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death_n life_n punishment_n sin_n 9,230 5 4.9399 4 true
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A90516 Nuntius a mortuis: or, a messenger from the dead. That is, a stupendous and dreadfull colloquie, distinctly and alternately heard by divers, betwixt the ghosts of Henry the Eight, and Charles the First, both Kings of England, who lye entombed in the church of Windsor. Wherein, (as with a pencill from heaven) is liquidly (from head to foot) set forth, the whole series of the judgements of God, upon the sinnes of these unfortunate jslands. Translated out of the Latine copie, by G.T.; Nuntius a mortuis. English Perrinchief, Richard, 1623?-1673.; Henry VIII, King of England, 1491-1547.; Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649. 1657 (1657) Wing P1599A; ESTC R229647 18,209 36

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wonder if to the astonishment of Kings and Kingdomes thou hast suffered at the doores of thy Pallace an ignominious and opprobrious Death But knowest thou not over and above that this very Pallace the House of thy abode was the dwelling place of the Bishops of Yorke which I extorted from Cardinall Wolsey A man sometimes highly advanc'd by me whilest serving my unbridled Lust but whom afterwards I utterly Confounded when I judg'd it for the availe of my Avarice Nor prophan'd I only the Episcopall houses to ungodly and Nefarious uses but Compelled ev'm themselves the Bishops from their Obedience to the Roman Sea into an acknowledgement of my Iurisdiction in Church affaires unlesse only who presided over Rochester whom when neither with faire words nor menaces I could draw into the defection of the rest I beheaded to compleat my Sacraledge Behold therefore if or not it were fatall and most agreeable to the Heavenly justice that this Head of the Church so Admentitious should have been cut off before the doores of the Bishop To give Promotion to the affaires of my Primacy I made me a Vicar of one CROMVVELL of those Times a man of very meane extraction unto whom and hee of Lay condition both the Bishops and Archbishops were as underlings Now another of that name and like discent Rules as absolute over all thy Nobles and Guides the minutes of thy Life and Death The very same I made my Principall instrument of keeping from their meanes the Church its children and of bringing on the Baine of that Religion so long practiz'd in the Times of my Ancestors which I would call The Reformation of the Church I enter'd to this Kingdom from my Father when it was Blemishless entire and truly Regall nor in any thing unto any one obnoxious only as fitting in things that were Spirituall paying submission to the Vicar of CHRIST Thou received'st it when strengthless and wounded rent and torne from the yoke of St. Peter so just so sweet and so amiable wholy slav'd unto the Vicars of the People chose to governe by the votes of the multitude Carol. Too too true by the losse of my Head have I found those very things which thou hast said to me and now lately unless by others allowance that I had nothing either of Life or Kingdomes which was not wholy in the hands of the Parliament since puff'd up with fond pride and contumacy by thy Example I have swarved from the Church yet fear'd I not the qublique Hatchet would have struck me by the hands of Rebels with such pompe and seared impudence at my death but much more dreaded Secret councels and impoisonings Henric. But of that thou shouldst the least have been afraid for the punishment would not have answered the offence Publique sinnes must have publique Expiations nor sought I corners in which to perpetrate my wickednesses but sinn'd boldly after once I had begun only I drew indeed the masque of justice upon the Face of my iniquities the Supremacy as though my due of the Church unto my Self I arrogated calling a Parliament by a Decree whereout I quite abolished the Roman Seas authority I repudiated by pretence of Right the woman that was my lawfull Wife the Possessions likewise wholy of the Clergie under the same colour I occasioned to be confiscated whosoever was averse to my Supremacie as though guilty of High Treason I put to Death Wheresote when our sinnes for which wee worthily are punished are couered over with the veile of justice no wonder if the selfe same vizard likewise veile us when our selves at last we come to suffer Carol. But these Audacities from their Subjects unto Kings are the effects of most unheard of wickednesse Henr. I confesse it but with how much greater wickedness are those insolencies by our selves deserved Such sin only against a mortall Prince but we Princes against an aeternall Deitie But you Sir unless a mark'd out Sacrafice God so willing for your sinnes enormities could