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A28346 The Ladies Charity School-house roll of Highgate, or, A subscription of many noble, well-disposed ladies for the easie carrying of it on W. B. (William Blake), fl. 1650-1670. 1670 (1670) Wing B3152; ESTC R2137 96,148 302

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would give for the fancy of the Roll and Charity-stick and that she never saw the like and did wonder how any body would speak against the design of it My Lady such a one said She would give to bind some out or send one or two to be Poor Scholars in Cambridge or else to a Sea Captain to learn Navigation and get her Lord if she could to give the Quit-Rent of one or two Houses yearly saying It was no more than the Hawks-man cost him or else she would spare one Point of Venice but the thing should go forward Another Lady Warwick And for the six or seven Citizens Ladies we intend to go to we do verily believe they will give pretty well because they are the chiefest in all London and eminently good My Lady such a one cryed By her Troth she would give nothing at all for she had waies enough for her money But the next said She would give so much for five or six stone of Beef every Week and which of these is most like to Repent when they come to die and go into another World Then my Lady such a one said She would give for Bread and Beer between this and January come Twelve-month and others promise for their Cloathing But we have abundance of waies and objects for our Charity Ay said a fine young Lady it is the better for us we have abundance of Masses many Joints Toes Feet Fingers some Excuses all should do something in order to another World where we must be for ever 't is good to send a little before-hand Faith laies out for Christ and up for self but builds not upon works in the least that is Hay Sand Straw Stubble but Christ a Rock for ever and we should be glad to do any thing for his Honour who Loved Lived and Died for us and still maketh Intercession for us to the Father And now good Ladies and Gentlewomen We humbly pray that all your Charity be ready about Whitsuntide or Midsummer next at the furthest or sent in to the Worshipful Mr. Henry Cornish of Blackwell-Hall Merchant next door to the Gate whom we have one and all Prayed and Petitioned to be our only Interceder Receiver and Chief Treasurer for Life to all you much Honourable Ladies and Gentlewomen of the famous mighty well-beloved City of London or other places round about or else to William Blake of Covent-Garden Woollen Draper at the end of Maiden-Lane in Bedford-Street at the Sign of the Golden-Boy who will likewise take the same care to see it fairly Registred for the Honour of your Families or wait upon your Honours with the Clerk to give you further satisfaction in any particular when you please to command it THE Noble Marquess Galliaces's Sufferings for the Truth was famous through the World your Lord 's embracing of it makes his Marquisdom more great and may that Truth which our true Protestant Religion teacheth be for ever in and among your Noble Family may all the Branches of it flourish as Palms and Cedars be all as green Bays in the Courts of God's own House may the young Lord and his Noble Lady and that great Mass of old Gold be dedicated to the Lord that made Heaven and Earth and all their Blessings be sprinkled with a Blessing from above which may be as the Dew and Rain to the new-mown Grass to make you all fruitful in the waies of God loving him for himself and his Son for ever and all Good works because they are so And this amongst many we humbly beg your most Great and Honourable Family to abound in And that as at the Dedicating of the Tabernacle Exod. 35. 22. every one brought something so at the Rearing of this our Charity School-house one half handful of these Broad-pieces may be slung in as a Free-will Offering to the Lord who will then sanctifie all that great Lump or Heap besides and bless you all as he did the Seed of his Beloved Israel of Old and that he may so do we shall in our station as Poor Hospital ones ever pray Most Honourable and Great Lady THE Bounty of your Noble Deceased Mother the Lady Marchioness and great Hospitality of the Marquess your Father to the Poor of this Town as well as other places which has been and still is and was before we or any of us were born to our Poor Parents now Widows and Widowers many of them of which Bounty we having largly tasted obliges us and all of us humbly to acknowledge your great Goodness and the Charity of your Family the only Noble one near our School wherefore Dear Madam we most humbly beg leave of your Goodness to present one of our Charity School-house Sticks or Letter to your Ladiship and do promise one and all never to forget nor cease to pray for long Life and Eternal Happiness through our Lord Jesus Christ to your most Noble Ladiship and the Marquess also May it please you most Great and Noble Lady YOur Gentleman says That your Honour fears the Yearly Charge of the Ladies Little Charity-School will in time bring Ruine to my Family if not look't into I return a thousand humble thanks for this most kind Caution but I cannot in the least believe those good and Noble Ladies whom I ever intended believed and have Dedicated this unto will ever suffer such an inferiour mean and little person to sink under the Burden of so good and great a Work