of each degree To euery one a common Whore should be And so amongst them one could hardly finde A Cuckold that did beare a iealous minde When I but thinke what Sciences and Arts What men and women full of ex'lent parts Forget their functions lay their vertues by And wait and liue and thriue by Lecherie A Poets Art all other Arts excell If he hath skill and grace to vse it well Yet many times 't is vs'd most base and vile When it descends vnto a bawdy stile To turne good humane studies and diuine Into most beastly lines like Aretine To seeke to merit euer-liuing Bayes For sordid stuffe like Ouids lustfull Layes
Carists faith did dye together Then Hengist with the Saxons hither came Who many kild with sword and furious flame Besides eleuen hundred Monkes were kild At Bangor Abby all their blouds were spild And when the Saxons race to end was run The Dines came in and all the Kingdome won Before whose Swords did many thousands fall Which on the name of IESVS CHRIST did call Then William Conquerour with a multitude Vnto the Norman● vo●ke this Land subdude The Pope then caus'd all Priests to leaue their wiues To leade soule Sodomiticke single liues Then afterward in second Hearies raig●e Was sawcy Sir Saint Thomas Becket slaine A Popish Saint and Martyr made because He dy'd a Traytor to his Soueraignes Lawes King Henry and King Richard dead and gone Their brother Iohn by right ascends the T●●rone Whom all his life the Pope of Rome did vexe And with oppressions all the Realme perplexe With Candle Booke and Bell he curst and blest And Bals and Legates did the King molest Vntill such time he on his knees fell downe And to the Pope surrendred vp his Crowne At last because he durst the Pope withstand He dyed imposned by a ●●yers hand When thus by treason they had kild King Iohn Then the third Henrie Englands Crowne put on Then England bought the R●mesh doctrine deare It cost her threescore thousand markes a yeare For Agnus Deses Pardons Peter pance For which the Pope had all this coine from hence King Henry dyed then Edward tooke the sway His Sonne and Grandchild England did obay The first of them call'd Long-shanks conquests won Lost by Carnaruan his vnhappy Son Who by his Queene was in a Dung●on cast Till being murthered sadly breath'd his last Edward the third a braue victorious King Did Frenchmens pride into subiection bring Kickard the second next to raigne began Who lost more than his Royall Grandsire wan Then gan Iohn Wicklisse boldly to begin To preach gainst Antichrist that man of sin Who many troubles stoutly did abide Yet spight the Pope he naturally dy'de And being dead from out is graue was turn'd And had his Martyr'd bones to ashes burn'd Which ashes they did cast into a Brooke Because he had the Romish Faith for sooke Yet whilst the second Richard here suruiu'd No Martyrs were by fire of lite depriu'd Henry the fourth was in the Throne inuested In whose Reigne many were too much molested And Wi●●●● Sautre first his life ●●●●●● Through flames of fire who now in heauen doth liue The next Iohn Ba●●by in the fu●●●● flame And William Tharpe both was immortail fame Then the fifth Henrie a victori●●● Prince The Realme of France did ●● quar and ●●● The good Lord Ceb●● then O ●●●●●● By Popish Priests an Hereticke proc●aim'd Washang'd and burn'd by the vnit ●tull doome Of Sathans Seruants sleues to Hell and R●●e And leauing some vnnam'd Iohn ' B●owne● qu●re Iohn Beu●●ly a Preacher dyed in ●●● B sid s a number from the Le●●rds Towre Rackes tortures halters and the flame deuoure Ioba Hu● a glorious Martyr of the Lord. Was in Eohe●●● burned or Gods word And ren●rend Icrome did to Constance come From Pragae and stoutly suffered Martyrdome In Smith-sield one Iohn Claydon suffered death And with him Richard Turming lost his breath At this time sixete●ne godly folkes in Kent The Antichristian vassals d●d torment Then death cut off the fifth King Henries Raigne The Crowne the sixth King Henrie did obrame And William Taylor a true zealous Priest Did passe through fire vnto his Sauiour Christ. Good Richard Houedon with him William White Each vnto God through fire did yeeld his sprite D●ke Humphrey though no Martyr kil'd in 's bed And Richard Wych a Priest was burned dead Then Saint like good King Henry was depos'd By the fourth Edward in the tower inclos'd Then Edward fl●d and Henry once againe By Warwickes power the Kingdome did obtaine Thds did the various slate of humane things Make Kings of Capriues and of Captiues Kings Vntill at last King Edward turning backe Brought Henries royalty to finall wracke In whose Raigne Iohn Go●se as the story saith Was the first Martyr burned for Christs faith King Henry in the Tower was ab'd to death And Edward