Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n chancellor_n earl_n sir_n 18,623 5 6.3520 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A14618 Further obseruations of the English Spanish pilgrime, concerning Spaine being a second part of his former booke, and containing these particulars: the description of a famous monastery, or house of the King of Spaines, called the Escuriall, not the like in the Christian world: a briefe relation of certaine dæmonicall stratagems of the Spanish Inquisition exercised on diuers English men of note of late times, and now liuing in England. A relation of the founding of a military order in Rome, to wit, of the immaculate Conception of our Lady, the blessed Virgin. Composed by Iames Wadsworth, Gentleman, lately conuerted into his true mothers bosome, the Church of England, and heretofore pentioner to the King of Spaine. Wadsworth, James, 1604-1656?; Wadsworth, James, 1604-1656? English Spanish pilgrime. aut 1630 (1630) STC 24928; ESTC S119406 21,866 56

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

FVRTHER OBSERVATIONS OF THE ENGLISH SPANISH PILGRIME CONCERNING SPAINE Being a second part of his former Booke and containing these particulars The description of a famous Monastery or House of the King of Spaines called the Escuriall not the like in the Christian World A briefe relation of certaine Daemonicall stratagems of the Spanish Inquisition exercised on diuers English men of note of late times and now liuing in England A relation of the founding of a Military Order in Rome to wit of the immaculate Conception of our Lady the blessed Virgin Composed by Iames Wadsworth Gentleman lately conuerted into his true Mothers bosome the Church of England and heretofore Pentioner to the King of Spaine LONDON Imprinted by Felix Kyngston for Nathaniel Butter and are to be sold at his shop at S. Austens gate at the signe of the pide Bull. 1630. TO THE TRVLY NOBLE AND HIGHLY HONOVRABLE HENRY Earle of Holland Lord Kensington High Constable of the Castle of Windsor Captaine of his Maiesties Guard Knight of the Noble Order of the Garter one of his Maiesties most honorable Priuy Councell and Chancellour of the Vniuersity of Cambridge The Right Honourable Robert Earle of Warwick The truly Noble the Lord Mountioy Earle of Newport three most happy Brethren Iames Wadsworth wisheth daily increase of Honour and eternall felicity And to the Right Honourable Earle of Barkesheire and the truly Noble Lord Barclay and the Religious and Vertuous Knight Sir Henry Pherres and their religious Ladies WHen your Lordship was in Spaine in personall attendance on his Maiestie where you drew all eyes after you as you did all wishes heere When it could neuer bee more truely said Angli Angelis similes then were many of these things acted many occasions offered me of returning to my true Religion and natiue Countrie I should haue thought my selfe much happie to haue sailed by the same VVinde with your Honours ship but fortune would not breathe her assisting assent vpon me Their cunning suspicions and obseruations of mee crost my designes as my first Booke may happly reueale which I humbly petition to your Honour to accept So I humbly take my leaue kissing your Lordships hands euen those which haue raysed mee vp to the preferment of this Title to bee Your Honours most humble seruant in all bounden respectiue seruice to be commanded Iames Wadsworth To his friend Mr. Iames Wadsworth and his Booke GOe happy off-spring of a pregnant braine Sins Commetary a perspectiue for Spaine Through which her maskt delusions apeare Naked as if they had bin practis'd here If any Iesuite damne the Authors quill That writes 'gainst her from whome hee learnt his skill Or wonder how that Citie odious proues Which bred him and his Fathers memory loues Know this that Asa was not plagu'd cause he Depriu'd his mother for idolatrie Good Parents patterns are if bad forbeare To imitate and make their faults thy feare Should I relate the dangers he endur'd After his soule a libertie procur'd I should but wrong his Booke by making those Which reade such horrid lines afraid of 's prose When th' I le of Ree and Martins lucklesse Fort Our trouble and their triumphs did report Him Callis dungeon kept as if his fate Should pay the rash inuasion of a State Yet not their catchpole Popery nor all Their Macheuils could worke his funerall That hand which first conuerted him hath brought Him safe and their discouered atheisme wrought T. M. of C. C. Of his friend M. Iames Wadsworth and his Booke MAn 's borne to Griefe without their mothers groane None are brought forth none liue without their owne We need no proofs but stand amazd to see In one mans sorrowes short Epitome Well his vnhappy trauailes witnesse may That true Religion hath a thorny way He was on Sea by the windes billowes shaken