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A15032 The censure of a loyall subiect upon certaine noted speach & behauiours of those fourteen notable traitors, at the place of their executions, the xx. and xxi. of September, last past. As also, of the Scottish queen, now (thanks be to God) cut off by iustice, as the principal roote of al their treasons. On Wednesday the 8. of Februarie 1586. Wherein is handled matter of necessarie instruction and comfort for al duetiful subiectes: especially, the multitude of ignoraunt people. Feare God: be true to thy Prince: and obey the lawes. Whetstone, George, 1544?-1587?; Churchyard, Thomas, 1520?-1604, attributed name.; T. C., fl. 1587. 1587 (1587) STC 25334A; ESTC S113962 29,620 55

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Baiazet the nienth c. but innumerable that haue ben destroyed by the treason of their seruants West I hope these odious attempts wil discouer them and for that they are crept into seruices of accompt by subtilty it shal be the part of euery good subiect to certify their Lords who are perhaps vnacquainted with their religion of such dangerous seruants Wilk The last of these seauen that suffered was Abingtō his father was an officer of good credite in her maiesties house and for many aduauncements was bound to say God saue good Queene Elizabeth but his sonne was a notable Papist an Archtraitor and at his death did all that in him lay to settle a feare in the heartes of the ignorant multitude with a speach that ther could not choose but be a great effution of blood in England very shortly VValk Gods prouidence maketh it apparāt that y ● prophises of traitors proue not euermore scripture Throgmorton the traitor said before one yeare were expired the prosperitie peace of England should be tourned into general callamitie but the date thereof is out and I hope the destiny past No doubt he knewe of a number of mallitious enemies vnto the state and with the spirite of their wickednesse he blundered foorth his prognostication but let all good subiects to their comfort and Traitors to their confusion knowe that the wicked diggeth a pit and falleth therein himselfe and who treadeth down the hedge a serpēt shal bite him ther is no wisedome there is no vnderstāding there is no counsell against the Lord The horse is prepared the day of battaile but the Lord giueth the victory The Iewes had S. Paule in prison yea fortie of thē vowed that they wold nether eat nor drink vntil they had flaine him but God according to the Psalmist in a due time defended him yea in that distresse he came and stode by Paule thus comforted him Be of good cheare Paule for as thou hast testified of mee at Ierusalem so muste thou beare witnesse also at Rome The Angell of the Lorde led Peter foorth of prison the Angell of the Lorde defended Sidrack Mi●aack and Abednago in the burning fire the Angell of the Lorde stopped the Lions mouthes that shoulde haue deuoured Daniell the Angell of the Lorde with a drawne sword tould Io●ua that he was the chiefe of the Lordes hande A comfortable saying and a true experiment that this holie Angell of the Lord with a drawne sworde although not visibly seen stādeth between the godly their enemies and then though the wicked come armed with horses chariots an hoast of men they shal be ouercome with their subtil deuices their twords shall go through their own harts The lord wil haue the p●ide of y ● vncleane Pope abased al the world striue in vain to set him vp again if his friends look into his disgraces since victorious King Henrye the eight first vnmasked his abhominatiō they shal finde no cōfort to take his part he was thē in his strēgth the greatest princes of christēdome his friend yea for the Popes cause they were K. Henries greatest enemies the Pope sent Cardinal Poole ambassadors to moue the French K against the K. of England the French made many braggs but bit little the mighty Emperor Charles the 5. prepared a great Nauie at the Popes request to trouble the peace of england the fauoring of whose inuasion cost the Marques of Exe●ers head but this attempt prospered not but which had likelihood to do more hurt then all the boast of forrain power by the practize of Cardinal Poole 20000 rebels in Lincolne shire for religiōs sake had put themselus in armes but when they vnderstood of the K. power cōming against thē they cried for pardon least their chieftaine D. Mackerel monk called captain cobler to the censure of iustice In february following the Pope by his instrument cōpassed a meer cōmotion in Yorkshire of 40000. rebels but by the prouidēce of God the night before the armies should ioine they were seuered by a mighty fal of water in somuch as vpon a part by the captaines