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A42496 Stratostē aiteutikon A iust invective against those of the army and their abettors, who murthered King Charles I, on the 30 of Jan., 1648 : with other poetick pieces in Latin, referring to these tragick times, never before published / written Feb. 10, 16[4]8, by Dr. Gauden, then Dean of Bocking in Essex, now Lord Bishop of Exeter. Gauden, John, 1605-1662. 1661 (1661) Wing G372; ESTC R38755 36,903 56

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no sense to be counted the People of England any more than Scabs or Plague-sores or Leprosie or putid Ulcers and noysome Excrements are to be repured any part of the Body whose grief burthen and annoyance they are So that unless you can flatter your selves to have done well and worthily in all you have cruelly insolently and trayterously acted against King Lords Commons Gentry Clergy and all honest men Unless you can propound something to recompence the inestimable Injuries you have done to all Estates in these three Kingdoms as in other acts of your Tyranny and Treason so chiefly in that unparallel'd Villany of Murthering such a King and depriving us of so Incomparable a Prince for Wisdom Piety Gravity Patience Magnanimity Courage Constancy Charity and all other Vertues most adorning a Man a King and a Christian the loss of whom all the lives of you and your Approvers cannot countervail or expiate being but as so many Dogs heads to such a Boon Unless you can stop the Mouths of all men or cut their Throats or sear their Consences or perswade them to damn their Souls for your sakes to gratifie a few Cauterised Consciences bloody and ambitious Spirits among you You cannot but hear the sound of much Vengeance coming upon you to which your own black Souls summon you and which your own Consciences will in the first place silently but yet severely execute upon you Nor will your Seeming Smiles and forced confidences nor yet the Applauses of your sordid Flatterers and desperate Confederates nor yet the assistance of your numerous and deluded Souldiers be able to exempt you from that storm of Fire and Brimstone that Pit Snare Curse and Hell which pursues you and is ready to overtake you How can such Zimri's who have so trayterously slain such a King their Lord and Master ever hope to have peace or impunity in this or the other World Since the Justice of Divine Providence in a Case where his Name was not blasphemed and so his Glory not so concerned as in this of your murthering so lawful and so Christian a King suffered not any of the Murtherers of Julius Caesar who was but an Usurper to dye other than a violent and immature death Nor will we hope our Solomon by Gods blessing and his Subjects assistance suffer the hairy Scalps of those who were the chief Counsellors and Actors in destroying his dear Father and our Dread Soveraign to go down to the Grave in peace or to dye a dry death who have shed the blood of War in a time when all Differences were by a Treaty drawn to a Peace and Union We can never think that a Babel of so confused a fashion of such a headlong height as yours is such a Toads-stool suddenly grown out of the Earth of Beggary and Ignorance by Fraud and Cruelty lately watered with the blood of the King and his Subjects can long thrive or stand having no foundation in the World or any shew of reason equity honour peace liberty or piety to support it Not any seeming Authority for due and legall you could have none upon Earth Not any general desire delight consent or Agreement in what you have done or propound further to do but rather a general detestation an utter abhorrence and a perfect hatred of you and your deeds which honest men will then agree to and subscribe when they can be content to love Death and Hell or to hate God and their Souls Nor doubt we but many of those Souldiers whose valour and simplicity you have thus far grossely abused by ingaging them in such desperate assistances whose profit will redound to but few or none of them when their Christian penitent and smiteing hearts shall come to see as no doubt many of them already do who are not throughly poisoned with your desperate Principles to what horrid Villanies they they are made Gossips and accessary by your Fraud and Hipocrisie they will speedily re●●rn from you dead Dogs desperate Sheba's and cursing Shimei's ●hose mouths and hearts are full of the gall of bitterness whose hands and feet are swift to shed blood who know not the way of Peace nor have any fear of God before