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A50909 Letters of state written by Mr. John Milton, to most of the sovereign princes and republicks of Europe, from the year 1649, till the year 1659 ; to which is added, an account of his life ; together with several of his poems, and a catalogue of his works, never before printed. Milton, John, 1608-1674.; England and Wales. Lord Protector (1653-1658 : O. Cromwell); England and Wales. Lord Protector (1658-1659 : R. Cromwell) 1694 (1694) Wing M2126; ESTC R4807 120,265 398

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as the Guerdons of his Prowess Nor do we question but that he may be of great use to your Majesty in your present Wars who has bin so long conspicuous for his Fidelity and Experience in Military Affairs 'T is our desire therefore that he may be recommended to your Majesty according to his merits and we also farther request That he may be paid the Arrears that are due to him This as it will be most acceptable to us so we shall be ready upon the like occasion whenever offer'd to gratify your Majesty to whom we wish all Happiness and Prosperity Your Majesty's most Affectionate Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. To the most Serene Prince John King of Portugal Most Serene King our dearest Friend and Confederate THomas Evans a Master of a Ship and our Countrey-man has presented a Petition to us wherein he sets forth that in the years 1649. and 1650. he serv'd the Brafile Company with his Ship the Scipio being a Vessel of Four hunder'd Tuns and of which he was Master that the said Ship was taken from him with all the Lading and Furniture by your Majesties Command by which he has receiv'd great Damage besides the loss of Six years gain arising out of such a Stock The Commissioners by the League appointed on both sides for the deciding controversies valu'd the whole at Seven thousand of our Pounds or twice as many Milreys of Portugal Money as they made their report to us Which Loss falling so heavy upon the foresaid Thomas and being constrain'd to make a voyage to Lisbon for the Recovery of his Estate he humbly besought us that we would grant him our Letters to your Majesty in favour of his demands We therefore although we Wrote the last year in behalf of our Merchants in general to whom the Brasile Company was Indebted nevertheless that we may not be wanting to any that implore our aid request your Majesty in regard to that Friendship which is between us that consideration may be had of this man in particular and that your Majesty would give such Orders to all your Ministers and Officers that no obstacle may hinder him from demanding and recovering without delay what is owing to him from the Brasile Company or any other persons God Almighty Bless your Majesty with perpetual Felicity and grant that our Friendship may long endure From our Palace at Westm October 1656. Your Mrjesty's most Affectionate Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. To the Illustrious and Magnificent Senate of Hamborough Most Noble Magnificent and Right Worshipful JAmes and Patrick Hays Subjects of this Commonwealth have made grievous Complaint before us That they being Lawful Heirs of their Brother Alexander who dy'd Intestate were so declar'd by a Sentence of your Court pronounc'd in their behalf against their Brother's Widow and the Estates of their deceas'd Brother together with the Profits onely the Widow's Dowre excepted being adjudg'd to them by vertue of that Sentence nevertheless to this very day they could never reap any benefit of their Pains and Expences in obtaining the said Judgment notwithstanding their own declar'd Right and Letters formerly Written by King Charles in their behalf for that the great Power and Wealth of Albertvan Eyzen one of your Chief Magistrates and with whom the greatest part of the Goods was deposited was an Opposition too Potent for them to surmount whilst he strove all that in him lay that the Goods might not be restor'd to the Heirs Thus disappointed and tir'd out with delays and at length reduc'd to utmost Poverty they are become suppliants to us that we would not forsake 'em wrong'd and oppress'd as they are in a Confederated City We therefore believing it to be a chief part of our duty not to suffer any Countrey-man of ours in vain to desire our Patronage and Succour in distress make this request to your Lordships which we are apt to think we may easily obtain from your City That the Sentence pronounc'd in behalf of the two Brothers may be Ratifi'd and duly Executed according to the intents and purposes for which it was given and that you will not suffer any longer delay of Justice by any Appeal to the Chamber of Spire upon any pretence whatever For we have requir'd the Opinions of our Lawyers which we have sent to your Lordships fairiy Written and Sign'd But if intreaty and fair means will nothing avail of necessity and which is no more then according to the customary Law of Nations though we are unwilling to come to that extremity the severity of Retaliation must take its course which we hope your Prudence will take care to prevent From our Palace at Westm Octob. 16. 