item: #1 of 147 id: A25557 author: Fletcher, William, 17th cent. title: An answer to Malice defeated, or, Some reflections upon Madame Cellier's case date: 1680.0 words: 1410 flesch: 63 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A25557.xml plain text: A25557.txt item: #2 of 147 id: A25572 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. Answer to the Appeal from the country to the city. title: The Answer to the appeal expounded date: 1680.0 words: 16257 flesch: 65 summary: They began with a cry against Popery , but they concluded in the l Murther of the King ; the dislution of the Monarchy , and the perpetual Exclusion of the Royal Family , as may be seen in their Proclamation of Jan. 30.48 . for Inhibiting any person to be King. Here he shews himself to be an Informer , (c) Wat Tyler's endeavour was to destroy the Kings Life and Government , and plunder the City : whereas the Appeal desires to save King , City and Government , or at least to revenge their sufferings . keywords: appeal; appellant; church; city; danger; death; design; duke; fear; god; government; king; life; majesty; man; papists; party; people; plot; popery; present; prince cache: A25572.xml plain text: A25572.txt item: #3 of 147 id: A25716 author: City of London (England). Lord Mayor. title: An Account of the proceedings at the Guild-Hall of the city of London on Saturday, September 12 [i.e. 13], 1679 with the substance of Sir Thomas Player's speech, and the Lord Mayor's answer thereunto. date: 1679.0 words: 2434 flesch: 57 summary: City of London (England). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A25716) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 48504) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 3:10) keywords: city; lordship; sir; tcp; text cache: A25716.xml plain text: A25716.txt item: #4 of 147 id: A25877 author: Colledge, Stephen, 1635?-1681, defendant. title: The arraignment, tryal and condemnation of Stephen Colledge for high-treason in conspiring the death of the king, the levying of war, and the subversion of the government : before the Right Honourable Sr. Francis North, Lord Chief Justice of the Court of Common-Pleas, and other commissioners of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol Delivery held at the city of Oxon for the county of Oxon, the 17th and 18th of August 1681. date: 1681.0 words: 81678 flesch: 88 summary: Said he , There is no good to be expected from the King ; for he and all his Family are Papists , and have ever been such , you know it , Sir. Mr. Serj. Jeff. Said he , I would he would begin ; but if he do not , we will begin with him and seize him ; for there are several Brave Fellows about this Town that will secure him till we have those Terms that we expect from him . keywords: colledge; court; discourse; dugdale; evidence; gen; hath; haynes; house; j. mr; jefferies; jones; king; law; lord; man; oxford; papers; parliament; pray; serj; sir; smith; speak; thing; time; treason; witnesses cache: A25877.xml plain text: A25877.txt item: #5 of 147 id: A25878 author: England and Wales. Court of Common Pleas. title: The arraignment, tryal and condemnation of Stephen Colledge for high-treason, in conspiring the death of the King, the levying of war, and the subversion of the government Before the Right Honourable Sir Francis North, Lord Chief Justice of the Court of Common-Pleas, and other commissioners of oyer and terminer and gaol-delivery held at the city of Oxon. for the county of Oxon. the 17th and 18th of August 1681. I do appoint Thomas Basset and John Fish to print the arraignment, tryal and condemnation of Stephen Colledge, and that no others presume to print the same. Fr. North. date: 1681.0 words: 81485 flesch: 89 summary: Said I , by whom ? Said he , Colonel Warcupp hath been at me , and he tells me — Mr. just . Mr. just . keywords: att; colledge; court; dugdale; evidence; gen; hath; haynes; house; j. mr; jeff; jones; king; law; lord; man; papers; parliament; pray; ser; sir; smith; speak; thing; time; treason; witnesses cache: A25878.xml plain text: A25878.txt item: #6 of 147 id: A26241 author: Hill, Lawrence, d. 1679. title: An account of, (together with) the writing it self that was found in the pocket of Lawrence Hill, at the time he and Green were executed, (Friday the 21st of February, 1678/9) for the murder of Sr. Edmond-Berry Godfrey kt. date: 1679.0 words: 1817 flesch: 66 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A26241) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 65369) keywords: eebo; english; hill; tcp; text cache: A26241.xml plain text: A26241.txt item: #7 of 147 id: A27248 author: Bedloe, William, 1650-1680. title: A narrative and impartial discovery of the horrid Popish plot, carried on for the burning and destroying the cities of London and VVestminster, with their suburbs, &c. setting forth the several consults, orders and resolutions of the Jesuites, &c. concerning the same. ... / by Capt. William Bedloe ... one of the Popish Committee for carrying on such fires. date: 1679.0 words: 28898 flesch: 54 summary: / by Capt. William Bedloe ... one of the Popish Committee for carrying on such fires. / by Capt. William Bedloe ... one of the Popish Committee for carrying on such fires. keywords: aforesaid; burning; city; clock; committee; design; fire; firing; french; goods; harrison; hath; house; lane; london; man; matter; men; mrs; night; papists; people; persons; place; plot; said; set; sir; street; thomas; time cache: A27248.xml plain text: A27248.txt item: #8 of 147 id: A28432 author: Blount, Charles, 1654-1693. title: An appeal from the country to the city, for the preservation of His Majesties person, liberty, property, and the Protestant religion date: 1679.0 words: 9279 flesch: 56 summary: So that nothing does more justifie the Plot , than their corrupt Principles , and present Interest ; which will make them ( being sure to have the succeeding King on their side ) rather venture to push for it now , and run the hazard of the Peoples revenge , than suffer any longer the inconvenience of an English Parliament , or danger of the next Successor being a Protestant . EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). keywords: duke; english; good; hath; interest; king; life; nature; papists; plot; popish; prince; religion; tcp; text; time cache: A28432.xml plain text: A28432.txt item: #9 of 147 id: A28486 author: Blundell, Nicholas, 1640-1680. title: Blundel, the Jesuit's letter of intelligence to his friends the Jesuites at Cambray, taken about him when he was apprehended at Lambeth on Monday the 23th of June 1679 to Madam Katherine Hall in Cambray. date: None words: 2338 flesch: 52 summary: Next day Mr. Langhorn a Lawyer , Sir George Wakeman , Mr. Cooker , Mr. Marsh , Mr. Rumbly , the three last Benedictines , were brought to the Barr , where the Indictment being read against them for conspiring the King's Death &c. they pleaded all not guilty , then was Langhorn first tryed , whose Tryal held so long , that they had no time to Try the other four , and the Commission by which they sate , expiring that day , the Judge adjorned the Tryal of the other 4 till the 14th of July , and then the Judge commanded the Keeper to bring the five Jesuits , whom with Langhorn were Sentenced to be Hang'd , Drawn and Quartered , Mr. Corker and Mr. Marsh are close Prisoners , and have been so this eight months , with whom I have been , God has fitted and is still fitting them as sacrifices for himself , they are very well disposed and resigned to God's holy will , Mr. Rumbly hath the Liberty of the Prison , with whom is Mr. Eskett , all cheerful and expect the good hour ; On Thursday the day before the five Jesuits were Executed , my Lord Shaftsbury was with Turner and Gaven , promising the Kings Pardon if they would acknowledge the Conspiracy , Mr. Gaven answered he would not murder his Soul to save his Body , for he must acknowledge what he knew not , and what he did believe was not . Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 97306) keywords: eebo; english; gaven; tcp; text cache: A28486.xml plain text: A28486.txt item: #10 of 147 id: A29064 author: Boys, William. title: The narrative of Mr. William Boys, citizen of London faithfully relating what came to his knowledge concerning the late horrid Popish plot, and the death of Sir Edmund-Bury Godfrey, by his acquaintance with, and attendance upon Mr. Miles date: 1680.0 words: 10941 flesch: 52 summary: The narrative of Mr. William Boys, citizen of London faithfully relating what came to his knowledge concerning the late horrid Popish plot, and the death of Sir Edmund-Bury Godfrey, by his acquaintance with, and attendance upon Mr. Miles Boys, William. 1680 Approx. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 128:10) The narrative of Mr. William Boys, citizen of London faithfully relating what came to his knowledge concerning the late horrid Popish plot, and the death of Sir Edmund-Bury Godfrey, by his acquaintance with, and attendance upon Mr. Miles Boys, William. keywords: council; good; house; majesty; murther; papists; person; plot; prance; self; sir; time cache: A29064.xml plain text: A29064.txt item: #11 of 147 id: A29095 author: Bradford, John, 1510?-1555. title: The godly exhortation of holy Father Bradford which he gave to his wife, children and friends a little before his death, who dyed a martyr for the Gospel in Q. Maries days : wherein is plainly shown the excellency of the Protestant religion and the happiness of those that profess and live the same : as also the damnableness of the Romish religion with their bloody and rebellious crimes laid open : with the relation of the murder of that just justice Sir Edmund-bury Godfrey. date: 1683.0 words: 3119 flesch: 71 summary: Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 103748) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1586:12) The godly exhortation of holy Father Bradford which he gave to his wife, children and friends a little before his death, who dyed a martyr for the Gospel in Q. Maries days : wherein is plainly shown the excellency of the Protestant religion and the happiness of those that profess and live the same : as also the damnableness of the Romish religion with their bloody and rebellious crimes laid open : with the relation of the murder of that just justice Sir Edmund-bury Godfrey. keywords: bradford; eebo; english; friends; god; tcp; text cache: A29095.xml plain text: A29095.txt item: #12 of 147 id: A29937 author: Bryan, Robert, 17th cent. title: A prophetick demonstration of many remarkable passages ... as they were found in a manuscript intitled, The mistery of observable predictions upon the present state of Reynelus & Romulus, or, The unrid[d]led] hyraglip of a she fox nurs'd by a she wolf in a stile answerable to Miltons heroick verses on lost Paradise ... date: 1680.0 words: 7062 flesch: 65 summary: Watch'd over was the Tree , ( such Fruit did bare By the Old Serpent , and Enchanted were , Both Fruit and Garden , where Pluto did feed , His Queen of pleasure , who grasp'd flowers of Seed , That Ravish'd was , by gathering such a prize , Which coveted , now opens Natures Eyes , To sense the Good and Evil of that Life , Which she in hell must loose , to end the strife ; As he the Draggon ( out charm'd ) his Art doth loose , By strength of Teeth to bite or to abuse , The Power in Nature plac'd ; which must arise To Glory in such Draggons first surprise , IV. As into time was brought , hells hot desire , Which did create Eternal flames of fire , Those forms to destroy , which Nature gave In Childhood to be nurss'd , towards their grave ; While open throat of Saturn down doth swollow , All principles to Blood , in whom did wallow , Natures first birth , cast forth in open Field , Vnswadled there , while none respect did yield , Like to Celeus , ( unto Saturns Daughter , ) Who took in Ceres , while she wandring after Her Proserpine , whom ravish'd and led to hell , From her was lost , ( with Pluto constraind to dwell . ) keywords: cause; death; doth; form; fox; god; hath; nature; power; ram; self; tcp; text; time; wolf cache: A29937.xml plain text: A29937.txt item: #13 of 147 id: A30330 author: Burnet, Gilbert, 1643-1715. title: A collection of several tracts and discourses written in the years 1678, 1679, 1680, 1681, 1682, 1683, 1684, 1685 by Gilbert Burnet ; to which are added, a letter written to Dr. Burnet, giving an account of Cardinal Pool's secret power, the history of the power treason, with a vindication of the proceedings thereupon, an impartial consideration of the five Jesuits dying speeches, who were executed for the Popish Plot, 1679. date: 1685.0 words: 42562 flesch: 65 summary: But I must again and again repeat , what I often told you in discourse ; That no Member of that Church can thorowly understand and believe the Principles of it , and be a good Subject even to a King of his own Perswasion : If then there be such reasons offered them , for susspecting foul dealing from their Priests and Church , as would make them suspect an Attorney , Physician , or any other person with whom they were to deal , they will be prepared to hear reason ; which is all that we desire : and upon this Head these following Considerations may be laid before them . keywords: admiral; ages; authority; blood; christ; church; council; court; deposing; doctrine; duke; faith; france; general; god; good; great; king; law; man; matter; men; people; persons; pope; power; princes; protestants; religion; rome; set; things; time; tradition; worship; years cache: A30330.xml plain text: A30330.txt item: #14 of 147 id: A30379 author: Burnet, Gilbert, 1643-1715. title: A letter written upon the discovery of the late plot date: 1678.0 words: 16096 flesch: 64 summary: But I must again and again repeat , what I often told you in discourse ; That no Member of that Church can thorowly understand and believe the Principles of it , and be a good Subject even to a King of his own Perswasion : In the Jubilee in the year 1300 , He shewed himself the first day in the Pontifical Habit , but the second day , he was clothed with the Imperial Habit , a naked Sword being carried before him , and cried out with a loud voice , I am Pope and Emperor , and have both the Earthly , and Heavenly Empire . keywords: age; ages; authority; church; council; decree; deposing; doctrine; france; general; great; king; pope; power; princes; rome; sentence; thing; tradition cache: A30379.xml plain text: A30379.txt item: #15 of 147 id: A30477 author: Burnet, Gilbert, 1643-1715. title: The unreasonableness and impiety of popery: in a second letter written upon the discovery of the late plot.. date: 1678.0 words: 12108 flesch: 64 summary: If then there be such reasons offered them , for susspecting foul dealing from their Priests and Church , as would make them suspect an Attorney , Physician , or any other person with whom they were to deal , they will be prepared to hear reason ; which is all that we desire : and upon this Head these following Considerations may be laid before them . First , Whatever Church offers cheap and easie pardons for sin , does take off so much from our sense of the evil of sin . keywords: ages; christ; church; faith; god; great; man; people; pope; religion; rome; sin; things; worship cache: A30477.xml plain text: A30477.txt item: #16 of 147 id: A30681 author: Brooks, William, Alderman of Dublin. title: A true narrative of the late design of the papists to charge their horrid plot upon the Protestants by endeavouring to corrupt Captain Bury and Alderman Brooks of Dublin, and to take off the evidence of Mr. Oats and Mr. Bedlow, &c. as appears by the depositions taken before the Right Honourable Sir Joseph Williamson, knight ... and the several examinations before Sir William Waller ... date: 1679.0 words: 7919 flesch: 57 summary: A true narrative of the late design of the papists to charge their horrid plot upon the Protestants by endeavouring to corrupt Captain Bury and Alderman Brooks of Dublin, and to take off the evidence of Mr. Oats and Mr. Bedlow, &c. as appears by the depositions taken before the Right Honourable Sir Joseph Williamson, knight ... and the several examinations before Sir William Waller ... Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 839:26) A true narrative of the late design of the papists to charge their horrid plot upon the Protestants by endeavouring to corrupt Captain Bury and Alderman Brooks of Dublin, and to take off the evidence of Mr. Oats and Mr. Bedlow, &c. as appears by the depositions taken before the Right Honourable Sir Joseph Williamson, knight ... and the several examinations before Sir William Waller ... keywords: brooks; captain; joseph; kelly; letter; nettervile; sir; williamson cache: A30681.xml plain text: A30681.txt item: #17 of 147 id: A30893 author: H. B., Citizen of London. title: An answer to the excellent and elegant speech made by Sir Thomas Player, the worthy chamberlain of London, to the Right Honble [sic] the Lord mayor, etc. on Friday the 12th of September, 1679 / by H. B. ... date: 1679.0 words: 2129 flesch: 66 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A30893) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 98264) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 445:9) keywords: citie; eebo; player; tcp; text cache: A30893.xml plain text: A30893.txt item: #18 of 147 id: A30922 author: H. B. title: A reply to the excellent and elegant speech made by Sir Thomas Player, the worthy Chamberlain of London, to the Right Honble the Lord Mayor &c. on Friday the 12th of September, 1679 by H.B. date: 1679.0 words: 2072 flesch: 66 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). keywords: citie; eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A30922.xml plain text: A30922.txt item: #19 of 147 id: A31231 author: Castlemaine, Roger Palmer, Earl of, 1634-1705. title: The compendium, or, A short view of the late tryals in relation to the present plot against His Majesty and government with the speeches of those that have been executed : as also an humble address, at the close, to all the worthy patriots of this once flourishing and happy kingdom. date: 1679.0 words: 46282 flesch: 60 summary: Mr. Coleman , being then found Guilty upon the account of his Letters , ( for my Lord Chief Justice told him , ( as I already mention'd ) † That the Cause hung not on the Matter he insisted upon , to wit , on the Consult of August , which Oates pretends him to be at ) He was next day Condemned at the same Bar , where he declar'd , with all the Execrations imaginable , ‖ That he told the House of Commons , all that he knew of this Business : That he never heard of Proposition , or knew of any to Supplant the King , or Government , by Invasion , Disturbance ▪ or the like : That he thought , ( 't is true ) by Liberty of Corscience , Popery might come in ; and that every Body is bound , to wish all People of the Religion be professes , with much more to the same Purpose . Oates then not only repeats the beforementioned April Consult at the † White-Horse-Tavern ; his comming over with ‖ Sir John Warner , Sir Thomas Preston , Fa. keywords: april; bedlow; bin; body; charge; coleman; court; day; death; evidence; george; god; good; hand; hartcourt; house; ireland; jesuits; justice; king; langhorn; letter; life; lord; majesty; man; nay; oates; pag; persons; plot; present; reader; sir; thing; time; tryal; white; witnesses cache: A31231.xml plain text: A31231.txt item: #20 of 147 id: A31346 author: By-stander. title: The Catholick gamesters, or, A dubble match of bowleing with an account of a sharp conference held on the eve of St. Jago between His Holiness and the Mahometan dons in St. Katherines Bastile ... : to the tune of The plot in the meal-tub, or, Tan-ta-ra-ra-ra make shift / published by a by-stander to prevent false reports. date: None words: 3087 flesch: 81 summary: My Self may get by 't , save a Thing more rare Than this same Triple Bawble now I wear , Which otherwise is hazarded I swear . Howere I 'le venture 't , prove it good or ill , And have a Push for 't ere I lose it will. keywords: dons; eebo; ere; tcp; text cache: A31346.xml plain text: A31346.txt item: #21 of 147 id: A31907 author: E. C., Doctor of the civil law. title: A full and final proof of the plot from the Revelations whereby the testimony of Dr. Titus Oates and Mr. Will. Bedloe is demonstrated to be jure divino, and all colours and pretences taken away that might hinder the obstinate from assenting to the truth and sincerity of their evidence : dedicated to all Roman-Catholicks and infidels / by E.C., Doctor of the civil law. date: 1680.0 words: 7641 flesch: 32 summary: I hope to obtain my end here , whatever ill success I meet with from you ; it being the only way I can propose to secure us from the effect of a Plot ; for 't is well known , after your Conspiracies are discovered , your first Artifice is to insinuate an opinion of your Innocence , and then to induce Men to argue against , and question Circumstances , by your Arts adulterated and made contradictory , and lastly , to drill them on to a disbelief of all ; than which nothing can he more menacing the safety of the Government ; your Interest hereby being unshaken , and a Liberty given of entring into new Cabals , and of acting as with more security , so with more power and strength . And I must confess , you have hit upon right Measures , this is infallibly the most expedite and successful manner of promoting Religion that can be ; that of Reason and Argument is very teadious , and People are won but slowly by it ; in this Case , if you meet with a Man tough and tenacious of his own Sense , 't is but cutting his Throat , and the Work is done ; for 't is in effect gaining a Proselyte by destroying a Heretick . keywords: church; evidence; law; man; men; oates; plot; reason; religion; tcp; text; truth; witnesses cache: A31907.xml plain text: A31907.txt item: #22 of 147 id: A32369 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: A proclamation commanding all papists, or reputed papists, forthwith to depart from the cities of London and Westminster, and from within ten miles of the same date: 1679.0 words: 1337 flesch: 63 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). keywords: london; papists; tcp; text cache: A32369.xml plain text: A32369.txt item: #23 of 147 id: A32417 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for a general fast date: 1678.0 words: 1329 flesch: 61 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32417) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107239) keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A32417.xml plain text: A32417.txt item: #24 of 147 id: A32437 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for incouragement of the further discovery of the popish plot date: 1680.0 words: 1041 flesch: 62 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32437) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 104133) keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A32437.xml plain text: A32437.txt item: #25 of 147 id: A32516 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for the apprehending certain offenders therein named and for the better security of His Majesty and his government from dangers arising from popish recusants date: 1678.0 words: 2020 flesch: 53 summary: Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. By the King, a proclamation for the apprehending certain offenders therein named and for the better security of His Majesty and his government from dangers arising from popish recusants England and Wales. keywords: eebo; majesty; persons; tcp; text cache: A32516.xml plain text: A32516.txt item: #26 of 147 id: A32517 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for the apprehending certain persons therein named, accused of high treason date: None words: 1300 flesch: 60 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32517) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 103853) keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A32517.xml plain text: A32517.txt item: #27 of 147 id: A32519 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for the apprehending of certain persons therein named, accused of high treason date: 1679.0 words: 1401 flesch: 61 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 103855) keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A32519.xml plain text: A32519.txt item: #28 of 147 id: A32540 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for the discovery and apprehending all popish priests and Jesuits date: 1678.0 words: 1275 flesch: 59 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32540) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 103866) keywords: eebo; popish; tcp; text cache: A32540.xml plain text: A32540.txt item: #29 of 147 id: A32541 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for the discovery and apprehending of several persons justly suspected to have contrived and acted in the felonious burning of houses in and about the city of London date: 1679.0 words: 1430 flesch: 58 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; english; london; tcp; text cache: A32541.xml plain text: A32541.txt item: #30 of 147 id: A32551 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for the further discovery of the late horrid design against His Majesties sacred person and government date: 1678.0 words: 1099 flesch: 63 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32551) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 102745) keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A32551.xml plain text: A32551.txt item: #31 of 147 id: A32552 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for the discovery of the murtherers of Sir Edmund-Bury Godfrey date: 1678.0 words: 1267 flesch: 60 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32552) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 98963) keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A32552.xml plain text: A32552.txt item: #32 of 147 id: A32568 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for the more effectual and speedy discovery and prosecution of the Popish Plot date: 1679.0 words: 1268 flesch: 60 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A32568.xml plain text: A32568.txt item: #33 of 147 id: A32569 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for the more effectual discovery of Jesuits, and of all estates belonging to them, or to any popish priest, colledge, seminary, or other popish and superstitious foundation date: 1679.0 words: 1389 flesch: 58 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32569) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 97783) keywords: eebo; english; popish; tcp; text cache: A32569.xml plain text: A32569.txt item: #34 of 147 id: A32679 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: Whereas His Majesty hath received information that some persons who can discover the manner and circumstances of the murder of Sir Edmund-Bury Godfrey, are withheld from so doing out of a fear that their persons may be in danger ... date: 1678.0 words: 1136 flesch: 64 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32679) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 102822) keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A32679.xml plain text: A32679.txt item: #35 of 147 id: A33884 author: Colledge, Stephen, 1635?-1681. title: A letter written from the Tower by Mr. Stephen Colledge (the Protestant-joyner) to Dick Janeways wife date: 1681.0 words: 1906 flesch: 63 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: colledge; dick; eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A33884.xml plain text: A33884.txt item: #36 of 147 id: A33886 author: Colledge, Stephen, 1635?-1681, attributed name. title: Raree show, or, The true Protestant procession a new ballad to the tune of the Northumberland man. date: 1681.0 words: 1427 flesch: 70 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A33886) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 46603) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; english; protestant; tcp; text cache: A33886.xml plain text: A33886.txt item: #37 of 147 id: A34192 author: Comyne, Eustace. title: The information of Eustace Comyne, servant to Mr. Keadagh Magher treasurer to the papists in Ireland, of their mony to carry out this horrid plot, who was barbarously murthered for discovering the same, and turning Protestant : given in writing to the honorable House of Commons, the 15th of this present November, 1680. date: 1680.0 words: 2471 flesch: 50 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A34192) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107455) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: county; informant; john; pound; tcp; text cache: A34192.xml plain text: A34192.txt item: #38 of 147 id: A34397 author: Coniers, George, 1646-1711. title: A true copy of a dispute lately held at Rome between Father Conyer, a Jesuit, and Alexander Thompson, a Church of England man and barrister at law, concerning the plot date: 1681.0 words: 2107 flesch: 58 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). keywords: church; eebo; english; tcp; text; wou'd cache: A34397.xml plain text: A34397.txt item: #39 of 147 id: A34571 author: Corker, James Maurus, 1636-1715. title: Roman-Catholick principles in reference to God and the King explained in a letter to a friend and now made publick to shew the connexion between the said principles and the late Popish plot. date: 1680.0 words: 6577 flesch: 73 summary: It is a farther Comfort to Us , that our Sufferings ( God be praised ) are in some measure , not unlike to those of Christ our Lord ; For it was laid to his Charge as it is to Ours , that he was a Traytor to a Caesar ; That he perverted the People , and endeavour'd the b Destruction of Church and State ; Nor were there wanting , then as now , an OATS and BEDLOE , c two false Witnesses to Swear all this . 6. This Way or Means is not the Reading of Scripture , Interpreted according to the Private k Reason or l Spirit of every Disjunctive Person , or Nation in Particular ; But , 7. It is an Attention and m Submission to the Doctrine of the Catholick or Vniversal Church , established by Christ for the Instruction of all , n Spread for that end throughout all Nations , and visibly continued in the Succession of Pastors , and People throughout all Ages : From which Church o Guided in Truth , and secured from Error in Matters of Faith , by the p promised Assistance of the Holy Ghost , every one may , and ought to q Learn both the Right Sense of the Scripture , and all other Christian Mysteries and Duties , respectively necessary to Salvation . keywords: catholick; christ; church; cor; faith; god; mat; matters; principles cache: A34571.xml plain text: A34571.txt item: #40 of 147 id: A34573 author: Corker, James Maurus, 1636-1715. title: Stafford's memoires, or, A brief and impartial account of the birth and quality, imprisonment, tryal, principles, declaration, comportment, devotion, last speech, and final end, of William, late lord viscount Stafford, beheaded upon Tower-hill on Wednesday the 29. of December 1681 hereunto is also annexed a short appendix concerning some passages in Stephen Colleges trial. date: 1681.0 words: 46747 flesch: 65 summary: From hence my Lord drew a second Iuference , ( viz ) That had the Lord Aston , and the rest been Guilty , ( as Dugdale accused them , ) It was highly improbable , the said Lord should adventure to exasperate , discard , and leave to Goal and Ruin , a man , at whose mercy they all lay , and who might to retreive his desperate fortune , by making Discoveries , utterly destroy both their Designs and them . I do now upon my Death and Salvation aver , That I never spoke one Word either to Oates or Turbervil , or to my knowledge ever saw them , until my Tryal : And for Dugdale I never spoke unto him of any thing but about a Foot-boy , or Foot-man , or Foot-race ; and never was then alone with him : All the Punishment that I wish them , is , that they may repent and acknowledge the Wrong that they have done me ; then it will appear how Innocent I am : God forgive them ! keywords: answer; catholicks; christ; church; death; design; dugdale; england; evidence; faith; general; god; good; hath; king; life; lord; lord stafford; man; men; oates; page; papists; perjury; persons; plot; religion; self; swear; testimony; thing; thy; time; treason; tryal; turbervil; way; witnesses; words cache: A34573.xml plain text: A34573.txt item: #41 of 147 id: A34574 author: Corker, James Maurus, 1636-1715. title: Stafford's memoires, or, A brief and impartial account of the birth and quality, imprisonment, tryal, principles, declaration, comportment, devotion, last speech, and final end of William, late Lord Viscount Stafford, beheaded on Tower-hill Wednesday the 29. of Decemb. 1680 whereunto is annexed a short appendix concerning some passages in Stephen Colledges tryal / the whole now again set forth for a more ample illustration of that so wonderfully zealous pamphlet entituled The papists bloody aftergame, writ in answer to the said Memoirs, and published by Langley Curtis, 1682. date: 1682.0 words: 47113 flesch: 64 summary: From hence my Lord drew a second Inference , ( viz. ) That had the Lord Aston , and the rest been Guilty , ( as Dugdale accus'd th●m , ) it was highly Improbable , the said Lord should adventure to Exasperate , Discard , and leave to Goal and Ruin , a Man , at whose mercy they all lay , and who might to retrieve his desperate Fortune , by making Discoveries , utterly destroy both their Designs , and them . But that this forementioned Lord was my Lord Stafford , or that he ever saw Turbervil in my Lords Lodgings , or Company at Paris , or else-where , he could not say ▪ UPon these Testimonies , the Managers made this Observation , viz. keywords: answer; catholick; christ; church; death; design; dugdale; england; evidence; faith; general; god; good; hath; king; life; lord; lord stafford; man; managers; matter; men; oates; page; papists; perjury; persons; plot; religion; self; stafford; swear; testimony; thing; thy; time; treason; tryal; turbervil; way; witnesses; words cache: A34574.xml plain text: A34574.txt item: #42 of 147 id: A34683 author: Carol, James. title: A narrative of the popish plot in Ireland for the murdering the Protestants there, and the introducing of popery : and the assistance they depended upon from England / discovered by me James Carrol, in the year 1672 ; with an account of my sufferings for discovering the same. date: 1681.0 words: 7894 flesch: 34 summary: arrive at Portumna , in the County of Gallway , a Town belonging to William Burke , Earl of Clanrickard , and took up their Lodgings at the house of one Thomas Allen , an Inn-keeper , then living at the Sign of the Black-Spred Eagle , in the said Town of Portumna , which said Allen then was a Tenant or Steward unto the said Earl of Clanrickard ; and this Informant saith , that the said Thomas Allen then and there falling into discourse with this Informant and his said Father , supposing them to be Irish , this Informant's said Father speaking the Irish Tongue , did enquire of them what News there was abroad : whereunto they answered , that they had been travelling up and down the Country , but heard no strange News : whereupon he said to this Informant and his said Father in English , as followeth : If ( said he ) we have news , that the Dutch are beaten , whom we are in great hopes utterly to destroy , for that 's the l●ght we must put out , we have so