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A87881 The observator observed, or, Animadversions upon observations on the history of King Charles wherein that history is vindicated, partly illustrated, and severall other things tending to the rectification of some publique mistakes, are inserted : to which is added, at the latter end, the observators rejoinder. L'Estrange, Hamon, 1605-1660. 1656 (1656) Wing L1188A; ESTC R179464 41,478 51

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how that hope hath failed me shall be my next enquiry The total of my lapses and slips amount to eight no more if I have faithfully collected them as I hope I have and did really so intend but lest one or two should be casually omitted I allow them to be 10. And being so I appeal to thy ingenuous candor gentle Reader first whether in describing of at least a thousand circumstances it be not a greater miracle that I mistook in but 10 then that I erred so many Secondly whether 10. errors in such circumstances wherein the fame of no one man the interest of no one cause is either damnify'd or advantaged be ground sufficient for so much clamour so loud outcry as would gladly raise the Country yea the whole Nation against me Lastly whether it would not have represented the Observator to be a man of more Christian yea Moral Principles had he vivâ voce by conference or by letters hinted to me these mistakes as fit considerations for a second impression Indeed the last is needlesse he having so fair and frequent opport unities of doing the first True it is acquaintance there is none between us if acquaintance be taken for familiarity but acquainted with my person he is and I with his so well as he knows me perfectly without a Nomenclator How can it be otherwise conjectured when the truth is we have met in London at the same shop I may safely say neer an hundred times and to speak more close to the point not lesse then ten times not only after the publication of my History but after he had to my knowledge perused it and before he had entred one line of his Observations into the Presse All which do evidently declare that it was not my information but a dear and precious quarrel he desired Having given you this particular of mine own failings I proceed to those of the Observator himself which I have not only said but proved to be Errours Page 64. Denying the paper found in Feltons hat Page 7. Concerning Peter Baro and the Margarets Professorship 3. Page 86. Saying Standing at Gloria Patri was never obtruded Page 114. Concerning the Sabbath 2. Page 122. Concerning the setting forth of the Ships 2. Page 176. Sir Edward Dering for the Lord Digby Page 215. Archbishop of Canterbury voted an Incendiary Decemb. the 16th for the 17. Page 238 Concerning the taking of the Protestation Page 240. Concerning the Bishops sent to the King the Primate and the Irish Articles 6. The total whereof is 18. in 17 printed sheets almost two for one escaped from me in 70. which yet were dispensable in any man were they but circumstantiall as mine but when one of them tends to the very destruction of sacred worship as that of the Sabbath and another to the defamation of one of the most glorious Lights of our Church These are unpardonable faults were not both the snfferers thereby above his obloquy In this Catalogue I have forborn such mistakes as relate imediately to my self I have not minded him of his most notorous corrupting and falsifying my Preface nor of his wilfull mistaking other words for mine which cost him a sixth part of his Pamphlet nor yet his detorting wrestling mine owne words to his fancy against their naturall mind and inclination Things counter to the ingenuity he so pretends to in his Epistle made to me to the ancient mode of simplicity to which I wish he would conform hereafter Therefore gentle Reader when thou seest him next after my hearty commendations present him from me with his Distich again a little vary'd Vse thou old vertues I shall forbear New words not fitted to the ear Addenda to the Observator Observed PAge 6. l. 8. After the end of the Paragraph But if any demand what made King James so stout an adversary of the Arminians the Observator hath an answer ready minted an exceeding good one I assure you and for which the Arminians have reason to thank him Reason of State he saith it was and King-Craft how so because the Arminians were united into a party under the command and countenance of Olden-Barnevelt and by him used to undermine the power of Maurice then Prince of Orange so then by the Observators own inference Reason of State and