1656. Your Lordships most Affectionate Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. To the most Serene and Potent Lewis King of France Most Serene and Potent King our dearest Friend and Confederate WE are apt to believe that your Majesty receiv'd our Letters dated the 14th of May of the last year wherein we wrote that John Dethic Mayor of London that year and William Waterford Merchant had by their Petition set forth That a certain Vessel call'd the Jonas freighted with Goods upon their Accompt and bound for Dunkirk then under the Jurisdiction of the French was taken at the very Mouth of the Thames by a Sea-Rover pretending a Commission from the Son of the late King Charles Which being directly contrary to your Edicts and the Decrees of your Council That no English Ship taken by the Enemies of the Parliament should be admitted into any of your Ports and there put to sale they demanded Restitution of the said Ship and Goods from M. Lestrade then Governor of the Town who return'd 'em an answer no way becoming a Person of his Quality or who pretended Obedience to his Sovereign That the Government was conferr'd upon him for his good Service in the Wars and therefore he would make his best advantage of it that is to say by right or wrong for that he seem'd to drive at As if he had receiv'd that Government of your Majesties free gift to authorize him in the robbing your Confederates and contemning your Edicts set forth in their favour For what the King of France forbids his Subjects any way to have a hand in that the King's Governor has not only suffer'd to be committed in your Ports but he himself becomes the Pirate seizes the Prey and openly avouches the Fact With this Answer therefore the Merchants departed altogether baffl'd and disappointed and this we signifi'd by our Letters to your Majesty the last year with little better success for as yet we have receiv'd no Reply to those Letters Of which we are apt to believe the reason was because the Governor was with the Army
the preserving entire the League and Alliance lately concluded between this Republick and the Kingdom of Sweden shall be so far your care that the present Amity may not only continue firm and inviolable but if possible every day encrease and grow to a higher perfection to call it into question would be a piece of impiety after the Word of so great a Prince once interpos'd whose surpassing Fortitude has not only purchas'd your Majesty a Hereditary Kingdom in a Foreign Land but also could so far prevail that the most August Queen the Daughter of Gustavus and a Heroess so matchless in all degrees of Praise and Masculine Renown that many Ages backward have not produc'd her equal surrender'd the most just possession of her Empire to your Majesty neither expecting nor willing to accept it Now therefore 't is our main desire your Majesty should be every way assur'd that your so singular Affection toward us and so eminent a signification of your Mind can be no other then most dear and welcome to us and that no Combat can offer it self to us more glorious then such a one wherein we may if possible prove Victorious in out-doing your Majesty's Civility by our kind Offices that never shall be wanting Westminster July 4. 1654. Your Majesty's most Affectionate Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England Scotland and Ireland c. To the most Illustrious Lord Lewis Mendez de Haro WHAT we have understood by your Letters most Illustrious Lord that there is an Embassador already nominated and appointed by the most Serene King of Spain on purpose to come and Congratulate our having undertaken the Government of the Republick is not onely deservedly acceptable of it self but render'd much more wellcome and pleasing to us by your singular Affection and the speed of your Civility as being desirous we should understand it first of all from your self For to be so belov'd and approv'd by your Lordship who by your Vertue and Prudence have obtain'd so great Authority with your Prince as to preside his equal in Mind over all the most Important Affairs of that Kingdom ought to be so much the more pleasing to us as well understanding that the judgement of a surpassing Person cannot but be much to our Honour and Ornament Now as to our cordial Inclinations toward the King of Spain and ready propensity to hold Friendship with that Kingdom and encrease it to a stricter perfection we hope we have already satisfi'd the Present Embassador and shall more amply satisfie the other so soon as he arrives As to what remains Most Illustrious Lord we heartily wish the Dignity and Favour wherein you now flourish with your Prince perpetual to your Lordship and that whatever Affairs you carry on for the Publick Good may prosperously and happily succeed White-Hall September 1654. Your Illustrious Lordship's most Affectionate Oliver c. To the Most Serene Prince Charles Gustavus Adolphus King of the Swedes Goths and Vandals c. BEing so well assur'd of your Majesty's good-will towards me by your last Letters in answer to which I wrote back with the same Affection methinks I should do no more then what our mutual Amity requires if as I communicate my grateful Tydings to reciprocal Joy so when contrary Accidents fall out that I should lay open the sence and grief of my Mind to your Majesty as my dearest Friend For my part this is my Opinion of my self That I am now advanc'd to this degree in the Commonwealth to the end I should consult in the first place and as much as in me lies for the common Peace of the Protestants Which is the reason that of necessity it behooves me more grievously to lay to heart what we are sorry to hear concerning the bloody Conflicts and mutual Slaughters of the Bremeners and Swedes But this I chiefly bewail that being both our Friends they should so despitefully Combat one against another and with so much danger to the Interests of the Protestants and that the Peace of Munster which it was thought would have prov'd an Asylum and Safeguard to all the Protestants should be the occasion of such an unfortunate War that now the Arms of the Swedes are turn'd upon those whom but a little before among the rest they most stoutly defended for Religions sake and that this should be done more especially at this time when the Papists are said to Persecute the Reformed all over Germany and to return to their intermitted for some time Oppressions and their pristin Violencies Hearing therefore that a Truce for some days was made at Breme I could not forbear signifying to your Majesty upon this opportunity offer'd how cordially I desire and how earnestly I implore the God of Peace that this Truce may prove successfully happy for the Good of both Parties and that it may conclude in a most firm Peace by a commodious Accommodation on both sides To which purpose if your Majesty judges that my Assistance may any ways conduce I most willingly offer and promise it as in a thing without question most acceptable to the most Holy God In the mean time from the bottom of my heart I beseech the Almighty to Direct and Govern all your Counsels for the common Welfare of the Christian Interest which I make no doubt but that your Majesty chiefly desires White-Hall Octob. 