of both sides the rebels were appeased departed w tout blodshed in the 3. yere of K. Eward the 6. the Pope to set vp his authority in Eng. by his seditious instruments moued generall rebellions through Eng. but they were ended w t the destruction of the kings rebellious subiects Q Marie though vnsound in religion had the better hand against her rebels whom no doubt God therin fauoured for her godly father K. Henry the 8. as he did the Idolater Abdias for his greate grandfather Dauids sake But the manifold disgraces which our soueraign lady Q. Elizabeth hath giuen vnto this bloody pope out of whose tirany euē frō her very cradle the Angel of y e lord hath miraculously deliuered her maiesty open the incomparable strength of Gods prouidence and offer cause of admiration to the whole worlde when for our sinnes Queen Mary committed both the word and fworde to the hipocrisie and tyranny of the Cleargie good lady her life was assayled with a thousand publique and priuate practises but the Angel of the Lord stil stode between her and her harmes and from the fetters of aduersitie loosed and crowned her Maiestie with the supreame dignitie of this Realme and as a prognosticatiō of his ruine by her renown the yeare that God placed her royall throne he displaced these christian Princes the Popes great friendes The Emperor Charles the sift the Queene of Hungarie Queene Mary of England two kings of Dēmarke Bona Sferza Queen of Polonia Henrie the third the French king Ierolme Pruoli Duke of Vennice Hercules Daeste Duke of Ferrara and Paule the fourth Pope of Rome that these setled friēds of the Pope being remooued other princes better affected or at lest not so hurtful to the passage of the gospel might occupy their places the Pope and all his fauorers while their strength yet lasted shot to depriue her maiestie of her crowne and dignitie God so strengthned her maiestie as by her power the French were dishonorably driuen out of Scotland and by her wisedome both Realmes were deliuered from forraine bondage yea the King of Scottes is bound to confesse that from God and her Maiesties goodnesse he and his posterity possesse a kingdome this peaceable victorie against the french discomforted the Pope a few yeares in fine Pius Quintus set D. Morton an english fugitiue a worke to raise a commotion in the north parts the Earle of Northumberland the Earl of Westmerland and others entred into open rebellilion the very sound of her Maiesties power dismaed them and happy was he that could run fastest away the principals fled but escaped not the iustice due vnto traitors the Earle of Northūberland was soone broughte vnder the censure of her maiesties lawes and according to his deserte was beheaded at
Yorke the Earle of Westmerland euer after for a bare allowance was subiect to the proud controlement of euery raskal Spaniard Felton to drawe her Maiesties subiects from dutiful obedience set vppe the Popes Bul vpon the Bishop of Londons gates but God be praised the hornes that shold haue gored the innocent turned into a halter to hang maister Felton the Pope expected no good successe by open force and therefore he now armed his practises with Machiuels pollices Madder and Barlowe were made instruments to murther some principal Maiestrates but their confusion was speedy their purpose frustrate This wily Pope with an ambicious humour then infected the principal Pear and most popular subiecte of England his treason was so dangerous as the person of the Queens maiesty and the peace of England could not be in safetie vntill the Duke was set lower by the head in whose confusion by Gods prouidence the peace of England was no waye troubled the conspiracie of Throgmorton Apleyard Brooke and others had no better successe then in helping some of those wicked members to the gallowes The Pope his instruments seeing the pollicie of man preuailed not against the Lords annointed they set the deuill a worke to destroy her sacred maiestie The notable traitor Doctor Storie whom God woulde haue cutte off by the censure of her Maiesties lawes confessed that certaine persons of whome there is yet that liueth by vertue of her princely word mercy vndertooke to destroy her excellency by Nigromancie but the deuil had no power where the Angel of the Lord was the shielde of his annointed by the solliciting of the Athiest Stukeley the pope tooke hart of grace by open force to alter the godly gouernment of England and for his better strength Stukeley thought to haue compassed the K. of Portingals armie after an ende of his battail with Mulei Maluco King of Feze and Marocoes but Gods prouidence turned his hope to an idle fancy for in that battail the K. of Portingale was slaine his army was discomforted and