good assurance not only from France but England too ; for there 's one , we are sure , will stick by us ; then my Lord Clanrickard will presently sound a Trumpet , and I will go along with him , and three or four score more of this Town , well horsed and armed , and every man five pounds in his Pocket ; and I hope I shall kill an hundred of the Protestants , Anabaptists , Independents , and such like Phanatick Rogues , before I am killed ; for I expect a Quarter-Masters place in the Troop that is here to be raised , and I will have some of them upon the point of my Sword before the last of June : and as for those that are here in this Country , we will soon cut them off , they shall have no help to come from the other side of the Brook ( meaning England ) for we have taken care to prevent that , by having an Embargo put on Shipping , that none can come from thence to help them ; so that we shall be twelve to one , and leave them neither root nor branch , nor spare them as in their former Rising . And altho' this Informant just as he and his said Father were so brought to , and going into the said Gaol , did employ an English man , a person living in Loughrea , and gave him money , and lent him this Informants Horse , to convey or carry a Letter from this Informant and his said Father to Galloway , but Fourteen Miles from Loughrea ; yet within an hour or two after , fearing the Earl of Clanrickard's displeasure , being ( as this Informant hath great cause to believe ) charged by some or other of the Earls Agents or Tenants there , at his Perril , as he told me , not to convey or carry the said Letter , did return this Informant his money again , and said , that the said Constable , Christopher Poor by name , and a Popish Constable in Loughrea , told him , the said person , that if he should carry the said Letter , or any other ways appear to do any thing for this Informant or his said Father , that the said Earl of Clanrickard would ruin him and his Family : And the better to colour the said malicious and injurious prosecutions against this Informant and his said Father , several persons by such instigations and prevalencies as aforesaid , were procured to report , that this Informant's said Father had a design to burn the said Town of Loughrea ; and that besides the said Information against this Informant and his said Father for such their travelling , as aforesaid , on the Sabbath-day , there would be seven or eight other Indictments preferred and prosecuted against them , at the then Galloway Assizes : and in such Condition this Informant and his said Father lay in the said Goal or Prison in Loughrea , aforesaid , for some considerable time , and perhaps might there have layn ( if not destroy'd or famish't before by their cruel usages ) had not this Informant , through a Window of the said Prison , accidentally seeing a stranger riding by , conveyed to him a Letter , directed to some friends of theirs , then living in Galloway , where , by such means , the said Letter was received , and understanding thereby such the sad Condition of this Informant and his said Father , their said friends did presently make application to the Judges of the Assizes , then sitting there at Galloway , and of them obtained an Order for the removal of this Informant and his said Father thither . keywords: allen; clanrickard; council; day; dublin; earl; english; father; informant; lord; thomas; time cache: A34683.xml plain text: A34683.txt item: #43 of 147 id: A36193 author: England and Wales. Court of King's Bench. title: The Doctor degraded, or, The reward of deceit being an account of the right perfidious and perjury'd Titus Oates, who recieved [sic] sentence at the Kings-Bench-Bar, at Westminster the 16th day of May, 1685. date: 1685.0 words: 1853 flesch: 72 summary: The Doctor degraded, or, The reward of deceit being an account of the right perfidious and perjury'd Titus Oates, who recieved [sic] sentence at the Kings-Bench-Bar, at Westminster the 16th day of May, 1685. 1685 Approx. The Doctor degraded, or, The reward of deceit being an account of the right perfidious and perjury'd Titus Oates, who recieved [sic] sentence at the Kings-Bench-Bar, at Westminster the 16th day of May, 1685. England and Wales. keywords: eebo; english; oates; tcp; text cache: A36193.xml plain text: A36193.txt item: #44 of 147 id: A36268 author: Dangerfield, Thomas, 1650?-1685. title: Tho. Dangerfield's answer to a certain scandalous lying pamphlet entituled, Malice defeated, or, The deliverance of Elizabeth Cellier together with some particular remarks made from her own words, an acknowledgment of matter of fact, and a short compendium of the principal transactions of her life and conversation / all which are wrote by the hand of Tho. Dangerfield ... date: 1680.0 words: 11899 flesch: 48 summary: Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). keywords: cellier; dangerfield; elizabeth; good; house; king; life; man; pag; self; text; time; truth; way; words; world cache: A36268.xml plain text: A36268.txt item: #45 of 147 id: A36280 author: Dangerfield, Thomas, 1650?-1685. title: Thomas Dangerfield's answer to a certain scandalous paper entituled, The Kings evidence vindicated as to the imputation of perjury date: 1680.0 words: 2495 flesch: 51 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 41540) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1254:27) Thomas Dangerfield's answer to a certain scandalous paper entituled, The Kings evidence vindicated as to the imputation of perjury Dangerfield, Thomas, 1650?-1685. 4 p. Printed for Richard Janeway, London : 1680. keywords: eebo; evidence; friend; kings; tcp; text cache: A36280.xml plain text: A36280.txt item: #46 of 147 id: A36304 author: Dangerfield, Thomas, 1650?-1685. title: The information of Thomas Dangerfield, Gent. delivered at the bar of the Hovse of Commons, Tuesday the twentieth day of October in the year of Our Lord 1680 / perused and signed to be printed according to the order of the House of Commons by me William Williams ... date: 1680.0 words: 3590 flesch: 67 summary: WHen Mrs. Cellier and my self waited on the Lord Peterborough , to be Introduced to his Highness the Duke of York , his Lordship enquired of me , If the Lady Powis had given me any directions how to Discourse the Duke ? I replyed , She had . After this the Duke informed us , That in a Month or two's time the Commissions would be ready : but ordered us in the mean time to bring our part to bear with the Commissions : and particularly ordered me to find out some persons ( as there was enough such among the Catholicks , as well as elsewhere ) which were fit to be Trusted , and that should accept of such Commissions , which should be delivered them by a person appointed for that purpose , but not to be known to them to be any other but a Presbyterian : keywords: duke; lordship; plot; tcp; text; thomas; time cache: A36304.xml plain text: A36304.txt item: #47 of 147 id: A36344 author: Dangerfield, Thomas, 1650?-1685. title: More shams still, or, A further discovery of the designs of the Papists to impose upon the nation the belief of their feigned Protestant or Presbyterian plot by Thomas Dangerfield. date: 1681.0 words: 13579 flesch: 52 summary: Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). keywords: church; constable; french; health; house; king; life; man; men; person; plot; rogue; room; self; tcp; text; thing; time; world cache: A36344.xml plain text: A36344.txt item: #48 of 147 id: A36786 author: Dugdale, Stephen, 1640?-1683. title: The further information of Stephen Dugdale, gent. delivered at the bar of the House of Commons pursuant to an order of the said house, on the 30th of October, 1680. date: 1680.0 words: 5094 flesch: 68 summary: That I have Intercepted several Letters that came to Mr. Evers from St. Omers , and Paris , wherein was mentioned , that they were in good forwardness , and that they had disbursed 500 l. upon Account for Arms , as also 700 l. was mentioned in other Letters to be laid out for the same purpose , in some of which Letters , it was pressed to Mr. Evers for return of Monies for discharging those Accounts . To which end Mr. Evers told me , That there was several Gentlemen in the County of Stafford had Monies in their hands , though they were shy of being so known ; but nevertheless had entered into Covenant to do it at St. Omers : To confirm which , I received a Letter from Mr. Warner a Jesuit , that the money should be speedily returned to Mr. Harcourt the Jesuit here . That in another Letter directed to Mr. Evers , which I broke open , and found the same to be my Lord Stafford's hand-writing : The Contents of which was , That things went well on beyond the Seas for carrying on the Plot , and hoped it did so here in England ; and for the Pardoning of those that were concerned therein , Mr. Evers told me , That there were several Indulgencies , which he believed came from Mr. Ireland , to whom they were transmitted from Rome . keywords: design; evers; house; letters; lord; money; time; wou'd cache: A36786.xml plain text: A36786.txt item: #49 of 147 id: A36787 author: Dugdale, Stephen, 1640?-1683. title: The information of Stephen Dugdale, gent. delivered at the Bar of the House of Commons, Munday the first day of November, in the year of our Lord 1680. date: 1680.0 words: 3942 flesch: 62 summary: And he the said Evers often hath told me , that it would not be long before we might expect good times , for the Duke of York having declared himself to be a Roman Catholick , had given a good assurance to the Pope ; besides he was a Prince of that resolution and worth , that if ever he made any ingagement , he would never revoke it , particularly in so high a Concern as this , where his Soul lies at stake . And that the said Evers told me , that there had been great care taken for an honest Gentleman to be Confessor to the Duke of York , and they had found one , a friend to the said Evers , who was a worthy honest Gentleman ; one Mr. Moumford , otherwise called Beddingfeild . keywords: evers; letter; lord; master; sir; tcp; text cache: A36787.xml plain text: A36787.txt item: #50 of 147 id: A36812 author: Duke, Richard, 1658-1711. title: Funeral tears upon the death of Captain William Bedloe date: 1680.0 words: 1205 flesch: 69 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A36812.xml plain text: A36812.txt item: #51 of 147 id: A38266 author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons. title: The reasons & narrative of proceedings betwixt the two Houses which were delivered by the House of Commons to the Lords at the conference touching the tryal of the Lords in the Tower on Monday the 26th of May 1679. date: 1679.0 words: 3792 flesch: 52 summary: Whereupon , your Lordships having appointed the Trial of the said Earl to be before that of the other Five Lords , Now your Lordships having since inverted that Order , gives a great cause of doubt to the House of Commons , and raises a jealousie in the Hearts of all the Commons of England , that , if they should proceed to the Tryal of the said Five Lords in the first place , not onely Justice will be obstructed in the Case of those Lords , but that they shall never have right done them in the matter of this Plea of Pardon ; which is of so fatal consequence to the whole Kingdome , and a new device to frustrate publick Justice in Parliament . Which Reasons and Matters being duely weighed by your Lordships ; the Commons doubt not but your Lordships will receive satisfaction concerning their Propositions and Proceedings : And will agree , That the Commons ought not , nor can , without deserting their Trust , depart from their former Vote communicated to your Lordships ; That the Lords Spiritual ought not to have any Vote in any proceedings against the Lords in the Tower ; and when that matter shall be setled , and the Methods of Proceedings adjusted the Commons shall then be ready to proceed upon the Tryal of the Earls of Danby , ( against whom they have already demanded Judgment ) and afterwards to the Tryal of the other Five Lords in the Tower. Wherein , stating the several parts of this regulated Monarchy , he says : The King , the House of Lords , and the House of Commons , have each particular Priviledges : And among those which belong to the King , he reckons power of Pardoning . keywords: commons; earl; house; lords; lordships; tryal cache: A38266.xml plain text: A38266.txt item: #52 of 147 id: A38267 author: England and Wales. Parliament. title: The reasons and narrative of proceedings betwixt the two houses which were delivered by the House of Commons to the Lords at the conference touching the trial of the Lords in the tower on Monday the 26th of May, 1679. date: 1679.0 words: 3721 flesch: 48 summary: The reasons and narrative of proceedings betwixt the two houses which were delivered by the House of Commons to the Lords at the conference touching the trial of the Lords in the tower on Monday the 26th of May, 1679. The reasons and narrative of proceedings betwixt the two houses which were delivered by the House of Commons to the Lords at the conference touching the trial of the Lords in the tower on Monday the 26th of May, 1679. England and Wales. keywords: commons; earl; impeachment; lords; lordships; tryal cache: A38267.xml plain text: A38267.txt item: #53 of 147 id: A38819 author: Everard, Edmund. title: The depositions and examinations of Mr. Edmund Everard (who was four years close prisoner in the Tower of London) concerning the horrid popish plot against the life of His Sacred Majesty, the government, and the Protestant religion with the names of several persons in England, Ireland, France, and elsewhere concerned in the conspiracy. date: 1679.0 words: 6791 flesch: 49 summary: After some Months , Sir John sent for me , and said he had Order to examine me ; he inquired , What and whom I verily thought were the Causes of my Imprisonment ? I told him that the Lady Anne Gourdon , alias Huntley , with Peter Talbot , Titular Bilhop of Dublin , were assuredly the Causes of it ; and might well contrive by other Instruments some false Accusation against me , for to weaken the testimony I was to give against them of their plotting against England : for that the said Lady had informed me of a Design the English Catholiques had against the King's Person , his Government , and Religion ; and that she had correspondency with her Brother the Marquiss of Huntley , my Lord of Rothes , my Lord of Oxenford of Scotland , and other Catholiques and Priests , this side and beyond Seas : That the said Peter Talbot , before I brought him to the French King's presence , told me , That he was to treat with that King from soine very great Person or Persons in England , for to raise men in Ireland for the French King , and that I had declared these things in France to one Sir Robert Welsh , who desired me to acquaint the Duke of Ormond therewith . The depositions and examinations of Mr. Edmund Everard (who was four years close prisoner in the Tower of London) concerning the horrid popish plot against the life of His Sacred Majesty, the government, and the Protestant religion with the names of several persons in England, Ireland, France, and elsewhere concerned in the conspiracy. keywords: duke; england; english; john; king; lady; paris; plot; sir; tower cache: A38819.xml plain text: A38819.txt item: #54 of 147 id: A38820 author: Everard, Edmund. title: Discourses on the present state of the Protestant princes of Europe exhorting them to an union and league amongst themselves against all opposite interest, from the great endeavours of the court of France and Rome to influence all Roman Catholick princes, against the Protestant states and religion, and the advantage that our divisions give to their party : wherein the general scope of this horrid Popish Plot is laid down, and presented to publick view / by Edmund Everard ... date: 1679.0 words: 22047 flesch: 13 summary: Thirdly , it is not an effect of the Jealousie that reigns betwixt these two Houses , that Rome hath had opportunity to inspire them so strongly to contend mutually in making out whether of them were more zealous of the Worship of the Roman Faith ; so that contrary to all the most essential Rights of their States and Crowns , the former to preserve himself in the quality of the Catholick King , hath suffered the new Emissaries of the Papacy in less than one Age to invade many very good Inheritances ; so that the Church at this day enjoys near a third part of the Temporal Estate through the whole extent of that Monarchy , and the other to maintain the Quality of the most Christian King , though he hath seen two of his most Illustrious Predecessors assissinated by their Parricides or Ministers in a very short time , and the Laws of his Kingdom are repugnant to such Establishments ; yet nevertheless hath and doth still every day tollerate the same , so far that the Cities of France may be seen as well provided of Fortresses and Colonies of the Papacy under the names of Covents , Religious Houses , Colleges and Abbeys , as those of Spain and Italy , which may be called the Triumph of the Papal Policy , it being infallibly certain that in process of time , if God redress it not , The Successors of these Monarchies must by all the Rules of a Judicious Policy , together with their Subjects , become the Miserable Slaves of the Despotick Monarchy of the Papacy ? In the fifth place , as Rome hath the Art to subtilize all the advantages that it can draw from all Conjunctures , and as it embraceth nothing more readily in all its Projects , than any Design to destroy the Protestant Party , from their Heads , to the meanest member of them , that the poor Protestants of High Hungary might not escape this general Persecution ; was it not an effect of the opposition which rages betwixt those Houses , that Rome , being about to draw a cruel storm over the Protestants , the Emissaries of the Papacy had the craft to make his most Christian Majesty to understand , that there being none but his Imperial Majesty , who could vigorously traverse his Designs on Holland ; it was his Interest to give him Business in his own State , and that this could not be done by any probability otherwise , than by somenting the Revolt on the Coast of High Hungary , therefore he must of necessity purchase the Heads of the Protestants in that Country to his part ? Now at the same time that these Emissaries caused this Doctrine to be solicited in the Court of France , and by their solicitation obtained Money and Treaties in France , and insinuated themselves into High Hungary ; the Brethren of the same Emissaries , who are as puissant in the Imperial Court , as the former in the Court of France , by Intelligence and Conspiracy with the former , had the dexterity without notice it may be precisely given thereof at first to his Imperial Majesty , to cause it to be determined at the Court of Vienna , that cruel Persecutions should be raised against those miserable People ; we must not wonder then , that those poor People , Members of our Faith , persecuted on one hand , and flattered on the other , are fallen into the trap set for them by the Court of Rome with so great dexterity , and that thereupon we have seen the Protestant Body in that Country in this last conjuncture , agitated with such furious Convulsions . keywords: communion; court; empire; estate; europe; france; hath; house; interest; king; liberty; majesty; means; party; peace; princes; protestant; religion; roman; rome; states; time cache: A38820.xml plain text: A38820.txt item: #55 of 147 id: A39589 author: Fitz-Gerald, Maurice. title: A true discovery of the Irish popish plot made by Maurice Fitz-Gerald of Killcowan in the county of Lymrick, Jan. the 20th, 1680 [i.e. 1681] : by way of a guest. date: 1681.0 words: 1858 flesch: 78 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 98588) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1550:31) keywords: gerald; tcp; text cache: A39589.xml plain text: A39589.txt item: #56 of 147 id: A39602 author: Fitzharris, Edward, 1648?