26. 1654. Your Majesty's most Affectionate Oliver c. To the Magnificent and most Noble the Consuls and Senators of the City of Breme BY your Letters deliver'd to us by your Resident Henry Oldenburgh that there is a difference kindled between your City and a most Potent Neighbour and to what streights you are thereby reduc'd with so much the more Trouble and Grief we understand by how much the more we love and embrace the City of Breme so eminent above others for their Profession of the Orthodox Faith Neither is there any thing which we account more sacred in our wishes then that the whole Protestant Name would knit and grow together in Brotherly Unity and Concord In the mean time most certain it is that the common Enemy of the Reformed rejoyces at these our Dissentions and more haughtily every where exerts his Fury But in regard the Controversie which at present exercises your contending Arms is not within the power of our decision we Implore the Almighty God that the Truce begun may obtain a happy issue Assuredly as to what you desir'd we have written to the King of the Swedes exhorting him to Peace and Agreement as being most chiefly grateful to Heaven and have offer'd our Assistance in so Pious a Work On the other side we likewise exhort your selves to bear an equal Mind and by no means to refuse any honest conditions of Reconciliation And so we recommend your City to Divine Protection and Providence White-Hall Octob. 26. 1654. Your Lordships most Affectionate Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. Oliver Protector of the Republick of England To
c. To the most Serene and Potent Prince Lewis King of France Most Serene and Potent Prince our most August Confederate and Friend BY so speedily repaying our profound Respect to your Majesty with an Accumulation of Honour by such an Illustrious Embassy to our Court you have not onely made known to us but to all the People of England your singular Benignity and Generosity of Mind but also how much you favour our Reputation and Dignity For which we return our most cordial Thanks to your Majesty as justly you have merited from us As for the Victory which God has given most fortunate to our United Forces against our Enemies we rejoyce with your Majesty for it and that our People in that Battel were not wanting to your Assistance nor the Military Glory of their Ancestors nor their own Pristin Fortitude is most grateful to us As for Dunkirk which as your Majesty Wrote you were in hopes was near Surrender 't is a great addition to our joy to hear from your Majesty such speedy Tidings that it is absolutely now in your Victorious hands and we hope moreover that the loss of one City will not suffice to repay the twofold Treachery of the Spaniard but that your Majesty will in a short time Write us the welcome News of the Surrender also of the other Town As to your Promise That you will take care of our Interests we mistrust it not in the least upon the Word of a most Excellent King and our most assured Friend confirm'd withal by your Embassador the most accomplish'd Duke of Crequi Lastly we beseech Almighty God to prosper your Majesty and the Affairs of France both in Peace and War Westminster June 1658. Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. To the most Eminent Lord Cardinal Mazarin Most Eminent Lord WHile we are returning Thanks to the most Serene King who to Honour and Congratulate us as also to intermix his Joy with ours for the late glorious Victory has sent a splendid Embassy to our Court we should be ungrateful should we not also by our Letters pay our due acknowledgments to your Eminency who to testifie your Good-will toward us and how much you make it your study to do us all the Honour which lyes within your power have sent your Nephew to us a most Excellent and most Accomplish'd young Gentleman and if you had any nearer Relation or any Person whom you valu'd more would have sent him more especially to us as you declare in your Letters adding wlthal the Reason which coming from so great a Personage we deem no small advantage to our Praise and Ornament that is to say to the end that they who are most nearly Related to your Eminency in Blood might learn to imitate your Eminency in shewing Respect and Honour to our Person And we would have it not to be their meanest strife to follow your Example of Civility Candour and Friendship to us since there are not more conspicuous Examples of extraordinary Prudence and Vertue to be imitated then in your Eminency from whence they may learn with equal Renown to Govern Kingdoms and manage the most important Affairs of the World Which that your Eminency may long and happily Administer to the Prosperity of the whole Realm of France to the common Good of the whole Christian Republick and your own Glory we shall never be wanting in our Prayers to implore From our Court at White-Hall June 1658. Your Excellency's most Affectionate Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. To the most Serene and Potent Prince Charles Gustavus King of the Swedes Goths and Vandals c. Most Serene and Potent Prince our dearest Confiderate and Friend AS often as we behold the busy Counsels and various Artifices of the common Enemies of Religion so often do we revolve in our Minds how necessary it would be and how much for the safely of the Christian world that the Protestant Princes and most especially your Majesty should be united with our Republick in a most first and solemn Confederacy Which how ardently and zealously it has bin sought by our selves how acceptable it would have bin to us if ours