tending to their own Honour and the Honour of Religion which will be a good Work if half the World should oppose it because 't is not only commended but commanded in holy Writ to do all the good we can whilst opportunity lasts for at Death no man repents of being or doing good nor never will whilst the World stands but thousands for their not doing have complained how they have lost their time and a very great one of this Nation said Man's only Happiness lies in being good and at leizure doing good imitating the glorious Sun and Air yea the best Saints and Angels and God himself who is good to all and all his Works Oh Madam how sweet and cheering are these Beams to every Creature and that Air too through which they spread and send themselves to us below who have yet holy Angels to guard us as well as the blessed Writ and those good examples in it for to guide us in our Charity which does every where commend the poor Widow and Fatherless Children to us as the truest objects of it these being really such and you a very Great Noble and Pious Countess abounding in all manner of Mercies Honour and Plenty enough a large considerable Off-spring as young and tall Plants and Cedars to stand on high ground flourish as Bays and Bay-Trees in the True Church of God as well as in this happy Nation the most happy yet in all the known World and a Lord and Husband of a Thousand to Crown all these many Mercies
Time drops Pearles from his golden Wings yea the Orient on 's wee for Butterflyes haz zard God Christ Heavens ioyes our Im̄ortall soules to Eternity all for nothing for nothing Call Time againe Call Time againe Cryed a great Lady when it was to late Prize it therefore as the greatest Iewell in the world THE LADIES Charity School-house Roll OF HIGHGATE OR A Subscription of many Noble well-disposed Ladies for the easie carrying of it on BEing well informed that there is a Pious Good Commendable Work for maintaining near forty Poor or Fatherless Children Born all at or near Highgate Hornsey or Hamsted We whose Names are subscribed do engage or promise That if the said Boys are decently Cloathed in Blew lined with Yellow constantly fed all alike with good and wholsom Diet taught to Read Write and Cast Accompts and so put out to Trades in order to Live another day Then we will give for one Year two or three if we well like the design and prudent management of it once a Year the sum below mentioned But if we be not fully satisfied that the said Boys are all of them true Objects of Charity or are in the least neglected to be taught the holy Scripture and Fear of God by good Discipline frequent Catechizing and orderly going to the Publick Church every Lord s Day Forenoon and After then we will not mind this our promise in the least or contribute any thing at all to it But hoping that the work may be good take Root find many friends last long be commendable in future Ages we be enclined to do as above mentioned not knowing but that a Kernel may become a Tree and a thing of small beginning prove popular and praise-worthy to the Honour of our Protestant Religion and in time find many Benefactors Also it standing so exceeding well and near this City's famous Hospitals which were not half so great as now However this little Infant being the first erected thing in our names and Dedicated to us as a Pious Work worthy of Encouragement we are not willing it should wholly die but to try the Expedient believing all good Works to be good and not to be repented of in Life Death or Eternity but the surest sign of true love to God and Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ And now 't is ten to one but some of your near Acquaintance as well as your great Relations may say Pray Madam let us trouble you with a small sum or a few Guynies to this good Work hoping it will be no sin to add a little Charity to your Ladiship And in such a case you may for the ease of your memory set it down in one of these Lines below and so you will be sure not to forget or wrong us Now a Lord or Gentleman's money will do almost as well for our School as your Ladiships only we will still ascribe all to your Honour For God's sake do not object any thing but read and see whether these Scriptures do not all seem to be for us The night comes when none can work that is at Death Joh. 9. 4. Be merciful as your heavenly Father is merciful Lay up Treasure in Heaven Matth. 6. 20. He that soweth sparingly shall reap sparingly 2 Cor. 9. 6. Make ye friends of the unrighteous Mammon that when ye fail that is when ye depart this world Christ may receive ye into his everlasting habitation Luk. 16. 9. He that observes the wind shall not sow or he that regardeth the clouds shall not reap that is he that makes excuses and objections Eccl. 11. 4. But cast your Bread upon the waters and after many days you shall find it Eccl. 11. 1. Give and it shall be given to you Luke 16 38. Charge them that are rich in this world that they do good and not trust in uncertain riches but be rich in good works 1 Tim. 6. 17. Blessed is he that considereth the Poor the Lord shall preserve him alive when he lay sick and not deliver him into his enemies hands but he shall be blessed in the Earth Psal 41. 