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A28677 A letter from St. Omers to a friend in London B. B. 1681 (1681) Wing B36; ESTC R12370 5,869 4

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it s no small confidence the Church reposes in you in sending you of this Blessed Errand and having these secrets imparted to you oh betray not your trust remember you have sworn secrecy in the receipt of the holy Eucharist and now to divulge those secrets you are intrusted withal indispensably concludes under a state of Damnation you are sent upon the great Affairs of the Church and one principal duty incumbent upon you is to insinuate among the Hereticks that there was no design against them by the Catholicks you will meet with abundance of credulous Souls among them that will believe you and so the work will be the less difficult Former Success pleads for farther Attempts a perswasion the discover'd design was but a fiction makes a future the more feasable when we are pittied as sufferers for our Innocence we cannot easily be thought Conspirators You will find those good natured Souls even amongst the Hereticks themselves that will joyn in the Consort in crying out no Plot no Plot except it be a Presbyterian one which opinion we shall suddenly take care to confirm and that it was the indigency of the Witnesses that invented all this Bustle about a Popish Plot these are a sort of Men that are in their kind servicable to our Interest although they don't design it so that care must be taken to nourish this Notion among them and not to despise this day of small things In all your publick Discourses Usher in something about the Procedures of the Parliament and Represent them as odious as possible you can to lessen their Esteem amongst the People let 41 and 42 bear a great Part in your Discourse and give out that their present Propensions are to repeat those Practices devote your selves to compose Pamphlets against those pestilent sort of Men Roger Lestranges elaborate Pieces will furnish you with Sentences to sute your purpose scatter Reports that most of the House of Commons in the late Parliaments were Fanaticks and that their Votes were highly arbitrary and illegal and that their Phanatical Principles was appearant by making War upon the conforming Clergy in their ordering a Bill to be brought in against Pluralities which must be represented as the Prodromus to Hudibrasses Cry no Bishop by this you will secure the superior Clergy on your side especially those of London most of which keep their Country Livings as the Citizens their Houses but above all admire at their Presumption about the Bill of Exclusion and that their intermedling with a thing of this Nature implies a great Heigth of Sedition and Faction in their Body that every Member that voted in favor of it needed a Pardon stampt by Creation as much as my Lord Danby That it was more proper for them to consult the best way to make Tangier tenable and the raising of Mony for the Rebuilding af Charles and Henrietta Forts This is a work also of indispensable necessity they being the great Bull-wark against our Designs which must by means be battered down before we can make any considerable Progress in those various Works that now are under our Management This hath likewise been the continual Imployment of Catholiks in that Kingdom with no small Success so that some Sort of People question whether there be any such Constitution in the Government and others to wish there were not You must also mightily inveigh against the Dissenters from the established Church among them and lament the Negligence of Subordinate Majestrates in not putting the Laws in Execution against these Sort of People commend those Clergy Men most whose zeal leads them that way oppose the Union of different Opinions as a thing unattainble and that it proceeds from a spirit of faction to design it that it will be the way to ruine the conforming Party cry out of dangers impendant from the Presbiterians against the Covernment This must be effectually done for it is from those Sort of Men that poor Catholicks have of late suffered most exstreamly they being most of wallerising Spirits by this you will strangely amuse and divert the Hereticks hot pursuits against the Catholicks whilst they are in their full Cry against one another our Designs may go on the more smoothly and unsuspectedly and the Laws against us lie down on 't for Designs cannot be so well managed in a Prison this hath likewise been experienced to have been mighty succesful since the Discovery of that glorious Project In a word make it your Business to expose all as infamous Persons and Enemies to the King and Kingdom that oppose the Interest of the Catholick Cause more especially the petitioning Lords of the Monmouth faction who shall in due time have that Retribution for their Pains as will make them Repent of being such great Sticklers for Protestantism I thought Sir to transcribe this Paper for your information that you might see how innocent these Men are as to a Plot and what well