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A01233 Tvvo spare keyes to the Iesuites cabinet· dropped accidentally by some Father of that societie and fallen into the hands of a Protestant. The first wherof, discovers their domestick doctrines for education of their novices. The second, openeth their atheisticall practises touching the present warres of Germany. Projected by them in the yeare 1608. and now so farre as their power could stretch, effected, till the comming of the most victorious King of Sweden into Germany. Both serving as a most necessary warning for these present times.; Colloquium Jesuiticum. English Francke, Christian, b. 1549.; Freake, William.; Camilton, John. De studiis Jesuitarum abstrusioribus. English. 1632 (1632) STC 11346.3; ESTC S102623 30,485 64

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forward enough to serue the Pope at all times and as good Catholickes as could bee wished in the matter of Religion yet for theyr too much Ambition and Couetousnesse whereby they became insupportable they were by the consent of all Christian Princes and not without approbation from the Pope himselfe put to the Sword all at an instant and vtterly rooted out almost in a moment as sometimes were the Pythagorians those very Iesuites in effect among the Heathen serued throughout Italy and the Provinces adioyning Now the reason wherefore they doe make choise to lay vp their Armes and munition in their Churches is onely this For if when any Insurrection or rebellious tumult ariseth in a Province the Papists come thither to helpe and assist them by this meanes they haue Armes for them in a readinesse vpon a suddaine but if any who are of contrary Religion come thither to doe them wrong or to steale any thing from them they haue munition and stones aboue head to destroy them withall before they be aware And is not this I pray you he ready way to make the House of Prayer a Den of Theeues And yet by your patience if you will but attend I shall relate things more strange and horrible then these in respect whereof the things I haue related hitherto may well see me tollerable I may almost say Innocencie Vnder the Pauement of their Church at Gratz and elsewhere to my knowledge are Vaults and buildings vnder ground whereunto there is no way but by staires and steps Here haue they hoorded vp like to that Cacus whom Virgil speaketh of all theyr prey and treasure and doe obscurely conceale a world of wealth so professing pouertie not onely with publike consent but also with incredible pleasure suffering the same with admirable patience and Cursing to the pit of Hell all such as are poore against their wils as vnworthy of so blessed a Crosse But as for this their treasure for the most part it is so contriued that it is buried directly and perpendicularly vnder their greatest and chiefest or most eminent and highest Altar and so they shall be sure that when they Chant Masse they shall Sacrifice to MARS aboue head and to MAMMON below Now furthermore in their Vaults vnder ground they maintaine a very strange Library of Cords Halters Rackes Swords Axes Iron-pincers Stockes Torches Pillories and souerall Instruments of Torture wherewith and whereunto poore wretches being tyed fast are joynt by joynt torne a sunder as many as fall into the hands of these Tyrants who are farre more cruell in this kind then MEZENTIVS or PHALARIS ever were Nor are they without a Divels coate and a long steeple crown'd hat with blacke feathers a jagged doublet cut and slashed breeches puffed out and bagged like bellowes downe to their anckles such as would euen make a man affrighted to looke vpon them But perhaps he that readeth this Relation will wonder to what end Religious persons who professe themselues the Disciples and followers as they would haue all men to beleeue of our most meeke Saviour IESVS should make such provision I will resolue you this question also if you please to attend With such instruments as these doth the Societie captivate the vnderstanding of their Disciples vnto Iesuiticall obedience For if in the least matter they get any hinte of suspition against any of theyr Novices that he will not be constant or that he desireth to escape from them and that he is likely to betray the secrets of their Societie they clap vp such a fellow in a faire paire of stockes and having macerated him a long time with hunger and cold and want of all bodily comforts at the last they make an end of him with some exquisite tortures and killing torments I doe not belye them I write nothing but a truth There was at Gratz about three yeares agoe a young man named IACOBVS CLVSSEVS a youth of an excellent and pregnant wit this man did they lay hands vpon and miserably tormented him by whipping and scourging for a matter