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A33874 A collection of the funeral-orations, pronounc'd by publick authority in Holland upon the death of ... Mary II Queen of Great Britain, &c. by Dr. James Perizonius ..., Dr. George Grevius ..., F. Francius ..., Mr. Ortwinius ..., and, the learned author of the Collection of new and curious pieces ; to which is added, the invitation of the chancellor of the electoral University of Wittenberg, in Saxony, to George Wilbain Kirchmais, to pronounce a funeral oration upon the Queen's death, &c. ; done into English from the Latin originals. Kirchmaier, Georg Wilhelm, 1673-1759.; Francius, Petrus, 1645-1704. Oratio in funere Magnae Britanniae, Franciae, et Hiberniae Reginae Mariae. English.; Graevius, Joannes Georgius, 1632-1703. Mariae Stuartae ... Britanniae, Galliae, et Hiberniae Reginae ... justa persoluta. English.; Ortwinius, Joannes. Laudatio funebris recitata post excessum Serenissimae ... Mariae Stuartae. English.; Spanheim, Friedrich, 1632-1701. Laudatio funebris ... Mariae II Magnae Britanniae, Franciae, et Hiberniae Reginae. English. 1695 (1695) Wing C5203; ESTC R10177 94,331 161

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Countries Concurrence with the London united Ministers by Mr. Chandler p. 1s The Life of the Reverend Mr. Thomas Brand written by Dr. Annesley price 1s Practical Discourses on sickness and recovery in several sermons as they were lately Preached in a Congregation in London by T. Rogers M. A. after his recovery from a sickness of near two years continuance Early Religion or a Discourse of the Duty and Interest of Youth The second Edition Price 1 s. Fall-not-out by the way or a persuasion to a Friendly Correspondence between the Conformists and Nonconformists in a Funeral Discourse on Gen. 45. 24. occasioned by the desire of Mr. Anthony Dunwell in his last Will. All three written by T. Rogere M. A. price 1 s. The Mourners Companion or Funeral Discourses on seveal Texts by John Shower price 1 s. 6 d. Mr. Boyses answer to Bp. King The Vanity and Impiety of Judicial Astrology price 3d. Mensalia Sacra or Meditations on the Lord's Supper by the Reverend Mr. F. Crow M. A. late Minister at Clare in Suffolk price 1 s. A Practical Discourse on the late Earthquakes by a Reverend Divine price 6d Triunity or the Doctrine of the Holy Trinity asserted in a Discourse on 2 Cor. 13. 14. by Isaac Maudult Minister of the Gospel Price 6 d. An Earnest Call to Family Catechism and Reformation by a Reverend Divine price 6 d. or 50 for 20 s. Comfort for Parents mourning over their Hopeful Children that die young by T. Whitaker Minister at Leeds in Yorkshire The 3d Edition of the Life and Death of the Reverend Mr. John Elliot who was the first Preacher of the Gospel to the Indians in America with an Account of the wonderful success which the Gospel has had amongst the Heathens in that part of the World Written by Cotton Mather price 1s Gospel Truth stated and Vindicated the Second Edition price 1s A Defence of Gospel Truth price 6 d. Man made Righteous by Christ's Obedience being two Sermons at P●●●…ers Hall with inlargements The Vanity of Childhood and Youth all four written by D. Williams The Young Man's Claim to the Sacrament by J. Quick price 6 d. Mr. Barkers Flores Intellectuales In two parts Some Remarkable Passages in the Life and Death of Mr. John Mason late Minister of Waterstratford drawn up by a Reverend Divine to which is added his Christian Letters printed from the Original Copies Proposals for a National Reformation of Manners to which is added the Instrument for Reformation c. price 6 d. The Knowledge of the World or the Art of well educating Youth through the various Conditions of Life by way of Letters to a Noble Lord Vol. 1. to be continued in that Method till the whole Design is finish'd Printed first at Paris afterwards reprinted at Amsterdam and now done into English A Narrative of the Extraordinary Cure wrought in an instant upon Mrs. Elizabe●● Savage Lame from her Birth without the using of any Natural Means with the Affidavits which were sw●rn before the Right Honourable the Lord Mayor and the Certificates of several credible Persons who knew her both before and since her Cure price 6 d. The Fourth Edition of the Lives and Tryals of