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A03963 A vvorld of vvonders. A masse of murthers. A couie of cosonages Containing many of the moste notablest wonders, horrible murthers and detestable cosonages that haue beene within this land. Not imagined falso to delight vaine heads ociose, not practised trans mare to breed trueth cum ambiguitate, but commited euen at home re vera, and may be prooued cum honestate. A matter moste fit to be knowen, well wayed and considered of all men. T. I., fl. 1595.; Johnson, Thomas, d. 1644, attributed name. 1595 (1595) STC 14068.5; ESTC S109081 33,922 48

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such as came newly to them as prisoners eate them haule a liue so greeuous a mortalitie of people folloged that vneth the quicke were able to bury the deade Lord deliuer vs from the like About Chippyngnorton in Oxfordshire in the yeare 1344 was found a monsterous serpent hauing two heads and two faces like women one face attired of the new fashion of attyres then sprung vp and the other face atired after the olde ci●ll fashion and like a bat or ●●●n●er mouse And shall wee not say those were tokens of Gods wrath sent to mooue vs to repentance and leauing of our new deuised pride of apparrell But what then may be sayd of the straunge birds or fowles taken by Richard Waller and Richard Preston within the Parish of Crowell in Lincolne shire euen euen the other day in ●●r memories in the yeare 1586 which birds w●●ed enter●●●t ●●llors hauing fethers vpon then heads or fronts growing standing out very like the frisled and curled haire of most men and women in these dayes yea hauing also great feathers about their neckes growing and standing very high very euen and in the very forme of our greatest set of ruffes being diuersly coullored held vp with 〈◊〉 quilles resembling the wyers commonly called supporters which woord in my iudgment right fitteth the matter for that in very trueth they are the supporters of sinne and of many iniquities If wee further consider how these foules beeing taken would walke thrée and thrée togeither in most stately forme and afterwards turning bill to bill stood as it were consulting it might be imagined they did but resemble the most ●proude stately and scornefull footesteps of women in these our dayes as also their gossops talks and inuentions of new●●nd tayles and behauiour But gentlewomen consider what you are and whereto you must turne A apainted wall is but a deceite to the buyer and a paynted body is but a deceiuing of the soule Consider that a simple soule surpasseth thousands of the moste gorgious attired bodies of this world Leaue off the pride of the Pecock and take the humility of the Doeue for when age draweth vpon you you your selues will repent your former pride and acknowledge it méere vanitie Vppon Christmas day in the the 25. yeare of the raigne of L. Richard the second a Dolphin came out of the sea euento London bridge showing himselfe playing but after there followed great tempests The posterne gate of London néere the Towre in King Henry the sixt dayes sunck more then seuen foote into the earth at the same season Wonderfull and straunge it is to tell how in the 1594 the bodie of one Alce Hackney which had béene buried in the Church of Saint Mary-hill in London by the space of one hundred thrée score and fiftéene yeares was taken out of the ground by a graue maker bothe whole of skinne and also her ioynts plyable not deminished This body being also so taken vp is reported that after so long time lying in the earth to lye foure dayes abooue ground to the vein of all commers not smelling nor anoying of any and then buryed againe This as it séemeth to mée veryfieth the saying of reueend Bede our Cuntreyman who affirmeth that there be thrée dayes in a yeare wherein whosoeuer is borne the bodies shall not consume vntill the day of Iudgement In the yeare 1552 at Middleton eleuen myles from Oxford a woman brought foorth a Childe with two bodies from the nauill in such sorte that when they lay at length the one body hed lay as it were east-ward and the other hed and body lay west west-ward the legs for y e bodies grew out at the midst wheras the bodies ioyned and they had but one issue for both the bodies These were women children and liued eightéene dayes About that time when the Gray-f●yers was made an hospitall ten great Dolphins were taken and brought to London the least wherof was bigger then a horse Straunge it is to consider how God sundry times in most miraculous sorte prouideth for the poore as may be read in the dayes of Quéene Mary The twentie six of Nouember 1575. a Poulters wise in Christ Church