and the Affairs of Swedeland had bin in that posture and condition if the said League could have bin sacredly concluded to the good liking of both and that the one could have bin a seasonable Succour to the other we declar'd to your Embassadors when first they enter'd into Treaty with us upon this Subject Nor were they wanting in their duty but the same Prudence which they were wont to shew in other things the same Wisdom and Sedulity they made known in this Affair But such was the Perfidiousness of our wicked and restless Countrey-men at home who being often receiv'd into our Protection ceas'd not however to machinate new disturbances and to resume their formerly often frustrated and dissipated Conspiracies with our Enemies the Spaniards that being altogether taken up with the preservation of our selves from surrounding dangets we could not bend our whole care and our entire Forces as we wish'd we could have done to defend the common Cause of Religion Nevertheless what lay in our power we have already zealously perform'd and whatever for the future may conduce to your Majesty's Interests we shall not onely shew our selves willing but industrious to carry on in union with your Majesty upon all occasions In the mean time we most gladly Congratulate your Majesty's Victories most Prudently and Couragiously atchiev'd and in our daily Prayers implore Almighty God long to continue to your Majesty a steady course of Conquest and Felicity to the Glory of his Name From our Court at White-Hall June 1658. Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. To the most Serene Prince the King of Portugal Most Serene King our Friend and Confederate JOhn Buffield of London Merchant has set forth in a Petition to us That in the year 1649. he deliver'd certain Goods to Anthony John and Manuel Ferdinando Castaneo Merchants in Tamira to the end that after they had sold 'em they might give him a just account according to the Custome of Merchants after which in his Voyage for England he fell into the hands of Pyrates and being Plunder'd by 'em receiv'd no small Damage Upon this News Antony and Manuel believing he had bin Kill'd presently look'd upon the Goods as their own and still detain 'em in their hands refusing to come to any Account covering this Fraud of theirs with a Sequestration of Englisb Goods that soon after ensu'd So that he was forc'd the last year in the middle of Winter to return to Portugal and demand his Goods but all in vain For that the said John and Anthony could by no fair means be perswaded either to deliver the said Goods or to come to any Account and which is more to be admir'd justifi'd their private detention of the Goods by the Publick Attainder Finding therefore that being a
stranger he should get nothing by contending with the Inhabitants of Tamira in their own Countrey he betook himself for Justice to your Majesty humbly demanded the judgment of the Conservator appointed to determine the Causes of the English but was sent back to the Cognizance of that Court from which he had appeal'd Which though in it self not unjust yet seeing it is evident that the Merchants of Tamira make an ill use of your Publick Edict to justify their own private Couzenage we make it our earnest request to your Majesty that according to your wonted Clemency you would rather refer to the Conservator being the proper Judge in these Cases the Cause of this poor Man Afflicted by many Casualties and reduc'd to utmost Poverty to the end he may recover the Remainder of his Fortunes from the Faithless Partnership of those People Which when you rightly understand the business we make no question but will be no less pleasing to your Majesty to see done then to our selves From our Court at Westminster August 1658. To the most Serene Prince Leopold Arch-Duke of Austria Governour of the Low-Countries under Philip K. of Spain Most Serene Lord CHarles Harbord Knight has set forth in his Petition to Us that having sent certain Goods and Houshold-Stuff out of Holland to Bruges under your Jurisdiction he is in great danger of having them arrested out of his hands by Force and Violence For that those Goods were sent him out of England in the Year 1643. by the Earl of Suffolk for whom he stood bound in a Great Sum of Money to the end he might have wherewithal to satisfy himself should he be compell'd to pay the Debt Which Goods are now in the Possession of Richard Greenville Knight who broke open the doors of the place where they were in Custody and made a Violent seizure of the same under pretence of we know not what due to him from Theophilus Earl of Suffolk by Vertue of a certain Decree of our Court of Chancery to which those Goods as being the Earls were justly liable whereas by our Laws neither the Earl now living whose Goods they are is bound by that Decree neither ought the Goods to be seiz'd or detain'd which the Sentence of that Court now sent to your Serenity together with these Letters positively declares and proves Which Letters the said Charles Harbord has desir'd of us to the end we would make it our Request to your Highness that the said Goods may be forthwith discharg'd from the violent seizure and no less unjust action of the said Richard Greenville in regard it is apparently against the Custom and Law of Nations that any Person should be allow'd the liberties to sue in a Foreign Jurisdiction upon a plaint wherein he can have no relief in the Country where the Cause of Action first arose Therefore the Reason of Justice it self and your far Celebrated Enquanimity encourag'd us to recommend this Cause to your Highness Assuring your Highness that whenever any dispute shall happen in our Courts concerning the Rights and Properties of your People you shall ever find us ready and quick in our Returns of Favour Westminster Your Highnesse's most Affectionate Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. LETTERS Written in the Name of RICHARD Protector Richard Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. To