those Eminent Protestants who fell in the West of England and elsewhere from the year 1678 to 1680. COMPLEAT SETS of the Athenian Mercury being sixteen Volumes c. resolving all the most nice and curious Questions proposed by Ladies and Gentlemen for the last FOUR YEARS The History of several Remarkable Penitents to which is added a Sermon preached at Boston in New England to a condemn'd Malefactor by Increase Ma●her A Narrative of the conversion of Mackerness late of March in the Isle of Ely by Mr. Burroughs Minister at Wisbech price 1 s. Directions Prayers and Ej●culations for such as lead a Military Life price 2 d or 100 for 14 s. A New Book of Trade entituled Panarithmalogia by VV. Leybourn Author of Cursus Mathematicus Price 4 s. 6 d. The Tryals of several VVitches lately Executed in New-England published by the special Command of his Excellency the Governour of New-England The third Edition Price 1 s. ☞ All these aforesaid books are sold by John Dunton at the Raven in Jewen-street and also by Edm Richardson near the Poultrey-Church BOOKS now in the Press and going to it Printed for John Dunton PROPOSALS for Printing by Subscription An History of all the Remarkable Providences which have happened in this present Age as also of what is Curious in the Works of Nature and Art with parallel Instances from former Ages By William Turner M. A. and Vicar of Walberton in Sussex PROPOSALS and SPECIMENS giving a full account of this Work may be had of the Undertaker John Dunton at the Raven in Jewen-street as also of Edm. Richardson near the Poultrey Church and of most Booksellers in London and the Country 'T is desired that those Remarkable Providences concerning Atheists the answering of Prayers and upon several other Heads mentioned in a Letter lately sent to the Undertaker of the History of Remarkable Providences might be sent with all convenient speed to John Dunton at the Raven in Jewen-street This is further to give notice that those that expect any Benefit by the Proposals made concerning the said Work would send in their First Payment viz. 15 s. with all possible expedition by the first of September next that being the longest time allowed for taking in Subscriptions * Upon the 26th of this instant June will be published An Essay upon the Works of Creation and Providence Being an Introductory Discourse to the History of Remarkable Providences now preparing for the Press to which is added A SCHEME of the said Undertaking as also a SPECIMEN of the Work it self together with MEDITATIONS upon the Beauty of Holiness * The Funeral Orations made in Holland upon the Death of the Queen of Great Britain by Dr. James Perizonius Professor of History Eloquence and the Greek Language The Learned Grevius at Vtretcht and Mr. Ortwinius c. 'T is designed these Foreign Orations shall be publisht all together in One Volume which will delay their publication something the longer ☞ There is preparing for the Press All the Memorable Sayings of the late Queen Mary collected into one Volume under proper Heads by a Reverend Divine of the Church of England ☞ If any Ministers Widow or other person have any Library or parcel of Books to dispose of if they will send a Catalogue of them or notice where they are to John Dunton at the Raven in Jewen-street they shall have Ready Mony for them to the full of what they are worth FINIS * * She was wont to rise by six a clock in the morning Winter and Summer This is the Sence of a Letter which the Queen wrote a little before she fell Sick to Mademoiselle de Moussay
length to be preserved by a Mary and as it was of old by many ways afflicted by two William's First and Second so it receiv'd New Life and Spirit from WILLIAM the THIRD On the other side by a contrary Example in the Name of James the Second as in the fatal Names of Darius Philip Antiochus Aristobulus Augustus and Constantine we see the unfortunate Catastrophe of that which began under the same Names with joyful and lucky Auspices But above all things who among ye can forbear to admire the Conduct of the Supream Architect who fram'd this wonderful Structure at the Beginning without the Aid or Knowledge of the Sleeping Parent of Mankind when this Goodly Form this Pulchritude and Procerity of Female Body represents it self before your Eyes not Heroe