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A34420 Monarchy, no creature of Gods making, &c. wherein is proved by Scripture and reason, that monarchicall government is against the minde of God, and that the execution of the late king was one of the fattest sacrifices that ever Queen Iustice had ... / by Iohn Cooke ... Cook, John, d. 1660. 1651 (1651) Wing C6019; ESTC R20620 90,353 192

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Iudgement is something more then science Be instructed ye Iudges of the earth but be consciencious for learning and a good Conscience are two of the bravest supports in the world because a man cannot be deprived of the first in this world nor of the other in the world to come and Iudges are so far to be skild in the Law of God that in all causes coming before them they are to warne the Clyents that they trespasse not against the Lord 2 Chron. 19. 10. If this learning should fall which I hope I shall never live to see then farewell to Ministers and after that no more Magistrates Secondly Prudence 10 answer all objections and cavillations that will be brought to put life into a dead Cause for in most great suites the parties Litigant commonly thinke that they are both in the right and if the matter be heard by no wiser men then themselves how shall he that is in the wrong ever come to see his Error and this Prudence in a Iudge consists principally in giving satisfaction to the hearers that the sentence is Iust and if possible to satisfy him against whom Iudgement is given that he hath no wrong done him Thirdly Iustice which must respect the cause and not the person Iudges were pictured blind and the Areopagites gave sentence in the dark Thou shalt not pitie the poore in Iudgement though it be plausible and naturall for tender hearted men especially so to doe yet God abhorrs it Fourthly There is required Mercy after Iudgement the poore mans condition is to be considered for if Iustice be wound up a peg too high in the Execution of it it breaks Summa Iusticia is the degeneration of it But by this learning I am far from understanding any Craft or Artificiall subtillities in taking legall exceptions for the quashing of Inditements and thereby to save a witch or a murderer from the Gallowes or to arest the Iudgement when the money is conscionably due to the Plaintiffe this is none of that wisedom which Solomon desired I Kings 3. 9. which is requisite in a Iudge it is a wise and understanding heart to discerne Iudgement betweene good and bad truth and falshood a righteous and just cause from that which onely is so in appearance the simplicity of the Dove in doeing wrong to no man and the wisedom of the Serpent to see that by subtillitie in pleadings unnecessary delayes captious interpretations and clamorous importunities an honest cause be not delayed or overthrowne marke I beseech you what a Iudge Prince Iob was Chap. 29. 11. when the eare heard me then it blessed me and when the eye saw me it gave witnes to me hearers had not words enough to praise my eloquence hee was so admired that any one but Iob would have been proud of halfe so many acclamations Ver. 12 13 14. Because I delivered the poore that cryed and the fatherlesse and him that had none to help him the blessing of him that was ready to perish came upon me and I caused the widowes heart to sing for joy I put on righteousnes and it clothed me my Iudgement was as a robe a diademe the poore oppressed ones gave him 10000. benedictions the widow owed to his care the conservation of her children and by banishing sadnes from her looks he made her life comfortable and her mouth publisht his praise the fatherlesse being vertuously educated were in a better condition then when they had a father though Kings adorne themselves with purple yet they minde their pleasurs and honors more then doeing Iustice to the friendlesse but Iobs principle ornament and garment Crowne and Diademe was Iustice. I was eyes to the blinde and feet was I to the lame I was a father to the poore and the cause which I knew not I searched out hee mixed the quallitie of a father with that of a Iudge granting executions against poore men with a bleeding heart melting to thinke that such as are lame and blinde should be ordered to run and see like those who are to lye in prison for one hundred pound when they are not worth twenty pounds certainly the most honorable title is to be stiled a father of the poore for what need is there of rich men but onely to doe good to the poore and though a ludge must not pitie the poore in Iudgement yet after Iudgement pronounced there is place for mercy which is but Iustice and before sentence the poore mans interest ought to be so deere precious to the Iudge as not to pronounce any sentence against him till his cause be throughly not onely opened but studied and when the poore had none or but little Councell Iob was as well their Advocate as their Iudge As by the wisedome of the Law of England the Iudge is to be a Councell for the prisoner in matter of life and death so was Iustice Iob a Councell for poore men in all Civill Causes and would not let any man lye in prison for a debt untill he had examined the justnes of it and that it was cleerely due as well in equity as by Law and his justice is most conspicuous Iob 31. 