-1681. title: The confession of Edward Fitz-Harys, Esquire written with his own hand, and delivered to Doctor Hawkins minister of the tower, the f[i]rst of July, 1681 ; being the day of his execution ; together with his last speech. date: 1681.0 words: 2968 flesch: 63 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 95254) keywords: edward; fitz; king; life; lord; tcp; text cache: A39602.xml plain text: A39602.txt item: #57 of 147 id: A39604 author: Fitzharris, Edward, 1648?-1681. title: The last speech of Edward Fitz-harris at the time of his execution at Tyburn, the first of July, 1681 date: 1681.0 words: 1497 flesch: 67 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A39604) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 63756) keywords: fitz; harris; tcp; text cache: A39604.xml plain text: A39604.txt item: #58 of 147 id: A42804 author: D. G. title: A letter from St. Omars in farther confirmation of the truth of the Popish Plot upon a consideration of divers circumstances in the trials together with several new matters relating to a farther discovery thereof, and particularly, a letter from Mr. Jennison proving Mr. Ireland to have been in London the 19th of August, contrary to the Staffordshire witnesses and what the five Jesuits (lately executed) insisted upon at their trials : with remarks upon the said letter. date: 1679.0 words: 26913 flesch: 47 summary: A letter from St. Omars in farther confirmation of the truth of the Popish Plot upon a consideration of divers circumstances in the trials together with several new matters relating to a farther discovery thereof, and particularly, a letter from Mr. Jennison proving Mr. Ireland to have been in London the 19th of August, contrary to the Staffordshire witnesses and what the five Jesuits (lately executed) insisted upon at their trials : with remarks upon the said letter. A letter from St. Omars in farther confirmation of the truth of the Popish Plot upon a consideration of divers circumstances in the trials together with several new matters relating to a farther discovery thereof, and particularly, a letter from Mr. Jennison proving Mr. Ireland to have been in London the 19th of August, contrary to the Staffordshire witnesses and what the five Jesuits (lately executed) insisted upon at their trials : with remarks upon the said letter. keywords: bedlow; design; england; evidence; ireland; jesuits; king; letters; london; men; murther; oates; pag; people; persons; plot; religion; sir; swears; testimony; time; witnesses cache: A42804.xml plain text: A42804.txt item: #59 of 147 id: A45528 author: Barrow, William, 1610-1679. title: The papists new-fashion'd allegiance a letter lately seiz'd in the house of an eminent Roman Catholick in Hereford-shire, and produced at the late assizes there held / written by Father Harcourt. date: 1679.0 words: 2193 flesch: 56 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 42071) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1286:9) keywords: eebo; english; father; power; tcp; text cache: A45528.xml plain text: A45528.txt item: #60 of 147 id: A46146 author: Ireland. Lord Lieutenant (1677-1685 : Ormonde) title: Whereas His Majesty out of his princely care for securing the true Protestant religion, and to satisfie the minds of all his loving subjects therein, for the more effectual discovery and suppression of the most horrid and execrable popish plot ... by the Lord Lieutenant and Council, Ormonde. date: 1680.0 words: 1248 flesch: 65 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Title from first 6 lines of text. keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A46146.xml plain text: A46146.txt item: #61 of 147 id: A46182 author: Ireland. Lord Lieutenant (1677-1685 : Ormonde) title: Whereas the late horrid plot & conspiracy of divers priests and Jesuits, and other papists, against His Majesties sacred person, and for the subversion of the Protestant religion and His Majesties government, hath been so far discovered, that the said effects thereof have by His Majesties care and the blessing of Almighty God been hitherto prevented, and the most notorious offenders therein brought to condigne punishment in England, or are secur'd, or fled from justice ... by the Lord Lieutenant and Council, Ormonde. date: 1679.0 words: 1432 flesch: 65 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A46182) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 104934) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; lord; majesties; tcp; text cache: A46182.xml plain text: A46182.txt item: #62 of 147 id: A47594 author: Kuhlmann, Quirin, 1651-1689. title: The general London epistle of Quirinus Kuhlman a Christian, to the Wiclef-Waldenses, Hussites, Zuinglians, Lutherans, and Calvinists being an explication of a vision and prophecy of John Kregel : wherein the reformation from popery is fundamentally asserted, and the union of Protestants convincingly urged : together with a postscript relating to the present popish plot : translated from the Latine copy printed at Rotterdam in May 1679. date: 1679.0 words: 20969 flesch: 63 summary: But there is no Astrologer ( of those I have seen ) whose Conjectures have come nearer the truth , than the Almanack Writer of Staden , who expresly compares the two Comets of 1664 and 65 , to two who give in their Evidence before a Judge , and the third to a publick Herald , proclaiming the Sentence given in upon the fore-going Evidence ; and therefore declares his Opinion , that within 24 months time the work of God will be manifested , by preparing the whole Roman and Turkish Empire for quite another War , then is now believed , which is to last till the next Age , and to run over the greatest part of the whole World , and that the end of it will be , the propagation of the Gospel in the East , and the return of the Christian Church to the place of its first rise . What I have said of you , the same may be said of the Turks , Persians , and Tartars , as well as of Nominal Christians ; because Turks and Persians , with others who are Strangers to the Name of Christ , if they heartily glorifie Christ by a Righteous Life towards God and their Neighbours , though they have no Explicite Knowledge of Christ , are notwithstanding partakers of him , and that in a nearer degree than our Nominal Christians , notwithstanding their Mahometanisme , which in time must be totally done away . keywords: age; body; brethren; christ; church; day; end; fore; forth; god; hath; men; papal; pope; prophets; reformed; scripture; thou; time; vial; years cache: A47594.xml plain text: A47594.txt item: #63 of 147 id: A47796 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: An account of the growth of knavery under the pretended fears of arbitrary government and popery with a parallel betwixt the reformers of 1677 and those of 1641 in their methods and designs : in a letter to a friend. date: 1678.0 words: 14884 flesch: 58 summary: Other things ( say they , p. 15 . ) of main Importance for the Good of this Kingdom , are in Proposition ; as the Establishing and Ordering the King's Revenues , that so the Abuse of Officers , and Superfluity of Expenses may be cut off , and the necessary Disbursements for his Majesty's Honour , the Defense and Government of the Kingdom , may be more certainly provided for : the Regulating of Courts of Iustice , and Abridging both the Delays and Charges of Law-Suits , &c. See now if our Reformer of 77 , does not fish with the very same Bait. AN ACCOUNT Of the GROWTH of KNAVERY , UNDER The Pretended FEARS OF ARBITRARY GOVERNMENT , AND POPERY SIR , TO give you my Opinion freely of the two Libels that you sent me , methinks the Design of them lies too open to do much Mischief ; for I never saw so bare-fac'd an Araignment of the Government , and all the Parts of it : King , Lords , Commons , Iudges , Ministers of State ; they are all of them made Conspirators ; against the Sovereign Multitude , forsooth ; and when the Libeller has done with the Body of the Commons , he gives you a Defamatory List of betwixt two and three hundred of their Members , provoking and abusing all Sober Interests ; Insomuch , that he has left himself nothing to trust to , but the contemplation of a General Tumult , which is the very Point he drives at in his Appeal to the Rabble . keywords: church; commons; good; government; house; king; kingdom; law; majesty; man; oath; pag; parliament; people; person; popery; power; publick; religion; state cache: A47796.xml plain text: A47796.txt item: #64 of 147 id: A47801 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: An answer to the Appeal from the country to the city date: 1679.0 words: 14197 flesch: 66 summary: 48. for Inhibiting any person to be King. He that has a mind to see these match'd in the Scottish Kirk , may receive further satisfaction in a little book Entitled , TYRANNY and POPERY Lording it over the Consciences , Lives , Liberties , and Estates , both of King and People . keywords: appeal; appellant; church; city; danger; english; fear; government; interest; king; majesty; man; papists; party; people; plot; popery; popish; prince; rebellion; text cache: A47801.xml plain text: A47801.txt item: #65 of 147 id: A47840 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: A dialogue between Sir R.L. Knight, and T.O.D date: 1689.0 words: 7151 flesch: 63 summary: A dialogue between Sir R.L. Knight, and T.O.D L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. 1689 Approx. A dialogue between Sir R.L. Knight, and T.O.D L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. keywords: church; good; king; man; observator; roger; sir; sir r.; tcp; text; thee; thy; titus cache: A47840.xml plain text: A47840.txt item: #66 of 147 id: A47844 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: Discovery upon discovery in defence of Doctor Oates against B.W.'s libellous vindication of him, in his additional discovery, and in justification of L'Estrange against the same libell : in a letter to Doctor Titus Oates / by Roger L'Estrange. date: 1680.0 words: 19070 flesch: 61 summary: But then Doctor , you must distinguish betwixt a mans Vindicating of Himself and Defaming You : for otherwise men must sit down and confesse themselves to be Rascalls as often as you are pleas'd to call them so , for fear of Blasting Your Evidence . Now I thought Sir , that One mans Oath might be as well taken for being no Papist , as Anothers for being a Protestant : keywords: case; church; city; discovery; doctor; evidence; good; government; kings; l'estrange; man; matter; men; nation; papists; people; plot; religion; self; sir; thing; way; work; world cache: A47844.xml plain text: A47844.txt item: #67 of 147 id: A47862 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: A further discovery of the Plot drawn from the narrative and depositions of Dr. Titus Oates, and fairly submitted to the consideration of all indifferent readers. date: 1680.0 words: 4474 flesch: 57 summary: In general, first editions of a works in English were prioritized, although there are a number of works in other languages, notably Latin and Welsh, included and sometimes a second or later edition of a work was chosen if there was a compelling reason to do so. Popish Plot, 1678. keywords: church; english; government; law; oates; papist; plot; tcp; text cache: A47862.xml plain text: A47862.txt item: #68 of 147 id: A47868 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: The history of the Plot, or, A brief and historical account of the charge and defence of Edward Coleman, Esq., William Ireland, Thomas Pickering, John Grove : Robert Greene, Henry Berry date: 1679.0 words: 61104 flesch: 67 summary: That the Witness lay at Groves , and there was a flaxen-hair'd Gentleman , and Strange the late Provincial , that lay there besides : but that the Witness was charged to keep himself very close , Groves in the mean time , denying that Oates ever lay in his house , and confessing that Strange did , but not in either April , or May. Mr. Townley informed , that he knew Oates , and saw him in April , May , and Iune . keywords: answer; april; august; bedlow; coleman; consult; court; day; days; england; evidence; fenwick; gavan; george; hand; harcourt; hill; house; informed; ireland; iune; king; langhorne; letter; london; night; oates; omers; plot; prisoner; sir; sworn; time; vvitness; wakeman; whitebread; witness; witnesses cache: A47868.xml plain text: A47868.txt item: #69 of 147 id: A47876 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: The lawyer outlaw'd, or, A brief answer to Mr. Hunts defence of the charter with some useful remarks on the Commons proceedings in the last Parliament at Westminster, in a letter to a friend. date: 1683.0 words: 22196 flesch: 46 summary: What pretence then have the House of Commons , who can bring none to Answer in this manner , to any right or legal power to take or Imprison any Criminal whatsoever ? 