like but rather almost Divine such a Majestic Forehead such a Graceful Countenance such Radiant Eyes such an Harmony of Shape and Lineaments accompany'd with Sweetness of Favour and a Charming Aspect in our MARY surpassing all the Graces and Venus's of the Greek tho enliven'd with Apellaean Colours Deserving indeed not only more then Mortal Empire which the Ethiopians decreed to Majesty of Form but also of Eternity of Reign if any such thing might be granted upon Earth Her Coelestial Courage her Lofty Mind Her Wit that penetrated the most hidden Recesses Her Judgment certain and unacquainted with Mistake Her inexhaustible Thirst of Reading the incredible Treasure of Her Memory Her Heroick Genius all these were deposited in a Royal Domicil or rather Temple rear'd by the same Architect as the Universe There was eminently to be seen in her Words in her Aspect in her Habit in her Eyes in the Posture and Carriage of her Body unaffected Sincerity Fidelity Candor and whatever else could procure Love and Reverence Besides the Gracefulness of her Delivery the Accomplish'd understanding of three Languages and her Knowledge of things Divine and Human she was adorn'd to perfection with harmless and Chast Manners which no Impurities could defile no envenom'd Breath no Pestiferous Gales the Familiar Contagion of Courts could ever infect Her pure and spotless Mind might rather be broken like Chrystal Glasses crackt by the Infusion of Poyson then endure what was not accompany'd with Vertue and Honesty or some publick or private benefit So that whatever most usually puffs up with Arrogance or corrupts with Stomachful Pride a Sex most covetous of Rule What makes others swell and look down upon their Inferiors with Contempt as Nobility of Extraction Beauty Wit and Wealth like Boxes glittering without with Gold and Gems but within inclosing Arsenick such as have more of Aloes then Honey all these Blemishes of her Sex she was a Princess who from her Infancy detested So that she whom the Supreme Parent of Nature had rendred every way perfect and fortunate bewailing only this one thing that she was better then her Father she when but a Child was never observ'd to swell or abate of her usual Affability Mildness Easiness to give admission or of the humble Opinion she had always of her self And as much as there was in her Countenance of ingenuous and Royal Erubescency so much was there in her Heart of Bashful Modesty by which means Majesty was always season'd with Benignity Gravity with Cheerfulness Clemency with Severity And as many as were admitted to the Presence and Ear of so Great a Princess knew they were to undergo a perpetual combat with her Modesty so that they must be forc'd to submit their discourses to this same Modesty or else to be silent altogether Conscript Fathers I speak those things which are vulgarly known chiefly aiming at this that no man should believe so many and such great Endowments of Mind were transmitted into MARY with the Blood of the Father and Mother which were the only Workmanship of God who would only vouchsafe by this to shew how far he could accomplish Nature and this I boldly and confidently aver For in the most Corrupt times of King Charles and King James's Courts when Popery adventured not only to creep in privately but pulling off her Vizor to rush in with open force when Religion was a Cloak for Fraudulent Artifices when Effeminate Arts Dissolute Clemency Undecent Practices and Wanton Pastimes were the Delights of the Court and Flexible Youth was led away by the Princes as they pleased themselves it came to pass not without the Assistance of God himself that all this while MARY and ANN under the tuition of Noble Matrons and other Exquisite and Pious Instructors as formerly the two Sisters Pulcheria and Arcadia the Daughters of Eudoxia by the Order of Charles II. were kept to a strict Discipline By whom the Minds of the Royal Virgins that were one day to be advanced to Sovereign Dignity might be rightly form'd and excited not so much to the Desires of a Pompous and Illustrious Fortune as to the Study of true Piety and a Religion purg'd from Superstition Thus Nature has taught us that Parian Marbles are to be cut smooth Ivory plain'd and Diamonds polish'd that Gold is to be purifi'd Plants and Trees to be trim'd