1 2. And now he that gives in Life carries his Lanthorn before him makes his own hands and eyes Executors The Great Ladies do allow their House-keeper one bottle of Wine three of Ale half a dozen Rolls and two Dishes of Meat a day who is to see the Wilderness Orchard great Prospect Walks and Gardens all well kept and Rolled for their Honour's Families and to give them small Treats according to discretion when they please to take the Air which is undoubtedly the best round London Three or four short Reasons why you Noble Ladies should not let this little School-house die 1. It is but little yet you have done for Christ or the Honour of Religion being cumbred with many things like Martha you neglect the best 2. In this you imitate the best two Princes that ever Reigned in this Realm Queen Elizabeth and Edward the sixth who founded most of the great Hospitals As for Queen Elizabeth she hated Popery made Christ's Righteousness her Rock loved the Parliament City and Dutch a Cord hardly to be broken 3. It stands so well and is really dedicated to you who are the choicest Flowers in Nature What is beloved like you English Ladies no mortals more happy if sin do not hurt you Others have not the hand and purse Others have not the Climate Others have not such Husbands as your Right English Nobles are or were many of them heretofore No such Noble Seats as most of yours be You have every one a Canaan Milk Honey and the holy Gospel preacht and may that ever be and your lives exemplary whilst the Sun Moon and Stars endure But pray Madams why should Old Sutton's brave Hospital such and such Hospitals flourish but yours die yours who are certainly the best and greatest Ladies in the whole world May God Almighty bend your hearts to us Poor Boys who will ever pray for you and all yours An Essay or humble Guess how the Noble Ladies may be enclined to give to and Encourage their Charity-School at Highgate near London AND first my Lady such a one cryed Come we will make one Purse out of our Family and if we get so much we will buy a Close Mead or Field near the School and it shall be called by our names to the worlds end A Noble Motion My Lady such a one said She would give for one Year or two but settle nothing And my Lady such a one said She would give only to the Lecture which is every Lord's Day Winter and Summer about five or six in the Evening But my Lady such a one said She would first inform her self and then do as others did My Lady such a one said She would give at present because she liked the School-house Orders and its standing very well and was very much taken with the Wilderness and Walks And my Lady such a one said She
your hands if once slipt and gone Oh! how much lost time have I to repent of and how little time to do it in said Sir Henry Wotton in King James's Reign Man's greatest happiness is to be good and at leisure to do good Delays and procrastinations of being good and doing good are dangerous And To morrow to morrow couzens many a one sayes a Father Therefore the Wise man sayes What thou findest in thy heart to do do it with all thy might for there is no device nor work in the Grave whither thou art going Eccles 9. 10. But he that dyes to sin daily makes the best step to this Eternal step of Death as a great Philosopher calls it which puts us not into another room but another place and condition quite away from all we now converse withal Relations never meet together more in the way and manner that they now do but the Father puts away the Son and the Son the Father and this Relation is never more nor the Marriage one neither Matth. 22. 30. Death is a Divorce for ever and though these Relations meet in the Resurrection-state yet is there neither Marriage nor giving in Marriage as Christ speaks to the seventh Brother Let Husbands love their Wives whilest they may and Wives their Husbands this step and journey will part them both for ever as one said to his wife a dying who had been married fifty years or upwards Oh me said a young Lady This is very sad that I must leave thee my dear so soon we have not been married one year what is there no Remedy and must I needs dye Truly yes he that lives must dye whether he be sick or no. We dye because we liv'd said one Death is decreed and we dye naturally our Bed and Sleep resembles Death and the Grave What is sleep but the shadow of it And he that will dye well must live well and if there be any thing after this Life Why do not young men take care to live well I did both saith Socrates though a heathen Live and Dye well go together What God hath joyned let no man put asunder for as the tree leans so it falls Eccles 11. 3. Men do not live sin-ward and dye God ward no no you must live to God and lean to God live and dye to God if ever you mean to go to him The Tree falls as it leans and lies as it falls If you fall God ward you are happy But if sin-ward you are miserable and ever like to be For after death comes judgment that is the stating of the Soul saith Burrace in an unchangeable state Here a mans condition may be mended but after death its never to be altered Faith and Repentance may be wrought here though it be at the last cast This night shalt thou be with me in Paradise Luk. 23. 43. Yet late Repentance seldom true though true Repentance never too late But after death there is no amendment nor Repentance neither Solomon hew'd and squared his Building for the Temple before-hand so that at the rearing of it up there was no noise of the Ax or Hammer heard Whoever God intends as a stone in the heavenly Jerusalem he fits before hand May you all be fitted all you young and lovely Ladies And you more elderly too May you all stand before the Lamb see him have his name and praise in your forehead Palms in your hands Robes upon your backs to cry with that numberless number of all kindreds tongues and people Salvation Glory Honour to the Lamb and to him that sits on the Throne for ever Rev. 7. 