of no moment and because hee told them plainely that hee would renounce their Societie and complaine publikely if ever hee got libertie for this and other such wicked dealings towards him they clapped him vp into such a Prison vnder ground as aforesayd from whence hee was neuer seene to come out againe aliue Nor did any of vs that were Novices make question but that hee was made an end of with most exquisite torments Which vnparalell'd piece of tyranny I purpose in due time to divulge to the whole world with relation of all circumstances beeing the thing which the poore wretched Clussaeus had a purpose to haue done himselfe if hee had not beene hindered and preuented by death I shall withall make publike vnto the world another such piece of Villanie committed by the Iesuites of Fulda in Germanie vpon the body of one MARTINVS whom they stole away most basely from his Parents who are yet liuing at Miltenberg or Milberg And how many women thinke you haue beene deuoured and eaten vp in the same Gulfe How many young Children slaine How many young men that haue beene sole Heyres of very large and ample Patrimonies haue beene made away by them I doe not say I thinke but I beleeue and am firmely perswaded so often as shrikes and cryes sighings and most woefull lamentations were heard in the night season the hearing whereof would put a man into a cold sweat all over and make his hayre stand on end though our simpler Novices beleeued them to bee the Soules of some lately departed it was nothing but the shrikes and mone of children lately murthered or then a murthering Moreover that the extreame and Diuelish malice of Iesuites may be in nothing defectiue they are accustomed diuers times in those their Vaults vnder ground to make the Diuell very fine sport putting on terrible disguises they cause some of theyr Novices to be called downe to behold theyr Tragedie vpon whom they will rush suddainely with an horrible yelling noyse to make tryall forsooth of theyr courage and constancie For if they find any to bee timorous and fearefull they admit not such a man to the secrets of Magicke as accounting them cowardly and degenerate but appoint them to some of the inferiour Arts but such as appeare to bee of bold and vndaunted Spirits they take especiall notice of them and reserue them for serious imployments And yet they are not alwayes successefull for all this as appeared by that which happened at Prague in the yeare 1602. For whereas there were fiue principall Iesuites who being habited as Devils made sport with their youth It so fell out that there was found to bee a sixth in their company before they were aware and hee questionlesse was a Divell indeed who catching vp one of the personated Diuels in his Armes gaue him such a kindly vnkind embrace that within three dayes after hee dyed of it The fact was common
things had read not without astonishment that among them of Iapan being our Antipodes there are certaine religious men whom they call Iamam buxa or Souldiers of the Vallies who purposely to at taine an opinion of Sanctimony doe punish themselues grieuously doe watch very much doe Fast exceeding long and doe giue themselues wholly to certaine Meditations composed of their owne heads and that they preuaile so farre by these things that they are beleeued many times as inspired with an holy instinct to speake Oracles and are accounted by all to bee perfect and Holy men then especially when as they make no bones of it to kill themselues voluntarily for their Idoll When I had as I said vnderstood these and many other like passages out of Letters written not onely by men of our Order but also published in Print I assure you I was amazed and did so shake as if I had newly fallen from Heauen to Earth For vpon a sudden it came into my minde to thinke that nothing could bee deuised more like to our Religion and that therefore it was vehemently to be suspected least all this our Spirituall course of life should not proue Divine but Humaine onely and Pharisaicall Forasmuch as very Idolators and Heathens wanting the light of the Gospel doe attaine thereunto and indeed such Heathens as are said to be wondrous like both in Nature Manners and Disposition to our most ingenious Europians I meane our Italians and Spaniards so that now it is apparant that the like Religions haue bin devised and established by men of like natures and inclinations And what a strange thing is it that among those Ethnicks of Iapan not onely our profession of Iesuitisme but in a sort the very entire Gouernment of the Romane Hierarchy may be seene apparantly founded and established by an Heathen Spirit For in the same Letters it is related that one chiefe man throughout the whole Empire of Iapan doth hold the chiefe place of a supreame Iudge in matters