your eyes whose Curse is to bo●st your selves in your iniquity to fall from one wickedness to another till eterual vengeance upon you Penitently smiting their breasts as those that came from crucififying Christ Jesus a work proportionate to the malice and crueltie of you our Kings Murtherers our barabasses whose barbarity hath at once deprived the King of what is wont to be dearest to men his Life and his Kingdoms robbing his Subjects the Christian World and all Mankind of the greatest glory and most Illustrious Example of Vertue and Pietie that ever sate upon a Christian Throne The most unspotted Perso● the wisest Prince the most Charitable Christian the most imitable Pattern for Moderation in Prosperity for Patience in Adversity for devout humility toward God for judicious zeal to true Religion for constant love to the Church for winning Majesty upon all men that ever swayed the Scepter of this or any other Kingdom Accessible in his brightest splendor Magnanimous in his Diminutions Of a th●iving and victorious Vertue under the heaviest Pressures and Crosses Whose excellent Skill was never so much discovered as in the late Storms Whose Darknings rende●ed him not less formidable to his Enemies or less venerable to his Friends Nor was he ever more terrible to those that are perfect haters of God of Him and of all Goodness than when they saw that the Eminency of his Vertues was not to be smothered by their Calumnious Expressions but the beams and lustre of Divine Majestie in him daily conquered all Ecclipsings that either his own misfortunes or your malice cast upon him This was the Man this the Christian this the King this the Saint this the Martyr whom ●hese Judas's have betrayed these Jews destroyed these Caniballs devoured A Sin questionless exceeding in many respects that of Christs Crucifiers not as to the dignity of the person wherein Christ infinitely surpassed the Majestie as well as Merit of all Earthly Kings but as to that Eminency of Civil Dignity and Soveraignty wherewith the King from God was invested which Christ Jesus never assumed contenting himself with the form of a servant and subjecting himself to Civil Magistracy Also in regard of that malice hypocrsie and pretenceless Crueltie which thes● Monsters shewed against the King destitute of any shew of Due Authority which the Crucifiers of our Saviour wanted not urging also a Law they had by which they said though falsely he ought to die What Law the Kings Murtherers either produced or pretended to justifie their Authoritie their Accusations or their Sentence against and Execution upon the King we and they are yet to learn nor is it possible they ever should since all our Laws do most fully and clearly declare the person of the King as Supream Sacred Unaccountable Inviolable by
expiate the sin and shame of their former Errours and Defaults which have produced such sad and abhorred Effects to break the Strength to extirpate the Persons to oppose the Designs and to revenge the Villanies which have been with an high hand committed against God the King the Parliament the Laws and the Kingdoms by these Miscreants men alwayes of desperate Fortunes but now of so desperate Minds and Manners that all their paths lead to the Chambers of Death and their steps are descending to the pit of Hell From which the Lord in Mercy deliver the people of this Nation by prospering our Rightful King and by his Valour and Vertues redeeming us speediy from the sins sufferings and tyrannies of these blood-thirsty and deceitful men with whom no Agreement can be made by any man who doth not desperately resolve to sin against the Holy Ghost and eternally damn his own Soul Lam. 5. 16. 16. The Crown is fallen from our head Wo unto us that we have sinned For this our heart is faint for these things our eyes are dim Eph. 5. 11. Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness but rather reprove them Consilia callida inhonesta prima fronte laeta Tractatu dura eventu tristia Lecit FINIS In Martyrium CAROLI PRIMI Magnae Britaniae Regis invicti Jan. 30. 