By theeues was rob'd and by the Pyrate taken He was endungeond by the Iesuite That hopt with him to keepe his faults from light But he was now freed the Papists naked showes Well fitted to receiue the scourges blowes They with their disciplines haue rac'd his skinne And he 's become the Trumpet of their sinne Yet wrongs not charity since 't is his care To shame the bad and bid the good beware Now may he sleepe not fearing Thunders noise And make post miseries sweeten future ioyes I. G. Mr. M. V. to the Author SVppose thee a new Traueller againe Lanching into the dangers of the maine What would thy lot of entertainemen be Once more the French his Wine would offer thee A Rope for Cables somewhat for a Maste With other tacklings and to make more haste Thy ship should with the Aire of cursings goe And this the swelling Spaniard should blow The Iesuite should for a Present bring A Knife with which he lately kill'd a King Or if perhaps it were some meaner sport An Earle the Iesuite would praise him for 't But to apply all this my friend you see What entertaine the world would tender thee Yet thou hast learn't that 't is a noble Fate To gaine thy Countries loue through all their hate M. V. of C. C. C. I. D. to the Author of this Booke THat we thy vertues may the better prize Thy name thy deeds doe anagrammatize To wade euen through the Romane sea to bee Amongst the rockes and shelues of papistrie To lie i' th bosome yet not to adore The image of the Antichristian whore Is of such worth that none would thinke the same Were not thy deeds as worthy as thy name I. D. Col. G. C. To his Friend the Author I That once fear'd the Circe's cup of Rhemes But now doe drinke Thalia's clearest streames Vieuing thy Shipwrack't danger thou hast past To Neptune a votiue Table owe to cast Where an Apelles Art may seeme the more If that it paint the Babalonish whore Whose coate became thy cloake for each deceite That so the whore might haue her Pander straite Her Rags thy Veluets were her triple Crowne Thy Beauer Princes with a pinching frowne T' out baffle or from their Kingdomes depose If by them the Catholike cause did lose Her Siren tones would make thee soone awake If not a clap of Thunder would thee shake The Holy Crosse to beare was no labour And crosse thy selfe to crosse thy Sauiour Such was thy hungry zeale the old Saints bones T' adore thou made no bones of 't carued stones Would turne thy bead-deuotion into gold Which to a made-god wise man like thou tould Thou knew neuer cake could make its baker Yet often the Priests saw cake their maker Which did vnseale thy eyes cleerely to see All their Religion was but trumperie They had told thee of a Purgatory In Spaine thou found'st it thy Book 's the Story Saint Omers was thy limbus Puerorum Callis Dungeon thy limbus Patrum If one should aske where Hell on earth should be Thou think'st in Spaine or Roome he may it see What Iesuites are I know thou know'st full well
building It reaches one hundred in breadth and is distinguished into many pretty knots and beds set with all kind of herbs and flowers and watered with many pleasant Springs and Fountaines This Garden is much higher then the Orchard adioyning and you ascend from hence thither by a walke of many staires set with trees on both sides There are accounted to bee aboue forty Fountaines of pure water within the walles of the Monastery There are so many Closets and Keyes belonging to this Monastery that there is a speciall Officer appointed to be Master of the Keyes which Keyes are kept in a Closet by themselues and are esteemed to exceed some thousands The third part of this famous Monastery of Saint Laurence is possessed by 300. Monkes of the Order of Saint Hierome whose yeerely Reuenues amount to aboue 35000. Spanish Ducats and the rest goes to the King and his family To conclude it is furnished with so many Halles Parlors Dining-roomes Chambers Closets Offices Lodgings and other necessarie Roomes that it may well suffice foure Kings at once to keepe their Courts in There are certaine credible reports of men of credit and vnderstanding that some yeeres after that King Philip the second had begun this great worke he comming thither with the Earle of Lemos and hauing shewed him the plot and disclosed his purpose in the finishing of so great a work which would amount to an incredible charge he demanded the Earle to tell him freely what he thought of the Worke. The Earle stoutly and with a noble spirit answered the King saying Your Maiestie as you are the greatest Monarch of Christendome so are you reputed the wisest among Kings now considering the great charge that your Maiesty is at in your warres in Italy in France and the Low-Countries with the Great Turke and elsewhere together with your ordinary and extraordinary expences and the likelihood of warres with the Queene of