Selected quad for the lemma: prince_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
prince_n day_n king_n wales_n 2,304 5 9.9362 5 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
A70633 Murder will out, or, The King's letter justifying the Marquess of Antrim and declaring that what he did in the Irish rebellion was by direction from his royal father and mother, and for the service of the crown. Arlington, Henry Bennet, Earl of, 1618-1685.; Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685.; Gregory XV, Pope, 1554-1623. 1698 (1698) Wing M3095A; ESTC R41829 59,276 102

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

shall perceive your wonted Duty and Allegiance unto Us which We shall accept and reward in due time Witness Our self at Edinburgh the first day of October in the Seventeenth Year of Our Reign More of these secret Intreagues of King Charles the First and Second you will find in a Book Entituled Great Britain's Miseries in a short History of the manifold Difficulties this Kingdom has laboured under these 40 Years last past A LETTER From Pope Gregory XVth to Charles Steward Prince of Wales and since King of England during the time of his being in Spain As likewise the said Prince's Answer Both taken out of the History of England at the Pages 1162 1163 1164. Written by the Sieur Andrew du Chesne being the Third Edition printed at Paris in the Year 1641 by William Loyson at the Pallace in the Middle of the Prisoners Gallery and which are also to be met with in the French Mercury of the Year 1623 when these Letters were Written both which the said King never Disown'd Most Noble Prince AFter wishing you all immaginable Health and the Illumination of Gods Divine Grace We give you to Understand That whereas Great Britain has always abounded in Virtues and in Persons of singular Merit and Esteem and consequently fill'd both Worlds with the Glory of its Renown so she has also very frequently exacted the Consideration and Commendation of the Apostolick See And indeed the Holy Church was but yet in its Infancy when the King of Kings pitch'd upon it for the Portion of his Inheritance and which he did with so great Zeal and Affection that scarce the Roman Eagles got possession of it before the Cross And we may withal Observe that many of its Kings likewise being instructed in the surest means of their Salvation have all along prefer'd the Holy Cross to the Regal Scepter and the Doctrine of Religion either to Ambition or Covetousness transmitting thereby Examples of Piety both to foreign Nations and Posterity So that having sufficiently merited in Heaven the Privileges and Preeminences of Beatitude they have also Obtain'd on Earth the Triumphal Ornaments of never-dying Sanctity And now altho' the Church of England has for some time been born and seperated from the true Catholick Faith yet at the same time we perceive the Court of Great Britain adorn'd and embellish'd with so many Moral Virtues that we cannot but be encourag'd in our Love towards her and should Acknowledge her as one of the chiefest Ornaments of the Christian Name provided she were but Qualify'd and Influenc'd with the Orthodox and Universal Truth For which reason and so much the rather as we have the deepest Sence of and the sincerest Respect for the Glory of your most Serene Father and your own great Natural Abilities so we heartily and passionately desire that the Gates of Heaven may be set open to you and the Tenets of the True Church be receiv'd by you Moreover whereas Gregory the Great Our Glorious Predecessor of most pious Memory first taught the People of your Nation to obey the Law of the Gospel and to submit to the Apostolic Authority so we tho' Inferiour to him both in Piety and Virtue yet of the same Name and Dignity with him do think it but reasonable that we follow his holy Steps and endeavour to procure the Salvation of your Country especially at thsi Juncture when your happy Intentions Most Noble Prince have rais'd in us hopes of a successful Event Therefore as you are at present at the Court of the most Catholick King with Inclinations to make an Alliance with the House of Austria we cannot but extreamly commend Your Design and the rather by reason that we are satisfy'd that your principal end in it is the promoting the Advantage of our Supream Prelacy and Dignity For since you seem so earnestly to desire the Infanta of Spain in Marriage we may easily infer that in all probabily the ancient seeds of Christian Piety which have formerly flourish'd so prosperously in the Hearts of the Kings of Great Britain may revive and recover their pristine Glory in you and we cannot think that he who professes so sincere an esteem for such an Alliance should be an