'T is true , the Common , and generally all men in Authority , are inclin'd to enlarge their own Jurisdiction , and stretch it as far as possible ; but sure a bare Vote of that House in favour of themselves , or a late practice never heard of in former Ages , shall not be of force enough in any Court of Justice to elude the solemn Acts of King and Parliament . To which the Bishop of Canterbury answer'd by the Kings command , That the Commons are Petitioners and Demanders , and that the King and Lords always had , and of right shall have the Judgments in Parliament , even as the Commons themselves have shewed ; saving that in Statutes to be made , or Grants and Subsidies , or such things as are to be done for the publick profit of the Realm , the King will have especially their advice and assent , 1 H. 4. Rol. Parl n. 79. Who now is to be believ'd , Sir Edward Coke attributing to the Commons , or the Commons themselves wholly disclaiming all Power of Judicature ? Or shall a single Lawyers Ipse dixit , or proofless assertion , be of greater weight , than so solemn a Declaration upon Record , approv'd off by King , Lords , and Commons ? keywords: act; case; church; commons; court; england; good; government; great; house; king; law; laws; lords; members; nation; parliament; people; popish; power; realm; shou'd; tho; time cache: A47876.xml plain text: A47876.txt item: #70 of 147 id: A47881 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: A letter out of Scotland from Mr. R.L.S. to his friend, H.B. in London. date: 1681.0 words: 2458 flesch: 66 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A47881) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107093) keywords: books; eebo; english; friend; tcp; text cache: A47881.xml plain text: A47881.txt item: #71 of 147 id: A47888 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: Lestrange's narrative of the plot set forth for the edification of His Majesties liege-people. date: 1680.0 words: 12932 flesch: 57 summary: But without any m●●e Des●anting upon the Good or the Evill the Grounds or Cons●quences of Matters ; we shall now deliver some few Instances to our present purpose . ; every Authour hang up a Table at 's Door , and say , Here you may have a very good Narrative , for Three-pence , a Groat , or Sixpence , or H●gher if you pl●ase ●or we have 'em of all Sorts and Sizes : The only Danger is , the Popping of Catt and Dogs Flesh upon us , for Cony , and Venison . keywords: church; faction; good; government; king; man; narrative; papists; people; plot; popish; protestant; shall; tcp; text; thing; time; truth; way; work cache: A47888.xml plain text: A47888.txt item: #72 of 147 id: A47895 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: Notes upon Stephen College grounded principally upon his own declarations and confessions, and freely submitted to publique censure / by Roger L'Estrange. date: 1681.0 words: 16861 flesch: 65 summary: ] Which in the Acceptation of Forty and Forty-One , sounds as much as King and Parliament on the one side , in opposition to Charles Stuart on the other . Notes upon Stephen College grounded principally upon his own declarations and confessions, and freely submitted to publique censure / by Roger L'Estrange. keywords: church; college; design; england; king; lord; man; oxford; papists; parliament; person; protestant; religion; self; speech; thing; time; truth; way; words cache: A47895.xml plain text: A47895.txt item: #73 of 147 id: A47900 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: The parallel, or, An account of the growth of knavery under the pretext of arbitrary government and popery with some observations upon a pamphlet entitled An account of the growth of popery etc. date: 1679.0 words: 13464 flesch: 58 summary: Other things ( say they , p. 15. ) of main Importance for the Good of this Kingdom , are in Proposition ; as the Establishing and Ordering the King's Revenues , that so the Abuse of Officers , and Superfluity of Expences may be cut off , and the necessary Disbursements for his Majesty's Honour , the Defence and Government of the Kingdom , may be mor● certainly provided for : the Regulating of Courts of Iustice , and Abridging both the Delays and Charges of Law-Suits , &c. See now if our Reformer of 77. King , Lords , Commons , Iudges , Ministers of State ; they are all of them made Conspirators , against the Sovereign Multitude , forsooth ; and when the Libeller has done with the Body of the Commons , he gives you a Defamatory List of betwixt two and three hundred of their Members , provoking and abusing all Sober Interests ; Insomuch , that he has left himself nothing to trust to , but the contemplation of a General Tumult , which is the very Point he drives at in his Appeal to the Rabble . keywords: commons; good; government; growth; house; king; kingdom; law; majesty; man; oath; pag; parliament; people; person; popery; religion cache: A47900.xml plain text: A47900.txt item: #74 of 147 id: A47918 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: The shammer shamm'd, in a plain discovery under young Tong's own hand, of a designe to trepann L'Estrange into a pretended subornation against the Popish plot by Roger L'Estrange. date: 1681.0 words: 14166 flesch: 61 summary: [ That L'Estrange in his abusive Lying Dialogue , makes Choqueux to speak of L'Estrange ' s refusing to Licence The Royal Martyr ; which Tonge took very ill at L'Estrange ' s hands , — but Choqueux knew nothing of it . ] Take notice , that Tonge had drawn up some Objections against the Plot ; and L'Estrange desired a sight of 'em , and yet no Papers shew'd him , nor any Answer return'd him to that Question ; but thereupon he went his way . keywords: choqueux; deponent; father; hand; l'estrange; letter; matter; oates; papers; plot; self; thing; time; tonge; truth cache: A47918.xml plain text: A47918.txt item: #75 of 147 id: A47925 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: To the reverend Dr. Thomas Ken, Feb. 1, New stile, 1680 date: 1680.0 words: 1068 flesch: 64 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A47925) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 46922) keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A47925.xml plain text: A47925.txt item: #76 of 147 id: A48089 author: Creswell, Lady. title: A letter from the Lady Creswell to Madam C., the midwife, on the publishing her late vindication, &c. also, A whip for impudence, or, A lashing repartee to the snarling midwifes matchless rogue, being an answer to the rayling libel. date: 1680.0 words: 3429 flesch: 63 summary: A letter from the Lady Creswell to Madam C., the midwife, on the publishing her late vindication, &c. also, A whip for impudence, or, A lashing repartee to the snarling midwifes matchless rogue, being an answer to the rayling libel. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 426:10) A letter from the Lady Creswell to Madam C., the midwife, on the publishing her late vindication, &c. also, A whip for impudence, or, A lashing repartee to the snarling midwifes matchless rogue, being an answer to the rayling libel. keywords: creswell; daughter; eebo; english; madam; tcp; text cache: A48089.xml plain text: A48089.txt item: #77 of 147 id: A48271 author: F. L. title: Irelands sad lamentation discovering its present danger in some remarkable passages which have happened since the discovery of the horrid Popish Plot : in a letter from a person of honour to his friend in London, upon the dissolution of the late Parliament. date: 1680.0 words: 2732 flesch: 56 summary: In Obedience to which , a Captain of the Trained-Bands , took several in one Saints Eve , privately Celebrating Mass in their Popish Vestments , and the next morning brought them before the Duke ; where , upon Examination , some of them produced the Duke's own Protection , some Protected by Colonel Fitz-Patrick , and other Eminent Popish Gentry . WE hear that Colonel Fitz-Patrick , a Manager of our Kingdom , and who married the Duke of Ormond's Sister , is of late turn'd Protestant , and now in England : I like no such Masquerade , turning upon an Exigent . keywords: duke; eebo; english; plot; popish; tcp; text cache: A48271.xml plain text: A48271.txt item: #78 of 147 id: A49094 author: England and Wales. Parliament. House of Commons. Committee to Enquire into the Burning of London. title: London's flames being an exact and impartial account of divers informations given in to the committee of Parliament, by divers members of Parliament, and many other persons of quality (whose names are inserted in this book) concerning the dreadful fire of London in the year 1666, and the many other strange fires which have happened since : together with what was said by M. Langhorn, now a prisoner, and condemned for the horrid Popish Plot, concerning the great fire : wherein is plainly proved, that the papists were the contrivers and actors in the burning of that great and noble city. date: 1679.0 words: 9884 flesch: 52 summary: To which he answered ; I know not whether it be the hottest for Weather or Action : The said Yaxley , coming to the same House , the week after the Fire , Mr. Kitely said to him with some trouble ; I have often thought upon your hot Thursday , To which she replyed , It was not indeed upon the Thursday but it hapned upon the Sunday come sevennnigt after ; Mr. Yaxley bearing these Evidences produced against her , prompted her to avoid the words , saying , that upon the 13th of August , she did tell Mr. Kitely , That they say next Thursday , will be the darkest Thursday , that ever was in England , but not otherwise ; Which she affirms to have received from one Fynchman . Mr. Freeman of Southwark Brewer , whose House there was lately burned , informs , that the same day his House was fired , about a quarter of an hour before three , was found a paper with a Ball of Wild-fire , containing near a pound wrap'd up in it , in the nave of a wheel , in an outer house , where lay a great quantity of Timber ; how this house was fired he knoweth not ; but this he affirms to the Committee , it could not be by accident , because there had not been any Candle or Fire in the House where the Hay lay , that whole day ; and the Hay being laid up before Midsummer very dry , it could not possibly be set on fire within it self ; and moreover , he said , the Hay-loft was on fire on the top of the House , and that the Fire spread from one end of the Roof to the other in an instant . Mr. Richard Harwood saith , That he being near the Feathers Tavern by St. Pauls , on the fourth of September , something like Wild-fire by the sparkling and spitting of it , appeared , whereof he gave notice to some Souldiers there , who caused it to be quenched . keywords: city; committee; discourse; england; fire; house; hubert; informs; london; mrs; papists; saith; time cache: A49094.xml plain text: A49094.txt item: #79 of 147 id: A49279 author: Lander, Thomas. title: The information of Thomas Lander of Shutborrow in the county of Stafford another of the witnesses in the tryal of the late Lord Stafford, as it was taken upon oath by Edmund Warcup, Esquire, one of His Majesties justices of the peace for the county of Middlesex, and city and liberties of Westminster, on the 24th day of December, 1680. date: 1681.0 words: 2059 flesch: 61 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A49279) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 110400) THIS Informant saith , That having been employed as a Workman several times at the House of my Lord Aston at Tixall in the County aforesaid , he was sollicited by Mr. Francis Hind , Steward to the Lord Aston , to become a Witness against Stephen Dugdale , late Steward to the Lord Aston , any way to invalidate or take off his Evidence in relation to the Popish Plot , and he served this Informant with a Subpoena to come up to London for that purpose , at the late intended Tryal of the said Lord Aston in June last past ; but before his coming up , the said Mr. Hind , Francis Aston , Son to the Lord Aston , and Thomas Sawyear , Servant to the said Lord Aston , &c. sent for this Informant into a private Room in the s●id Lord Aston's House ; and there told him , That if he would swear such things as should be dictated to him by the Persons aforesaid , to invalidate or take off the said Dugdale's Evidence , he should have such a Reward as should be to his own content , and not want for Money and Horse , as might become a man of better Quality than himself . keywords: aston; informant; lord; tcp; thomas cache: A49279.xml plain text: A49279.txt item: #80 of 147 id: A49468 author: Anderson, Lionel, d. 1710, defendant. title: A brief account of the proceedings against the six popish priests, condemned for high-treason on the 17th day of this instant January, 1679/80 viz. Lionel Anderson, alias Munson, William Russell, George Parry, Henry Starkey, James Corker, and Will. Marshal, two Benedictine monks, formerly tryed with Wakeman : with whom was likewise tryed Alexander Lumsdell : who though he appeared to be a priest, yet being born in Scotland, he continues upon a special verdict : the heads of the evidence against each of them, and their defences and behaviour. date: 1680.0 words: 2779 flesch: 61 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). keywords: eebo; evidence; priests; tcp; text cache: A49468.xml plain text: A49468.txt item: #81 of 147 id: A51030 author: Smith, William, 17th cent. title: Mr. Smyth's discovery of the Popish sham-plot in Ireland, contrived to correspond with their sham-plot in England by which it appears that it has been the joynt design of the papists in both kingdoms, to make people believe their real plot to be a sham-plot, and their sham-plot a real plot : necessary for the information of all His Majesties Protestant subjects. date: 1681.0 words: 2917 flesch: 57 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A51030) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 96788) Jack and Dr. Harris , or Harrison , called his Majesty Papist , that he designed the Distruction of his Subjects , and to establish the Popish Religion in his Dominions , and that they plainly perceived his intention was to bring his said : Subjects under a Tyrannical Government , and that they and the rest of their Brethren intended e're this time to have had him ( meaning the King ) in their power , and to have disposed of him at their pleasure , nay to have made him shorter by the head , if he had not condescended to all their designs ; but failing in their designs were resolved to spend their lives and fortunes to make it out a Popish Plot , by which ( said the above Father ) we will make the world believe there was no Popish Plot but a Presbyterian Plot , and they will be utterly confounded , and we cleared , and all Presbyterians and other like Dissenters , be accused not only of the said Plot , but be reputed guilty of all the Blood that hath been spilt . keywords: english; plot; popish; sham; tcp; text cache: A51030.xml plain text: A51030.txt item: #82 of 147 id: A52939 author: Gent. of Grays Inn. title: A new narrative of a gent. of Grays Inn, relating to Mr. Turbervill's last narrative concerning the horrid Popish-Plot date: 1680.0 words: 3390 flesch: 60 summary: Yet notwithstanding , I was no voluntary Witn●ss , I do here profess , and stand upon it , as a Principle of my Religion , That , had I known any matters certainly true , which would have preserved the Lord Stafford's Life , ( though I were in all li●●●●●hood to be murdered by the Papists , or 〈◊〉 being exposed , as now I am to popular fury ) I would and ought to have declared them . But suppose a Magistrate really tyrannical ; it is no contemptible Question , Whether the evils of the redress may not be equivalent to the mischiefs imposed ? I remember Livy 's Nec morbum ferre pos●●●●● nec remedium : And Tacitus ' s ●erend , a Regum ingenia , neque 〈◊〉 effe crebras mutati●●● , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 don●● homines ; sed neque haec continua Et meliorum interrantu pensantur : And Seneca 's Infaeliciter aegrotat , cui plus pericull à Medico quàm Morbo . keywords: good; man; narrative; tcp; text; turbervill; ● ● cache: A52939.xml plain text: A52939.txt item: #83 of 147 id: A53539 author: Oates, Titus, 1649-1705. title: To the Right Honourable the Lords spiritual and temporal, and to the Honourable the knights, citizens, and burgesses in this present Parliament assembled, the humble petition of Titvs Oates, D.D. date: 1689.0 words: 1702 flesch: 48 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; english; petitioner; tcp; text cache: A53539.xml plain text: A53539.txt item: #84 of 147 id: A54184 author: Penn, William, 1644-1718. title: The oaths of Irish papists no evidence against Protestants, or, A warning piece to jurors in a letter to a friend. date: 1681.0 words: 5258 flesch: 53 summary: Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. Popish Plot, 1678. 2005-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2005-08 Aptara Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2006-01 Judith Siefring Sampled and proofread 2006-01 Judith Siefring Text and markup reviewed and edited 2006-04 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion THE OATHS OF Irish Papists NO EVIDENNCE AGAINST Protestants : OR , A Warning piece to JVRORS . keywords: english; evidence; irish; oaths; persons; plot; popish; protestant; tcp; text cache: A54184.xml plain text: A54184.txt item: #85 of 147 id: A54713 author: Ephelia, fl. 1679. title: A poem to His Sacred Majesty, on the plot. Written by a gentlewoman date: 1678.0 words: 1291 flesch: 71 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Copy torn, slightly affecting text. keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: A54713.xml plain text: A54713.txt item: #86 of 147 id: A54760 author: Phillips, John, 1631-1706. title: Dr. Oates's narrative of the Popish plot, vindicated in an answer to a scurrilous and treasonable libel, call'd, A vindication of the English Catholicks, from the pretended conspiracy against the life and government of His Sacred Majesty, &c. / by J.P., gent. date: 1680.0 words: 31468 flesch: 64 summary: Seeing then all the several Orders of the Roman Clergy , and this Vindicator of the Inglish Catholicks , being of the same Gang , are so far from being Persons of Credit , that they are not only the Subject of every Satyrical Pen , but the Religious Scorn and Indignation of so many good and grave Men of their own Profession ; we may presume that those Thunder-bolts of Perjury and concocted Lyes which they toss with so much Rage at others , will not prove so Fatal as vain Malice suggests to men of their own lewd Principles . Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. keywords: article; attestation; business; catholicks; credit; deponent; doctor; england; english; good; history; jesuits; king; letters; little; london; lyes; man; men; narrative; omers; papists; person; place; plot; presbyterians; princes; provincial; reason; rest; sacred; sir; thing; time; truth; vindicator; way; white; world cache: A54760.xml plain text: A54760.txt item: #87 of 147 id: A55414 author: Poor Robin. title: Poor Robins dream, or, The Visions of hell with a dialogue between the two ghosts of Dr. T. and Capt. B. date: 1681.0 words: 3115 flesch: 82 summary: Yet still thou didst persevere in thy sin , Taught Tony and the rest to bring me in . And cryes , My Tony thou shalt live to see Englands destruction , and its Monarchy , And my chief Engine , Tony , thou shalt be . keywords: eebo; english; poor; tcp; text; thou; tony cache: A55414.xml plain text: A55414.txt item: #88 of 147 id: A55598 author: Gadbury, John, 1627-1704. title: A ballad upon the Popish Plot written by a lady of quality. date: 1679.0 words: 2403 flesch: 72 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; english; plot; popish; quality; tcp; text cache: A55598.xml plain text: A55598.txt item: #89 of 147 id: A55631 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: A postscript to the Observators first volume, or, The answer of Miles Prance to several of those papers wherein he finds himself most traduced and slandered with some notes to be added to Observator Numb. 8 of the 2d volumn [sic]. date: 1684.0 words: 18752 flesch: 52 summary: But it being very late , Madam Lee perswaded her not to carry them that night , and so the business rested till after I had my liberty , and then I gave the Tavern another Tankard in lieu of theirs , which had been so stollen , and the beforementioned Tankard which had been in my Wifes Trunk , ( and which must be the Tankard intended by the Boy , if he did ever talk at such a rate , for all the rest were new ones ) I sold to one Mr. where the Owners of the other may easily satisfie themselves , whether it be the same . But if he will abandon his Province , and pull me Head and Ears out of the Church of England , and not only make me a Phanatick in spight of my Teeth , but also point me out as a Rogue , one that have for sworn my se●f against him : And that I cheated Her Majesty with Brass Screws ; and design'd to defraud a Man of a Tankard , and made away my Servant , and sent for him , the said L'Estrange , to the Old Dog-Tavern , and then d●n●●d it , with such and such horrid Oaths , when not a word of all this is true ; I hope I may have leave to say — Your Worship in these particulars is mistaken ; and to disabuse the World therein , even in like publick manner ; since , as himself says , Observator , Num. 473. keywords: brass; church; deponent; fincham; gentleman; good; having; house; john; l'estrange; man; matter; miles; observator; prance; screws; silver; tho; time; truth; words; work cache: A55631.xml plain text: A55631.txt item: #90 of 147 id: A55936 author: England and Wales. Assizes (York) title: The proceedings at the assizes holden at York, the 24th day of July, 1680, before ... Sir William Dolben ... and Sir Edward Atkyns ... then judges of assize for the northern circuit, against several prisoners then indicted for the horrid Popish Plot against the life of the King and for subversion of the government and Protestant religion : with an accompt at large of the arraignment of Sir Miles Stapleton ... , and of the tryal, condemnation and execution of Thomas Thwing for the same plot. date: 1681.0 words: 12362 flesch: 85 summary: then judges of assize for the northern circuit, against several prisoners then indicted for the horrid Popish Plot against the life of the King and for subversion of the government and Protestant religion : with an accompt at large of the arraignment of Sir Miles Stapleton ... , and of the tryal, condemnation and execution of Thomas Thwing for the same plot. then judges of assize for the northern circuit, against several prisoners then indicted for the horrid Popish Plot against the life of the King and for subversion of the government and Protestant religion : with an accompt at large of the arraignment of Sir Miles Stapleton ... , and of the tryal, condemnation and execution of Thomas Thwing for the same plot. keywords: bolron; dolben; gascoyne; gent; justice; king; lord; mrs; plot; pressicks; sir; thomas; thwing cache: A55936.xml plain text: A55936.txt item: #91 of 147 id: A57190 author: Reynolds, John, d. 1693? title: Vituli labiorum. Or, A thanksgiving sermon, in commemoration of our great deliverance from the horrid Powder-Plot, 1605 And also of Gods merciful discovery of a bloody conspiracy against His Majesties Person, and the Protestant religion, 1678. Both intended by the papists. Preached at St. Peter's, Exon, Nov. 5. 1678. In prosecution whereof the Churches persecutions, foreign and domestick, by the hands of popish votaries, ever since the Reformation, are briefly recapitulated. Their charge of novelty on our church and religion is retorted. The absurdity of many of their doctrines and principles, and how destructive unto civil government, is detected. By John Reynolds, M.A. date: 1678.0 words: 10551 flesch: 64 summary: So that whatsoever enemies think effectually to prevail against the Israel or Church of God , must first make account to cancel all the Promises that are given for Israels security ; he must first overcome God himself , his Power , his Wisdom , and all his other Attributes concerned for his People ; he must subdue the Captain of our Salvation , storm Heaven , and put all the glorious Host of those Guardians of the Saints there to the rout , before he can perfectly and fully prevail against Gods Israel . I cannot really admit any diminutive account of your goodness to my self , otherwise than by considering you in that larger sphere which God hath placed you in , as a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , a common good to your Country ; of which for me to say any thing , would be altogether unnecessary , forasmuch as there are every day so many mouths open to acknowledg it . keywords: church; churches; conspiracy; enemies; god; gods; good; hath; israel; king; new; plot; popish; religion; self; tcp; text; time; world; youth cache: A57190.xml plain text: A57190.txt item: #92 of 147 id: A58385 author: Cellier, Elizabeth, fl. 1680. title: Reflections upon the murder of S. Edmund-Bury Godfrey the design of Thompson, Farwell, and Paine to sham off that murder from the papists : the late endeavours to prove Stafford a martyr and no traitor, and the particular kindnesses of the Observator, and Heraclitus to the whole design, in a dialogue ; with a dedication from Mrs. Cellier. date: 1682.0 words: 20823 flesch: 60 summary: Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. Now then pray what mean these passages in Coleman's Letters ▪ We have here a mighty Work upon our hands , no less than the Conversion of Three Kingdome , and by that perhaps the subduing of a Pestilent Heresie , which has domineerd over a great part of the Northern World a long time , there were never such hopes of success since the death of Queen Mary , as now in our days ; but the opposition we are like to meet with , is also like to be great , so that it imports Us to get all the Aid and Assictance We can ▪ Again , Your Friends the Emperour and the Pope will have a fair occasion of giving marks of their Friendship to Mr. — to make the great Design succeed , to undermine the Intreagues of the Merchants , who Trade for the Parliament and the Religion ; and to Establish that of the Associated Catholicks in every Place . keywords: bin; body; design; high; impartial; justice; king; lord; man; men; murder; murther; nation; papists; perjury; persons; plot; popish; prance; reason; religion; sir; thing; time; world cache: A58385.xml plain text: A58385.txt item: #93 of 147 id: A59336 author: Settle, Elkanah, 1648-1724. title: The present state of England in relation to popery manifesting the absolute impossibility of introducing popery and arbitrary power into this kingdom : being a full confutation of all fears and apprehensions of the imagined dangers from thence, and particularly of a certain pamphlet, entituled, The character of a popish successor / by E. Settle. date: 1684.0 words: 33202 flesch: 38 summary: So that all the forementioned Impotence and Impossibilities of popish and arbitrary Tyrannys Introduction into England , being fully demonstrated ; I have only this to add ; There is no greater Mistake in the generality of Mankind , than an Imbibed Opinion , that the Papists think themselves obliged to endeavour the setting up of their Religion hap-hazard , right or wrong , hand over head , without Consideration or Regard to the Issue or Success of the Undertaking ; and that in fine , a popish Successour will certainly muster all Forces and all Engines to attempt the Storming of the whole Protestant Liberty and Religion , though under a tenfold Odds of laying his very Bones at the Siege . But alas ! when it comes to the DOING once , the Papists will find that the whole Body of the people of England , even to a Nemine Contradicente ( at least , not one in a hundred excepted ) if without any other Defence of their Belief , are still those Opinators in Religion , that maugre the general Ignorance of the Multitude , or the great Learning or Rhetorick of the Jesuites , they 'd be no sooner perswaded to quit their plain English Bibles , nay , not so much as poor Sternhold and Hopkins , to listen to an unintelligible Latine Mass , or joyn in an Ora pro nobis sancte Paule , sancte Petre , sancte Loyola , and the rest of the Fraternity of Major , or Minor Saints , then they 'd kneel to the Talmude or the Alcoran , nor be no more perswaded into the possibility of a Wafer's Transsubstantiation into a Deity , than of a Cartwheel into a Star : and without these and the rest of the Romish Fundamentals , where 's the Restoration of the Romish Faith , or the Progress of a Popish Propagation in England . keywords: army; cause; character; church; clergy; england; english; french; government; great; hands; head; king; kingdom; law; laws; let; nation; nay; papists; parliament; people; popery; popish; power; prince; protestant; queen; reason; reign; religion; rome; romish; royal; self; successour; thing; time; whil'st; world cache: A59336.xml plain text: A59336.txt item: #94 of 147 id: A59348 author: Settle, Elkanah, 1648-1724. title: A supplement to The narrative in reply to the dulness and malice of two pretended answers to that pamphlet / written by E. Settle. date: 1683.0 words: 15069 flesch: 52 summary: Popish Plot, 1678. Nor shall ye beat it out of the Heads of Ten Thousand English Foot to this day , but that Mr. Choqueux's innocent Squibs , and Rocket cases , desigped for his Master Prince Ruperts Divertisement , were Fireballs , and Cartrages and other Romish Ammunition belonging to the great Devil the Plot. keywords: armies; king; letters; man; men; murder; narrative; nay; oats; page; papists; plot; popish; protestant; reflecter; remarker; sense; settle; tho; time; truth; world cache: A59348.xml plain text: A59348.txt item: #95 of 147 id: A59376 author: Fitzgerrald, Maurice. title: The several informations of John Mac-Namarra, Maurice Fitzgerrald and James Nash relating to the horrid Popish plot in Ireland together with the resolutions of the Commons in Parliament upon the said informations and message from the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament, Thursday the 6th of January, 1680. date: 1680.0 words: 5847 flesch: 45 summary: WHO Informeth and saith , That William Bradley Esq ; one of His Majesties Justices of the Peace for the County of Waterford in the Year 1677. gave him the said Informant an Oath of Secrecy touching the Plot intended and designed in Ireland , by the Earl of Tyrone and the rest of the Confederates against the Kings Majesty ; At which time he imparted to this Informant , the Earl of Tyrone had received a Commission from the French King to be a Colonel of Horse in the County of Waterford , and that the said William Bradley was to be his Lieutenant Colonel , and desired this Informant to provide himself with Horse and Arms , and to procure as many as he could of those he dare trust : and that this Informant should have a Command of being a Captain under the said Earl and Him. Thomas Power his Gentleman , and Garret Mac-Teige his Follower , and another whose name is Luke Power , this Informant having in Company with him one VVilliam Power , and Boetius Clausy , being then abroad Hunting with Dogs ; The said Earl knowing this Informant at a distance , called to him , upon which this Informant went to him : The said Earl taking this Informant from the Company , asked him , whether Mr. Bradley had imparted to him any Matter of Secrecy ; this Informant replyed , that he had : The said Earl then told this Informant , that he must be very private and discover it to none , but those he was very sure of . keywords: bourke; bradley; captain; county; deponent; earl; informant; john; mac; time cache: A59376.xml plain text: A59376.txt item: #96 of 147 id: A59378 author: Lander, Thomas. title: The Several informations of Mr. Simeon Wright, Thomas Launders and Richard Perkin concerning the horrid Popish Plot in England : and the several ways that have been used to take off the Kings witnesses, and to hinder the further discovery of it : the two former, being witnesses in the trial of the late Lord Stafford, their informations were taken upon oath by Edmond Warcup, Esq., one of His Majesties Justices of the Peace for Middlesex and Westminster, in December last 1680 : the latter was taken upon oath by Sir Robert Atkyns, kt. at the assizes at Stafford, 1679 : the whole informations being nothing but matter of fact. date: 1681.0 words: 6759 flesch: 53 summary: The Several informations of Mr. Simeon Wright, Thomas Launders and Richard Perkin concerning the horrid Popish Plot in England : and the several ways that have been used to take off the Kings witnesses, and to hinder the further discovery of it : the two former, being witnesses in the trial of the late Lord Stafford, their informations were taken upon oath by Edmond Warcup, Esq., one of His Majesties Justices of the Peace for Middlesex and Westminster, in December last 1680 : the latter was taken upon oath by Sir Robert Atkyns, kt. The Several informations of Mr. Simeon Wright, Thomas Launders and Richard Perkin concerning the horrid Popish Plot in England : and the several ways that have been used to take off the Kings witnesses, and to hinder the further discovery of it : the two former, being witnesses in the trial of the late Lord Stafford, their informations were taken upon oath by Edmond Warcup, Esq., one of His Majesties Justices of the Peace for Middlesex and Westminster, in December last 1680 : the latter was taken upon oath by Sir Robert Atkyns, kt. keywords: aston; dugdale; house; informant; lord; plot; sir; stafford; thomas; witnesses cache: A59378.xml plain text: A59378.txt item: #97 of 147 id: A59470 author: Shaftesbury, Anthony Ashley Cooper, Earl of, 1621-1683. title: The English states-man, the Protestant oracle being the Earl of Shaftesbury's famous speech. date: 1688.0 words: 2385 flesch: 59 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A59470) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 61886) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; england; english; man; tcp; text cache: A59470.xml plain text: A59470.txt item: #98 of 147 id: A59755 author: Sheridan, Thomas, 1646-ca. 1688. title: Mr. Sheridan's speech after his examination before the late House of Commons on Wednesday the 15th of December 1680 date: 1681.0 words: 5108 flesch: 45 summary: Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. But I am convinc'd , Innocence is no security against the Darts of Envy or Malice , and that he who will hazard his Body or his Soul , may take away the Life and Fame of any one at pleasure ; 't is to men of such principles I owe my present Trouble : I do not say this to reflect upon any Member of this Great and Honourable Assembly . keywords: cou'd; duke; english; hope; house; man; tcp; text; wou'd cache: A59755.xml plain text: A59755.txt item: #99 of 147 id: A59895 author: Sherlock, William, 1641?-1707. title: Some seasonable reflections on the discovery of the late plot being a sermon preacht on that occasion / by William Sherlock ... date: 1683.0 words: 10018 flesch: 54 summary: It was impossible to do this , without calling to mind a great many things , which to be sure , those who are any ways concerned , are not now willing to hear of ; and that with such plainness , as is necessary to convince men of the evil nature and tendency of such practices : but God is my witness , that I did not this with the least design to upbraid or reproach any men , or party of men , but with the same honest and charitable intentions , though it may be not with the same skill , that a Chirurgeon uses in searching a wound to the very bottom ; which is very painful indeed , but absolutely necessary to a Cure. This Pious Prince , though he were immediately advanced to the Throne by God himself , could not escape the Conspiracies of his enemies both at home and abroad : for Men of Turbulent and restless Spirits , will be sure to find or make some pretences or occasions of quarrel , under the most just and equal Government . keywords: church; god; government; king; man; men; plot; popery; popish; prince; religion; things; zeal cache: A59895.xml plain text: A59895.txt item: #100 of 147 id: A60496 author: Smith, John, of Walworth. title: The narrative of Mr. John Smith of Walworth ... containing a further discovery of the late horrid and popish-plot ... date: 1679.0 words: 23645 flesch: 50 summary: Neither shall I dwell upon the Parisian Massacre , by which in a few days there were murdered above forty thousand persons , and that for no other cause , but because the Church of Rome had adjudged them Hereticks ; but I shall rather call over some of the attempts against these Nations , commenced upon , and justified by the foregoing principles of the Papal Church , in reference to those who differ in Religion from them . And all these meerly for Religion , not so much as one of them being chargeable with any traiterous Machination against the Government . keywords: church; england; faith; government; hath; having; informant; jenison; jesuits; king; kingdom; late; majesty; nation; papists; person; plot; pope; popish; principles; protestant; religion; rome; subjects; time cache: A60496.xml plain text: A60496.txt item: #101 of 147 id: A60497 author: Smith, John, of Walworth. title: No faith or credit to be given to Papists being a discourse occasioned by the late conspirators dying in the denyal of their guilt : with particular reflections on the perjury of VVill. Viscount Stafford, both at his tryal, and in his speech on the scaffold in relation to Mr. Stephen Dugdale and Mr. Edward Turbervill / by John Smith Gentleman ... date: 1681.0 words: 29936 flesch: 52 summary: Viscount Stafford, both at his tryal, and in his speech on the scaffold in relation to Mr. Stephen Dugdale and Mr. Edward Turbervill / by John Smith Gentleman ... Smith, John, of Walworth. 