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B02912 Reasons humbly offer'd for a law to enact the castration, or gelding, of Popish ecclesiastics, as the best way to prevent the growth of popery in England. Defoe, Daniel, 1661?-1731. 1700 (1700) Wing D843A; ESTC R175925 12,803 16

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Castration was a Bar in their way they ought not to prefer the keeping of those things of which they stood in no need and of which she hop'd they made no use to the advancement of the Catholick Faith But this tho' the severest Reproof in the World has never been able to bring the Romish Clergy to so much sense of their Duty as to renew their Attempts of converting Sweden This may serve to confirm the story told us of an old Capuchin in the Menagiana the Works of the Abbot Menage that he rejected the Advice of his Physicians to be cut of the Stone for fear it should make him Impotent tho' he was then 80 Years of Age. Namque ad Vivendum castrari valde recusat Et propter vitam vivendi perdere causam The Romish Clergy have so much accustom'd themselves to those impure Pleasures that they will be sure to avoid those Countreys where they must be render'd uncapable of enjoying them If it be thought that the Laws already made will be more effectual against them there 's no need of repealing them tho' a new one of Castration be added Since that hath had so good an Effect in Sweden we have no reason to despair of the like here It 's generally concluded that our English Women are as tempting as any in Europe and are therefore as likely to prevail on a Romish Priest to venture hanging to enjoy their Favours as any others But if they be rendered uncapable of it the tempaation will have no force and so the Priests will save their Lives our Women will preserve their Chastity and our Religion and Liberty will be freed from their Attacques The only Objection of weight that can be made against it is that it may provoke our Popish Allies and other Popish Princes to treat Protestant Ministers in the like manner To which we answer That admitting it should be so it is not half so bad as to have them broke on the Wheel Hang'd or sent to the Gallies In the next place there 's not the like Reason for treating Protestant Ministers in that manner for they generally marry or if they be guilty of Uncleanness are thrust from the Ministry And in the last place there 's no reason why we should have any more regard to our Allies or other Popish Princes than they have to us We hear every day of the cruel Persecution in France and Germany notwithstanding our mildness to the Papists here so that our enacting a Law of Castration cannot possibly make them persecute the Protestants more severely than they do but may rather put a stop to it And indeed it is to be wondred at that the Protestants should be so much wanting in their Zeal and so little sensible of their own Interest when we have so Warlike and Zealous a Protestant Prince upon the Throne of Great Britain as not to agree on Methods for obliging the Papists to forbear that barbarous Persecution of their Brethren Endeavours of that Nature were us'd in some of those Reigns when Popery had so much Interest at Court that it seem'd to have a share of the Throne therefore it 's strange if nothing should be attempted towards it in this Reign To effect this would humanly speaking seem to be no difficult work since the Naval Strength of Europe is in the hands of the Protestants and that the strength of Great Britain and Holland is now under the Command of one Prince who is the Hero of his Age. This our own Safety seems to require and charity and compassion to our Brethren beyond Sea does loudly call for but if for reasons of State or otherwise it be found impracticable for us to interpose in behalf of persecuted Protestants abroad there 's nothing can hinder us if we be wiling to secure our selves against Popery at home by putting the old Laws in Execution or Enacting new ones This seems to be absolutely necessary if we consider either the State of the Protestants beyond Sea or our own Condition at home If we look abroad we shall find the Protestant Interest which was once so considerable in France quite ruin'd and one of the chife Causes of its being so was the neglect of our English Governments since Queen Elizabeth's time we have done nothing effectual for them since then which was a mighty oversight both in respect of Duty and Interest That it was our Duty will scarcely be deny'd by any Man that has any true Impressions of the Protestant Religion That it was our Interest is demonstrable because had the Protestants of France been supported by our Meditation and Assistance they would never have concurr'd in any ambitious design of their Monarchs against the Protestant Interest or this Nation and perhaps the fears of that Court that they might prove a Curb on their Designs of that Nature was none of the least causes of their having ruin'd them by the most ungrateful as well as the most barbarous Persecution that ever was known From all which it will naturally result that it is the Interest of England to save if possible the Remnant of the Protestants in France by some Effectual Interposition If we look a little further into the State of the Protestants of the Valleys of Piedmont we shall find that Antient Church almost totally ruin'd and disperst If we turn our Eye towards Hungary Transilvania and Poland the Reformed Interest is almost quite exterminated in those Countreys as it is totally ruin'd in Bohemia What danger it is liable to in the Neighbouring Countrey of Saxony is known to every one since that Country whose Prince was the first that embrac'd the Reformation is now under a Popish Government and if we come nearer home to the Palatinate there we shall also find a Protestant Church once the most flourishing and best reformed in all Germany under an unreasonable and cruel Persecution If we consider the Treaty of Reswick by that we shall find the German Protestants despoil'd of eight or nine hundred Churches The once famous Protestant City of Strasburgh deliver'd in Prey to the Church of Rome and the Protestants in Alsace and the Neighbouring Principalities on each side as the Dutchy of Montbelliard County of Veldents c. subject to Popish Incroachments In a word if we look throughout the whole Empire and take a view of the Diet at Ratisbon we shall find the Popish Interest every whene rampant and Incroaching upon the Reformation contrary to the Fundamental Laws and most solemn Treaties of the Empire If we cast an Eye upon Swisserland the little Republick of Geneva and the Principality of Neufchatel there also we shall find the Protestant Interest threatned and languishing If we look Northward there we find the Protestant Kingdoms of Sweden and Denmark ready to ingage in a War with one another and that the Quarrels betwixt them are fomented by those who carry on an Interest which is destructive both to the Protestant Religion and the Civil Liberties