10. Yea may you all fall down cry not with the cry of Lamentation but Acclamation Joy and triumph which Triumph to the Godly will certainly be after all actions of Mortality are come to an end In the mean time all affections have two sharp ends the first and the last the first meeting and the last parting of Friends and Lovers is alwayes so And as Christ wept for Jerusalem and the hardness of the Jews whom Paul wished almost to be accursed for that they might be saved so the Jews shal one day be converted and look upon him whom they have peirced and mourn as for their first born Rev. 1. 7. And Paul's Friends wept sore when he told them they should see his face no more Act. 21. 13. But the Mary's wept Mary Magdalen and the Mother of Jesus wept when he said in his sufferings Woman behold thy Son John 19. 26. And the other Loved much because much was forgiven Mark 8. 36. You who have all your sins forgiven let the memorial of his sufferings dwell in your hearts and 't will make you weep to sin against him Oh! the kindness and favours of a good God are obligations to a good Soul May you all remember what he has shewed unto you at any time Were you never sick in dangers nor partakers of some special mercies Oh! keep the Remembrance of his goodness to your Souls But oh how little do rich and poor think upon this God and his goodness to their Souls which must stand before the Lamb as I said but now or be banisht from him for ever and ever or how little do they think of the worth Nature or Immortality of them What 's a fine Silk a fine Skin a fine Shape a sweet Face to such a Spark or Beam of God as the Soul is that came out from him and was breathed into man by him Gen. 2. 7. Shall this immortal thing ever starve dye and be forgotten which one calls the Breath of Life or the Living Breath which gives us Life Some never look their Bibles others never mind their Souls the whole world will not make amends for such a loss much less a vain wretched life of sinful pleasures and a few honours What! Careful for shape and fashion and neglect that which is the Breath of life or the life which gives us Breath as I said before Good Books are good Companions and the Bible makes glorious Christians when they so read mind it as to live up to it Queen Elizabeth lov'd it well and hug'd it in the Prison But vain Books eat up time and spoil many young Ladies and Gentlewomen but 't is not lack of time but love and relish to it that you do not read hear and pray more But what kind of foolish Creatures are many of you young Ladies to think God Christ Heaven Souls may be put off for any slight occasions or a Looking-glass You were not made for Birds or Butterflies to sing in woods Play Court or Dance in Sun But you are made for Saints to sing with Angels and go to God or else to weep in Hell Nay 't is so we will assure you and no otherwise there is but two places Look to the heavens and think well what he deserves that made them and you Psal 8. 3. and you to live in them for ever If
a heavenly holy zealous Preacher than a rich Drone a thousand times Some Shepherds have for little so much that the great Shepherd will owe them nothing at all Others have so little for their faithfulness that he will give them a Crown 'T is better for Ministers it should be said Why are not you and you provided for than Why have such and such so much As he nobly said I had rather it should be said Why does not Cato 's Image stand here than it should be said Why does it stand here But Preachers of Faith must live by Faith as well as other men and the world to come will make amends for all Come Thee and I shall be happy when King Jesus comes said one to his friend And they that fear the Lord speak often one to another Mal. 3. 16. And then shall the Righteous shine as the Sun in the Kingdom of their Father Matth. 13. 43. But many men make work for Repentance and many Ministers never put them seriously upon it as they should for want of Skill Love Faithfulness or Zeal The Lion sent for the Wolf and asked him if he had not a stinking breath Yea Sir said he and for that he tore him in pieces and sent for the Dog and asked him no said he 't is very sweet for that he tore him in pieces and sent for the Fox and asked him who cunningly told him He had a great Cold in his head and could not smell and so saved his Skin 'T is a brave thing when neither fear nor flattery moves men nor ministers from saying what they should few love Reproof fewer who reprove for love of souls and fewest of all who sincerely love the reprover Am I your enemy because I tell you the truth sayes Paul Gal. 4. 