1681 Approx. Viscount Stafford, both at his tryal, and in his speech on the scaffold in relation to Mr. Stephen Dugdale and Mr. Edward Turbervill / by John Smith Gentleman ... Smith, John, of Walworth. keywords: church; county; credit; dugdale; evidence; father; god; hath; having; house; informant; king; late; lord; lord stafford; men; oath; papal; papists; person; plot; protestant; religion; saith; stafford; thing; time; tixall; truth; turbervill; viscount; william cache: A60497.xml plain text: A60497.txt item: #102 of 147 id: A60667 author: Smith, William. title: Contrivances of the fanatical conspirators in carrying on their treasons under the umbrage of the Popish Plot, laid open with depositions sworn before the secretary of state, wherein it most plainly appears, this present horrid rebellion hath been design'd by the republicans many years, and that James the late D. of Monmouth, &c. were long since highly concern'd therein : with some account of Mr. Disney, who was lately apprehended for printing the rebellious traiterous declaration / written by a gentleman who was formerly conversant amongst them. date: 1685.0 words: 15656 flesch: 57 summary: Contrivances of the fanatical conspirators in carrying on their treasons under the umbrage of the Popish Plot, laid open with depositions sworn before the secretary of state, wherein it most plainly appears, this present horrid rebellion hath been design'd by the republicans many years, and that James the late D. of Monmouth, &c. were long since highly concern'd therein : with some account of Mr. Disney, who was lately apprehended for printing the rebellious traiterous declaration / written by a gentleman who was formerly conversant amongst them. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1753:17) Contrivances of the fanatical conspirators in carrying on their treasons under the umbrage of the Popish Plot, laid open with depositions sworn before the secretary of state, wherein it most plainly appears, this present horrid rebellion hath been design'd by the republicans many years, and that James the late D. of Monmouth, &c. were long since highly concern'd therein : with some account of Mr. Disney, who was lately apprehended for printing the rebellious traiterous declaration / written by a gentleman who was formerly conversant amongst them. keywords: colledge; company; day; house; king; lord; lordship; man; medburne; men; otes; persons; plot; popish; school; self; sir; smith; thing; time; william cache: A60667.xml plain text: A60667.txt item: #103 of 147 id: A60861 author: Fitzharris, Edward, 1648?-1681. title: Some short but necessary animadversions on the paper delivered to Dr. Hawkins together with a copy of the paper it self, entituled, The confession of Edward Fitz-Harris, Esq. written by his own hand and delivered &c. / reprinted from the copy published by the doctor, and these animadversions added to prevent the deluding of Protestants by it. date: 1681.0 words: 3433 flesch: 63 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A60861) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 105588) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: edward; fitz; king; life; lord; tcp; text cache: A60861.xml plain text: A60861.txt item: #104 of 147 id: A61045 author: Barrow, William, 1610-1679. title: The Speeches of the five Jesuits that were executed at Tyburn on Friday the 20th of this instant June, 1679 date: 1679.0 words: 3279 flesch: 59 summary: I do heartily forgive them , and beg of God to grant them his holy Grace , that they may repent of their unjust proceedings against me ; otherwise they will in conclusion find , they have done themselves more wrong , than I have suffered from them , though that hath been a great deal . I pray to God to bless him Majesty both Temporally and Eternally , which hath been my daily Prayers for him , and is all the harm I ever intended or imagined against him . keywords: death; god; jesuits; tcp; text; world cache: A61045.xml plain text: A61045.txt item: #105 of 147 id: A62418 author: Thompson, Nathaniel, d. 1687. title: A choice collection of 120 loyal songs, all of them written since the two late plots, (viz.) the horrid Salamanca Plot in 1678, and the fanatical conspiracy in 1683. Intermixt with some new love songs with a table to find every song to which is added, an anagram, and an accrostick on the Salamanca doctor date: 1684.0 words: 53880 flesch: 81 summary: 4. For , like Roman Cataline , to gain his Pious Ends , He pimps for au the loose Rebellious Fops in Toon : And with Treats and Treason daily crams his City Friends , From the Link●man to the Scarlet-Goon . He the Hall Adorns ; But the Heads were all in a Confusion : Such●d in there was & a ratling with their Horns : keywords: black; body; boys; brave; bring; cause; charles; crown; damn'd; day; devil; doctor; fair; find; god; good; great; head; hone; john; justice; king; late; laws; like; london; lord; love; loyal; loyalty; man; men; nation; ne'r; new; o hone; oates; patience; place; plot; prince; sir; song; state; swear; thou; thump; titus; tony; town; treason; truth; tune; whigs; wou'd; ● d; ● ● cache: A62418.xml plain text: A62418.txt item: #106 of 147 id: A62803 author: Bethel, Slingsby, 1617-1697. title: To the Right Honourable Sir Patience Ward Knight, Lord Mayor of the City of London. The humble petition of the commons of the city of London, in Common-hall assembled, June 27. 1681 date: 1681.0 words: 1673 flesch: 58 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). EEBO-TCP is a partnership between the Universities of Michigan and Oxford and the publisher ProQuest to create accurately transcribed and encoded texts based on the image sets published by ProQuest via their Early English Books Online (EEBO) database (http://eebo.chadwyck.com). keywords: city; eebo; london; tcp; text cache: A62803.xml plain text: A62803.txt item: #107 of 147 id: A62856 author: Oldham, John, 1653-1683. title: Tom tell-troth, or, A dialogue between the Devil and the Pope about carrying on the plot date: 1679.0 words: 2853 flesch: 79 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A62856) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 42337) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: devil; english; tcp; tell; text cache: A62856.xml plain text: A62856.txt item: #108 of 147 id: A63140 author: England and Wales. Court of King's Bench. title: The tryal and condemnation of Dr. Oliver Plunket, titular primate of Ireland, for high-treason at the barr of the Court of King's Bench at Westminster, in Trinity term, 1681. date: 1681.0 words: 25279 flesch: 85 summary: The tryal and condemnation of Dr. Oliver Plunket, titular primate of Ireland, for high-treason at the barr of the Court of King's Bench at Westminster, in Trinity term, 1681. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1296:27) The tryal and condemnation of Dr. Oliver Plunket, titular primate of Ireland, for high-treason at the barr of the Court of King's Bench at Westminster, in Trinity term, 1681. Plunket, Oliver, Saint, 1629-1681. England and Wales. keywords: att; c. j.; come; duffy; gen; ireland; king; l. c.; lord; mony; moyer; plunket; time; witnesses; wyer cache: A63140.xml plain text: A63140.txt item: #109 of 147 id: A63142 author: England and Wales. Court of King's Bench. title: The tryal and condemnation of Edw. Fitz-Harris, Esq., for high treason at the barr of the Court of King's Bench, at Westminster, on Thursday the 9th of June, in Trinity term, 1681 : as also the tryal and condemnation of Dr. Oliver Plunket, titular primate of Ireland, for high treason ... date: 1681.0 words: 58528 flesch: 84 summary: Gen. My Lord , I pray your Judgment in point of Law ▪ I doubt not you will do the King right , as well as the Prisoner , I could not get a Copy of the Pannel , till last night about 4 a Clock ; ●ere is prepared a Copy with crosses and marks who he should challenge and who not , and truly , My Lord , since I had the Pannel ▪ upon looking over it , I do find the Sheriff hath returned three Anabaptist Preachers , and I know not how many Fanaticks , and since there are such Practices as we find in this Case , we doubt there may be more , and therefore I pray she may be removed . Just . Let us s●e the Paper . keywords: att; c. j.; come; duffy; everard; evidence; fitz; fitz harris; french; gen; hand; harris; hath; ireland; king; l. c.; libel; lord; man; men; money; moyer; mrs; murfey; paper; plunket; prisoner; said; self; serj; sir; thing; time; treason; witnesses; ● ● cache: A63142.xml plain text: A63142.txt item: #110 of 147 id: A63144 author: Busby, George, 1638-1695, defendant. title: The tryal and condemnation of George Busby for high-treason as a Romish priest and Jesuite, upon the statute of 27 Eliz., Cap.2, at the assizes and general goal-delivery held at Derby, for the county of Derby, the 25th day of July, in the 33th year of the reign of our Soveraign Lord King Charles the Second, &c : before the Honourable Sir Thomas Street, Knight, one of the barons of His Majesties exchequer / as it was faithfully taken, by a person of quality. date: 1681.0 words: 14399 flesch: 69 summary: The tryal and condemnation of George Busby for high-treason as a Romish priest and Jesuite, upon the statute of 27 Eliz., Cap.2, at the assizes and general goal-delivery held at Derby, for the county of Derby, the 25th day of July, in the 33th year of the reign of our Soveraign Lord King Charles the Second, &c : before the Honourable Sir Thomas Street, Knight, one of the barons of His Majesties exchequer / as it was faithfully taken, by a person of quality. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1391:2) The tryal and condemnation of George Busby for high-treason as a Romish priest and Jesuite, upon the statute of 27 Eliz., Cap.2, at the assizes and general goal-delivery held at Derby, for the county of Derby, the 25th day of July, in the 33th year of the reign of our Soveraign Lord King Charles the Second, &c : before the Honourable Sir Thomas Street, Knight, one of the barons of His Majesties exchequer / as it was faithfully taken, by a person of quality. keywords: bar; busby; england; gent; george; hallam; house; jury; lord; mass; priest; prisoner; sacrament; street; things; time; years cache: A63144.xml plain text: A63144.txt item: #111 of 147 id: A63156 author: Atkins, William, 1601-1681, defendant. title: The tryal and condemnation of two popish priests, Andrew Brommich and William Atkyns, for high treason at Stafford assizes, August 16, 1679 with an account of the notable equivocation of some witnesses of the Romish Church there produced, and the reason thereof from their own authors : Mr. Stephen Dugdale, one of the grand evidences of the Popish plot being there present. date: 1679.0 words: 3059 flesch: 50 summary: Yet had this been all , and managed with any modest colourable pretence of Conscience , it might possibly have been born with by our most Gracious Soveraign , the best and most merciful of Princes , without exacting the severity of those Laws● but when th●se very men so obnoxious before to just punishment , have so far abused his Majesties Lenity , and compassionate good nature , as to contrive , and vigorously promote horrid Designs against his Sacred Life , and what is yet more dear to him , the true Protestant Religion , as it is most appa●e●t they lately have done , it cannot but be thought high time to re●train their insolence , by putting in execution those wholesome Laws , which their continual Treasonable Pra●ti●●● 〈◊〉 not only justified , but rendred absolutely n●cess●ry fo● the preservation of his Life and Crown . In pursuance hereof , in such a juncture of Affairs , the Honourable Judges of Assize had particular order to give in charge the strict prosecution of all Jesuits and Popish Priests that might be discovered in their respective Circuits ; and 't is wonderful , considering the subtle Disguises and Caution of that sort of Men , and the secresie of their seduced Followers , who as strictly conceal their Priests , as those do their Confessions , that so many should be dis●overed . keywords: eebo; english; priests; tcp; text cache: A63156.xml plain text: A63156.txt item: #112 of 147 id: A63159 author: England and Wales. Court of King's Bench. title: The tryal and conviction of John Tasborough and Ann Price for subornation of perjury, in endeavouring to perswade Mr. Stephen Dugdale to retract and deny his evidence about the horrid Popish Plot with an intention to stifle the further prosecution and discovery of the same at the King's bench bar at Westminster, Tuesday the third day of February, 1679/80 before the Right Honourable Sir William Scroggs Knight, Lord Chief Justice, and the rest of the judges of that court. date: None words: 23125 flesch: 85 summary: The tryal and conviction of John Tasborough and Ann Price for subornation of perjury, in endeavouring to perswade Mr. Stephen Dugdale to retract and deny his evidence about the horrid Popish Plot with an intention to stifle the further prosecution and discovery of the same at the King's bench bar at Westminster, Tuesday the third day of February, 1679/80 before the Right Honourable Sir William Scroggs Knight, Lord Chief Justice, and the rest of the judges of that court. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 583:11) The tryal and conviction of John Tasborough and Ann Price for subornation of perjury, in endeavouring to perswade Mr. Stephen Dugdale to retract and deny his evidence about the horrid Popish Plot with an intention to stifle the further prosecution and discovery of the same at the King's bench bar at Westminster, Tuesday the third day of February, 1679/80 before the Right Honourable Sir William Scroggs Knight, Lord Chief Justice, and the rest of the judges of that court. keywords: come; dugdale; evidence; hath; iust; lord; mrs; note; pemberton; price; tasborough; time cache: A63159.xml plain text: A63159.txt item: #113 of 147 id: A63162 author: England and Wales. Court of King's Bench. title: The tryal and conviction of Thomas Knox and John Lane for a conspiracy to defame and scandalize Dr. Oates and Mr. Bedloe thereby to discredit their evidence about the horrid popish plot : at the Kings-Bench-Bar at Westminster, on Tuesday the 25th of Novemb. 1679 ... : where upon full evidence they were found guilty of the offence aforesaid. date: 1680.0 words: 26433 flesch: 82 summary: The tryal and conviction of Thomas Knox and John Lane for a conspiracy to defame and scandalize Dr. Oates and Mr. Bedloe thereby to discredit their evidence about the horrid popish plot : at the Kings-Bench-Bar at Westminster, on Tuesday the 25th of Novemb. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 370:13) The tryal and conviction of Thomas Knox and John Lane for a conspiracy to defame and scandalize Dr. Oates and Mr. Bedloe thereby to discredit their evidence about the horrid popish plot : at the Kings-Bench-Bar at Westminster, on Tuesday the 25th of Novemb. keywords: bedloe; chief; evidence; iust; knox; lane; lord; money; oates; osborne; sir; thing; time; waller cache: A63162.xml plain text: A63162.txt item: #114 of 147 id: A63166 author: Cellier, Elizabeth, fl. 1680. title: The tryal and sentence of Elizabeth Cellier for writing, printing and publishing a scandalous libel called, Malice defeated &c., at the sesions in the Old-Bailey, held Saturday the 11th and Monday the 13th of Sept., 1680 whereunto is added several depositions made before the Right Honorable the Lord Mayor. date: 1680.0 words: 15639 flesch: 83 summary: Said she , I know that well enough , but I keep a man in the house to write it , and I Dictated to him , and he wrote . Did you mean by your Question whether that Book was hers in property , or she were the Author and Publisher of it ? Mr. Penny. keywords: bar; baron; baron weston; book; cellier; corral; fowler; hath; libel; lord; mrs; self; weston; witnesses cache: A63166.xml plain text: A63166.txt item: #115 of 147 id: A63169 author: Bromwich, Andrew, defendant. title: The trial, conviction and condemnation of Andrew Brommich and William Atkins, for being Romish priests, before the Right Honourable the Lord Chief Justice Scroggs, at summer assizes last at Stafford held there for the county of Stafford, where they received sentence of death accordingly together with the tryal of Charles Kern, at Hereford assizes last for being a Romish priest. date: 1679.0 words: 10007 flesch: 85 summary: Ch. J. Do you believe this to be the man ? J. Then Gentlemen of the Jury , the question you are to try , is whether ●●drew Brommich be a Popish Priest or not : To prove that he is , here is a woman , one Anne Robinson , that swears she received the Sacrament of him in a Wafer once at Christmas last , and twice at Mr. Birch's , and twice at Mr. Pursals , and that he gave it to several others at the same time . keywords: edwards; guilty; jones; jury; l. ch; lord; mrs; priest; time cache: A63169.xml plain text: A63169.txt item: #116 of 147 id: A63173 author: Coleman, Edward, d. 1678, defendant. title: The tryal of Edward Coleman, Gent. for conspiring the death of the King, and the subversion of the government of England and the Protestant religion who upon full evidence was found guilty of high treason, and received sentence accordingly, on Thursday, November the 28th, 1678. date: 1678.0 words: 41363 flesch: 71 summary: My Lord , I did not see this Letter in several days after the papers brought me from Bradly ; when he came in with Three great Baggs , and a Box of Letters on Sunday night ; Said I , which are Mr. Coleman's principal papers ? Said he , those that are in the large speckled cloath Bagg ; for these we took first in the Scritore : These I took , and meddled not with the other , I presume other Clerks of the Council can give a particular account where this paper was found . The tryal of Edward Coleman, Gent. keywords: chief; coleman; council; day; design; duke; england; father; french; good; hand; house; king; know; letter; lord; money; oates; papers; parliament; religion; self; sir; thing; time cache: A63173.xml plain text: A63173.txt item: #117 of 147 id: A63184 author: England and Wales. Court of King's Bench. title: The tryal of Nathanael Thompson, John Farewell, William Pain before the Right Honourable Sir Fran. Pemberton, Kt., Lord Chief Justice of England, by nisi prius at Guild-Hall, London, the twentieth of June, 1682, for writing and publishing scandalous letters to Mr. Miles Prance, in relation to the death of Sir Edmund-bury Godfrey date: 1682.0 words: 6500 flesch: 81 summary: Pemberton, Kt., Lord Chief Justice of England, by nisi prius at Guild-Hall, London, the twentieth of June, 1682, for writing and publishing scandalous letters to Mr. Miles Prance, in relation to the death of Sir Edmund-bury Godfrey Thompson, Nathaniel, d. 1687, defendant. 