you not have mocqu'd that arrest of Popular judgement by your Prerogative in dissolving of the Parliament Carol. I did what I could to dissolve it but I pray heare what follow'd after my so doing The Scottish men my naturall Subjects in hostile sort invaded England with their Armies whom opposing in their march at Yorke an humble Booke came to my hands by Kymbolton under written by certaine Noble men of my Kingdome Henric. King Henry hearing Kymbolton nam'd after fetching first a very deepe sigh Oh Katherine sayes he 〈…〉 Kymbolton that Woman of all other most deare to me as excelling all her Sex in vertue whom I Banish'd Heav'n forgive me from my Bed to make place therein for that Strumpet Anne of Bollen afterwards publiquely beheaded for Adultery hath exchanged this so hated Life This Divorce against both heav'ns and humane Lawes to the end that I might make it firme made me usurpe unto me the authority of the Church when unless with so horrid a Sacraledge I could not uphold the impiety of that villany Hence broke upon our selves and both our Kingdomes the inundation of all these pressing miseries Carol. When holding forth Kymboltons Booke from this sayes he as by one wave of a Deluge hath also flow'd the totall Sea of my disasters for unadvisedly O my griefe I condiscended they so craving to a Treaty with the Scots in which J bound my selfe firmly to make Good what in my name should by my Delegates be agreed upon These Deputed O imprudent Drones or rather indeed perfidious Traytors gave concessions to the insidiating Scots to take strong Holds into their hands within my Kingdom till such time as by my Kingly authority the Parliament then dissolved should be revoked Writs therefore I accordingly issued forth The Scots are most Liberally gratifi'd nor doe they suffer them sooner to leave England then that first J had engaged my Princely Faith by a writing under my Hand and Seale this Hamilton also unhappily Councell'd me that unfortunate kinsman of mine not to anull the said new Sessions of Parliament till such time as they should all thereto assent Henric. Oh stupiditie or rather extreamest Madness Didst thou not see when to thy stiffe-neck'd People thou Granted this that thou putt'st a finall Period to the sway of thy Kingly Authority This was one and the self-same thing as if thou hadst given into the hands of the Parliament thy Scepter and thy Princely Diadem on condition not to have them again untill such time as they should please to restore them Thee But much otherwise should I have handled mine Though now it is as cleere as noone day that the measure of my Sins hath been made-up in Thee by Thy unhappie Participation of my Schismes and that by blinding the eyes of thy mind in Propitiation of the offended Dietie Gods just vengeance hath brought on Thee destruction Whom God will destroy hee taketh away their Right understanding But when once it was come to that passe Thou shouldst have
through the lenitie of my Nature though unwillingly wherefore respecting that strict Father of justice whose dominion is juster over Kings then that of Kings over other mortals I cannot waile my Blood so spilt unworthily who Pilate like subscrib'd anothers death having declar'd him first wholy innocent in my judgement Henric. Had this been the cause of thy Calamity those other rather much should have been punished with the losse by Heavens just vengeance of their heads who Thee being innocent made thus guilty by their prejudice and however against thy will and Relucting as by the shoulders forc'd thee headlong forwards into that most horrid iniquity of their judgement Therefore some thing there must necessarily be more which have caused this so execrable fate to thee nor know I why thou shouldest here be more obtruded on me thou thy selfe canst tell me any just cause why thou wert stripp'd out of this miserable Life by so shamefull and opprobrious a death if thou camest as such thou boasts thy self of Kings had it not been meeter thou hadst layd thy Bones amongst thy ancestors then trouble here my rest and quiet Carol. I earnestly indeed dying desired to have been buried in the Tomb of my Father but who spoyled me of my life deny'd that boone to me Fearing I beleeve least lying so neer them that the voyce of my Blood would cry more loud to them But in this they have not only been inhumane to me Many other and most grievous indignities have I suffered in my shamefull way of Dying At Westminster where my Self and my Ancestors the Kings of this Nation were Inaugurated was I forc'd to heare the Sentence of my Life from the mouth of a silly Petty-fogger when according to the municipall Lawes no Noble man can be judg'd but by his Peers At St. Iames his was I keep'd close Prisoner whilest my Enemies did determine of my Head wholly cast upon their