13. If I did despise the cause of my man servant or of my maid servant when they contended with mee hee heard the complaint of his slaves he permitted every man to speake for himselfe before he be hayled to prison to alledge reasons why hee ought not to be carryed thither and the ground of such his supereminent Iustice was ver 14. 15. VVhat then shall I doe when God riseth up and when he visiteth what shall I answer him did not he that made me in the wombe make him and did not one fashion us in the wombe that though he was a Iudge upon earth yet he was a servant to the God of heaven who would enter into judgement with him that though the condition of the Iudge and the Client be different yet their birth is alike God is Father of them both the Clients body molded of dirt and the Iudges not formed of any nobler matter and that both of them had the honor of being formed by the hand of God and both their soules made after his Image as if Iudge Iob and his slaves were Copartners or Tenants in Common that Princely spirit goes on and from ver 16. to ver 25. makes the most incomparable challenge that ever the people heard of If I have withheld the poore from their desire or have caused the eyes of the widow to faile Or have eaten my morsell alone and the fatherlesse hath not eaten thereof for from my youth hee was brought up with me as with a father and I have guided her from my mothers wombe If I have seene any perish for want of cloathing or any poore without covering if his loynes have not blessed me and if hee were not warmed with the fleece of my Sheep if I have lift up my hand against the fatherlesse when I saw
7. and 6. 12. for yee have turned Iudgement into Worme wood and Gall and the fruit of righteousnes into hemlocke Iustice which of it selfe is the most pleasing and profitable thing in the world and which being tempered with mercie cures all the distempers and diseases in a Body politique was corrupted made most bitter to the oppressed and most abominable to God when men are undone by the Law which should preserve them And the Lawes were no better in Habakkuks time 1. 13 14 15. wherefore holdest thou thy tongue when the wicked devoureth the man that is more righteous then he and makest them as the fishes of the Sea as the creeping things that have no ruler over them they take up all of them with the angle they catch them with their net gather thē in their drags therefore they rejoyee and are glad that as in the Sea the greater fishes devoure the lesser so a full pursed malicious plaintiffe or defendant wearies out his poore adversarie and right is conquered by might by meanes of those Angles Netts Draggs and Cobwebs and Rubbs that hang and Iye in the way and allies of Iustice preferring ceremonies formes and shaddowes before truths reallities and substances and Monarchs ever loved such wittie Iudges as could expound the Law that Iudgement should be given as his Imperiall Sacred Majestie desired and where the plaintiffs cause was so cleere that it was too grosse to give Iudgement against him then after Iudgement given for him to have such Councell as should finde a knot in a Bullrush an error in the proceedings to reverse the Iudgement and so the poore creature caught like a fish in a Net or a bird in the snare and the more he struggles to get out the faster hee is ensnared for he must pay costs to the defendant who unjustly keeps away his Land from him and if there be no such net or snare in one Court then he is brought into another because Law and Equity which should be the oearest friends in the world are many times together by the eares and it is hard reconciling them and being upon this subject let but the wisehearted consider what the Lord saith Esay 1. from the ●1 ver to the 18. verbatim so 5. 7. God looked for judgement but behold oppression for righteousnes but behold a cry God will at the length be cloyed as one is cloyed with meat which he loatheth and his stomack goeth against Prov. 27. 7. with the prayers and devotions of any Nation in the world that have not an expedient of quicke sure and cheape Iustice and will disown and spew out such a people though they be never so instant in prayer and by their instancie and importunities hope to speed Matth. 