16. and we may say the greatest sin timely repented of is pardonable but the least never repented of is damnable in its own nature it being against a holy law and a holy God and Oh! how would Mr. Fowler that brave Redding and Thames-street preacher set out this 'T is for us to bring our will over to God in every thing and not his to us in any thing contrary to his Law and holy Writ whilst the world stands Religion is an inward thing takes off from self and creature but gives to God reverence in the heart and the heart and sum of religion is to love God and our Neighbours sincerely but Religion can do more for Learning than Learning can for Religion can bless and sanctifie that but that can do nothing but adorn dress and set it out with words which yet is a most excellent thing And oh that all the preachers in the world were practisers and learned too but more especially the former yet sayes God I will set thy Sons O Sion against thy Sons O Greece Zechariah 9. 13. And the quarrel shall never be ended There is naturally so much Scorn Malice Enmity and Disclain in Learning against the Simplicity Purity and Holiness of the Gospel that the corrupt unsanctified mind of man cannot but disdain it as the Pharisees and Sadduces did the preaching of Christ the Greeks and other learned men Paul counting him a babler and the cross of Christ foolishness 1 Cor. 1. 23. and he a mad man and Christ a publican and sinner for being a Physician to them and a preacher frequently among them and therefore a sociable life is better than a solitary Monkish one in a cell Christ did eat and drink at great tables with publicans and sinners but he was still as a physician to heal and reprove sin and Dod the old Puritan minister of Northampton was so holy and good at this and had that reverence and presence with him that a young gentleman at Sir Anthony Cope's could not eat half his Dinner for fear of swearing before Dod but he is dead and gone to Heaven and so may the Gentleman too for ought that we know God calls at several hours but 't is better to go to Heaven alone than not at all or to Hell with half the world Let me be happy it matters not how many then be miserable yet Balak's Balaam wished that he might dye the death of the Righteous and thought of death another world and eternal Joys Numb 23. 10. And so some will send for good men at their death which they care not for in their life to come and pray and secretly desire that their last end might be like unto them Yet the world is apt to think of Religion clean contrary to what it is sayes Lord Bacon and to make it madness a thing that dulls spirits and is apt to make Ladies look wrinkled before their time depresses them of Joy and to be looked upon by Wits and Sparks as some of God Almighty's Shee-fools and must never see good or merry daies more Alas alas said he What a miserable mistake is this Can there be better and greater Joy than Joy in the Holy Ghost 1 Thes 1. 6. unspeakable and full of Glory And can there be better Sorrow than such Sorrow which is accompanied with Joy and Works or Repentance unto Salvation never to be repented of 2 Cor. 2. 10. Can there be better chear than a good Conscience Ask Abraham Isaac and Jacob if the Waies of God be not good Ask all the Prophets Patriarchs and Apostles if the Waies of God be not Good Yea the Martyrs and the Prisoners I am in a Bed of Roses sayes one And I am in my Paradice and Palace with God and his Angels said the Noble Marquess Galliaces in the Dungeon And I have Christ who is was and ever will be all in all sayes another All in Health Life Death and Sickness and Eternity too to Men and Angels Yea ask your own Conscience when the Curtain 's drawn and the Candle out Which is best a house of Prayer a house of God or a Play-house or a days sinning or a days communion and waiting on God and his Worship Come fy pish you are mad if you prefer the pleasures of sin before Heaven or sinful pastime before Heaven's Joy Oh ye vain and foolish young Ladies do not think of being Religious when you have nothing else to do but lay aside the Lute and Citern now and dance a little in your thoughts to Death's Pipe and think you hear his Night-watch and where you shall be a hundred years hence and what when you have lain a month or two in the Grave and this will help you to be good betimes Young Ladies might be merry enough if they would be good and godly and begin betimes and have better Husbands too for good men will love good Ladies especially when they are young and good too And we hope some are left though but a few that look for Heaven and Religious Wives True Recreations are in another world All the pleasures of this are either sins or snares if we use them too much But moderation may be
Saviour's sake receive my Soul And so departed A Popish Doctor told Tindal disputing about Religion That it were better to be without God's Law than the Popes Tindal replied I defie the Pope and all his Laws He translated the Testament into English but the Popish party exceedingly raged saying There were a thousand Errors in it And for his good Works he was Imprisoned Condemned and Burnt but at his Death he cried Lord open the King of England 's Eyes John Hooper who Died 1555 being writ to by one out of England to send him some News he said He had no News to send him but that the last News that you will hear of me will be That where I have taken most pains to preach the holy Gospel there I shall be burnt to Ashes But one persuading him to Fly No says he I will live and die with my Sheep But being sent for to London he was Committed to the Fleet where he was miserably used and even poysoned with the common Ditch but being Sick he cried and called for help but the Warden said Let him alone if he die it will be a good riddance But a Knight coming to him told him Life was sweet and Death bitter