yeelded vp his hie and breath His Sonne young Edward of that name the sift Whom the third Richard from his life did lift VVho by foule murthers ●loud and tyranny Vsurpt the Throne of Englands Monarchy Till valiant Henry of that name the seuen Kild him and made vncu●n England euen Then first Ioane Beugh●on and a man call'd Babram● By faith through fire went to old Father Abram An Old man was in Smithfield burnt because He did resist against the Roman Lawes One Ierom hang'd and burned on the Gallowes In Florence with two ot●er of his f●llowes And William Tiliesworth Thomas Bernard and Iames Morton cause they did the Pope withstand Burn'd all and Father Rogers and old Reine Did dye by fire a better life to gaine One Thomas Nouice and one Thomas Chase Dy'd constant Martyrs by the Heauenly Grace A woman and a man call'd Laurence Guest By Deah gain'd euerlasting life and rest Besides a number past mans reckoning vp For IESVS sake dranke of afflictions cup. Some carried faggots through a world of mocks Some rack'd some pinde some fettered in the stocks Some naked stript and scourged with a lash For their reiecting of their Romish trash Some branded in the cheeke did alwayes beare The marke and badge of their Redeemer deare Thus the insulting tyrannizing Pope With cursings tortures fire and sword and rope Did force the Soules and Consciences of men To run dispairing to damnations Den And those who valiantly his power withstood Did seale their resolution with their bloud Before his triple treble trouble Crowne In adoration Emperours must fall downe Were they as high as any Caesar borne To kisse his feet they must not hold it scorne Henry the sixth the Emperour did fall downe Whom with his Feet Pope Celestine did Crowne Henry the fourth his Empresse and his young Son All three to Rome did barefoot goe and run And three dayes so these three did all attend His holinesse a godlesse eare to lend Which afterward was granted on condition That he should giue his Crowne vp in submission Pandulphus the Popes Legate with a frowne Did make King Iohn of England yeeld his Crowne King Henry of that as me the second he Kneel'd downe and kist the Romish Legats knee The Emperour when Pope Adrian was to ride Did hold his stirrop on the neere wrong side For which his Holinesse in angry sort Disdainfully did checke the Emperour for 't When as the Pope doth ride in Cope of gold Kings like to foot-men must his bridle hold In pompe he must bee borne vpon mens shoulders With glorious shew amazing the beholders Whilst Kings and Princes must before him goe To vsher him in this vaine-glorious show This being true as no man can deny Those that will
pickt the purse damn'd the Soule Because they knew the Pope and all his crue H●● hounds whō heauern in rage on earth did spue And in a word they thus were ouer-trod Because they truly seru'd the liuing God This was the maine and onely cause of all Because they would not offer vnto B●el The Popes outragious and couragious actor Was Bishop Bonner hells most trusty factor Romes hangman and the firebrand of this Realme That with a sloud of bloud did ouerwhelme The true beleeuers of Gods holy truth He burchered not regarding age or youth With him was ioyn'd a man almost as ill Who tooke delight Gods seruants bleud to spill Cal'd Stephen Gardner Englands Chanceller And Bishop of the Sea of Winchester These two did striue each other to excell Who should doe greatest seruice vnto Hell Vntill at last God heard his seruants cry And each of them did die immediately Thus when I●honah heard the iust complaints Of his beloued poore afflicted Saints Then this too cruell Pope defending Queene The bloudiest Princesse that this land hath seene She did decease and persecution ceast And tired wofull● Englands purchast rest Queene Mary being dead her welcome death Reuin'd our ioyes in blest ELIZABETH Innumerable were her woes and cares Abundance were the subtill wiles and snares Which Sathan and his Ministers oft laid To reaue the life of that most harmelesse Maid She was accus'd abus'd reuil'd miscal'd She was from prison vnto prison hal'd Long in the Tower she shas close prisner shut Her louing seruants all way were put From thence to Windsor thence to Woodstocke sent Closely mewd vp from all the worlds content But God whose mercies euer did defend her Did in her greatest Sorrow comfort send her He did behold her from his Throne on hie And kept her as the apple of his eye Let Hell and Hell-hounds still attempt to spill Yet the Almighty guards his Seruants still And he at lest did ease her Sorrowes mone And rais'd her to her lawfall awfull throne This Royall Deborah this Princely Dame Whose life made all the world admire her fame As Iudith in