6. 7. yet his soule hateth them he abhores it from his very heart and take but that precious Text of Ier. 22. 15 16. did not thy father eat and drinke and doe Iudgement and Iustice and then it was well with him he judged the cause of the poore and needy then it was well with him was not this to know me saith the Lord Indeed a man would thinke that it should be easier to finde one good man that would even sacrifice his life to reputation and for the good of the people and so one good King for whom the people would even dare to dye Rom. 5. 7. and if Gods people had been left to any kinde of goverment which they should thinke best they might happily have intrusted some good man with a plenartie of power and have expected a blessing therein but Monarchie is against Gods institution and blessings are onely annexed to Gods Ordinances bread wine in the Sacrament are better to worke devotion then pompious toyes Images and Puppets are for carnall Gospellers sayes God when his people choose a King they reject him But does not Peter Paul call an absolut Monarchie Gods Ordinance I deny it for the power Legislative was in the Senate the Romans did never intrust any man by any Legall constitution to doe what he list without the peoples consent in the Senate Neroes cruelties were never with the peoples consent but sayes Paul to the poore Saints there you see what differences there are between the Caesars and the Senators who stand for the peoples Liberties in such a Case those that have the swords in their hands as the Emperors had the Millicia being at his dispose it is best for you to submit to them those to whom Peter wrote being strangers scattered by persecution were not to trouble themselves with State-matters no more then it had been proper for the Dutch or French Congregations that live quietly in London to have troubled themselves with the difference between the late King and the Parliament But may not people live happily in a mixt Monarchy where the King may have a prerogative in many things and yet the people enjoy their Liberties I say not for Monarchy and Liberty are inconsistent and incompatible Indeed an Apprentice that hath a good master may after a sort be said to be free but to speake properly he is a servant so if there should be a good King like a blacke swan the people may be lesse miserable for a season but it cannot hold long for every creature seeks its owne perfection which depending upon the destruction of one another they Act accordingly and therefore for any people to live in quiet it is necessary that they be totally slaves or wholly free and those Kings at first that promise or pretend to be satisfied with a mediocrity of power they doe not intend to rest there but that they may the more easily compasse what remaines and for my owne part when I heare many wise men speake of making peace with the King and tyeing him up so close to his Lawes that he should not be able to hurt the people I thought it was but a kinde of dissimulation to make people beyond Sea thinke him to be a great King and yet in effect to make him stand but for a cypher therefore I do much preferre the Spanish principle before the Scottish the first wishes that he had many lives to loose for his King and that hee had rather loose his life then question the Kings Iustice but the Scots contend for a King of Clouts meerely for the name of a King that must be whipt if he looke but awry keeping their Kings in as much awe as schoole-boyes for any people to live in slavery whenthey may be free is a basenes of spirit and for others to contend for a King and no King I meane a titular King without power not so much power as a High Constable hath to commit a night-walker is rather worse for God that hath punisht grosse profanenes in England and Ireland with rods will punish hypocrisie in Scotland with Scorpious But still versatill witts will be objecting what were all the former Emperors Tirants in the foure Monarchies or if so what