the most Serene and Potent Prince Lewis King of France Most Serene and Potent King our Friend and Confederate SO soon as our most Serene Father Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England by the Will of God so ordaining departed this Life upon the Third of September we being Lawfully declar'd his Successor in the Supream Magistracy tho in the Extremity of Tears and sadness could do no less then with the first Opportunity by these our Letters make known a Matter of this Concernment to your Majesty by whom as you have bin a most Cordial Friend to our Father and this Republick we are Confident the Mournful and unexpected Tydings will be as sorrowfully received Our business now is to request your Majesty that you would have such an Opinion of us as of one who has determin'd nothing more Religiously and constantly then to observe the Friendship and Confedracy contracted between your Majesty and our Renowned Father and with the same Zeal and Good-will to confirm and Establish the Leagues by him Concluded and to carry on the same Counsels and Interests with your Majesty To which intent it is our pleasure that our Embassadour Residing at your Court be empower'd by the same Commission as formerly and that you will give the same Credit to what he transacts in our Name as if it had bin done by our selves In the mean time we wish your Majesty all Prosperity From our Court at White-Hall Septemb. 5. 1658. To the most Eminent Lord Cardinal Mazarine THO nothing could fall out more bitter and grievous to us then to write the Mournful News of our most Serene and most Renowned Father's Death nevertheless in regard we cannot be ignorant of the high Esteem which he had for your Eminency and the great Value which you had for him nor have any reason to doubt but that your Eminency upon whose care the Prosperity of France depends will no less bewail the loss of your constant Friend and most United Confederate we thought it of great moment by these our Letters to make known this Accident so deeply to be lamented as well to your Eminency as to the King and to assure your Eminency which is but reason that we shall most Religiously observe all those things which our Father of most Serene Memory was bound by the League to fee confirm'd and ratify'd and shall make it our business that in the midst of your mourning for a Friend so Faithful and Flourishing in all Vertuous Applause there may be nothing wanting to preserve the Faith of our Confederacy For the Conservation of which on your part also to the good of both Nations may God Almighty long preserve your Eminency Westminster Sept. 1658. Richard Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. To the most Serene and Potent Prince Charles Gustavus King of the Swedes Goths and Vandalls c. Most Serene and Potent King our Friend and Confederate WHen we consider with our selves that it will be a difficult matter for us to be Imitators of our Fathers Vertues unless we should observe and endeavour to hold the same Confederacies which he by his prowess acquir'd and out of his singular judgment thought most worthy to be embrac'd and observ'd your Majesty has no reason to doubt but that it behoves us to pay the same tribute of Affection and Good-will which our Father of most Serene Memory always paid to your Majesty Therefore altho in this beginning of our Government and Dignity I may not find our Affairs in that Condition as at present to answer to some particulars which your Embassadours have propos'd yet it is
a Chest or two of choice Musick-books of the best Masters flourishing about that time in Italy namely Luca Marenzo Monte Verde Horatio Vecchi Cifa the Prince of Venosa and several others he took his course through Verona Milan and the Poenine Alps and so by the Lake Leman to Geneva where he staid for some time and had daily converse with the most Learned Giovanni Deodati Theology-Professor in that City and so returning through France by the same way he had passed it going to Italy he after a Peregrination of one compleat Year and about Three Months arrived safe in England about the time of the Kings making his second Expedition against the Scots Soon after his return and visits paid to his Father and other Friends he took him a Lodging in S. Brides Church-yard at the House of one Russel a Taylor where he first undertook the Education and Instruction of his Sister 's two Sons the Younger whereof had been wholly committed to his Charge and Care And here by the way I judge it not impertinent to mention the many Authors both of the Latin and Greek which through his excellent judgment and way of Teaching far above the Pedantry of common publick Schools where such Authors are scarce ever heard of were run over within no greater compass of time then from Ten to Fifteen or Sixteen Years of Age. Of the Latin the four Grand Authors De Re Rustica Cato Varro Columella and Palladius Cornelius Celsus an Ancient Physician of the Romans a great part of Pliny's Natural History Vitruvius his Architecture Frontinus his Stratagems with the two Egregious Poets Lucretius and Manilius Of the Greek Hesiod a Poet equal with Homer Aratus his Phaenomena and Diosemeia Dionysius Afer de situ Orbis Oppian's Cynegeticks Halieuticks Quintus Calaber his Poem of the Trojan War continued from Homer Apollonius Rhodius his Argonuticks and in Prose Plutarch's Placita Philosophorum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Geminus's Astronomy Xenophon's Cyri Institutio Anabasis Aelians Tacticks and Polyaenus his Warlike Stratagems thus by teaching he in some measure increased his own knowledge having the reading of all these Authors as it were by Proxy and all this might possibly have conduced to the preserving of his Eye-sight had he not moreover been perpetually busied in his own Laborious Undertakings of the Book or Pen. Nor did the time thus Studiously imployed in conquering the Greek and Latin Tongues hinder the attaining to the chief Oriental Languages viz. The