parish within Newgate was deliuered and brought to bed of foure daugghters all aliue A place by the seaside all of hardstone and pebles commonly called a shelf lying betwéene Oxford and Alborough in Suffolk wheras neuer was knowen to be either grasse or earth but alwaies bare and barren suddainly by Gods appointment sprang out of the fame without labour or till age such great abundaunce of peason that the poore Inhabitaunts there gathered as it was then iudged aboue one hundred quarters and yet notwithstanding there still remained pease some rype some gréene and some in the blossome euen in as a great a quantitie as they were before they were gathered About the same time also a great fish was taken threescore féet in length very swéet and pleasant to be eaten In the yeare 1557. before haruest was such a dearth that wheat was solde for foure marks the quarter mault for fortie foure shillings pease at fortie six shillings the quarter but it pleased God to send such a haruest to ensue presently vpon that dearth that wheat was solde for fiue shillings a quarter mault for an noble Rye for ten grotes and all this so solde at London in the cuntry it was better cheape Let vs repent vs of our wickednes and begine to loue one an other as we ought and doubt we not but God will euen now doe the like for vs in this our dearth although in mans iudgement it presumptio●s may be made to the contrary More monsterous births befell in the yeare 1562 then in many yeares before A Mare brought foorth a foale with one body and two heads and a thing like a tayle growing sut betweene the heads Also a Sow farrowed a pigge with foure legs like to thearmes of a man childe with hands and figers Also there was an other Sow which farrowed a pigge with two bodyes eight féete and but one head Diuers children and beastes were brought into the world in monsterous formes but most to be noted is how many had resemblances of ruffs growing about their necks and this without fable The xvij of February 1570. at a place called Kinnaston néer Marclech hill in Herefordshire a straunge thing was séene that was the ground to open and the ground with certaine rocks to remooue and went forward for the space of foure or thrée dayes to wit satterday sunday and munday and in fiue and twentée houre it remooued fortie paces euerie pace fiue foote carrying both trees and shéepecoates yea shéepe and all in them some trees falling into the chinkes others remaning firme as before others that to fore stood east stand now west et sic econtra Kinaston Chapell was ouerthrowne with it and two high wayes laned with hedges and trées are remooued trées and all an hundred yards from their acc●ustomed places
Archigallo was twise king of this land and Elidurus his brother twise disposed so that he was thrise ruler heerof Catillus who ruled this land ten yeares caused all Extortioners and oppressors of the poore to be hanged to giue examples to other I would to God they were so vsed now a dayes I suppose there would be a great number of vsurers brokers sergiaunts About thréescore yeares after the birth of Christ it is supposed that Christianitie came into this land but diuers write diuersly for some as Necephorus and Dowthemus say that Simon Zelotes first preached Christ heere Some say Phillip the Apostle Some say Ioseph of Armathia that buryed our Lord. King Arthur conquered thirtie kingtomes such as were in those dayes wherin he liued In the raigne of Careticus and Ethelfridus was such ciuil and deadly warres that the most part of this land was buryed destroyed and the people that were left faine to flye into Wales the faithfull of Christ was then almost extinguished the Brittaines indispaire and in subuersion to the Saxons But what is the cause or this prouoking of Gods anger euen couetousnes whordome and extortion Looke vp England looke vp and repent those sinnes were then but euen in the budde now behol●e and repent for now are they in the fulnes of their flower and stay but for the frute Woe are wée whose doyes are so dangerous But Lord awake in mercie and take pittie on vs. Then couerend Beda wrote 78. bookes and in his time renoumed throughout the whole worlde When Bytiricus ruled this land it rained blood yea that fel on peoples clothes appeared like crosses When this land was stored with Wooules the Princes of VVales payed 300. Wooules euerie yeare to the King of England for at that time might scarce two be found vntill the yeare 994. neither feuer nor flix nor murren of Cattle were knowen in this land In the time of king VVilliam the Conquerour was scarcitie and dearth that men did eat horsses cats dogges yea and mans flesh Anno 1093 was such