did that which was right in his own eyes Chap. 18. 1. and 19. 1. repeated upon the occasion of the abuse and murder of the Levites Concubine where the Holy Ghost does not meane such a King as Abimelecke or as the Gentiles had to breath life into the Lawes by his Royall assent for such a King the people of Israel never had nor owned in the Land of Canaan not a man that challenged a power unaccomptable to oppresse murder sweare plunder and commit all manner of wickednes without controle such a monster being fitter to carry garbidge to Beares then to live amongst Civill people but there was then no man zealous for Gods glory to fight for Israel and to judge them according to the Law of God therefore the Lord raised up Samuel a singular man for Iustice and mercie 1 Sam. 1. 28. Hanah his Mother lent him the Lord Chap. 3. The Word of the Lord was revealed unto him he dealt faithfully in telling Eli what the Lord commanded thereupon he was established to be a Prophet of the Lord vers 20. Chap. 7. He exhorteth to solemne Repentance then they make him a Iudge vers 6. being so he yet prayed and sacrificed and the Lord discomfited the Philistines by Thunder and Samuel judged Israel all his dayes and went Circuits carrying home Iustice to the peoples houses and built an Altar unto the Lord having ver 12. taken a stone and called the name of it Ebenezer saying hitherto hath the Lord helped us Iudges being to take speciall care that God may be purely worshipped and glorified and that Gods people may not forget the mercie of the Lord in destroying their Enemies Certainly Moses and Samuel were two of the best Iudges that ever were in the world and are to be as patternes and looking-glasses to all Magistrates so that as he is the best Christian that is most like unto Iesus Christ so he is the best Iudge that is most like unto Moses and Samuel Moses Exod. 18. 13. sat to Iudge the people who stood by him from the morning untill the evening he ended the businesse of the day with the day ver 16. sayes he I Iudge betweene one man and another and I make them know the Statutes of God and his Lawes if a Iudge can but teach people the Statutes of God and his Lawes his worke is in a good forwardnes and more then halfe done In that Samuel is commended for telling Eli the destruction of his house it argues that the best part of faithfulnes is to discover the abuses and errors in any profession as being best knowne unto them for the end of the professors and of every ones profession ought to be the same viz. the welfare of the body politique therefore whereas there are many Ieofailes rubs that lie in the Allies of Iustice that poore men are overborne in their righteous causes by full purses which the Reverend Iudges proceeding regularly as they find the course of the Court cannot remedie without the power of Parliament I have seriously thought that oppressions in Courts of Iustice have been spun by the late Courtiers with so fine a threed that few but those that daily meet with it in practise can see it and therefore unlesse it please God to move the hearts of the honorable Iudges in pure love to Iustice to propound fit remedies to the Parliament plaisters that may be large enough for the wound I meane an Act of Retranchement to cut off all unnecessary delayes and expences in matter of Iustice between man and man that poore men may have it for Gods sake the rich for reasonable consideration it will lye very remote from the understandings of many worthy publike spirited men what course to take therein without which all the warres have been but as purgings and vomitings the health of a State consisting in the equallity and harmony of Iustice and all Martiall Iustice is sanctified by the Civill Iustice as for example if one of the Reverend Iudges would make it his suite to the Parliament that a bargaine and sale might be as strong as a fine Recovery that a poore Farmer or Cottager might leave some small portions to his yonger Children without paying one or two yeares purchase for the charge of a fine and recovery what an ease might this be to men of small estates to passe them from one to another and to cut off Intailes by a deed in writing without so much solemnitie and expence if another would set forth the unprofitablenes of Outlawries which are to no purpose but to multiply expence And a third be earnest for an Act to plead the generall Issue in all Actions and at the Assises to insist wholly upon the merit of the Cause whether the money be due or not whether the Plaintiffe have right to the Land or not I am confident it would make sweet musicke in Parliament I do not intend to dispute the lawfulnes of Legall proceedures in point of conscience to them that Iudge them so but in point of comfort at the day of Iudgment let me humbly propound this to those that sit in the seat of Iustice whether it appearing to them that the defendant hath paid the money though it be after the day of payment limited in the Condition or that the money is payd upon a single Bill where payment by Law is no plea or that the Plaintiff in an Ejectment hath a cleere right to the Land but the lease Entry and Ejectment was not proved in due forme of Law or if a wilfull murder be committed and so found by the Iury but there is a word mistaken in the Indictment whereby the murderer escapes for that Assises and so the matter compounded or the prosecutor desists and the Plaintiff in the Ejectment