Selected quad for the lemma: cause_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
cause_n great_a lord_n time_n 4,349 5 3.3765 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A93104 Animadversions upon Iohn Lilburnes two last books, the one intituled Londons liberty in chaines discovered. the other An anatomy of the Lords cruelty. Published according to order. Sheppard, S. (Samuel); Sheppard, Simon, 1646 (1646) Wing S3173; Thomason E362_24; ESTC R201220 9,950 15

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

for your standing up for the rights and priviledges of the people I honor and esteem you but for your superbious and unwarrantable carriage to your superiors I contemn and despise you the subjects of this Kingdome have been a long time enslaved and like foolish prisoners played with their fetters it hath pleased God now to open a way to their infranchisement O! let it be done in a fair and regular manner let us not be so unmannerly to ca●ve to our selves since there are those appointed who are both able and willing to to distribute unto us and let us not while we go about to enjoy the immunities of Magna Charta break and infringe Gods Commandements And now Sir for all your great skil in the Law I must tell you that you are very grosly mistaken in one point which you recite page the 10. of your Anotomy of the Lords Tyranny Where you say To speak truly the Parliament are not nor ought not to medle with causes betwixt party and party that are decidable at the common law they being the supream Iudicature of the Kingdom and the last refuge to appeal to in case of injustice elsewhere and so may properly be called Iudge of Iudges rather then Iudge of particular causes and parties I pray Sir let me demand of you one thing what renowneth a King more although to speak truly he is appointed by God only to look after the good of the people in general to appoint over them prudent and faithful Governors and to see them execute Justice and Judgement yet I say what hath renowned them more then to bee so tenderly zealous over the welfare of their subjects as to deign to fill up the seat of Justice with their Persons and to hear the particular complaints of each peculiar subject and indeed Equity commandeth it should be their constant imployment but that the possibility thereof is taken away by reason if it were so they must with Moses sit each day from morning til night and yet the people depart unheard so is it with that great Counsel the Parlament of England it is for their everlasting Fame and Honor to decide pettie causes whereby they shaw their pious care of the Commons happiness now this sometimes they leave undone not because it doth not belong to them to hear private causes but because they are not able to decide affairs of State and private affairs between man and man also therefore is your Argument waved that it belongeth not to the Parliament to hear private causes Again I wonder you should cast such an Aspersion on the Lords as you do in the 14. page of you Book intituled An anotamy of the Lords Tyranny you say The Lords have been the principal instruments to engage this Kindome in a bloody Warr That they set us a fighting to unhorse and dismount our old Riders and Tyrants that so they might get up and ride themselves Where in saying so O how much do you mistake your selfe it is evident to the whole kingdome that the Lords have been the Composers and not the fomenters of the common troubles had they sided with the Malignant and Royall partee I fear it had not been with us as now it is but it fareth with you as with the Poet Homer who never writ well of any whose actions were never so meriting that disturbed his Country so you delight to say the worst you can and to Maligne any be they never so innocent that have taken part any way against you which is in you a very great over-sight Again I esteem you very incorrigible that you should desire as in the Anatomy of the Lords Tyranny pag. 19. That you hope the Honourable House when they have judged your cause will not onely cause the Lords to restore the charges you have been at during the time of your Imprisonment but will also grant you ample repairations for your hard and unjust sufferings Your sufferings your selfe occasioned by your sturdy and imperious carriage to the Lords who you not onely resisted but reviled and is it any reason that when a man shall wilfully set fire on his house and goods his neighbours should be constrained to make him reparation I trow not so is it in your case your own obstinacy perhaps hath impoverished your state and therefore the Lords must make up the breach and restore unto you the monies your folly hath caused you to expend for which there is no reason or the least colour but you seem to urge some reasons in page the 20. why it should be so where you say That the Kings constant custome was to provide lodging dyer and to pay the Fees of all those he committed to the Tower but the Lords for no cause at all having committed you thither put you to pay all the vast extravagances and Fees Alas sir the reason thereof might be this The Lords know what a numerous multitude of Sectaries were your Idolaters and they in not providing for your entertainment in the Tower would put them to the test and thereby would give you occasion to find your friends indeed from your friends in shew and all this was for your information in that point and you have found during your imprisonment in the Tower very much accommodation from those of your society have neither wanted as is credibly reported for either good cheer or wine a certain Symptome of their affection towards you and now it being fairely hoped by you as perhaps it may certainly happen that you shall be delivered out of bonds O that God would put it into your heart to do as you once protested to the Lieutenant of the Tower upon condition he would admit you the Society of your wife and friends to wit that you would not write a line in the way of controversie which would be for your exceeding great availe but I fear it will be with you as with those superstitious sea-men who being in an hideous and threatning storme in danger to loose their lives with their fraught make solemn protestation to some Saint that if they will appease the fury of the tempest and allot them safe harbour they will offer up to their shrine large gifts which notwithstanding when the waves are silent and they arive on shore they forget to do so it is to be feared that you when you are again at liberty and injoy those immunities you did ere your confinement will be the same man still and steer a course as irregular as ever before but I hope the Lord will guide your heart better and quiet your troublesome spirit and unite your heart to his Church and people that now at length we may have peace and union among our selves and not suffer us while we Tithe Mint and Cummin to leave undone the more necessary duties not suffer us while we are busied to finde fault and to urge needless disputations to forget those duties necessary for the saving of our souls that we may no longer be a scorn to our neighbouring Nations who clap their hands and rejoyce to behold our divisions and distractions hoping thereby to make themselves Lords over us but he that ruleth the heavens and the earth I hope will so Order the Councels and consultations of our happy Parliament that by them as his Instruments he will settle his true worship in this Kingdome and cause the Natives thereof to injoy peace truth and happinesse FINIS