Arbitrary judging me a Place above all others lov'd by me through the memory of my past there Childhood where my youth also had been harmlesly entertain'd with many innocuous and most innocent oblectations The Scaffold for my death appointed rais'd directly before the Court of my house unto which that I might come with more regret and also shame ev'n through those roomes they dragg'd me where to honour Forraign States Embassadors with Royall pompe I used and Masques to recreate them I beheld also but with what sence of indignation his head cover'd Eyes sternly fixed on me Oliver Cromwell one of ordinary extraction and abstracting from what Fortune hath rear'd him to much more despicable then the meanest of my Nobles how much short then of the majesty of a King sitting umpire of my life and death But though these things were very grievous and deplorable yet that one was even then death it selfe lesse tollerable to me when my eares the Blood yet spinning out my veynes swallowed in that fatall mandate from the Cryer that it should be death to call my Son or Prince of Wales or destine him to bee his Fathers successor And then indeed it truely appeared as conjectured by the wiser in the beginning that not the King so much as Rule displeas'd the Rebels who conspired so unanimously my death to the end that That aswell as I should be extirpated Yet this one thing very much consolates my Griefes that at least I have been destin'd to this Place where I cannot doubt of your more courteous reception of me as being Nephew of your Sister the Princess Margaret her I meane who marrying Iames the fourth of Scotland bore that Mary of whom so lately you made mention and she Iames my late Father since deceased unto whose Scepter she gave both England and Scotland unto which James I Charles the first as Heire unto my Father have succeeded Henric. Hom what 's that J heare and art thou that Charles then the Son of James to whom from me by Elizabeth that Kingdome is divolved by Succession art thou I pre-thee that self same Charles and canst not see how all these evils have oppressed thee But it seems thy eyes yet very well see not newly come into into this region of Darkness No! hadst thou remembred how a long while agoe I drew from out that yoake my necke which in the Church I had full 20. yeares drawne in after first I was annointed King I and defended with both Sword Pen too thou wouldest lesse wonder that after 20. yeares Reigne thy Subjects should have so departed from thee Thou canst not be ignorant that amongst all the Christian Kings J was the first that ever arrogated the Supremacy and would be cal'ed The Head of the Church which Titles that I might knit them to my Crowne with a knot that should never be unty'd Oh! what Blood have I not shed of Martyrs This sinne of mine so long since committed being to be expiated by the blood of a King both this Scepter and monstrous Head together were at once to perish this was long agoe decreed by the Fates as we may judge now 't is come to passe But more then all this J will tell you There was a Person of great note during my Reigne of whom many things thou canst not choose but have heard whose Name was called Thomas Moore This man adorned with vertues so transcendent many ages could not match his worth from a Pleader at the Barre of the Law and having regard unto his merit and Learning I call'd to be Lord Chancellor of England But I seemed only thither to have rais'd him that I might depress him from the greater Hight For when following the dictamen of his Conscience he would not owne me the Head of the Church I commanded forthwith His to be cut off So that whilest Playing Calisthenes hee fell into the hands of Alexander Goe thou then now Head of the Church and complain that by the Sentence of a pittifull Lawyer Thine is also cut off from thy Shoulders Or rather seest thou not plainly in these Prodigies the Tenor of Gods admirable Iudgements It was grievous to thee to be a Prisoner at St. James his where thou hast so innocently in thy youth disported thy Selfe but thou minds not that I formerly by violence and Sacraledge snatcht those Houses from the Church as not long after all the Goods of the Monks the Carthusians Bernardins Cestersians Canon Regulers and so of all the rest But more especially of those of St. Benedict whose houses and Estates I confiscated being the most Splended and Opulent of all the Kingdome by an injustice till that Time not ever heard of wherfore as I for that they own'd me not their Head cast in Prison many innocent Religious and from their Houses made them hve unto the Gallowes so then hadst for thy Prison where thou sufferedst a house that had been heretofore Religious I hang'd up severall Abbots at their doores to give a terrour by their sufferings to the Monks And what