Enemy to the Catholick Religion or be ever enclin'd to molest the Holy See In pursuance whereof we have commanded continual and most humble Orations to be put up to the Father of Mercies that it would please his Divine Goodness to establish you as the blooming Flower of Christendom and the Sole Hopes of Great Britain in the Throne of your Noble Ancestors who for the most part have all made it their chiefest Business to Assert the Authority of the Soveraign Pontificat and to combat the Monsters of Heresy Propose to Yourself the Modells of former Ages inspect the Behaviour of your Fore-fathers and they will shew you what Method you are to take to get the Throne of Bliss and what Policy Temporal Princes have always made use of to inherit an Eternal Kingdom Behold your gloriours Predecessors Enthron'd above Who formerly waited on by Angels went to Rome to Honour and do Homage to the Lord of Lords and to the Successors of his Holy Apostle St. Peter Their Works and Examples are of so many Voices whereby God Exhorts you to imitate their Lives to whose Empire you shall one day arrive Is it possible that you can suffer the Hereticks to Profane and Condemn those Holy Men whom the Faith of the Church enjoyns us to believe to Reign above the Clouds with Jesus Christ and to have command and Authority over all the Principalities and Potentates of the Earth See these blessed Saints stretch out their Arms to Conduct you safe to the Court of this most Catholick King and behold with what Ardour they desire to lead you to the Bosom of the Mother-Church That Church which is often suppliant with inexpressible Agonies before the Throne of Almighty Wisdom for your Reformation and Safety and which even now tenders its Apostolick Charity with all imaginable Christian Affection to receive you to her self You that are her Darling Son You that are her most desir'd tho' hitherto her too misguided Off-spring Certainly you can never be more Obliging to the Christian State than to put the Prince of Apostles into the possession of your most noble Island which has almost all along hitherto approv'd its self the most potent Arbiter both of Church and State The most glorious Work will the easier be Effected if you first shew an Example by Opening to God that knocks at the Door of your Heart and wherein consist the Absolute Happiness and Salvation of this Kingdom This is so great Charity occasions us to desire that You and your most Serene Father should be qualify'd with the glorious Titles of Deliverers and Restorers of the Ancient and Paternal Religion of Great Britain which we hope may be speedily Effected by means of the great Power and Goodness of God in whose Hands the Hearts
of Kings are and who causes the People of the Earth to receive Relief and which we shall always be ready to Favour and Encourage to the utmost of our Power In the mean time be pleas'd to understand by the Contents of this Letter that for Our parts We will omit nothing that may anywise tend to procure your Happiness and that We shall never repent of having writ it if it may be but so efficacious as to raise the least Spark of the Catholick Faith in your Breast whose Benefit we so much desire and to whom We wish long Life and an endless Encrease of all Christian Virtues Given at Rome in the Palace of St. Peter the 20th Day of April 1623 and in the Third Year of Our Pontificat This Letter was deliver'd to the said Prince by the Pope's Nuncio accompany'd by all the Italian Lords who were then at the Court of Spain King CHARLES I's ANSWER Being then PRINCE of WALES TO THE POPE'S LETTER Most Holy Father I Have received Your Holinesse's Letter with infinite satisfaction paying all imaginable respect to the Piety and Good Will with which your Holiness writ it But what has occasion'd me inexpressible Pleasure was to read of the generous exploits of the King 's my Predecessors in whose deserv'd Commendations Posterity hitherto has not been a little Niggardly I am willing to believe Your Holiness set their Example before my Eyes that I might endeavour to imitate them in all my Actions for in truth they have often exposed both themselves and their Dominions for the Exaltation of the Holy See insomuch that their Courage with which they attack'd the Enemies of the Holy Cross has ever approved it self as vigorous as my endeavours shall always be to introduce Peace good Intelligence which have hitherto been so much wanting into Christendom for as the common Enemy of Peace labors incessantly to insult Hatred and Dissention into the hearts of Christian Princes so I am of Opinion that the Glory of God requires indispensably that they should be united and I do not value my self in being descended from so many great Princes on any