Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n daughter_n king_n marry_v 7,147 5 8.7437 4 false
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
A01009 Purgatories triumph ouer hell maugre the barking of Cerberus in Syr Edvvard Hobyes Counter-snarle. Described in a letter to the sayd knight, from I.R. authour of the answere vnto the Protestants pulpit babels. Floyd, John, 1572-1649.; Jenison, Robert, 1584?-1652, attributed name. 1613 (1613) STC 11114; ESTC S115113 123,366 230

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

goe the Euangelicall voyage of Virginia You seeme ready to fight (p) ibid. for the Minister that eate vp the pease-pottage whilest his fellowes fought with the Sau●●●●●wet if you will Wade into that matter you 〈…〉 London the author of my report to 〈…〉 ●●otestant we haue no reason to thi● 〈…〉 Minister of his owne religion You 〈…〉 of (q) p. 27. the roaring rake-hill of Cambrige 〈…〉 your preacher esteemed as an Angell crying Crashaw Crashaw goe to Geneua though the voice was so loud as the whole Vniuersity did ring of his folly 24. You that wonder I should say that a Counselour did refuse (r) pa. 15. to patronize your Lecturers Sermō you cānot deny but the lower house of Parliamēt wherof your selfe were one did discard his Iesuits Ghospell Neither durst you raise against me a sleeping witnes the late Earle of Salisburie but that you know he now is in case that he cannot speake That Counsellour Syr Edward was more politicke then you may be presumed to be he would looke before he leaped into such a dunghill of vntruthes as I proued that Sermon was You in your credulous vanitie rashly cast your selfe into that labyrinth of lies commending the same as a thing (ſ) Lett. to M. T. H. pag. 55. vnanswerable but now ashamed of your folly you will take noe notice therof Your dull capacity you write (t) Countersnarle pag. 25. cannot conceiue what I meane to say that you flutter in a web of weake slaunders You can tell how oft I doe repeat spider and cobweb where I doe clearely declare that M. Crashaw was the spider his Sermon a web of slaunders wherin you did flutter which truly expounded was no reproach but rather a prayse of your ingenuous disposition that did easily belieue being voyd of fraud your selfe as I then thought you were the great and deep protestations of that deluding Preacher 〈◊〉 I feare you are sicke of the disease which 〈…〉 (u) pag. 52. Mulier nihil scit nisi quod ipsa cupit woman-kind with to vnderstād no 〈…〉 please as now you are pleased to take no 〈…〉 singular cōmendations of that Sermon 25. Then you name the feature of that daughter of Babel the twentie particulers wherein he accused vs to degenerat from Antiquitie An. 1607. 1608. 13. of Februar the yeare of our Lord the day of the moneth it was preached and printed that we may think you Godfather to the Childe Whereas now finding by the perusall of my Treatise that she hath neither oyle in her lampe nor wit in her head although she knock at your dore for helpe you cast her off with I know you not M. T. D. as a foolish Virgin Let the Courtier your friend whom you describe (x) pag. 16. as hauing noe more witt then your selfe make you smile with his frownes fond lookes yet I doe not doubt but that the Printer of that Sermon will auer as much as I wrote that when that Sermō flew abroad vnder the aforesayd Counsailours name the same was stayed till the Epistle dedicatorie was altered 26. You would faine also stinge me (z) pa. 17. with an imputation to be a slanderer of Queene Elizabeth that I take vpon me to determine with what consorts her glorious Ghost is accompained laying say you a heauy censure on the blessed soule of so worthy a Saint What Consortes did I giue her Were they night-ghosts Why doe you not name them Was the company appointed her by me any other then her princely Father (a) Ouerthr pag. 104. Why should his company seeme dishonorable or a blemish and heauy censure to that Saint Doe you feare he may marrie with his daughter in that world 〈…〉 ●●ported he did in this Or doe you glaunce 〈…〉 ●oubtfulnes of her bloud that perchance no●●he King but some other put to death with her mother was indeed her true Father Durst you haue cast such snarling surmises whilst she liued Or in time of his ragine haue sent him to Hell to canonize his daughter for in Hell he must needes be if he be not in Heauen with her seing you acknowledg no third place But I perceiue your malicious meaning You know many gentlemen still affect the memorie of that Princesse you would put a ielousy into their heads as if my Treatise had married her Ghost to some Hobgoblin in Hell Noe she shall not receiue her doome by my pen before I heare it pronounced by the supreme Iudges mouth I could not say she inioyed the cōpany of her Catholick Ancestors yet did I not deny it Though she seemed to die in a cōtrary faith to theirs yet will I not diue into Gods vnsearchable secrets 27. You call her a worthy Saint of the Ghospell which should I expresse in a Catholicke phrase In his sermon at the Court on the 5. of Nouember would seeme a hard censure I am not angrie that Doctour King sing of her to them that sought her in Hell what the Angles sayd of Christ to the woman that sought him in the Graue Surrexit non est hic she is risen she is not heere and though I could obiect if she were neuer in Hell how rose she from thence If she were once in Hell how got she out Yet I will be content that your new Orpheus be thought able to haue wrought such a wonder and fetch her out of Hell with his Fiddle Thus you may see that my heauie-heeled learning so you phrase it with 〈◊〉 weight of truth and reason crusheth the serpent 〈◊〉 head of your snarling malice against it Though you say without proofe that my booke hath (c) p. 68. 69. lame and goutie arguments neither whole head good foot nor sound hart yet if I could be perswaded that any great force eyther of witt iudgement or true learning were in you I might thinke the same more invulnerable then Achilles seing your forked shaftes discharged out of so strong a desire to disgrace me are not able to pierce so much as into the heele thereof 28. But I am not so fonde as to measure the strength of my Treatise by the weakenes of your impugnations nor to thinke my Pigmie inuincible though it haue put a craking Crane to flight Sure I am the truth I defend is (d) Me in mea causa defiaēte atque prostraeto victrix erit causa cui seruio Aug. cont lit Petil. c. 1. Gould howsoeuer the learning may be Lead wherewith I defend it Noe worldly respect either of honour or profit wonne me to vndergo these combatts neyther doe I regarde the priuate woundes wherwith you seeke to disgrace my person so the sheild of faith and doctrine wherewith I defend my ghostly Coūtry the Church of Christ be safe and sound Were the shaddow of humane glory the marke I ayme at in writing I would not let my name be buried in two letters in the frontispice of these bookes wherin you imagin I dreame