must begin againe having lost his own charges and payd above five pound costs to the defendant who continues the wrong keeps the Lands unjustly from the plaintif the defendant that hath paid the money is forced to fly into Chancery for reliefe where the unjust Plaintiff at Law refuses to appeare or else demurrs because he hath a Iudgement at Law or the witnesses dead and so the poore defendant taken in execution and buried above ground in prison for ten pound where the principle debt was but five pound and that paid though not at the prefixt day and so proved to the Iury I say whether it would not be easier for thē to give an accompt of reforming such errors then otherwise but if by the Parliaments intention in altering the Iudges oathes enjoyning them onely to proceed according to Iustice the Iudge may not of himselfe moderate such like extremities then of what huge concernment must it needs be humbly and earnestly to sollicite for present remedies for what souldier can with comfort fight with a blunt sword it is a great joy to Physicians to cure their Patients but if any dye under their hands when they might by a little
cause to thinke that the Lord was highly displeased with those that would have made peace with the late King read but 1 Sam 12. from the 16. to the 22. and it is all one to say that God is the Author of Monarchy as that he is the Author of sin for the blessed spirit which cannot lye calls it a great wickednes the people call it their evill and Samuel sayes they have done all this wickednes yet feare not for the Lord will not forsake his people for his great names sake because it hath pleased the Lord to make you his people and he promises to pray for them ver 23. as if Monarchy was such a great sin that if it had not beene that the Lord will not truly destroy his owne people Psal 89. 33. Exod. 32. 12. for what would the Egyptians then have said hee would never have pardoned it for a Iust rationall Goverment is one of the things that is of the greatest concernement in the world but is it not said 1 Sam. 15. 9 10 11. that God set up Saul to be King true but no otherwayes then he set up Pharoah to oppresse his own people but Saul and the people spared Agag and the fatlings which was Sauls disobedience and observe for what Saul lost the Kingdome the people will have a King though he erre but in mercy saying it is more noble to save him whom wee may destroy then to kill him whom wee may save alive and the best of the Sheep and the Oxen spared for sacrifice unto the Lord and confessed his sinne v. 24. Saul said unto Samuel I have sinned for I have transgressed the Commandement of the Lord and thy words because I feared the people and obeyed their voice 25. Now therefore I pray thee pardon my sin turne againe with me that I may worship the Lord 26. And Samuel said unto Saul I will not returne with thee for thou hast rejected the Word of the Lord and the Lord hath rejected thee from being King over Israel 27. and as Samuel turned about to goe away hee laid hold upon the skirt of his mantle and it rent 28. and Samuel said unto him the Lord hath rent the Kingdome of Israel from thee this day and hath given it to a neighbour of thine that is better then thou 29. and also the strength of Israel will not lye nor repent for he is not a man that should repent 30. then he said I have sinned yet honour mee now I pray thee before the Elders of my people and before Israel and turne againe with mee that I may worship the Lord thy God 31. so Samuel turned againe after Saul and Saul worshipped the Lord what would not the mercifull God of Israel pardon the King of Israel an error in mercy being but too pittifull to spare a great man that happily might have repented that confest his sin prayed for pardon that he might worship the Lord that prayed againe for pardon of that particular sinne and did worship the Lord accordingly that was annointed 1 Sam. 10. 1. in token of the giftes and graces of Gods spirit and kist by Samuel for congratulation and homage 1 Kings 19. 18. Psal 2. 12. it speaks aloud to me that the Lord was very angry at Monarchicall Goverment and that Kings when they have possest themselves of such a God-like state and Immense powers Incompetible almost with humanitie not only by force and usurpation but by the peoples consent or election as Saul was the people shouted and said God save the King 1 Sam. 10. 24. and Chap. 11. 15. 