King-Craft will not tolerate the Arminians in a Commonwealth and if so they well deserved the name of a Faction as he page 73. most aptly stileth them as men having as strong a tang of the Jesuites in Practical as Dogmatical concernments and indeed a Faction a turbulent seditious Faction the united Provinces found them all along from the first of their spawning there more especially in that wicked conspiracy of Barnevelt who suffered most condignly upon that very account 1619 and in no less damnable and hellish plot about three years after wherein the States sitting in Councel at the Hague and after them all other anti-Arminian Magistrates were destined to slaughter but this plot aborting and miscarrying the next was to murder the Prince of Orange to seise upon the Magazines to displace all Officers both martial and civil and commit an horrid Massacre upon all of different belief all which was by a blessed providence discovered and prevented four of the principal conspirators hanged and the rest some imprison'd others banisht This was the deportment of the Observators Faction in the Netherlands an argument they are none of the best Subjects be their Doctrine as Orthodox as they pretend Page 10. l. Penult At this mark But seeing the Observator so disliketh this impulsive of Irregularity I will take it again by exchange afford him another for it which though not so publiquely declared yet was by knowing men in those affairs beheld as the real and genuine cause of this Commission and that was the Archbishops refusal to license Dr. Sibthorp's Book But be the impulsive to it what it will sure I am Sr. Henry Martin told the Bishops they would incur a praemunire did they act by this Commission and that Legally the Commission which should impower them ought to proceed from the Archbishop not from the King to whose advice the Bishops did so far listen as they superseded and forbore to act untill a while after they obtained leave and Commission from the Archbishop FINIS A Catalogue of some Books Printed for and sold by Edw. Dod at the Gun in Ivie-Lane AN entire Commentary upon the whole Old Testament in 4. Vol. in Fol. wherein the diverse Translations and Expositions literal and mystical of all the most famous Commentators both Ancient and Modern are propounded examined and judged of for the more full satisfaction of the studious Reader in all things which compleateth the Authors Commet on the whole Bible a Work the like to which hath never yet been published in English by any man written by John Mayer Doctor in Divinty The Expiation of a Sinner in a Commentary on the Epistle to the Hebrews Fol. by T. L. D. D. a learned and Reverend Divine The Justification of a sinner being the main argument of S. Pauls Epistle to the Galathians Fol. Written by the Author of the Expiation of a sinner Thomae Loshintonii Logica analytica de principiis Regulis usu Rationis Recta 8. The Angel Guardian proved by the light of Nature beams of Scripture and consent of many Ancient and Modern Writers untainted with Popery by Robert Dingley Master of Arts late Fellow of Magdalen Colledge in Oxford 8. America or an exact description of the West-Indies especially of those Provinces under the dominion of Spain in which not only the Nature and Climate of the place with the Commodities it affordeth is fully described but also plain and full directions given for the right ordering of the same so as to fit them for the use of the Inhabitants and also for transportation the like never yet published in English faithfully related by N. N. Gent. in 8. Natures Paradox or the Innocent Impostor a pleasant 〈◊〉 Hystory translated out of French into English by Major John Wright 4. Poems Songs and Sonets written by Richard Lovelace Esq 8. The Life and death of Mr. Carter with other Tracts written by his son Mr. John Carter Minister of Gods Word in the City of Norwich 8. Directions for writing of true English by Richard Hodges in 8. The Reign of King Charles faithfully and impartially delivered and disposed into Annals by H. L. Esq Fol. Judgement and Mercy or the plague of Frogs inflicted removed delivered in nine Sermons by that late Reverend and Learned Divine Mr. Josias Shute 4. The Safe way to Glory in several Exercises of General use By William Smith Mr. Ar. R. of Cotton in Suff. See the Additions * See the Additions Ephes. 4. 15. {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} Augustine Epist. 162. Epist. 200. Asellio Chrysost. in Isai. Hom. 2. Catechist Doct. p. 259. Page 245. Adv. Pelagian l. 1. Ad Ruffin Patercl l. 2. Elenchus Mat. Autidot Lincoln Edit. 2. p. 157.