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A78344 A catalogue of the titles of severall books printed in Cambridge in the year 1669 1669 (1669) Wing C1411B; ESTC R175692 7,370 8

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Monmouth General shall be Then Iames Nan in a small flees To New-York fly they hold it meet Til Charles the Second takes his rest Then York Monmouth shall contest Who hath most right to wear the Crown And so in blood each other drown The Commons then shall laugh sing And banish quite the Name of King The Lords priviledge quite out of doors Then every Peer must pay his scores Then Castlemain that Papist-Whore Shall dy a death as did Iane Shore And Drunken Shepheards run away Both Dogs Flocks shal go astray The knavish Lawyers in disgrace And honest men put in their place Who shall with love make men agree And justice plead without a Fee The Cityzen Countreyman Shall lovingly go hand in hand Then Brittain shall in triumph ride With peace honour by her side Dame Foresight with her looking-glass Shewing what 's coming what 's past Iustice with her ballance waits that Day To even all that Strife can say Charitie full-loaded with her store Distributing Alms amongst the poor Victory with her Laurel-Crown'd Spurning at Tyrants on the ground Heaven then shall pleased be For seeing Love Vnity Always waiting at the Gate To keep out discord from the State In a large Quarto Sr Satan Birckenhead proved to be a legitimate Child of the Devil viz. That when the poor people who had their houses pull'd down on both Tower-hills Petitioned the House of Commons for satisfaction The said Sr. Satan stood up affirmed to the Parliament That to his knowledge His Mai●…tie had taken particuler care to satisfie pay every Man to a farthing their whole damage Upon which lie The House threw out the poor peoples Petition who are not yet satisfyed nor in any hopes of redress The Iesuits Conclusion Arguments used to severall Protestant Princes abroad That the Pope hath a great Interest in England For that say they you find the Lord Taff E. of Carlingford an Irish-Papist Sr. Bernaed Gascoygn an Italian Papist and Harry Howard the Head of all the Papists in England with other Church-Papists employed as Embassadours to severall Princes Coures as if there were not Protestant Subjects enough capable of trust Montagu's faint request Zeal in pressing the French King on behalf of the poor oppressed Protestants in France Together with that Kings gracious Answers value had for the English Embassadours desires viz. making 49. fresh Articles be published against the Protestants which are such cruell Ones that they are judged by moderate Persons to be hatch'd in hell by the departed Iesuits printed to gratify their friends in England A hot dispute between 2. young Students at the Vniversitie of Heidelbergh the one a Frenchman the other an Englishman In which the Frenchman by many unanswerable Arguments proves That as Queen Elizabeth promoted defended the Protestants Interest in the Low-Countries So on the contrary King Iames King Charles of blessed memory destroyed not onely the Interest of Protestants in Cermany France but everywhere else One Demonstration whereof was That King Iames to gratifie Gundimer the Spanish Embassadour out of a fearfull base cowardly Spirit sent orders to call home the Lord Vere other brave English Officers commanding 8000 Men out of the Cittadell at Manham Castle at Heidelbergh leaving those invincible fortifications to the plunder of the Duke of Bavaria the English having then had in Manham above 200 fodder of wine which contain 1200. hogsheads all other provisions in great abundance Which Act was the immediate ruin of that renowned Prince Palatine almost all the Protestants in Germany A second Demonsiration was That when the Duke of Bukingham was sent to the relief of the Protestants in Rochel there were private Instructions that they should land the English in the Isle of Rhee and when God by a Iudgement cut off the Duke of Buckingham for his delaying to go with a second relief there were found in his pocketts instructions from the Queen-Mother that the Duke should make good his premise to delay the time till the Rebels Rogues as they were termed were beaten before Mompelier at Rochel So that the French-man concluded That 't was no marvel that Queen Elizabeth prospered was a terrour to the whole world not suffering any French-Pensioners in her Court employing none but true-born Englishmen and that on the contrary 't is no wonder that so many Iudgements plagues disgraces have happened to England since her days when you behold the treachery of our Chieftains Leaders An Account dropt out of the Privy-purse kept by Pimp-May through Bridgmans carelessnes found by a Parliament-man On the folding of the outside of the paper was written The punishment of evill-doers viz. Item To the Lord Gerard for continuing his Art of swearing ruining many poor Gentlemen other misdemeanours abusing the old King at Newark and for his Ladys employ in the room of the Lady Wood twelv thousand pounds On condition that He quietly give his place to the Duke of Monmouth Item Four thousand pounds to the Lord Mordant to continue his practise of forceing Ladys abuseing Taylor others Item Five thousand pounds to the Lord Culpeper to render his place in the Isle of Wight to Sr. Robert Holms Item To the Lady Castlemain twelv thousand pounds to furnish Barkshire-House Item Eight thousand seaven hundred twenty five pounds a year to the Lady Castlemain out of the Post-Offices Item For the lying in of Mis at the Play-house for children abroad at Nurse c. with many Articles lying before the Accomptants at Brook-house exactly cast up for satisfaction with this Inscription Mobile mutatur semper cum Principe vulgus In a small Octavo Sr. Philip Warwicks wise resolutions to weare little breeches never to ask any employment Provided he may enjoy the last Fifty thousand pound shared with pocky Sr. Robert Long of the Excheqr Dedicated to the Commissioners at Brook-house A Prophecie cryed in the streets in Paris Being An Observation on a Dialogue between an English Gentleman a French Nobleman at the Crowning of King Henry the Fifth in Paris at which time the Englishman crowing braying over his Prisoner ask'd him when a Frenchman should be crowned King of England in London-city as now an Englishman was crowned King of France in Paris To which the Frenchman modestly replyed Sr I will tell you When Englands Sins are as great as the Sins of France are now you may then see a Frenchman or some other strange Nation crown'd in London Which makes the Frenchman bragg that the time is near at hand But honest English hearts do pray hope that England will return by a holy Repentance to a mercifull God that can prevent the fulfilling of this Prophecie History of Bel the Dragon Being an excellent piece practised experienced by the States of Holland in which is proposed to the Duke of Bukingham 3. remedies in State for the prevention of the encrease growth of vermin caterpillars in England viz. That the 400000 pounds a year in Rents Fees emoluments devoured by Arch-Deacons Deans Canons Prebends Chancellours Commissaries Officialls Surrogates Proctors Gent-Apparators Vicars Petty-canons Singing-men Boys Choristers Organists Gospellers Epistlers Virgers the rest of that joviall unusefull Crew besides the vast incomes of the Bishops be employed for the maintenance of an able Godly Ministry preservation of the poor Or laid out in a Fishing trade for encrease of Shipping Or as a Stock to defray the Publick charge in the room of Excise Hearth-moneys Dedicated to the Author of Omnia comesta â Belo the Cobler of Gloucester Monks last charitable Legacies bequeathed to Genll Lambert Major Genll Overton whereby he hath manifested himself to dy a true Son of the Church of England according to the 40th Article viz. Brethren forgive love one another