't is said that the people made Saul King and Saul and all the men of Israel rejoyced greatly yet one offence and that a small matter in comparison though no sin be little that is committed against the great God makes a Monarch to forfeit all his Royalties for when people either for feare or through the vanity or pride of heart will tye themselves by Oathes or Covenant to be in subjection to any man the Scripture tells them that God is angry with them for giving away that libertie which he would have them keep and if they breake their trust never so little they may plucke them downe and choose godly and Iudicious men to rule over them in the feare of the Lord certainly Saul was a Saint in comparison of the pretenders to Monarchy in our dayes He sins in mercy not in cruelty confessed his sin never used any means to be King but hid himselfe as unwilling and unworthy to be King ventured his life most freely for the people was not guilty of Innocent Blood as we read of unles it were in the case of the Priests 1 Sam 22. 19. tooke the newes of his rejection from Samuel patiently acknowledged divine Iustice in all and would not have a man suffer that denyed his title to the Crown as in the place before alledged How unlike was Saul to Charles the last but by Solons law no evill is to be spoken of the dead least quarrells should be immortall He hath appealed to a higher Tribunall where no error will be found in the sentence pronounced against him but all that had a hand and acted in that execution from a consciencious principle to be rid of Tiranny and oppression in discharge of their duties to God and man Not for any sinister end to make themselves great but faithfully to serve their generation will have much cause of rejoycing therein at that great day when the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed and many Iudgments given in severall Courts shall be reversed but that undoubtedly will be confirmed Object But it is strongly objected for Monarchy that God accepted David it is said of him 1 King 15. 4. 5. Nevertheles for Davids sake did the Lord his God give him a lamp in Ierusalem to set up his Son after him and to establish Ierusalem because David did that which was right in the sight of the Lord and turned not aside from any thing that he commanded him all the dayes of his life save onely in the matter of Vriah the Hittite Ans Gods choosing David was no approbation of the Kingly office in him more then in Saul God never said that Davids office was after his own heart unles sin and great wickednes be after Gods heart God gave Saul gifts he had a spirit of Regiment the Israelites were resolved to have a King as the Heathens had whether God would or not let them have one sayes God at their own perills when the King was good and governed them as the good Iudges did and would give an account to the people a reason of all his actions Then God had his will and the people had their wils to have the name of a King but the Nature of good magistrates and certainly I have thought many times upon the late troubles that if I durst have asked any thing in the world contrary to the minde of God
shall we say of the Kings of Israel Iudah where the King is sole Iudge or hath a negative voyce there he is unlimitted and consequently a Tirant that may do wha the pleases and such a one can never have any love of a people of any understanding if the people be Iudges and may make warre or peace without the King then he is no King it is no discretion to be too much in particulars Certainly for the generall Monarchs have beene monsters of men a generation of men and women borne for the scourge and punishment of man kinde whose wickednes and villanies have been of the highest Elevation and Magnitude more forcible to provoke and irritate Gods Iustice to punish the world then the honesty and single-heartednes of the people to incite procure his pardoning mercie and forgivenes Therefore I hope all good people will agree with me that we have great cause to rejoice in that famous peece of Iustice of Ianuary the 30. 1648. acted where most of their miseries had been plotted and as Iosephus records antiquit lib. 18. cap. 6. of one Marsias that after the death of that Tirant Nero or Tiberius Hee made an Oration to the people to write every man upon his doore The Lion is dead and as after the removall of Tarchoni the Romans would not so much as endure the name of a King which comes from the old Saxon word Koning or rather cunning for they learne to catch the prey and devoure men I would intreat my Honored Countreymen to be as wise in this generation as the Romans were before Christs time and instead of plotting to destroy themselves by hunting after new Tirants to consider what the Spirit of God saith in the 19. of Ezek from v. 1. to the 9. v. Let them say unto the children of the late King what your mother a Lionesse she lay downe among Lions shee nourished her whelps among young Lions and shee brought up one of her whelps it became a young Lion and it learned to catch the prey it devoured men