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spirit_n artery_n blood_n vein_n 5,874 5 10.2889 5 false
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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A64668 VVits fancies, or, Choice observations and essayes collected out of divine, political, philosophical, military and historical authors / by John Ufflet ... Ufflet, John, b. 1603. 1659 (1659) Wing U20; ESTC R8998 43,009 138

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who with the beginning of the Popes of Rome was Primate of all Scotland and all the Isles of the same The 10. th year of William Rufus the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury being Primate of Ireland consecrated Malchus Bishop of Waterford which place was mada a Bishops-See at the same time In the 6. year of William the Conquerour it was decreed at a Synod holden at Windsor that the Arch-Bishop of York should be subject to the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and that the Arch-Bishop of York with all the Bishops of his Province should come to such a place as the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury should appoint to hold a Counsell at It is no true Bishop that desireth rather to be Lordly himself then profitable to others Leo the fourth Pope of Rome made a decree that a Bishop should not be condemned but by 72. witnesses The good Bishops of Rome continued almost 300. years the first of them was named Limus Blood is hot sweet temperate a red humor prepared in the meseraick veins and made of the most temperate parts of the Chilus in the Liver whose office is to nourish the whole body to give it strength and colour being dispersed by the veins through every part of it and from it spirits are first begotten in the heart which afterwards by the Arteries are communicated to all the other parts The force and power which lyeth in the blood the spirits and in the whole body is that which causeth the diversity of passions by reason that the passible part growing out of the flesh as from a root doth bud and bring forth with it a quality proves semblable The bodies misgriefes proceed from the soul and if the mind be not first satisfied the body can never be cured The corruptable body suppresseth the soul and the earthly mansion keeps down the mind that is much occupied Mans soul though it be immortal dyeth a kind of death it is called immortall because it can never leave to be living and sensitive and the body is mortall because it may be destitute of life and left quite dead in in self but the death of the soul is when God leaveth it and the death of the body is when the soul leaveth it so that the death of both is when the soul being left of God leaveth the body Labienus of Rome was the first on whom the punishment of burning bookes or writings was excluded upon Bookes are living Ideas of the Authors mind Something it is to have a fame go of a man yet words are as fame soon blown over when Libera scripta manet Books out live men Boldness or Valour is not terrified with a mans own danger but to fear in the behalf of others is humanity Boldness and fear are commonly misplaced in the best hearts when we should tremble we are confident and when we shoud be assured we tremble A cold and moist brain is an insepetable companion of folly Brevity although it breed difficulty yet it carrieth great gravity Brevity when it is neither obscure nor defective is very pleasing even to the choycest judgements Brevity makes counsell more portable for memory and easier for use The Brownists say they did not make a new Church but mended an old The Brownists seperate for these four causes or points A hateful Prelacie a devised ministery a confused communion and an intermixture of errors The Brownists charge Episcopacie with four heresies first their Canons secondly sin uncensured thirdly their Hyrarchy fourthly their Service book The agreement of brothers is rare by how much nature hath more endeared them by so much are their quarrells more frequent and dangerous Butidius a man well qualified and if he had taken a right course a man likely to have come to honourable preferment over much haste pricked forwards and at the first went about to out-go his equalls then his Superiors and at last of all to fly above his own hopes which hath been the overthrow of good men who contemning that which by a little patience is had with security hasten to that which gotten before his time breedeth their ruine and destruction Buying and selling of men and women which was used in England untill the third year of Henry the first was then prohibited In the third year of Henry the first by a Synod holden at London it was decreed that all burialls should be in their own Parish because the Priest should lose his ●ees The care of burialls the pomp of funeralls and magnificent Tombs are rather solaces to the living then furtherances to the dead A Canon is that which in a universal counsell is established Innocent the fourth was the first Pope that caused Cardinalls to wear red hats and to ride with trappings A Canteed containeth a hundred Townships Nothing cometh to pass without an efficient cause There be three sorts of causes naturall voluntary and casual Nothing is ended or begun without a Precedent cause that cause can hardly rise again and recover grace which hath been once foyled It is a sign of a desperate cause to make Satan our Counsellor or our refuge Although a man have a good cause he may fail in obtaining his right by Law unless he follow it earnestly defend it stoutly and spend freely Those things are casual whose act is not premeditated by any Agent It is the weakness of good natures to give so much advantage to an enemy Wha● would malice rather have then the vexation of them whom it persecuets We cannot better please an adversary then by hurting our selves this is no other then to humor envies to serve the turn of those that maligne us and to draw on that malice whereof we are weary whereas carelessness puts ill will out of countenance and makes it withdraw it self in a rage as that which doth but shame the Author without the hurt of the patient in causless wrong the best remedy is contempt In the first year of Richard the first the City of London received their Charter of freedom and to chuse twenty six Aldermen and out of that numto chuse a Major to rule the rest also two Bayliffs or Sheriffs whereas from the Conquest they were governed by Port-greeves In the 21. year of Henry the third the King at a Parliament at Westminster comfirmed the great Charter The 26. of Edward the first the great Charter was confirmed and at the same time it was enacted that the King should not charge the Subjects with any taxes or tullages but by Parliament It was also confirmed again in the 27. year of his raigne with these words added Salvo jure Coronae nostrae Edward the third confirmed the great Charter in the 15. year of his raigne The Duke of Orleans the French Kings brother challenged King Henry the fourth to meet him with 100. Knights compleatly armed against the like number and the vanquished to be ransomed at the victors pleasure A substantiall change is above the reach of all infernall powers and is proper to the