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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A39194 An Elegy upon the death of Pope Innocent the XI 1689 (1689) Wing E469; ESTC R33411 1,138 1

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AN ELEGY Upon the DEATH of Pope INNOCENT the XI Who Died the 12th Day of August 1689. Aged Seventy Eight Years and Three Months After he had Held the Pontificate Twelve Years Ten Months and Two and Twenty Days MOurn ye unhappy Sons of Mother Rome And let your Sighs and Lamentations come From the remotest Parts of Christendom For now Pope Innocent the Eleventh's Dead Whom Thirteen Years y 'ave own'd your Churches Head Whom ye so long Infallible Believ'd Death prov'd Infallibly ye were Deceiv'd If in the Church diffusive it resided Infallibility is now divided Unless you think it to be like the Soul Whole in each Part and Total in the whole Yet him that Title we may thus far give That Politick Lewis ne're could Him deceive Nor make Him with his Curs'd Ambition side Or ' gainst Religion to promote his Pride The haughty Tyrants Threats he did withstand Boldly inflexible to each demand His Barbarous Persecutions disapprov'd Which made him ev'n by Protestants Belov'd That Power Usurp'd by some He did disown With Bulls to thrust a Monarch from his Throne For an Opinion differing from his own But Tyranny in Kings Romes Sons Profest Was ne're Approv'd in His more Noble Breast Else He had surely lent a helping Hand To a Late Monarch to Re-gain his Land And from His Treasures mighty Summs had given To Re-inthrone him tho' De-throned by Heaven But He found better ways t'exhaust His Store And Free the Christian World from Turkish Pow'r And where 't was needful Nobly He bestow'd His-Church Revenues for the Christians Good. To Germans and Venetians a True Friend Pecuniary Aids He oft did send And for th' ungrateful Pole great Summs Advance Altho' out-done by greater Sums from France These ways He knew His Bounty best became T' oppose the Enemies of the Christian Name Thus Peters Patrimony He Employ'd Before laid out in Luxury and Pride His Train and Table both He did Retrench Christs Enemies to Resist The Turks and French Temperate and Humble for Himself He shew'd But fervent Zeal Transported Him for GOD. And as His Life His Virtuous Acts declare So even in Death is seen His Pious Care For in His Bed as Languishing He lay Feeling how swiftly Nature did decay And having the last Sacrament receiv'd As by their Tenets firmly is believ'd He to the Sacred Congregation sends And does to their unbyass'd Choice commend On His Departure from St. Peters Chair A Person worthy to Succeed Him there And gave strict Charge they should Employ His Store To Ease the People and Relieve the Poor If this be Christian-like we may forgive Those falser Tenets that He might believe Yet while alive small Love He gain'd from some So ill true Virtue is Maintained at Rome Now Dead His Loss they Justly do bemoan Ne're truly Valuing their Good till gone Whom with Reproaches they pursu'd of late And made the Object of their Causeless Hate His Princely Robes they do to Relicts shread And pay Him Veneration now He 's Dead Well let Him rest and may the next Pope be No less a Friend to Christendom than He What more might have been said in His behalf Let some Monk Crowd into an Epitaph Licensed according to Order LONDON Printed in the Year of Our LORD GOD 1689. 183.