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A79944 The Clergyes bill of complaint, or, Submissive suite of one in the behalf of all the orthodox and great sorrow-suffering church-men throughout England. Exhibited to the most honourable houses of Parliament, against Brownists, Anabaptists and other schismaticks, shewing amongst other things, how the materiall churches on earth and our reverend divines are made despicable through their misdemeanors. Besides necessary annotations in the end, whereunto the reader is respectively referred by certain alphabeticall letters, from A to T included in severall lines to this work. 1643 (1643) Wing C4644; Thomason E84_44; ESTC R11008 6,440 15

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permitted to advance the head I do divine will become more terrible and cruell than the very Irish yea than the Scythian Anthropophi or man-eaters Tigers these things carefully and seriously again I beseech you as heretofore your Ancestors whose memory be blessed have done with exceeding praise Cam. Annal. R. El. pag. 71. and 275. Our most blessed and Almighty GOD grant from my soule I pray that your course right well begun you may happily consummate This is my Prayer and not mine alone u With many others which are joyn'd in one FINIS The Annotations whereunto you are referred by Letters placed in the lines of this precedent work a This yeer hath produced great plenty of Pamphlets there was almost no day wherein 6. or 8. came not forth Allusion to Plinii lib. 1. Epist 13. Many in these dayes itching with the scab of desire to write have their braines as the saying is in their fingers so great and inconsiderate is the boldnesse to put any thing in writing D. Will. Hall b Regina Britaina libras ter centum mille quotanis Expendit morbos accellerando novos Non opus Helleboro nam quisque Tobaccon ab aula Principis ad caulam pauperis usque bibit Doct. Vaugh. in Orph. Jun. englished thus Great Britane new infirmities to hast Three hundred thousand pounds doth yearly waste Wee need not Hellebore for though it stinke From Court to Cottage all Tobacco drinke c. An Indian root very well known by daily use called Herba Nicotiana Medica Petum commonly Tobacco and perhaps Betele whereof Plutarche makes mention in lib. de facie in orbe Lunae But facetiously said one Quod vino madidis detur Tobacco vocari Do-Baccho cur non rectius ille solet which may be thus Englished Tobacco should be cal'd Do-Baccho rather As by the use thereof wee well may gather Do-Baccho signifies I give thee wine Which with that hearbe makes many sup and dine d A man half learned is a most pestilent creature Pr. e In the booke of the holy Fathers there is scarce a leafe wherein the Bishops Presbyters and Deacons with other Orders and also Priests which name some do greatly detest are not named with honor f He that hath a head round like a Globe or bowle is defective in his sence and reason Alsted Encycl published in fol. 773. and thereof our simple Sectaries may be properly called Brownists g Gallen said he would give Momus 100 years to change the structure of mans body even in the least part and doubted not but he should be forced in the end to confesse that it could be made in none other or a more perfect man The same I say to those that cavil against the English Liturgy h In all Services the Lords Prayer is sayd for than is the salt and seasoning of the Sacrifice Durand rational lib. 1. cap. 5. numb 17. i Those of our Country to omit Forreigne Nations unanimously maintain that the bowing of the knee to the holy Eucharist is very proper Bp. Winch. Conc. p. 991. Bp. Norw tom 1. p. 560. D. Boys postil p. 598. D. Don. in Conc. p. 115. D. Featl in Conc. p. 393. D. Clark in Conc. p. 264. D. Saunder in Conc. p. 631. Kellet in his Tricaen Christi p. 203.567.581.582.638.645.653 Sutores crepidam tractent fabrilia fabri that is Let Sowters meddle with the Last or Shoe Smiths in their Art with what they have to do l There are in heaven most honorable Crowns of dignity either white for Virginity or purple for Suffering or lawrell for Learning S. Aug. m. n It is a wonder if they were mules and many of one and the same time with us not of so great name are far better sighted than Argus o Our late Soveraign Lord K. James of famous memory overthrew the Innovators Rams Anno 1604. for at that time the Church of England had most acceptable Halcionian dayes p Amongst so great men Mr. Hooker a man of a most unreproveable judgement in Polititia Ecle gives most unreproveable Arguments q The objections of such trifles blinde Fisher but in the holy Bible sharp-ey'd enough doth strongly confute defence of the Liturgy written in English r If our Bishops have committed any fault they are men and may erre sometimes good Homer slumbered and sometimes holy Peter slept who was the first not the chiefe of the Apostles Constantine the Great piously sayd That he would cover the crimes of his Priests with his Purple a saying worthy to be written in gold on Cedar s No man sees how the Cavaliers now a dayes bring into displeasure and hurry into contention and how much they move I speak not of writings but of deeds every where of strifes and calumnies for every small trifle t See the Apology of the B. of Norwich whom some do call the christian Seneca I Englands Chrysostome against Brownists Also Camd. Annals Q. Eliz. in English pag. 257. and 403. u De la champ in the Prayer of David FINIS