To which he replied Death to come is more bitter and Life to come more sweet But being profered his Pardon going to the Execution he cryed If you love my Soul if you love my Soul away with it He prayed at the Stake Jesus thou Son of David have mercy upon me and receive my Soul And wiping his Face with his Hand cried For God's sake let me have more Fire And a third Fire being kindled he was yet alive but the last words he spoke were Lord Jesus receive my Spirit Lawrence Saunders meeting with one Pembleton another Minister said I have many fears if I should come to Suffer or Die for Religions sake What need you fear said Pembleton you have but a lean Body but I have a fat one yet you shall see the last gobbet and Grease of mine melt or fry away rather than deny Christ or the least of his Truth which I have professed Mr. Saunders being called a while after Imprisoned Tried and Condemned cried Welcome Christ welcome Christ welcome Eternal Life and the Fire being kindled sweetly slept in God sealing the Truth with his Blood But faint-hearted Pembleton for all his Self-boasting played Apostate in a small time John Rogers might have escaped and had many Motives a Wife and ten Children and had Friends in Germany if he would have gone he helped to Translate the Bible into English but Bonner sent him to Newgate amongst Thieves and Murderers And being Condemned he desired to have his Wife admitted to see him but that would not be granted him by any means but being told in the Morning he must Die that Day O said he if it be so I need not tie my Points being Dressing of himself But a Pardon being proffered him if he would Recant he utterly refused it His Wife then with nine Children and the tenth sucking at her Breast were brought to him but this sorrowful sight nothing moved him but in the Flames he took his Death with wonderful Patience The Sabbath before his Death he drank to Mr. Hooper who lay in a Chamber beneath him bidding the Messenger tell him That by God's Grace never little Fellow stuck closer to a man than he would to him supposing they should be both Burnt together Thomas Blinney in the Year 1531 had been in Prison and was drawn to Abjure and Submit himself after which he fell into terrors of Conscience for almost a Year being through God's Mercy restored to Comfort he resolved to lay down his Life for that Truth which he before had Renounced he Preached openly and complained of himself for his Fact bidding them beware they did not trust in Flesh nor Friends in matters of Religion but was seized by the Bishop and Imprisoned Being told of the Fires heat O said he God's Spirit will cool those Flames and I am sailing through a boisterous Sea but shall shortly be in Heaven help me with your Prayers and was Burnt calling upon Jesus with his Eyes and Hands lifted up John Frith was Prisoner in the Tower and had many Conflicts with the Bishops and at last condemned to be Burnt and delivered over to the Mayor and Sheriffs and in Smithfield patiently endured the same the Wind blowing away the Fire made his Death very long but by God's Grace he bore it as though he felt no Pain he much helped Tindal in Translating the New Testament And thus have I given you most Great and Noble Ladies a little short brief hint of a few brave and famous worthy English Martyrs there are Hundreds more in Fox's Book which you may find yea Thousands more English and others surely we should love the Truth and our English true Protestant Religion for the Truths sake yea and a little for these holy Martyrs sake And the God of Heaven grant our merciful King may long Live and such a Spirit never come again For this is the sum and substance of that Stuff we shall have if we lose the Bible of which the Gold Legion has a Cart-load which I here give you in a score or two of Lines as I found it written in a great Book Translated out of Spanish and Dedicated to a mighty Princess by an English Knight A great Person quitting all his fair Possession and giving them to the Church as 't was likely turned Colliers Man which labour brought Sickness and Death at which very instant all the Bells in Rome rang out on their own accord to the astonishment of the Pope himself A certain holy Monk retiring into a Wilderness house 70 miles distant from any 14 Years together had a certain Leopard which came to him every day for his Meat a long time together Gregory the Great in a great Sickness-year relates that he saw many visible Arrows come down from Heaven and struck Men dead yea another saw it Rain perfect Arrows and pieces of Stars A holy Priest that went into a very Rich Man's Kitchin where was a great Dinner of Chickens Capons and Feasants in Dishes which when the Priest saw he bade the Cook uncover the Dishes and they presently became Toads and Serpents A certain Monk saw a little Bird in a Cloyster singing very pleasantly and hopping out he follow'd it to a certain Wood where the Bird continued singing for the space of two or three hours as he thought but returning to the Cloyster again thinking he had been only a few hours or half a day at most but being unknown and searching of the Records he had been absent from the Covent 300 Years when he thought he had not been half a day St. Antonius tells you of an ill Liver that he knew was afflicted with tedious Sickness earnestly begged of God to deliver him who sent an Angel to tell him he must lie so two Years