a famine that therof sprang such and so great a mortalitie that the quick were scant able the dead Also in the yeare 1099. we read that blood sprang out of y e earth at Finchamstead in Barkshire Much about this time the water of the riuer of Trent at Nottingham was dryed vp from one of the clock till thrée The like defection of water did the Theames at Londen bridg suffer about foure yeares after The 24. of February at Tewxbury being then their Faire such number of flyes and kyttles dammed Seuern that for the length of a Buts shot were in mens iudgement estéemed abooue a hundred quarters A wunder of wunders befel in England throughout 1133. for there was great darknes throughout all the land and the Sunne appeared no otherwise then as the Moone when she is in her last quarter Giraldus Cambrencis in his booke of the discription of Wales telleth that in the Cuntrey Kemanies yea in his time a young man named Se●●illus borne in those parts was so tormented w t toades as though all the toades in the Cuntrey had beene gathered together to vex him and when as innumerable numbers of them were killed by those that kept him by others of his friends and kinsmen yet came they still increasing in greater numbers then before insomuch that when his acquaintance perceiued no help after many assayes they loped all the boughes and leaues of a very high trée and closed him in a coffin made for the purpose so hoisted vp into the said high trée but notwithstanding poore S●isillies was still molested with them for they créeping vp wunderfull heapes left him not til they had eaten him vy to bare bones and so dyed About Orford in Suffolk certaine fishers tooke in their nettes a fish in all pointes shaped like a man which fish was half a yeare kept in Orford Castle for a wunder Hée would eat all manner meat but most gréedily raw fish he was shewed in no kinde of worship Aftermen had wundred at him hée was little estéemed of and so not béeing looked vnto stole away and was neuer heard of 1188. In the yeare 1230. a suddain darknesse chaunced in Poules-Church euen at seruice time so oue could scantly sée an other Also bout thrée or foure yeare afterward fiue sunnes to be séene in the ayre as also two great dragons flyingand fighting together during a whole day the one day chased the other to the déepe sea After all these followed great warres and troubles in England Wales c. Beholde all Cornehourders a wunderfull example not fained but by sufficient testimonies to be approued done euen at home In the yeare 1234 was a dearth in England as true histories recorde euen as now also there is so that many dyed for want of victualls The richmen as now a dayes were dwelled with couetousnes so that they would not releiue them that were in necessite Amongst whome a thing worthy noting was one Walter Gray Arch-bishop of Yorke whose corne béeing fiue yeares olde doubted that the vermine would destroy it and therfore cōmaunded to deliuer it to husband men that dwelt in his manours vppon condicion as much new corne after the next haruest and would distribute none of it to the poore for Gods sake Now it fortuned that when the men came to a great stacke of corne that stoode néere to the towne of Rippon belonging to the said Archbishop and had opened the corne there appeared in the sheaues the heds of wormes and of toades and horrible serpents yea and a voice was heard out of the mowe saying lay no handes one that corne for the Archbishop and all that he hath is the diuels This being heard the left it and the bayliffes of the Towne were faine to build an high wall round about the corne and then to set it one fire least the venemous venime should haue gonne out to haue poysned the corne in other places Beholde this true example and repent thou couetous richman and doe good while time is offered thée and God will blesse thée the better A sea-bull was taken passinge the thames as far as Mortlake to the 25. yeare of the reigne of King Richard the 3. It is most aproued that in the sayd Kings raigne ther dwelled in the Dioces of Lincolne a woman of noble birth both well fauored and beautifull who being married to a rich man in that curtry beare to her husband many children and yet not with stāding wonderfull to tell the sayd woman got another gētle with child and begate of her thrée sonnes one after an other or euer the ma●er came to light the woman were named Hauissia and Lucia In King Edward the 2 raigne flesh of beasts was so corrupted that men durst not eate therof such murraine of beasts and cattell was then that men and women stole Cattes and did eate their owne children some fatte dogges horses such like Prisoners plucked in peeces