wishers they are to the present Constitution as a traiterous Peer lately professed upon the Scaffold and how infinitely they are wrong'd that upon the Evidence of such Persons their Lives should be taken away when their endeavors are not to justifie their pretended Innocence but to conceal their devilish Guilt and to facilitate the perpetration of their hellish Designs against the Protestant Interest nothing being more common than when their Company corresponds to justifie their Conspiracies against the English Government and yet in Protestant Countries pretend to abhor any such Proceedings as much as Sir Francis Withins does petitioning The Priests here was strangely exhillerated at the Receipt of the Lord Stafford's Speech to find that he finished his testimony with a Lye in his mouth for they looked upon his Lordship as staggering in his belief as to the Doctrine of equivocation and had a mind to outlive Treason as well as B but being constant to the death hath obtained with the Rest to be privately Laughed by the subtle Priests to suffer himself to be so imposed upon when as they are not afraid to whisper that he knew himself guilty and it was pleasantly expressed by a Papist that his Lordship Rode to heaven upon a Jesuits back The Priests of late are mightily transported at their English Intelligence and say it will shortly appear to the world that the Popish Plot was no other but a Republican and Presbyterian Design for all the Gentry in England are accounted as Presbyterians that are vigorous against the Papal interest and they openly Report that things shall be reduced to those circumstances before it be long that those which will talk of a Popish Plot must do it in their Closets and that a grave was making in England wherein the Protestants themselves should be forced to bury it what these things mean is obvious to every ones understanding which God of his infinite mercy prevent You cannot Sir imagine with what inveteracy of Spirit they mention the English Nation and that the Crown hath been usurped by all Protestant Kings since the Marian days and that they are therefore in Conscience obliged to endeavour to recover what the Church hath lost by that means and this they will by no means call Treason nor allow to be unjustifiable to which degree of confidence I am informed they are almost armed in England there you have them in pretence siding with the motions of the Court in opposition to those of the Parliament though implacable enemies to both likewise in appearance joyning with the Conformists against the Nonconformists though equally by them are hated for here they are manifest and the men appear as they are nothing being more frequent then to hear them mention his Sacred Majesty with an irreverence not to be pardoned with such villifying Expressions that would amount to the highest affront if given to an ordinary Person So Sir that which naturally Results from the whole is this that the great Design of these sort of men is to Ruin that Kingdom and to divide in order to the effecting thereof as a Roman Catholick once told me in Brussels it was worth twenty years purchase after the annuity of St. Pauls Deanery to find that good Dean leave off his heats against Popery in such a Juncture as this and worry and tare his own Irenicum till he made it cry out that Separation was both mischievious and unreasonable thereby surprising the poor Dissenters who had a great affection for him to find the good Doctor loose the Scent of Popery in the midst of the Plot and fall upon them Sir this little account of the Disposition and temper of these Persons we may see the absolute Necessity for Protestants to live in the supreamest Exercises of Love and good Affection tho they may dissent in some particulars Punctillioes in Judgement in reference to render them the more capable to withstand the common Enemy of both their civil and religious Priviledges why should two or three Ceremonies be the occasion of raising Feuds and animosities between them certainly Men are exstreamly to blame that think they owe not the Debt of common Love to one another where these small Differences are found between them there being no original Cause in the things themselves to produce a dividedness of affection therefore it must be attributed not to the Religion of the Protestant Profession although considered in those different ways of worship now in England that there is not a spirit of love and kindness as there ought to be which is so absolutely requisite under their present Circumstances but to the ill Tempers and Passions of Men the evil Tendency of which I the more apprehend in having this Prospect of the English Affairs in these Popish Counties Thus Sir I have given you this small Account of Matters as a Testimony of my Obedience I shall still have a Sence of my Duty in imparting any thing else of moment that may occur in this or of any other Nature I am Sir your most obedient Servant B. B. St. Omers June the 5th Stil Nov. 1681. LONDON Printed for Langley Curtis at the Goat on Ludgate-Hill