account so much as in my Unfeigned and true Zeal to pursue the footsteps of their Piety To support me in which design it is no small advantage to me to be back'd by the Will and Pleasure of my most Honour'd Lord and Father and the pious Intention of his Most Catholick Majesty both who are more than ordinarily concern'd to think of the great Calamities that must necessarily proceed from a Disunion among Christian Princes This the unexampled Prudence of Your Holiness has foreseen while you deem'd the Marriage between me and the Infanta of Spain to be so absolutely necessary for the Publick Good and nothing is more certain than that I shall be always most passionately desirous of an Alliance with a Prince who has the same Sentiments of the true Religion with my self wherefore I earnestly beg Your Holiness to believe that I have always been very far from encouraging any Novalties in Religion or from favouring any Faction opposite to the Interest of the Apostolick See but on the contrary have sought after all occasions to take away any suspitions or jealousies I might lie under being resolved to employ the remainder of my Days in the practise of one Religion and one Faith since we ought all to follow alike in Jesus Christ in pursuance whereof I shall for the future avoid no hazards and cheerfully undergo all manner of Inconveniencies even to the Exposing of my Life and Fortune upon an occasion that will undoubtedly be so acceptable and well-pleasing to God Nothing more remains but that I humbly thank Your Holiness for admitting me to this unworthy Address and I also earnestly beseech Almighty God to grant Your Holiness Health in this World and Eternal Happiness in that to come after so many Labours and Fatigues which your Holiness has undergone for the Propagation and Preservation of the Holy True Church Signed CHARLES R. The substance of the Articles of Peace made and concluded with the Irish Papists and Rebels by James Lord Marquess of Ormond for and on the behalf of His Majesty King Charles I. THE Substance of the Proclamation is That whereas the Lord Marquess of Ormond Lord Lieutenant of Ireland by virtue of an Authority given him by King Charles I. had agreed to a Peace on his said Majesties account with the General Assembly of Roman Catholicks of that Kingdom all the Inhabitants are obliged to take Notice thereof and to be Obedient to the same at their Peril Also that the Motives which induced that King to such a Peace were the Benefit and Traffick of his Subjects and to put a stop to the Miseries which they had so long undergone Sign'd Ormond and Dated from the Castle of Kilkenny the 17 th June 1648. The Substance of the Articles are That in consideration of his said Majesties having been acknowledg'd Rightful and Lawful Sovereign by his Dutiful and Loyal Subjects the Roman Catholicks of Ireland and for their hearty Proffers of doing him all imaginable service that King was pleas'd to Grant 1. That that they shall have the free Exercise of their Religion without being subject to any Penalties for the same That they shall not be forc'd to receive any other than what is Agreeable to their Conscience That they shall not be oblig'd to take the Oath of Supremacy but only bind themselves to be True and Faithful to the King as their Temporal Lord. Nevertheless the Lord Lieutenant does not pretend to alter the Established State of Spiritualities having no Authority for that purpose but however promises that the said Roman Catholicks shall not be interrupted in any of their Possessions and Jurisdictions till His Majesty upon a full consideration of their desires shall declare his further Pleasure in the next Free Parliament wherein also these gracious Confessions are to be Enacted as Laws 2. That a Free Parliament shall be call'd in Ireland within 6 Months or as soon after as 12 Persons nam'd in this Article or the major part of them shall desire and that in the mean time these Articles shall be inviolably observed as Laws Yet in case a Parliament be not held within 2 Years after the Date hereof then is the Lord Leiutenant at the Request of the said Twelve to Convene the General States for the better settling of Affairs in that Kingdom and that the Contents of these Articles are to be transmitted into England according to the usual Form to be passed in Parliament there and that no Alterations to the prejudice of the King 's Catholicks or Protestant Subjects shall be made either here or there other than what His Majesty shall declare his Pleasure in for the satisfaction of his Subjects or than such Matters as the then Lord Leiutenant shall propose to both or either Houses for the Advancement of His Majesties Service and the Peace of the Kingdom but which must