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A34762 The countries vindication from the aspersions of a late scandalous paper (nick-named) Robert Tell-Truths advice in choice of the next Parliament in which his popish designs are fully discovered and detected / by a lover of his king and country. Lover of his king and country. 1679 (1679) Wing C6573; ESTC R20996 6,694 6

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THE Countries Vindication FROM The Aspersions of a late Scandalous Paper Nick-named Robert Tell truths Advice in choice of the next Parliament In which his Popish Designs are fully discovered and detected By a Lover of his King and Country Respice Cave BY how mu●h Designs are l●id most opposite to Truth and Righteousness to much the more are those workers of iniquity active and industrious to promote those indirect Interests Per fas a●●●nefas turn every stone never wanting the presence of publick advantage In this art of Legerdemain our old but now most vigorous enemies the Papists are upon their great trial of skill In some Pamphlets they throw off the Plot as visible as it is and in a late Paper ●hey undertake to advise the People of England in their Elec●ions of Parliament-men and have made it their business to create Jealousies amongst the Protestants thereby to divide that Interest which is all little enough when intire to resist their devilish and hell-bred Machinations This Sophister tells us There has been Factions in all Ages playing their tricks and that in nomine Domini I can consent with him to our sad experience I can turn the truth upon the Popish faction and by that time I have done lay all the Devilish tricks at their own door In the mean time tell him Turpe est Doctori cum culpa redarguit ipsum Thou that teachest another should not steal dost thou murder and commit Sacriledg thou Hypocrite take out the beam out of thy own eye first before thou undertake the mote in thy brothers and ere you hope to have your Advice to pass let us examine your Composition I find your whole Receipt has dangerous Ingredients Reflections upon Parliaments upon all godly sober men and upon honest Country-men Another part in the mixture are seeds of Jealousies and Divisions thrown amongst us your old stratagems this will not do Mors in olla we find a Snake in the sweet herbs and death in the pot I believe you have had this recipe from Sir George Wakeman skilful in the venomous Art of Poysoning Your design Sir is discovered therefore you cannot hope to succeed your caution against the Godly the sober party nor the honest Country-man will not divide us I can assure you Sir they are no Papists and for those unhappy divisions that are and have been amongst us in the Church we shall demonstrate the Jesuit inforc'd 'em and he must needs go that the Devil drives and to draw a suspect one amongst another he tells us of what tricks and what vizards were worn in Forty-eight by Puritans and others at which time you say they lost their Mask a favour of your own bestowing and now has reassumed it again with which you are playing the Devil in the shape of an Angel of light but what have you to do to rake up our former miseries which I hope God has forgiven and the King has graciously so long since pardoned by whose wisdom and goodness he sits Enthroned in his peoples hearts all your subtilties can not unsettle the favourable apprehensions his Majesty has of his Protestant subjects loyalty after twenty years experience nor any ways bring in question the duty and affections of his People no Sir the resentments of former evils are too fresh amongst us for any Popish machinations to dissolve this union take the holy cheat to your self your Piae fraudes are the best support of your Romish Church and had not your Engins play'd amongst us our Puritan had never separated from the Church of England for I must tell you all the sober godly party and Puritans too were all conformable to the decent and orderly government of the Church of England read and heard Divine service and wore the Surplice and there held steddy till the fourth Commandment was almost expunged the Decalogue witness the Book s●t out by the Arch-bishop of Canterbury for licensing Sports Pays and Dancings on the Lords day enforcing all Ministers to read it in their Churches which divers otherwise conformable out of conscience refused for which they were turned out of their Ministry and a company of scandalous debauchees men of any latitude put into their places This was a bird hatcht at Rome sent to be nurst in England knowing well it would bring to pass their infallible design to divide us and from the same counsels came into our Churches those crouds of Trumperies Tapers and Crucifixes Cringings and Bowings that the Service of God was turned to a Popish Antick all in pretence as it was publickly asserted by some Grandees then in the Church to bring us to as near an union with the Church of Rome as possibly the temper of the present time would bear We do not forget what was enforc'd upon the peaceable Kirk of Scotland where the three footed Stools from the old Womens Tayls began the War all these were likely ways to preserve us from Popery contrary to the designs of our blessed Reformers King Edward the sixth and Queen Elizabeth of blessed Memory who by degrees as those days would endure drew us still further off from those Fopperies and we might have expected then when the Nation was become generally Protestant to have kept a greater distance by a further Reformation and as in the Church so in the State men of corrupt minds and pernicious practices to satisfie their avarice and boundless ambitions obtruded several Illegal Impositions as Loan-money and Ship-money against Law for which divers Noblemen and Gentlemen endured long Imprisonments Customs exacted without Act of Parliament with swarms of Monoplies under which the Nation groaned then came in the Scotch with a formidable Army to our Borders with their Petitions A Parliament was call'd who inspecting the Grievances of the Nation discovered those wicked Counsellors and dangerous Influences of the Papists Impeaching and calling to account those contrivers and actors of these Oppressions some whereof fled others for their own protection and the Jesuits the better to shuffle in their designs in the midst of our confusion made the best of Kings suspect his safety amongst his People and drove us into that unnatural War then the Papist not out of affection to his Majesty but having no other subterfuge and to carry on their designs ran in with their Arms got into several great places of Trust Military and Civil contriving and effecting an Act of Pacification with the bloody Irish Rebels after they had imbrued their hands in the blood and murder of a Hundred thousand of his Majesties Protestant Subjects in Ireland all which begat desperate apprehensions in the minds of most men that Arbitrariness and Popery were breaking in upon us though as we are bound to believe never design'd by that blessed Prince and glorious Martyr The Papist joyning unfortunately in this War heightned the confusion and now blood and rapine know no bounds the King is over thrown in his just Cause by the wicked designs of these disturbers