Hebrew Caldee and Syriac so far as to go through the Pentateuch or Five Books of Moses in Hebrew to make a good entrance into the Targum or Chaldee Paraphrase and to understand several Chapters of St. Matthew in the Syriac Testament besides an Introduction into several Arts and Sciences by Reading Vrstisius his Arithmetick Riffs Geometry Petiscus his Trigonometry Joannes de Sacro Bosco de Sphaera and into the Italian and French Tongues by reading in Italian Giovan Villani's History of the Transactions between several petty States of Italy and in French a great part of Pierre Davity the famous Geographer of France in his time The Sunday's work was for the most part the Reading each day a Chapter of the Greek Testament and hearing his Learned Exposition upon the same and how this savoured of Atheism in him I leave to the courteous Backbiter to judge The next work after this was the writing from his own dictation some part from time to time of a Tractate which he thought fit to collect from the ablest of Divines who had written of that Subject Amesius Wollebius c. viz. A perfect System of Divinity of which more hereafter Now persons so far Manuducted into the highest paths of Literature both Divine and Human had they received his documents with the same Acuteness of Wit and Apprehension the same Industry Alacrity and Thirst after Knowledge as the Instructer was indued with what Prodigies of Wit and Learning might they have proved the Scholars might in some degree have come near to the equalling of the Master or at least have in some sort made good what he seems to predict in the close of an Elegy he made in the Seventeenth Year of his Age upon the Death of one of his Sister's Children a Daughter who died in her Infancy Then thou the Mother of so sweet a Child Her false Imagin'd Loss cease to Lament And Wisely learn to curb thy Sorrows Wild This if thou do he will an Offspring give That to the Worlds last end shall make thy Name to live But to return to the Thread of our Discourse he made no long stay in his Lodgings in St. Brides Church-yard necessity of having a place to dispose his Books in and other Goods fit for the furnishing of a good handsome House hastning him to take one and accordingly a pretty Garden-House he took in Aldersgate-Street at the end of an Entry and therefore the fitter for his turn by the reason of the Privacy besides that there are few Streets in London more free from Noise then that Here first it was that his Academick Erudition was put in practice and Vigorously proceeded he himself giving an Example to those under him for it was not long after his taking this House e're his Elder Nephew was put to Board with him also of hard Study and spare Diet only this advantage he had that once in three Weeks or a Month he would drop into the Society of some Young Sparks of his Acquaintance the chief whereof were Mr. Alphry and Mr. Miller two Gentlemen of Gray's-Inn the Beau's of those Times but nothing near so bad as those now-a-days with these Gentlemen he would so far make bold with his Body as now and then to keep a Gawdy day In this House he continued several Years in the one or two first whereof he set out several Treatises viz. That of Reformation that against Prelatical Episcopacy The Reason of Church-Government The Defence of Smectimnuus at least the greatest part of them but as I take it all and some time after one Sheet of Education which he Dedicated to Mr. Samuel Hartlib he that wrote so much of Husbandry this Sheet is Printed at the end of the Second Edition of his Poems and lastly Areopagitica During the time also of his continuance in this House there fell out several Occasions of the Increasing of his Family His Father who till the taking of Reading by the Earl of Essex his Forces had lived with his other Son at his House there was upon that Son's dissettlement necessitated to betake himself to this his Eldest Son with whom he lived for some Years even to his Dying Day In the next place he had an Addition of some Scholars to which may be added his entring into Matrimony but he had his Wife's company so small a time that he may well be said to have become a single man again soon after About Whitsuntide it was or a little after that he took
setling of those Affairs In the mean time Almighty God preserve in safety so great a Pillar of his Church and of Swedeland's welfare From our Palace at Westminster July 1656. Your Majesties most Affectionate Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. to the most Serene Prince Lewis King of France Most Serene King our most dear Friend and Confederate CErtain Merchants of London Richard Baker and others have made their complaint in a Petition to us That a certain hir'd Ship of theirs call'd the Endeavour William Jop Master Laden at Tenariff with Three hundre'd Pipes of rich Canary and bound from thence for London in her Voyage between Palma and that Island upon the 21st of November in the year 1655. was taken by Four French Vessels seeming Ships of Burthen but fitted and mann'd like Privateers under the Command of Giles de la Roche their Admiral and carri'd with all her Freight and the greatest part of the Seamen to the East-Indies whither he pretended to be bound Fourteen excepted who were put ashore upon the Coast of Guiney which the said Giles affirm'd he did with that Intent that none of 'em might escape from so Remote and Barbarous a Countrey to do him any harm by their Testimony For he confess'd he had neither any Commission to take the English Vessels neither had he taken any as he might have done before well knowing there was a firm Peace at that time between the French and our Republick But in regard he had design'd to revittle in Portugal from whence he was driven by contrary Winds he was constrain'd to supply his necessities with what he found in that Vessel and believ'd the Owners of his Ships would satisfie the Merchants for their Loss Now the Loss of our Merchants amounts to Sixteen Thousand English