ANIMADVERSIONS UPON Iohn Lilburnes Two last Books the one Intituled Londons Liberty in Chaines discovered the other An anatomy of the Lords Cruelty Published according to Order LONDON Printed for Joseph Pots and are to be sold at his shop in the Old Bayly neer the Sessions house 1646. To Lieutenant Collonel John Lilburne SIR I Had thought that you like the generous Mastive would have passed by and taken no notice of the snaps and snarles of such Curs as I am for so you are pleased to tearm me in the ●9 page of your empty Pamphlet intituled Londons Liberty in chains discovered where your Ignorance saith that you look to be vilified and reproached as you have been formerly by such barking Curs as are S. Shipard who during the time of your close confinement nibled at your heels but though it was your pleasure venerable Sir to bestow an Epithite upon me only worthy to be annexed to your own name to wit BARKING CVR in so saying although perhaps you know it not Obscurus est tuus serm● although I and the world know Dicis non aliud quám merum mendacium yet herein you perhaps bestowed on me not so evil a tearm as you imagined for you resemble me to those harmless currs that bark yet bite not wherefore for so saying I am something engaged to you but for your own part you are a man I had almost said Cur that not only bark but bite too and by that means you have proved the PROVERB of no validity which saith Canes qui multum latrant raro mordent that is Dogs that bark much seldome bite You have bitten many men Mechanick men great men yea Peers of the Land you have bitten the Noble Earl of Manchester Colonel King and others and you know that Dogs teeth are something venemous and if drawing salves be not suddenly applyed the parties wound so bitten wil wrancle and fester You also know that a Dogs tongue hath the vertue to heal also with licking the wound which useful property although for ought I know you may so much degenerate from your kind as to want yet I rather incline to conceive the evil of your mind wil not suffer your tongue to do that good for which it was given you For most men know that you have wounded and bitten many but no man can remember that you ever endeavored to heal any or to make them amends for your injuries But to return from whence I digrest Although as I said before it pleased you to shew from what gentle stock you came by your gentle tearm Curr yet why have you curtail'd and excorciated my name saying S. Shipard when my name is Simon Shepard I cannot perswade myself you should be so meanly lettered as not to have some insight in the Art of spelling although you have ere now been found faulty in that kind by Mr Prynne and others I rather think you did it on purpose reserving the meaning thereof to your self for what reasons I care not but Sir by this means I am fully satisfied concerning a point which Ptolomei averreth to wit that from the benevolent or malevolent positure of the Sun and Moon at each others ascending sign at time of birth is discerned the love and hatred twixt any two and this by your means without seeing of Lillie But Sir forasmuch as hereafter you may again have occasion to use my name and that you may no more mistake in setting down i for e I shal here insert both your name and my own for those that shal read this Letter to judge I perswading my self it will go through many hands ere it arrive at yours you and I wil imagine a multitude of spectators while we throw the DODOCHEDRON DIE while we take to pieces and ransack our names and beleeve it Sir the ANAGRAM of a NAME is worthy of observation it often being as useful to certifie as the calculating of a Nativity I shal presume first to begin with yours and afterwards shal insert my own JOHN LILBVRNE Anagram Loe J-Burne hie Behold the Anagram sayes you burne high And not alone you make the Kingdome f●ie Now Sir in recompence of your favorable mitigation in tearming me only a barking Curr whereas if it had pleased you to have been rigorous you might have rancked mee with your self and Overton and have said biting Cur therefore Deign to accept of an Accrostick on your own name each letter thereof placed is as capital forme as where you were stiled DEFENDER OF THE FAITH Pray read An Accrostick Sonnet I whilome was a Warrior bold On Horseback charg'd the Foe Having men under me inrol'd Now ah it is not so Loo now because I Libels fram'd In Prison I am laid Lyons are my Associates tam'd Because to much I said Unto mee Independants Bow Reverencing mee as one Nere would Conformity Allow Even as Overton Thus much Sir for your sollace and delight Now Sir I shal insert my own name with an Anagram which if it shal distaste pardon my ignorance of the rellish of your pallate SIMON SHEPPARD Anagram No man pries headiness in me None ere abus'd me in this Kind but Thee For ne're no man pry'd headiness in Mee Yet cause Thy heady giddiness I blam'd Am I by thee vile fool a Cur-dog nam'd Accrostick Sonnet Since Thou O Lilburne angry art In truth dear Sir I care not for 't My mind 's not sorry that I fram'd Or that I wrote the Famer's fam'd Nor shal I bee by wisemen blam'd Shut up Thy Press and Rayl no more Having no matter now in store Except old Statutes for to cite Peecing Thy Books with infinite Articles Orders Proclamations Rerages Dammages Taxations Desist from such like fond Relations Now Sir although your splenitick humor shal perswade you the next time you mention my name to cal me biting Curr yet I hope you wil write my name more properly then before and say Shepard and not Shipard Moreover Sir I shal entreat you to take not see that though my weapon hath been hitherto a pen and not a pike yet the wise have reported that a Scholler may sooner become a Soldier than a Soldier a Scholler and although I hope you have Repented of your Rigorous Proceedings during the time you were a Commander imployed to vindicate a Righteous Cause yet I wonder how your mind assisted you to twit the Royal Party bloody and barbarous I confesse and yet your own conscience not to whisper you in the ear and tell you how cruel you your self were during the time you had a Commission I shal instance one tale to you related to me by a faithful honest man whose neer friend one Mr William Hagar surprized by your soldiers as be was walking in a garden the place I need not name I suppose you wel remember it and rifting him to his bare skin drove him before them ten miles til he came in your presence who were so void of humanity that instead of comforting a