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A81181 A cup of sack prest forth of the best grapes gathered the last vintage, in the loyall converts new distempered vineyard. Which by frequent using, will make an old lame capon-eater, able to shake his legs, and dance as roundly and as nimbly; as a boy of 18. years of age. Published for the good of those that are so distempered through malignant humours; who may be cured at a cheap rate. 1644 (1644) Wing C7597; Thomason E21_7; ESTC R14452 5,224 8

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since in a Sermon that they might be ashamed so to dishonour that Reformation they intend to seeke by being so deboist The next fort of this distempered wine which is Num. 14. makes the loyall convert maudlin drunke and he falls a crying and sayes Oh woe is me what shall I doe why what is the matter man why we have made many complaints against the independents and cannot be relieved and we are afraid to complaine any more Why what is the matter what doe they doe to you Why they challenge us to despute with us in the open Churches the most learned of us all And indeed now I remember the man speakes truth they have bin often challenged Major Lilborne challenged the Archbishop himselfe to dispute with him And it should not be a shame for a Prelate to be pusled in dispute with a lawman But is this all that troubles him and puts him in such a distemper no he saith that when they are come home from hearing of a Sermon they use to pray to God for a blessing at their own houses or lodging on what they have heard Indeed this may make our Enemies weak for our prayers doth us good but them 〈◊〉 prayers of the Church do not meane of the separation only I though not exclude them neither is a strong Bulwarke against the Popish 〈◊〉 Prelaticall Enemy But to coole his stomake he mixes the water of Dow river with his distempered wine and tell us of prophinations there which through the great distemper he was in if he be guilty of God forgive him no doubt they are wicked people in all parts of the Kingdome but your Priests Jesuits and fryers sprinkile their holy water at Masse among you every day and there will a speedy course taken with those that are ●ound so superstituous here Then he tells us that many have been convicted of blasphemy which is very true and Mr White hath put out one centry and there are almost ten times as many upon record and yet these are those he calls learned and Religious ministers which are plundred sequistred imprisoned and is there not just reason for it for they have not had the least share in the raising of these Wars in bringing the guilt of all the blood thereby shed in this Kingdome since the Warres began But still weeping he cryes out against heresie for the Papists call Protestants hereticks Oh they turn Popery out of doores and we shall go for company or at least be forced to shroud our selves in corners as the sectaries did before Oh the fear of this goes to the very heart of them that whereas they thought to have thrust out the Protestant Religion and all power put into their hands and to have setled Popery that now they are not only disappointed but we have hope to not only settle but Reforme the true Protestant Religion in great purity this breakes the heart of them for now their hopes are lost The next taste is num 15. in which the Loyall convert undertakes to tell us some though weak grounds of upholding Popery and Prelacy 1. That Episcopasie is a government coetaneous with this your almost out-dated Religion But those Bishops were nothing coetaneous with our Prelates till Popery made them so In Phaochases time they began 2. That the rubricke of Common Prayer is a booke established by many Acts of Parliament So is the Masse booke 3. To be positived obedient to the King is a duty commanded by Gods own mouth must we obey him if he command against Gods commands 4. That the Clergie are the Ministers of peace therefore not to preach for blood yet they began this warre by contribution to the King against the Scots 5. That those who have sworne canonicall obedience to their ordinary ought not to take the Covenant against Popetry and Prelacy as if the Prelates league was more viled then our Covenants with God which binde us to it 6. Those that have taken the oath of Allegiance and the Protestations ought not to resist the power of their Prince which power is in Parliament and therefore the Prelates abused themselves and there owne actions are hereby to be censured These be his grounds wherupon he would traduce us to beleeve that we are bound to submit to the Papists now in Arms against us But God hath taught us better things and to him wil we trust Then comming to numb 16. the destempered man having well drunk and it may be slept upon it too raiseth us his sences with a fresh cup of sacke which makes him prattle like a nimble Lawyer pleading the Popish cause of the Enemy even they who one and acknowledge the doctrine of the Church of Rome which gives up to understand that some have a dispensation whereby there publike acknowledgement for the present is not exacteed at Rome well the loyall favourite pleades hard in their behalfe 1. That they may not be banished because they have the Kings power and he that resisteth the power shall receive damnation Rom. 13. and to get the Kings power is to make him guilty of pergerie A strange cup of wine and yea this was brude at Oxford by the Loyall convert surely since he turned Papist 2. That the Papists may not be disinherited because there is no law for it yet there is a law because they rise and joyne in Armes against the Parliament 3. That to take away the lives of those that are Romish Catholiques is murder what may the Papists rob spoile steale kill raise and continue Warres against us and to kill them in opposing them herein is this murther and is this that which they do for the defence of the Protestant Religion yet this is the doctrine preached at Oxford and printed there by Leonard Lichfield Printer to the Vniversity but a weeke or two since Titled the new istempered Frst written by the Author of the Loyall convert And therefore to conclude making some use of his own words where O where are you most Royall Soveraigne where O where are you the great Counsells and grave senators of this fading Kingdom where O where are you the learned Colledge of the assembly of divines where O where are you renowned citizens of London where O where are you the great Armies of the Kingdome where O where are you all the Protestants of this languishing Island Are ye all fallen asleep we perish and is there none to awake you open your eyes unlocke your eares and molifie your hearts Behold Behold the miseries of your land and if compassion be not banished from the earth pitie O pitie the approaching ruines of this your groaning this your native Kingdom Hearen O harke to the sad complaints against these proul and insolent Papists and prelats And if your hearts be not of Adamant relent and take speedy care for the setling of this disquieted state Let the breath of this distempered Kingdome contracted into one extream sigh move you to the speedy endeavours of a timely cure examine her distempers Enquire into her constitution and purge out that unhappy popery which doth so disquiet us Let not popery crush us to pieces nor the children of your mother starve in the land of bread and let not the foundation of your naturall Kingdome be longer dabled in unnaturall blood to uphold them Turne O turne your eyes upon her breaches and let not strangers Lord it in her gates how many English Irish French and Flemish papists and of other nations among us seek our ruine For the mercies of that God which hath been merciful to you let not millions of Protestants be murdered and massacred by them with millions of poor children that know not their right hand from their left suffer not your wives and daughters to be ravished and deflowred but joyne as one man against the Common Enemy For the Lord and for his cause Vp Protestants the Papists be upon you FINIS