Pounds as will easily be made appear by Witnesses upon Oath But if it shall be Lawful upon such trivial Excuses as these for Pyrates to violate the most Religious Acts of Princes and make a sport of Merchants for their particular benefits certainly the sanctity of Leagnes must fall to the ground all Faith and Authority of Princes will grow out of date and be trampl'd under foot Wherefore we not onely request your Majesty but believe it mainly to concern your Honour that they who have adventur'd upon so slight a pretence to violate the League and most Sacred Oath of their Sovereign should suffer the Punishment due to so much Perfidiousness and daring Insolence and that in the mean time the Owners of those Ships though to their Loss should be bound to satisfie our Merchants for the vast Detriment which they have so wrongfully sustain'd So may the Almighty long preserve your Majesty and support the Interest of France against the Common Enemy of us Both. From our Palace at Westminster August 1656. Your Majesty's most Affectionate Oliver Protector c. Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England To his Eminency Cardinal Mazarine Most Eminent Lord HAving an occasion to send Letters to the King we thought it likewise an offer'd opportunity to Write to your Eminency For we could not think it proper to conceal the subject of our Writing from the sole and onely person whose singular Prudence Governs the most important Interests of the French Nation and the most weighty Affairs of the Kingdom with equal Fidelity Council and Vigilance Not without reason we complain in short to find that League by your self as it were a crime to doubt most sacredly concluded almost the very same day contemn'd and violated by one Giles a French-man a petty Admiral of Four Ships and his Associates equally concern'd as your Eminency will readily find by our Letters to the King and the Demands themselves of our Merchants Nor is it unknown to your Excellency howmuch it concerns not only Inferiour Magistrates but even Royal Majesty it self that those first Violators of solemn Alliances should be severely punish'd But they perhaps by this time being arriv'd in the East-Indies whither they pretended to be bound enjoy in undisturb'd possession the Goods of our People as Lawful Prize won from an Enemy which they Robb'd and Pilledg'd from the Owners contrary to all Law and the pledg'd Faith of our late sacrd League However this is that which we request from your Eminency That whatever Goods were taken from our Merchants by the Admiral of those Ships as necessary for his Voyage may be restor'd by the Owners of the same Vessels which was no more then what the Rovers themselves thought Just and Equal which as we understand it lies within your Power to do considering the Authority and Sway you bear in the Kingdom From our Palace at Westminster August 1656. Your Eminencies most Affectionate Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth c. Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. To the most High and Mighty Lords the States of the United Provinces Most High and Mighty Lords our dear Friends and Confederates WE make no doubt but that all men will bear us this Testimony That no considerations in contracting Foreign Alliances ever sway'd us beyond those of defending the Truth of Religion or that we accounted any thing more sacred then to Unite the Minds of all the Friends and Protectors of the Protestants and of all others who at least were not their Enemies Whence it comes to pass that we are touch'd with so much the more grief of Mind to hear that the Protestant Princes and Cities whom it so much behoves to live in Friendship and Concord together should begin to be so jealous of each other and so ill dispos'd to mutual Affection more especially that your Lordships and the King of Sweden then whom the Orthodox Faith has not more Magnanimous and Couragious Defenders nor our Republick Confederates more strictly conjoyn'd in Interests should seem to remit of your confidence in each other or rather that there should appear some too apparent signs of tottering Friendship and growing discord between ye What the causes are and what progress this alienation of your Affection has made we protest our selves to be altogether ignorant However we cannot but conceive an extraordinary trouble of mind for these beginnings of the least dissention arisen among Brethren which infallibly must greatly endanger the Protestant Interests Which if they should gather strength how prejudicial it would prove to the Protestant Churches what an occasion of triumph it would afford our Enemies and more especially the Spaniards cannot be unknown to your Prudence and most industrious experience of Affairs As for the Spaniards it has already so enliven'd their confidence and rais'd their Courage that they made no scruple by their Embassador residing in your Territories boldly to obtrude their Counsels upon your Lordships and that in reference to the highest concerns of your Republick presuming partly with Threats of renewing the War to terrifie and partly with a false prospect of Advantage