England All these things considered it would bee a blemish to your wisedome in the World If your Maiestie should goe forward with this Building and the charges will make you sinke before it bee finished The King replied notwithstanding all his wars and other charges Hee would goe on with this and hoped by the grace of God to see it finished to take pleasure and comfort in it in his life the which hee did and enioyed it seeuen yeeres and that after his death it should bee a Receptacle for his bones and likewise for the Kings that should succeed him to be for a Court in their liues and for their Funerall after their deaths Likewise it is crediblely reported that when the worke was finished and the Officers brought the Booke of accounts the totall of the Charges was twentie seuen Millions of Duckats which amounteth in our money to Nine Millions of Poundes The King hearing the Totall said I haue taken great care many yeeres and troubled my Head much heretofore to haue that finished I will now trouble my head no longer with the Charges wherefore he commanded the Booke of accounts to be cast into the fire A BRIEFE RELATION OF CERTAINE DEMONICALL STRATAGEMS OF THE SPANISH Inquisition exercised on diuers English Gentlemen of late times now liuing in England in the yeere 1620. IN the Court of Madrid was apprehended a worthy and discreet Gentlemen then and as yet fellow of Trinity Colledge in Cambridge Master Henry Roe who went ouer with the Lord Ashton as his seruant in his embassage to Spaine Who desirous of the spanish tongue as also to view the vniuersitie of Sallamanca departed with leaue from the Embassadour to reside for some space there But not long after being importuned by Master Charles Maynard brother to my Lord Maynard and Master Edward Filmer sonne to Sir Edward Filmer then at Madrid to suruey other parts of Spaine as Granado Cordonath and Sciuill For the effecting of which teadious iourney some 300. english miles returned some insupportable brasse mony by a Iesuite brother then to the gouernour of Madrid to receiue it of him at his arriuall there Thus departing from Sallamanca came to Madrid to my Lord Embassadours house and some 3. weekes after his comming went at the day appointed to the Gouernours house to receiue his money and because he was not well experienced in the brasse coyne tooke with him a seruant to on Master Prinn an English Merchant Now there stood readie at the Gouernors house a familiar of the Spanish Inquisition who saluted Master Roe very courteously and asked him if he were not the Gentleman that was to receiue such a summe of money of his Master and said that his Master commanded him to attend his comming and that the money was readie some halfe a dozen houses off If he pleased to take paines to goe thither Master Roe little fearing any treacherie went with this fellow who by his apparell seemed Hombre de bien They come quickly to a faire house where the familiar carries M. Roe into an vpper roome where were some sixteene todos vestidos de negro con capas Iespadas There was only one in a gowne who seemed to bee the chiefe amongst them and the Master of the house he very kindly salutes Master Roe asked him if he were not such a Gentleman that should receiue such money and where he lay Master Roe all this while fearing nothing pluckes out his bills of Exchange to r●ceiue his money and tells him that he lay in the English Embassadours house hee asketh him againe and againe of this last point Master Roe still answered him as before Whereupon hee for the present leaues Master Roe consults aside in the same roome with some of his fellowes and comes againe to Master Roe tels him that he must haue patience and that he was taken Prisoner by the spanish Inquisition A second with a great deale of complementall grauitie tooke his sword A third pickt his pockets emptying him of all his money and papers A fourth brings a smith vnto him to fetter his legges with weightie Iuyues A fift was inquisitiue to know if he had any riding clothes to trauell in who told him he had at the Embassadours house which made them shake their heads in token of feare to fetch them thence Heere they deteined him from two of the Clock in the afternoone till eleuen or thereabouts at night which time they set him sidewayes by reason of his fettered legges on a Mule attended by a guard of some forty in number who brought him safe out of the towne on his iourney and then the greater part of them returned to Madrid But the first place I rested in was called Torede Ladronis in English the Towre of Theeues where the Captaine of the Guard comforted him but withall in delusion tould him that hee should be eased of his fetters the next day and from thence they continued their iourney to Vallidolid where on the way they met with a flemmish Gentleman riding to Madrid one acquainted