Stukeley was cut off from disturbing of the peace of England But yet of keepe the Popes purpose a foote Iames fitz Morrice an Irish Traitor tooke vpon him to be the Popes captaine a man both for courage iudgemente and experience better armed to doe mischiefe then Stukeley and to make passage for forraigne power he conuayed himselfe into Ireland where he soone allured the Earle of Deasmonde sir Iohn his brother and others vnto rebellion but such was Gods iustice when the Traitor Fitzmorrice least thought to be surprised hee was casuallie slaine before he saw any successe of his treason D. Saunders supplied his place and after him followed the Italian and Spanish forces it was Gods good pleasure to giue her maiesty sohonorable a victory as not one man escaped to carrie newes saue a very few that were spared toreporte the mercie and power of her Maiestie Doctor Saunders wandred vp and down in the Mountaines like a rogue and died of frensie the Earle of Deasmonde was driuen to liue like a begger in the Mountaines and to finish his miserable life after his accustomed and sauage maner had by an Irish man his head strokē off in his Caben sir Iohn his brother like a Wolfe in the wooddes wandring to seeke some pray was taken and headed after his owne vsage when the practize of the Pope concerning open rebellion was thus rent in peeces necessitie droue him by his vagrant Iesuits in euery corner to sound sedicious Schimeons proclamation which was to entertain murtheres theeues A thiests all maner of discontented persons into the seruice of the pope to the intēt that they should murther the Q. maiestie and alter the state of this gouernmēt both in matters of religion pollicy these Iesuits in disguised habits some like ruffiās some like seruingmē y e most like courtiers transformed themselues at pleasure like vnto Protew and made their night walks like owles not w tstāding Gods prouidēce hath deliuered their Champion Campion and diuers others of thē into the hands of Iustice Iustice by orderly trial after ward condemned Campion and some of the most malitious of the Iesuits to the Gallowes whereof a number of good subiectes wondred at their deformities and plainely saw that the Lord of hoasts heaped the deuices of the wicked vpō their own heads and shewed foorth the vncomely priuities of Bebilon according to promise West With your fauour sir I the lesse maruel y t these Iesuits sow their seditiōs in such disguised warlike ruffianly order and intice men to violent murther without difference of persons when their first founder Ignatius Layola was a spanish souldier who decreeped with woundes to keepe himselfe frō begging in age disguised himselfe with the habite of holinesse and with counterfeit miracles began this holy order not vnlike to the curtisanes of Rome who when the sale of their bewtie is past professe themselues Nunnes to get them a liuing by cloister brokadge in their age Walk in very trueth since the time that it pleased God to make the glorie of himselfe and the passion of his sonne Iesus to be knowne and reuerenced among the Gentiles the godly embraced religion to nourish their soules and the wicked dissembled religion to pamper their carnall bodies and when that experience discouered that the multitude were like vnto a barrel that is ready to receaue euery liquor and that with hasty running they followed euery new doctrine the ambitious Athiests straight deuised some new forme of deuinity to rob God of his glorie many men of their liues and liuelyhode but which is most to be lamented huge milliōns of their saluation in the primitiue church there were such a huge sight of heretiques as christendome resembled a mighty armie wher the souldiers vnder a number of seuerall Ensignes followed seuerall Captaines for after euery heretique followed a multitude of people The enuious Monke Sergius through enuy that his heresie in Cōstantinople was put to silence deuised the damnable secte of Mahomet and to strengthen his purpose he picked foorth Mahomet the most proud arrogant and insolent person of Arrabia to take vpō him to be a prophet by magick wroght such counterfeit miracles as to this day a great part of the world are led 〈◊〉 his error One Ismael seeing what force followed the banner of new religion deuised a religion different frō Mahomets by the strēgth of his followers grew in fine to be the great Sophie of Persia the vnnatural enemie to the great Turke The number of orders of Friers had their beginning for the most part from ambition or enuie and to this day there is a malitious hatred among them as whosoeuer wil read Erasmus dialogue called Funus shal well perceaue seing the knaueries of the old orders of the friers waxed so publique as the date of