and lopt and the choicest Seeds to be improv'd by Art when no Industry can Correct or Polish the Pumice the Tophus and Spung. These being then the first Initiations of both Princesses the most prudent Henry Bishop of London being afterwards to improve the Inherent Promptitude of Nature and the management of their Infancy our MARY by degrees having already made her choice so accustom'd her self to reading and hearing at the Feet of Jesus which she wash'd with the daily and most fragrant Perfumes of her Prayers Oblations and Vows that afterwards she valu'd all other things as little worth look'd upon 'em as Empty Vanities and an Imaginary Shadow of Glory and ceas'd thenceforward to admire Aulae Fumum Opes strepitumque The Smoak the Riches and Noise of the Court and whatever Ambitious Minds hunt after without the Pale of Heavenly Contemplation like the Crow flying about the Empty World out of the Ark of Noah I will report a known Truth When first the News was brought of the Inauspicious but certain Nuptials of James the Father with Mary of Modena by the Mediation of LEWIS not only she toge with ANN her Sister with a Cast-down Countenance and Watry Eyes receiv'd the Tidings attended with a deluge of Tears which Doctor Thomas Doughty then Domestic Chaplain could by no means put a stop to but our MARY also after she somewhat alleviated her Sorrow with Weeping brake forth into these Expressions worthy to be engrav'd in Cedar However things fall out said she I hope we shall preserve immaculate to God our Faith and our Religion let all other things pass away which we shall look upon as of little consequence What certain presages were these Most Noble Hearers that the HEPOESS whom we bewail would one day be the most inexpugnable Tower and solid Bulwark of the more Holy Religion and a
gone again To deceive the Wishes of so many Mortals who thought there could nothing more corroborate their Felicity in this moveable Scene of Wordly Affairs then if MARY should long live and Govern Dost thou thus Great QVEEN withdraw they self from thy WILLIAM from thy People from thy Hollanders Of whom we may more truly say then fawning Rome of her Augustus or Severius that they ought either never to have been Born or never to have Died. Whose First Birth when thou wert born to the Earth might be look'd upon as the Palilia or Foundation-Festivals of Britain and the Universal Church but thy Last Birth by which thou wert born to Heaven might be thought the utmost Line of Both didst thou not still live in WILLIAM Behold how the Reformed Church and of all Hands the most Fortunate that was Illustrated by such a Sun is now wrapt up in Darkness by the departure of so Bright a Luminary portending great and unspeakable Calamities unless the most benign Deity avert them bow'd by the loud Prayers of His Elect. However we envy thy Immaculate Happiness in this our single Love of thee exceeding whatever Charity we have for our selves that we strive not to recall thee back to those Frail Glories which thou seest below us and tramplest 'em all under thy Feet rais'd above all the Rage of Treachery the Snares of Envy the Violences of Enemies the Injuries of Age or the Fleet Image of Worldly Things We bewail our own and the Losses of the whole World but with bruised Breasts we accuse our Transgressions against Heaven as the Causes of our Calamities And may it then be lawful for us also in these our last Funeral Offices to give thee a long and Eternal Farewel Farewel AUGUST MARY lately the Most Sacred Pledge of Heaven the Felicity of the World the Ornament of the Age the Admiration of the People the Palladium of Britain the Delight of Holland the Consolation of the Church the Support of Truth the Curb of Vice the Foster-Mother of the Poor the Hope and Defence of the Miserable Suffer us tho taken from our Eyes that we may always fix thee in our Minds that we may always behold with a joyful and perpetual Remembrance that Countenance that Aspect which formerly we approached with Veneration that Royal Right-Hand which we have often so submissively Kiss'd but more especially that Coelestial Mind and in That the Concurrence of all Praises and all manner of Vertue Lastly HAPPY SOUL accept not the vain Noises of profuse Applause which they pour often from their Breasts that