but when she saw that her hope was lost shee tooke another of her whelps and made him a young Lion and hee went up and down among the Lions he became a young Lion learned to catch the prey and devoured men then the nations set against him on every side and spread their net over him he was taken in their pit and they put him in chaines and imprisoned him that his voice was no more heard upon the mountaines of Israel how admitable and adorable is the fulnes of Scripture as if it had been calculated for the Meridian of England Zedekiah was the last King of Iudah the whelpe was Iehoahaz who was King for three moneths only 2 Kings 30. ver 31. he was taken in a pit or net a phrase importing the manner of catching Lions of whom Ieremie Prophesied that he should never returne to see his native Countrey Ier. 22. 10. the other whelp was Iehoiakim who went up and downe craving aid from the King of Egypt to make him King which was the cause of his ruine the roaring of the whelpe made a great noyse by their cruell and tirannicall commands but they were taken in strong holds being dead were buried with the buriall of an Asse Ier. 22. 18. thrown out upon a dunghill It is not I but the Spirit of God in the holy Scriptures that calls a King that challenges a power against the publique judgment of the people in a nationall Counsell and his Children a Lion and his whelps the Lord knowes my heart that I beare no more malice to any one herein mentioned or intended then I did when I lay in my cradle and though I should expect no more mercy from them then there is milk in a male-Tiger if the Lord should suffer mee to fall into their hands as hee justly might in regard of my sins though I trust for his mercies sake hee will not yet I doe freely pray for blessings upon them that if it be the will of God those Fatherlesse Children which are not fit to be Kings upon earth may be Heires of Heaven to a Kingdom that cannot be moved and if it shall please God to give repentance to any of them that with Achan they shall confes their sin and give glory to God learne to governe themselves and renounce all vaine and sinfull pretences I should be an humble Advocate for them that Mercy might be honorably seated on the right hand of Iustice and that there might be not onely a competent but an eminent exhibition allowed them for their support for I could heartily wish that such as professe Christ would dye more to vaine Phylosophy Col. 2. but live to morall Phylosoply if it were but to learne this lesson of blessing them that curse us and doeing the good of Iustice against the evill of injustice because for any man to lay aside his Iustice is to deprive himselfe of reason to become a brute Iustice being neerer of kin to every Magistrate then his child or brother as being part of his soule but Iustice without Mercie is crueltie and Mercie without Iustice is meere fatuitie FINIS Pray excuse the want of a Greeke Character and the Errata viz. OMitted in the title page these words viz. With some humble petitions and observations interweaved concerning Cheap and speedy Iustice with the Authors hopes above his feares of happy dayes In the same page leave out late in the Epistle read in their annotations for breach read branch read the Law must be set for party read Deputy for records r. retards for leave it read beare it for intertolares read intercalares for it is not r. Is it not for one Act r. an Act. r. Ima●es r. seemes r. a just r. as the defendant r. I scarce for flocke r. stocke r. many families preserved which would r. breaden r. will not doe it r. may seeme r. as if godly r. would sit r. straitned r. any time r. meanest souldier for begin r. begun for have been called home r. may be called home for prudencie r. precedencie a line left out r. I doe not know that he hath left his peere behind him fol. 32. for head r. hard f. 52. for direct r. dwelt f. 57. for Paul r. Saul f. 63. for contrited r. conceited fol. 82. r. preserved f. 90. r. captivity f. 92. Princes fo 96. r. Author of f. 97. r. not only to the death f. 139. r. when I heard f. 131. r. Tarquiu Animum verbi Divini studi osum Reformatio Legum Vivimus Morimur Pauca recensentes facile pronunciant Cura anima rum est cura curarum Erudimini Dr. st Monos arkein Revel 9. 11. Pauper Calvinus multos fecit divites Prudentia Humana Capitalis Inimica Christi Altius patibulum Habemus legem c. Celerem Iustitiam non Iustitium That Fox Herod Magno Conatu nugas agere Spiritum Regiminis non regenerationis Gloria Papoe successoris est rescindere Acta predecessoris deleatur nomen Calvini E pessimo Cane ne catulus quidem relinquendus Igni traduntur lege Papistarum Habetis confitentes reos Exeat aula qui vult esse pins Non unitum sed unum Tedneken o Leon