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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A66086 Beatitas Britanniæ, or, King Charles the Second, Englands beatituded as preached to the incorporation of the honour of Eay, in the county of Suffolk, March 31, 1661, being the Lords Day before their election of Burgesses, and the week before the choice of knights for the county / by Edward Willian .. Willan, Edward. 1661 (1661) Wing W2260; ESTC R98 30,979 47

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Nobil●um That 's the first but the least Secondly Son of Nobles may be in respect of several descents on either side or of several descents on both The last is far most Honourable and that 's the Noblenesse of our Charles the 2. the Son of Nobles by many and many descents on both sides First on his Royal Fathers side descended from many and many most Noble Kings of several Kingdomes and of all the most Noble Races in this When the Race of King Henry the 8. was ended with Queen Elizabeth Pretences were made by divers to the Crown of England but after due enquiries made they were all found in the Royal Grandfather of our most noble Charles the 2. And when the Businesse of Recognition was on foot in the Parliament Tertio Iacobi it was made evident by that Renowned Earl of Northampton that the Pretences of the Britains from King The right Honorable Earl of Northampton's Speech for that Recognition M. S. Brutus were in King Iames as from Cadwallo Those of the Scots by Fergus those of the Picts by the daughter of Hengist those of the Saxons by the sister of Edgar those of the Danes by the daughter of King Christian and those of the Normans by Margaret eldest daughter to King Henry the 7. in whom the Red and White Roses were most sweetly damasked York and Lancaster well united by that happy Match of Henry the 7. Son to the Noble Earl of Richmond and Elizabeth eldest daughter to Edward the 4. from whom came Prince Arthur who died young and Henry the 8. whose Race ended in Queen Elizabeth and left the Royal Dignities to the Race of Princesse Margaret by Iames the 4. of Scotland and so they became the Royal Birth-rights to King Iames the first of England and sixth of Scotland and so to our most Royal Soveraign Charles the 2. the rightest Lineal Descendant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by many most noble Descents on that side of his Royal Father Secondly the Son of Nobles also as descended from many Races of French Kings by that most Noble Daughter of France his Royal Queen Mother An Honour of no little estimate but so highly valued as there is almost no Nation Lupan Commen de Magistr Traesectur franc●r Praefat. saith Lupanus quae non ad francos Reges originem referat adeo magnum ●st fortibus nasci which derives not some honour from French Kings so much it is to be of such consanguinity Were it feasible in a Sermon to shew you all the streams of Royal Bloud that have flowed into the Noblest Veines of our most Noble Charles the 2. from all the high born Kings and Queens on all sides in all descents you could not but most highly honour his Nobleness by Extraction and think it no Hyperbole but his Birth-right to be Gwillim's Display of Heraldry Sect 6. c. 7. stiled the Noblest King in Christendome as that Herauld honours him and worthiest of all the Honours that Loyal Subjects can do a Soveraign who is in Solomon's rightest sense The Son of Nobles The Second way of Noblenesse is by Education or Institution a Noblenesse that God himself looks after For when he designed Moses to be Ruler of his People Israel he preordained his Education to be in the Court of Egypt and not as a servant there but as the son of a Noble Princesse Acts. 7. 21 22. who nourished him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith St. Luke as her own Son and so he was learned in all the Wisdome of the Deus effecit ut adoptaretur à fil●a Pharaonis Macar Homil. 9. Egyptians A Prince-like Institution and merely by Divine appointment as Macarius well observeth Nor would God have David to be a King before he had been a Courtier and that not merely as one of King Saul's Retinue but as of Royal Affinity Son in Law to the King no light matter as David himself hinted to the servants of Saul 1 Sam. 18. 23. But so he was to prepossess him with a Noble Spirit by Noblenesse of Institution Such regard has God himself to Noble Education Nothing more needfull for improving innate Inclinations to Noble Mindednesse And such Inclinations use to be in Noble Extractions seminals of right Noblenesse When Noble Birth and Noble Breeding Nicho● de Ly●a in hunc Vers Dionys Carthus in L●cum meet as they should they make right Noble indeed as Lyra notes s● inv●cem ornant sayes Dionysius Carthusianus they mutually adorne each other like a precious Gem in an Ornament of gold The Gold of Noble Extraction is ever fitly adorned with the Gem of Noble Education and right it is for both to be deemed precious Gold D. Ba●●hol Chassan de Glor. Mu●● par 8. is so even from the very Mine and so Nobility from the Wombe for as Chassanaeus sayes Nobilitas transit in filios in infinitum The honour of Noble Birth for ever descends and that of Noble Breeding should ever ascend Noble Temperaments be in Noble Extractions and Noble Tendencies in such Temperaments and such tendencies be easily heightened with right Institutions Well therefore might the Preacher bestow the Honour of the Text upon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The son-ship of Nobility has the start of others to be bettered by Noble Breeding And Nobleness of Breeding should ever follow that of Birth And it is By I●st ●●tion in virtue wisedom● and poli●●● which Education Son● of Nobles ●specially ought to have Pemb. Analyt●cal expos a. i. e. Pacificus sive pacatus Eucherius de Nom●n H●br S. Hieron Interp. Nom. Mat●h not unlikely but Solomon might have an Eye to Nobleness of Breeding in asserting what he does of the Son of Nobles who so eyes the Education of our right a Solomon may see him heightened by it to the Zenith of right Nobleness advantaged by Institutions by Afflictions and by Intercessions First of Institutions both Civil and Sacred these by such a Church-Discipline those by such a Court-Discipline as could not but season him rightly for Court and Church-Concernments His Tutors in both were more than Ordinary and his Institutions by more than Tutors No Vives no Coxe no Ascham could have instilled better Principles into his Noble soul then have been by Tutors nor any Bachanan so good Much less could Aristotle or Pl●to or Sen●●a have bettered the same though famous Tutors to great Princes And I may tell you that his Noblenesse of Education derives not all advantages nor most from Tutors though most able but from a most Royal and most Religious Father of ever blessed Memory in quo instar omnium auxiliorum erat who could doe and did as much as all besides and much more His Moods and Methods were like himself most truly Noble witnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chap. 27. that part of his Royal Likenesse entituled To the Prince of Wales And witnesse those Effects which verifie S. Austin● touching Discipline who sayes it is Magistra