are prodigal in praising others not Female Lamentations not Fruitless Wishes not Windy Expressions and Vollies of Idle Words Accept not Sacrilegious Altars nor Temples nor Masses nor Circension Pomp nor Funeral Chariots but accept this Publick and Grateful Testimony of Minds most devoted to thy Vertues to thy Benefits to what thou hast merited of us CONSECRATED TO THY ETERNAL HONOUR AND MEMORY And now we turn our selves to Thee the MOST INVINCIBLE yet the MOST SORROWFVL of Things in whose Royal Palace among Triumphant Lawrels the unfortunate Cypress supplies the room of the most Auspicious Rose You with more right implore from the Immortal God what Augustus Caesar is reported to have begg'd at the Funeral of Drusus Germanicus that his False Deities would grant him an Exit equally Glorious you with more right I say this day that MARY is carried to her Tomb with publick Funeral Splendor implore of God an Exit like that of your QVEEN and the Glory of a Death like Hers. But we above all things stretch forth our Hands and Hearts to Him under whose disposal we live that none of us may see that Black Day Rise wherein the Hasty Death of WILLIAM would prove the Common and the Fatal Funeral Pile of all Europe and the Vniversal Church Strengthen your self with Vertue and Courage MOST VALIANT of HERO'S You that are accustomed to vanquish others even anger'd Fortune it self You that appear'd more wonderful in Adversity then in Prosperity You whom the World 's Sovereign Emperor has hardned from the Cradle by Misfortunes and whose Vertue had been less conspicuous had it been less subdued and exercised so frame your Mind to Constancy of Resolution that it may be manifest not only to Britain but to all the World that you could overcome your Self whom no man else could ever vanquish even when Invincible Nature was to be expugn'd which is the Chiefest Victory of all We do not desire Your Breast should be inaccessible to Grief or Joy which Marcus Aurelius is reported to have affected far from any commotion of Mind We only desire this that after Your Tears have prov'd You to be a Man You would remember that You are a Prince and such a Prince upon whose single Fortitude so many Nations so many People so many Panting Souls believe their Safety their Liberty their Hopes and Fortunes depend You have all along been mindful which we look upon and esteem to be the Greatest Thing of all that you are a Christian bred up in the more Sacred School then the most Eloquent of the Romans while you are fully convinc'd that nothing happens preternatural or unusual to the Laws of Providence not so much as the fall of a Sparrow much less of a Man still much less of all those who are the express Image of that Immortal Deity whom they represent Your Mind GREAT KING that horrid Thought ne're troubl'd which disturb'd the Famous Pompey after the slaughter of Pharsalia whether the Gods took care of things on Earth You that have learnt to wage War with Kings not to contend with the King of Kings suffer not your self to be incens'd against Heaven for redemanding the Pledge which it had given You but for no certain Time So that it may seem doubtful to many whether You have more Reason to lament for what You have lost or to be gratefully thankful for what You once enjoy'd You dive not into the Secrets of the Eternal Mind or that all Provident Wisdom who in a moment seems to us to have destroy'd his own Workmanship and to have disturb'd and disappointed all both Yours and our Hopes This is not the First Day Your Experience how many times God frustrates the Desires of Mortals frequently curtailing long-grounded Hopes by speedy disappointment and no less often converting into unexpected preservation the despair arising from sad and sudden Accidents Even YOU YOUR SELF Great Sovereign have prov'd by Trials of Your own who and how Powerful is that Upholder of Princes that Preserver of Your Person even before You were born that Protecting and Avenging God who wrested you from so many Ambushments when You were hardly come into the World who dash'd in pieces so many Conspiracies against Your Life held back the Hands of so many Hir'd Assassinates scatter'd the force of growing Distempers stifl'd the Hatred and Animosities of Your Enemies averted the Effects of attempted Poysons and