Bet h●lias same was spread For cutting off great Holophernès head So our Eliza stoutly did begin Vntopping and beheading Romish sin Shee purg'd the Land of Papistry●agen Shee liu'd belou'd of God admir'd of men Shee made the Antichristian Kingdome quake She made the mighty power of Spaine to shake As farre as Sunne and Moone dispears'd her Rayes So farre and farther went her matchlesse praise She was at home abroad in euery part Loadstar and Loadstone to each eye and heart Supported onely by Gods powerfull hand She foure and forty yeares did rule this Land And then she lest her Royall Princely Seat She chang'd earths greatnesse to be heauenly great Thus did this Westerne Worlds great wouder dye She fell from height to be aduanc'd more hie Terrestriall Kings and Kingdomes all must fade Then blest is she that is immortall made Her death fild woefull England full of feares The Papists long'd for change with itching eares For her decease was all their onely hope To raise againe the doctrine of the Pope But he whose power is all omnipotent Di● their vnhappy hopelesse hopes preuent Succession lawfully did leaue the Crowne Vnto a Prince whose vertue and Renowne And learning did out-stripall Kings as sarre As doth the Sunne obseure a little starre What man that is but man could bass● more Romes seauen●headed purple beastly Whore How wisely hath he Bellarmine con●uted And how diuinely hath'he ost dispated How zealously he did Cods faith desend How often on Gods word he did attend How clement pious and how gracious good Was he as fits the greatnesse of his bloud Were 't not for him how should the Mu●●s doe He was their patterne and their patron too He was th' Apollo from whose radient Beames The quinteffence of Poetry our-streames And from the splendor of his piercing rayes A world of worthy writers won the bayes Yet all the worthy vertues so transparent And so well knowne to be in him inharent Could not perswade the Papists leaue their strife With cursed treasons to attempt his life For when their disputations helpt them not They would dispute in a damn'd powder plot In which the Romists went beyond the deuill For Hell could not inuent a plot so euill But he that plac'd him on his royall Throne The God of Iacob Iudahs holy one That God for Iesus sake I doe beseech With humble heart and with vnfained speech That he or his may Britaines Scepter sway Till time the world and all things passe away But now he 's gone into Eternall bliss̄e Crowne● And with Eternall glory crowned is Long may King CHARLES weare Britaines royall And heauens best blessings raise his high Renowne FINIS GODS MANIFOLD MERCIES IN THESE MIRACVLOVS DELIverances of our Church of England from the yeare 1565. vntill this present 1630. particularly and briefly Described IOSHVA 4.21 22. 24. When your Children shall aske their Fathers in time to come What meaneth this Pillar Then yee shall let your Children know saying THESE ARE THE DELIVERIES WHICH GOD HATH VOVCHSAFED TO HIS CHVRCH IN ENGLAND SINCE THE BEGINNING OF QVEENE ELIZABETHS RAIGNE TO THIS DAY That all the People of the Earth might know the hand of the Lord that it is mightie that yee might feare the Lord your God for euer THere was a Bull in Rome was long a breeding Which Bull prou'd little better then a Calfe Was sent to England for some better feeding To fatten in his Holinesse behalfe The vertues that this Beast of Babell had In thundring manner was to banne and curse Raile at the Queene as it were raging mad Yet God be thanked she was ne're the worse The goodly Sire of it was Impious * Pius the fufh of that name Pope of Rome piu● Hee taught it learnedly to curse and banne And to our faces boldly to defie vs. It madly ouer England quickly ranne But what succe●●e it had reade more and see The fruits of it herevnder written be This Bull did excommunicate and curse the Queene ●●dep●●eth her from her Crowne it proclaimed her an Here●●●● it cursed all such as loued her it threatned damnation to all subiects as dur●t obey her and it promised the kingdome of heauen to those that would oppose and kill her This was the effect and nature of this Popish Beast which all wise godly and vnder standing men did deride and contemne 1. A Priest call'd Moort●n by the Pope assign'd Northumberland and Westmerland seduceth With whom the Duke of * Duke of Norfolke and Earle of Northumberland beheaded Earle of Westmorland fled Norfolke is combin'd The whilst the Pope nocost or charge refuseth But pawnes his challices his Beads and Crosses Giues them his gracelesse blessing for their ayde The fruit where of were heads and honors losses God still defending Englands Royall Maid Thus we by proofe must thankefully confesse That where the pope doth