1648. IN fandis refer as damno scelerique dolorem Musa parem qualis luctu sub morte Josiae Ingenti vallem compleverat Hadarimmon Qualis ab irriguis oculis seu fonte perenni Uberibus manet lachrymis noctuque diuque Qualem continuo rorans pia lumina fletu Optabat V●tes deplorantissimus olim Sit modus hic nescire modum quô postera discat Impia gens quantum sceleretur sanguine Regis Regis ab antiquis oriundi Regibus at Qui Tantum alios superans virtute antiquior omnes Quantum lenta solent celsae viburna cupressus Ut scopulus mediis Neptuni in fluctibus ingens In coelum tollens sublimia culmina nullis Exuperanda undis immotus pectore forti Perstat immensis haerens radicibus omnc 〈…〉 Oceani frangit rabiem n●● territus unquam Conjuratorum ventorum praelia temnit Talem Te sensêre Tui Te Maxime Regum Vidimus invictâ conatus mente ferentem Hostiles variâ tentato mole malorum Inconcussa manet victrix patientia sacro Horrore insuetum complêsti Carolus orbem Aurea quae pulchro pînxti dictamina libro Tam pravi caecique malis Lux super aevi Unicus implêsti vitae moderaemine passus Quas alii fingunt aerumnas ultima mortis Humanam superant sortem miracula sancta Rex idem Martyr Trino Diademata clarus Altior exurgens summ â mens ambition● Martyrium imperio junxit Quartamque Coronam Stellis non gemmis fulgentem sum●re pergit Impavidus Christi Sponsae mirandus Alumnus Coetibus Angelicis proprior mortalia longè Despicit Ante pedes facinus deforme Rebellûm Dum prostrata jacet Majestas Regia surgit Celsior è ten●bris splendens Augustior istis Comminuit quantum Satanae vel militis ira Omni-potens tantum Numen virtutibns auxit Gratia grandescit collo minor atque corona Carolus evafit Magnus Ludibria Trunci Ridet Rex humilis sequitur vestigia Christî Formosum in latâ vidistis valle Leonem Quem trepidi cingunt Pastores Rusticus horror Magnanimum sequitur telo clamore lacessens Non hominum non illa canum petulantia terret Gradivum generos a fugam quia bestia nescit Degenerem motu nullo blanditur at ille Constans incedit gressu vultuque minaci Arduus insidias strepitusque aspernit inanes Inveniet facietve viam sibi conscia virtus Per fastiditos sic Te tulit impetus Hostes Ingentem Regni Genium dumque agmine circum Sacrilegûm spectant crudelia schismaticorum Immortalis abis Regna ad meliora Monarcha Lusit fatalim mens impenetrabilis ictum Plectitur illaesus poena est victoria fanguis Non minus innocuum decorat quàm purpura Regem Tutatur quem non potuerunt Scepira securis Non dolor Hunc non irae movet non Carceris horror Non tristis comitem squallor non Monstra profani Judicii non scommata sputa culumnia pulsus Erectum laedunt animum purissima lympha Mille modis agitata ni●et Patientia totum Possidet ac pleno sic fatur Numine Turbam Tetrius in vosmet quam in me p●ccabitis illa Vulnera me cruciant potius quae saeva paratis In proprias animas quàm quae in mea corpora cives Non Deus hoc vobis non sancta oracula mandant Infandum facinus Quamvis justissima summi Dextra patet suplex hanc prono exosculor ore Vos tamen injustos graevior vindicta manebit Qui genus humanum mortalia temnitis arma At sperate Deum memorem fandi atque nefandi Castigatvehemens faelicia crimina poena Deprecor ultorem mea vota novissima Christo Pro vobis patriâque meâ cum sanguine fundam Dixerat dicto citius prostratus atrocem Imperturbato Rex invictissimus ictum Sustinuit vnltu Diriguêre omnes imo suspiria ducunt Pectore quê is hominum quê is non adamantinae corda Non dolor aut lachrimae vastus stupor occupat orbem Ingenuum irato suffusum triste pudore Erubuit coelum pallentia lumina condens Antiquae periit sic illustrissima Gentis Gloria vix oculis unquam reparabile nostris Occubuit lumen Domini quem dextra sacrâret In Regem extinxit diro manus improba ferro Publica libertas Decora omnia Religionis Sanctus honos unâ pereunt collapsa ruina Singula quae tantâ fuerant suffulta columna In Chaos horrendum lapsos nox opprimit atra Cum tenebris pondus Terras Astraea reliquit Sanguine pollutus Divi Lex sancta recessit Militis incubuit trucis insatiata libido Omnia diripiens paupertate ambitiosa Cui stravere viam Regni perjuria dira Sic Lupus Vulpes tecti ambo pellibus Agni Insidiis fallunt non vincunt Marte leonem Tam claro ut possint satiari sanguine fauces Quoque magis possint factis obtendere velum Justitiae miles procerum plebisque senatum Relliquias vulgi rudis informisque Tumultus Dissipat in sulsis toga cedere cogitur Armis Carnifices dant jura prius suffragia deinde Liberiora petunt sequitur sententia tristis Corripit incusat condemnat destruit idem Judex Testis Miles Subjectus Hostis Tantum Relligio tantum nova lumina possunt Persuadere mali lucis tum Lucifer almae Nomen Effigiem simulat quùm perditus error Ingruit tenebras cupiens effundere vero Immanes animos ad atrocia crimina ducit Principis hinc sanguis libandus subditus iras Non putat averti superûm nisi tanta litetur Victima non alio ritu placabile numen Sanguinei celebrant sancti maculata cruoré Dextra Fraterno Patris Regisque