own Honour Westm May 1658. To the Evangelick Cities of the Switzers Illustrious and most Noble Lords our dearest Friends HOW heavy and intolerable the Sufferings of the Piemontois your most afflicted Neighbours have bin and how unmercifully they have been dealt with by their own Prince for the sake of their Religion by reason of the Felness of the Cruelties we almost tremble to remember and thought it superfluous to put you in mind of those things which are much better known to your Lordships We have also seen Copies of the Letters which your Embassadors Promoters and Witnesses of the Peace concluded at Pignerol wrote to the Duke of Savoy and the President of his Council at Turin wherein they set forth and make it out that all the Conditions of the said Peace are broken and were rather a Snare then a Security to those miserable People Which Violation continu'd from the Conclusion of the Peace to this very moment and still growing more heavy every day then other unless they patiently endure unless they lay themselves down to be trampl'd under foot plash'd like Mortar or abjure their Religion the same Calamities the same Slaughters hang over their Heads which three years since made such a dreadful havock of them their Wives and Children and which if it must be undergone once more will certainly prove the utter extirpation of their whole Race What shall such miserable Creatures do in whose behalf no Intercession will avail to whom no breathing time is allow'd nor any certain place of Refuge They have to do with Wild Beasts or Furies rather upon whom the remembrance of their former Murders has wrought no compassion upon their Countrymen no sense of humanity nor satiated their ravenous hunger after blood Most certainly these things are not to be endur'd if we desire the safety of our Brethren the Piemontois most Ancient Professors of the Orthodox Faith or the Welfare of our Religion it self As for our selves so far remote we have not been wanting to assist 'em as far as in us lay nor shall we cease our future Aid But you who not only lie so near adjoining as to behold the Butcheries and hear the Outcries and Shrieks of the Distressed but are also next expos'd to the fury of the same Enemies consider for the sake of the Immortal God and that in time what it behoves ye now to do Consult your Prudence your Piety and your Fortitude what succour what relief and safegard you are able and are bound to afford your Neighbours and Brethren who must else undoubtedly and speedily perish Certainly the same Religion is the cause why the same Enemies seek also your Perdition why at the same time the last year they meditated your ruin by Intestine Broiles among your selves It seems to be only in your power next under God to prevent the Extirpation of this most Ancient Scien of the Purer Religion in these remainders of the Primitive Believers whose preservation now reduc'd to the very brink of utter ruin if you neglect beware that the next Turn be not your own These Admonitions while we give ye freely and out of Brotherly love we are not quite as yet cast down For what lies only in our power so far distant as we have hitherto so shall we still employ our utmost Endeavours not only to procure the safety of our Brethren upon the precipice of danger but also to relieve their Wants May the Almighty God vouchsafe to both of us that peace and tranquility at home that settlement of Times and Affairs that we may be able to employ all our Wealth and Force all our Studies and Counsels in the defence of his Church against the Rage and Fury of her Enemies From our Court at White-Hall May 1658. To his Eminency Cardinal Mazarin Most Eminent Lord THE late most Grievous Cruelties and most Bloody Slaughters perpetrated upon the Inhabitants of the Valleys of Piemont within the Duke of Savoy's Dominions occasion'd the writing of the inclos'd Letters to his Majesty and these other to your Eminency And as we make no doubt but that such Tyranny Inhumanities so rigorously inflicted upon harmless and indigent People are highly displeasing and offensive to the most Serene King so we readily persuade our selves that what we request from his Majesty in behalf of those unfortunate Creatures your Eminency will employ your endeavour and your favour to obtain as an accumulation to our Intercessions Seeing there is nothing which has acquir'd more good-will and affection to the French Nation among all the Neighbouring Professors of the Reformed Religion then that Liberty and those Privileges which by publick Acts and Edicts are granted in that Kingdom to the Protestants And this among others was one main Reason why this Republick so ardently desir'd the Friendship and Alliance of the French People For the setling of which we are now treating with the King's Embassador and have made those progresses that the Treaty is almost brought to a conclusion Besides that your Eminency's singular Benignity and Moderation which in the management of the most Important Affairs of the Kingdom you have always testifi'd to the Protestants of France encourages us to expect what we promise to our selves from your Prudence and Generosity whereby you will not only lay the foundations of a stricter Alliance between this Republick and the Kingdom of France but oblige us in particular to Returns of all good Offices of Civility and Kindness And of this we desire your Eminency to rest assur'd Your Eminency's most Affectionate Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. To the most Serene and Potent Prince Lewis King of France Most Serene and Potent King our most August Friend and Confederate IT being the intention of Thomas Viscount Falconbridge our Son-in-Law to Travel into France and no less his desire out of his profound Respect and Veneration to your Majesty to be admitted to Kiss your Royal hands though by reason of his pleasing Conversation we are unwilling to part with him nevertheless not doubting but he will in a short time return from the Court of so great a Prince celebrated for the resort of so many Prudent and Couragious Persons more nobly prepar'd for great Performances and fully Accomplish'd in whatsoever may be thought most Laudable and Vertuous we did not think it fit to put a stop to his generous Resolutions And though he be a Person who unless we deceive our selves carries his own Recommendations about him wheresoe're he goes yet if he shall find himself somewhat the more favour'd by your Majesty for our sake we shall think our selves Honour'd and Oblig'd by the same Kindness God Almighty long preserve your Majesty in safety and continue a lasting Peace between us to the common Good of the Christian world From our Court at White-May 1658. Oliver Protector of the Commonwealth of England c. To the most Eminent Lord Cardinal Mazarin Most Eminent Lord HAving Recommended to the most Serene King