Ecclesiasticall who is little lesse then worshipped as a God and generally reputed so Holy a man that hee may not be suffered to tread on the ground and Cōmandeth farre wide many times vpon occasion euen contesting with those heathen Princes Moreouer this man hath the ordering and making of all the Tundi among them who are in effect the Byshops of that Nation albeit the nomination of them as it is reported be in some places in the Gouernours power which Tundi are thereupon in great and singular esteeme both with high and low and doe conferre Priesthoods doe appoint Fasting dayes and grant Licences for eating of Flesh to such as vpon Holy dayes goe on Pilgrimage to the Chappels of theyr Saints and Idols Yea and further the sects of the Bontij which arise among them and are nothing else but the Monkes of Iapan haue no authority or estimation among the people vnlesse this great man haue approued him by his letters Patents and testimonials Furthermore these Bontij are said to inhabite very large and spacious Colledges after the manner of our Monkes to liue a single life to erect an Altar in the middest of their Chappell wherevpon they place a woodden representation of Amida sitting vpon a golden Rose very gallant to behold Also that they haue very great Libraries with places wherein they eate and drinke together after the manner of our Refectories and certaine Copper workes which serue them insteed of bels to cal them vp to their houres of prayer Againe euery euening their president or cheife man among them propoundeth to euery one his particular subiect for his meditations that night and presently after midnight they doe before the Altar in their Chappell dancing by turnes say ouer their deuotions out of the last booke of Xaca Also that euery morning each of them spendeth an houre in Meditations that they build faire Cloysters in their chappels for their Fotoquij who are a certaine sect of religious persons amongst them that are shauen vpon their heades and chinnes and doe obserue a great number of holy dayes in the yeere And yet for all this they write that these Bontij are most base fellowes in their liues and conuersations and as coueteous as any men liuing vpon Gods earth and as well acquainted with all deuises how to rake vp money That these Bontij doe make sale vnto the people of many writings vnder their hands by helpe whereof the common people are perswaded that they are protected from the Deuill Also that these Bontij haue a custome to borrow money in this world which they promise to restore with large interest in the world to come for which they giue the Creditor bils of their hands as security which he at the time of his death carrieth with him into the other world And lastly that these Bontij are for the most part the sonnes of Noblemen in regard that the Nobility of Iapan being full of Children do vsually take a Course to procure these sonnes of theirs entered into the Order of the Bontij for whom they are not able to prouide otherwise You might stile these men Christian Monkes or if you please hauing respect vnto their qualities Clergy men and Prelates of the Church of Rome if euer the light of the Gospell had in any measure shined vpon them before the comming of our men amongst them or if euer any Christian at all had gone so farre as vnto them whereby they might haue heard of these things and haue imitated them Neither is prayer for their dead wanting among these Iapanezes howbeit in that they are a little more superstitious then wee For in the moneth of August they are obserued to set aside 2. whole daies for Adoration of the Spirits of the Dead And that a little before Night they set vp a great number of Lampes and other Lights about the doores of their houses with much varieties of Paintings and trimmings That afterwards they walke round about the Citie all night long partly for Deuotion sake and partly to looke about them Also that towards the Euening a great sort of people doe walke out of the Citie to meet the Spirits of their Dead friends now comming towards them as they forsooth imagine When they are at a certaine set place where they suppose that the Ghosts of their deceased Friends doe meet them first they salute them kindly euen as if they saw them saying you are heartily welcome wee haue wanted your good Companie long I pray you sit downe a while and refresh your selues with some victuals for wee know you cannot chuse but be wearie Then they set vpon Tables as a banquet for the Ghosts to feed vpon Rice Fruits and other Viands and when they haue demurred about an houres space as if they thought it high time to make an end they invite and intreat them to come home to theyr houses saying wee will goe before and prouide some good cheere for you Also it is obserued that assoone