1682 Approx. Pemberton, Kt., Lord Chief Justice of England, by nisi prius at Guild-Hall, London, the twentieth of June, 1682, for writing and publishing scandalous letters to Mr. Miles Prance, in relation to the death of Sir Edmund-bury Godfrey Thompson, Nathaniel, d. 1687, defendant. keywords: blood; cryer; farewell; godfrey; lord; sir cache: A63184.xml plain text: A63184.txt item: #118 of 147 id: A63185 author: England and Wales. Court of King's Bench. title: The tryal of Nathaniel Thompson, William Pain, and John Farwell upon an information exhibited by the Kings Attorney General against them, for writing, printing and publishing libels, by way of letters and other prints, reflecting upon the justice of the nation, in the proceedings against the murderers of Sir Edmond-bvry Godfrey : at Guild-hal on Tuesday June the 20th, 1682, where after a full hearing they were convicted : together with an accompt of several affidavits read in His Majesties Court of Kings Bench and other matters at the time of their receiving sentence : to which is added by way of appendix, several other affidavits which further confirm the testimony of Mr. Prance, given upon the tryal of Green, Berry and Hill about that murder, with some observations touching the said Thompson, Farwell and Pain. date: 1682.0 words: 21364 flesch: 70 summary: The tryal of Nathaniel Thompson, William Pain, and John Farwell upon an information exhibited by the Kings Attorney General against them, for writing, printing and publishing libels, by way of letters and other prints, reflecting upon the justice of the nation, in the proceedings against the murderers of Sir Edmond-bvry Godfrey : at Guild-hal on Tuesday June the 20th, 1682, where after a full hearing they were convicted : together with an accompt of several affidavits read in His Majesties Court of Kings Bench and other matters at the time of their receiving sentence : to which is added by way of appendix, several other affidavits which further confirm the testimony of Mr. Prance, given upon the tryal of Green, Berry and Hill about that murder, with some observations touching the said Thompson, Farwell and Pain. Thompson, Nathaniel, d. 1687, defendant. 1682 Approx. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 677:13) The tryal of Nathaniel Thompson, William Pain, and John Farwell upon an information exhibited by the Kings Attorney General against them, for writing, printing and publishing libels, by way of letters and other prints, reflecting upon the justice of the nation, in the proceedings against the murderers of Sir Edmond-bvry Godfrey : at Guild-hal on Tuesday June the 20th, 1682, where after a full hearing they were convicted : together with an accompt of several affidavits read in His Majesties Court of Kings Bench and other matters at the time of their receiving sentence : to which is added by way of appendix, several other affidavits which further confirm the testimony of Mr. Prance, given upon the tryal of Green, Berry and Hill about that murder, with some observations touching the said Thompson, Farwell and Pain. keywords: blood; body; bury; deponent; edmond; evidence; farewell; godfrey; green; hill; house; john; justice; letter; lord; man; prance; sir; thompson cache: A63185.xml plain text: A63185.txt item: #119 of 147 id: A63190 author: Castlemaine, Roger Palmer, Earl of, 1634-1705. title: The tryal of Roger Earl of Castlemaine for high treason in conspiring the death of the King, the subversion of the government, and introducing of popery and arbitrary power : before the Lord Chief Justice Scroggs &c. at the King's Bench Bar at Westminster the 23th of June 1680 where he was acquitted. date: 1681.0 words: 23688 flesch: 80 summary: You shall understand that he stands Indicted by the Name of Roger Palmer Esq ; Earl of Castlemain in the Kingdom of Ireland ; for that he as a false Traytor against our most Illustrious and Excellent Prince and Lord , Charles the Second , by the Grace of God of England , Scotland , France and Ireland King , Defender of the Faith , &c. and his Natural Lord ; not having the Fear of God before his Eyes , nor weighing the Duty of his Allegiance , but being moved and seduced by the Instigation of the Devil , his Cordial Love , true due and Natural Obedience , which true and Faithful Subjects of our said Soveraign Lord the King ought to bear towards him , altogether withdrawing , and contriving , and with all his might intending , to disturb the Peace and common Tranquility of this Kingdom , and to bring and put our Soveraign Lord the King to Death and final Destruction , and alter the true Worship of God within this Kingdom established to the Superstition of the Romish Church , and to stir up and move War against our said Soveraign Lord the King within this Realm of England , and to subvert the Government thereof , the Twentieth day of June in the Thirtieth Year of the Reign of our said Soveraign Lord , Charles the Second , of England , Scotland , France and Ireland , King , Defender of the Faith , &c. at the parish of St. Giles in the Fields in the County of Midd. with divers other false Traitors , to the Jurors unknown , did traiterously imagine and intend the killing , death and final destruction of our said Lord the King , and to change and alter and utterly subvert the Ancient Government of this Kingdom , and to depose and wholly to deprive our said Lord the King of his Crown and Government of this Realm of England , and to extirpate the true Protestant Religion : And to accomplish and fulfil the same most wicked Treasons and Traiterous Imaginations and Purposes aforesaid , the said Roger Palmer Esq ; Earl of Castlemain in the Kingdom of Ireland , and other false Traitors , to the Jurors unknown , the same Twentieth day of June , in the Thirtieth Year aforesaid , with force and Arms , in the Parish of St. Giles in the Fields aforesaid , in the County aforesaid , Advisedly , Devilishly , Maliciously , and Traiterously , did assemble , unite , and gather themselves together , and then and there , Advisedly , Devilishly , Maliciously , Subtily , and Traiterously did consult and agree , to bring our said Soveraign Lord the King to Death and Final Destruction , and to deprive him of his Crown and Government of England , and to Introduce and Establish the Religion of the Church of Rome in this Kingdom ; and the sooner to fulfil and accomplish the same most wicked Treasons and Traiterous imaginations and purposes aforesaid , he then and there did Falsly , Maliciously , and Trayterously promise divers great Rewards , and did pay divers Sums of Money to several Persons unknown ; and then and there falsly and traiter ously did write divers Notes , to incite several other Persons to accomplish the Treasons aforesaid , against the Life of our Soveraign Lord the King , his Crown and Dignity , and contrary to the form of the Statute in such Case made and provided . J. ●aymond , He hath Papers wherein he hath entred Memorandums to refresh his Memory , but these Papers he hath not by him . keywords: att; c. j.; d. oates; dangerfield; general; hath; j. jones; king; l. c.; lord; lord castlemain; lordship; man; oates; prisoner cache: A63190.xml plain text: A63190.txt item: #120 of 147 id: A63205 author: Staley, William, d. 1678, defendant. title: The tryal of William Staley, goldsmith for speaking treasonable words against His Most Sacred Majesty and upon full evidence found guilty of high treason : and received sentence accordingly, on Thursday, November the 21th, 1678. date: 1678.0 words: 5266 flesch: 81 summary: I have this to say in Justification of my self , and Allegeance to my Prince and King , that I never thought , nor imagined , or contrived any way , but have been a true Subject to the King upon all occasions ; I am sorry it proves so , Gods will be done , my Soul depends upon it ; I am a dying man by the Statute , never with Intention , or any thought or ill will , spake I any word about this matter . This they will not own when it comes to be an objection and penal upon them , but they will never get the Pope of Rome to declare he hath not a power to Excommunicate what he calls a Heretick , King , and if he does , that the Subject is not discharged from his obedience , they would do great service to their Papist friends , if they could obtain such an Edict . keywords: chief; king; man; prisoner; self; witness; words cache: A63205.xml plain text: A63205.txt item: #121 of 147 id: A63219 author: Berry, Henry, d. 1679. title: The tryals of Robert Green, Henry Berry, & Lawrence Hill for the murder of Sr. Edmond-bury Godfrey kt., one of His Majesties justices of the peace for the county of Middlesex at the Kings-Bench bar at Westminster, before the Right Honourable Sir William Scroggs ... on Monday the 10th of February 1678/9 : where, upon full evidence they were convicted, and received sentence accordingly on Tuesday, the next day following. date: 1679.0 words: 35617 flesch: 91 summary: Mr. Just. Said I , where is your Husband ? said she , he is within ; I was very glad to hear it , for , said I , he living in Somerset House , and being acquainted with Praunce , I am glad to hear that your Husband can be so Couragious ; so I went away and came again thither the next morning , and found he was taken the night before . keywords: att; berry; body; c. j.; girald; godfrey; green; hill; house; justice; l. c.; lord; man; night; praunce; sir; time cache: A63219.xml plain text: A63219.txt item: #122 of 147 id: A63228 author: England and Wales. Court of Oyer and Terminer and Gaol Delivery (London and Middlesex). title: The tryals of VVilliam Ireland, Thomas Pickering, & John Grove, for conspiring to murder the King who upon full evidence were found guilty of high treason at the session-house in Old-Bailye, Dec. 1, 1678, and received sentence accordingly. date: 1678.0 words: 33073 flesch: 81 summary: when M●●ss was going to be said , one said it was too late , for it was after ●● a 〈…〉 but Mr. Whitebread said it was not after noon ●●i●● we had ▪ din'd ; and you k●●● 〈…〉 that M●●ss●●s have been said at one or two of the clock in the af●●ern●●● Mr. Just . Sir Cr. Levings , Pr●●y , ●●●m whom had your Brother that money ? M●● . keywords: august; bedlow; c. j.; day; england; evidence; fenwick; grove; ireland; j. mr; john; king; l. c.; letter; lord; o ●; oates; pickering; religion; sir; thomas; time; whitebread; witnesses; ● e; ● l.; ● s; ● t; ● y; ● ● cache: A63228.xml plain text: A63228.txt item: #123 of 147 id: A63351 author: Fitzgerald, David. title: A true and brief account of the proceedings between Mr. David Fitz-Gerald and William Hetherington before His Majesty in councel on Friday the 11th of February, 1680/81 ... and also the articles of the said Hetherington against Mr. Fitz-Gerald : with Mr. Fitz-Gerald's answer to each article : with six high and transcendent articles preferred by the said Mr. Fitz-Gerald against the said Hetherington, fully proved before His Majesty in councel. date: 1681.0 words: 9929 flesch: 39 summary: A true and brief account of the proceedings between Mr. David Fitz-Gerald and William Hetherington before His Majesty in councel on Friday the 11th of February, 1680/81 ... and also the articles of the said Hetherington against Mr. Fitz-Gerald : with Mr. Fitz-Gerald's answer to each article : with six high and transcendent articles preferred by the said Mr. Fitz-Gerald against the said Hetherington, fully proved before His Majesty in councel. A true and brief account of the proceedings between Mr. David Fitz-Gerald and William Hetherington before His Majesty in councel on Friday the 11th of February, 1680/81 ... and also the articles of the said Hetherington against Mr. Fitz-Gerald : with Mr. Fitz-Gerald's answer to each article : with six high and transcendent articles preferred by the said Mr. Fitz-Gerald against the said Hetherington, fully proved before His Majesty in councel. keywords: evidence; fitz; gerald; hetherington; ireland; john; majesties; majesty; respondent; sir; witnesses cache: A63351.xml plain text: A63351.txt item: #124 of 147 id: A63601 author: England and Wales. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (London) title: The true narrative of the procedings [sic] at the Sessions-house in the Old-Bayly. Or the trial and condemnation of six notorious Popish priests & Jesuites, for high-treason viz. William Russel, alias Napper, James Corker, Lionel Anderson, alias, Munson, Charles Parry, and Alexander Lunsden. At a commission of oyer and terminer there held, on Saturday the 17th of this instant January 1679. date: None words: 1980 flesch: 60 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: alias; english; tcp; text cache: A63601.xml plain text: A63601.txt item: #125 of 147 id: A63832 author: Tuke, Richard, fl. 1672. title: Memoires of the life and death of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey, late justice of the peace for Middlesex, who was barbarously murthered by the papists, upon the first discovery of the horrid plot together with a full account of the strange discovery of the murther, the tryal of the murtherers, and the sham-plot of the papists to charge the murther of Sir Edm. Godfrey upon himself, detected. date: 1682.0 words: 22971 flesch: 39 summary: Memoires of the life and death of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey, late justice of the peace for Middlesex, who was barbarously murthered by the papists, upon the first discovery of the horrid plot together with a full account of the strange discovery of the murther, the tryal of the murtherers, and the sham-plot of the papists to charge the murther of Sir Edm. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1679:2) Memoires of the life and death of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey, late justice of the peace for Middlesex, who was barbarously murthered by the papists, upon the first discovery of the horrid plot together with a full account of the strange discovery of the murther, the tryal of the murtherers, and the sham-plot of the papists to charge the murther of Sir Edm. keywords: account; body; business; death; design; discovery; edmondbury; godfrey; good; hill; house; justice; king; life; majesty; man; men; murther; night; papists; persons; place; plot; prance; sir; sir edmondbury; time; way cache: A63832.xml plain text: A63832.txt item: #126 of 147 id: A63855 author: Turberville, Edward, 1648?-1681. title: The full narrative and further discovery of Edward Tvrbervill of Skerr in the county of Glamorgan, Gent. of the horrid Popish Plot containing many remarkable passages concerning the trial of William late Viscount Stafford : with an account of the Gent. of Greys-Inn, who appeared in court before the Lord High Steward to invalidate Mr. Turbervill's evidence. date: 1681.0 words: 5858 flesch: 55 summary: EEBO-TCP aimed to produce large quantities of textual data within the usual project restraints of time and funding, and therefore chose to create diplomatic transcriptions (as opposed to critical editions) with light-touch, mainly structural encoding based on the Text Encoding Initiative (http://www.tei-c.org). To which the said Earl would many times reply , That it was not yet time ; However be made no question but that such means would be us'd with all convenient speed ; or words to that effect . keywords: bin; brother; earl; england; english; lord; lordship; religion; self; tcp; text; time cache: A63855.xml plain text: A63855.txt item: #127 of 147 id: A65264 author: Watson, Richard, 1612-1685. title: A fuller answer to Elimas the sorcerer or to the most material part (of a feign'd memoriall) toward the discovery of the Popish Plot, with modest reflections upon a pretended declaration (of the late Dutchess) for charging her religion : prelates ... in a letter addressed to Mr. Thomas Jones by Richard Watson ... / published by Monsieur Maimburg ... date: 1683.0 words: 28434 flesch: 32 summary: The said Church of Rome , indeed , is very strict in this Article , imposing upon her Penitents a particular enumeration of all mortall sinnes , with all their severall aggravating circumstances , which our Royall Martyr in his Confer . Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. keywords: answer; bishop; catholique; christ; church; councel; day; england; fathers; god; good; hath; highnesses; holy; iones; lord; man; opinion; pag; person; point; presence; reason; religion; sacrament; sayes; self; sense; spirit; thought; time; truth; use; word cache: A65264.xml plain text: A65264.txt item: #128 of 147 id: A66402 author: Williams, John, 1636?-1709. title: An impartial consideration of those speeches, which pass under the name of the five Jesuits lately executed viz. [brace] Mr. Whitebread, Mr. Harcourt, Mr. Gawen, Mr. Turner, and Mr. Fenwick : in which it is proved, that according to their principles, they not only might, but also ought, to die after that manner, with solemn protestation of their innocency. date: 1679.0 words: 10088 flesch: 73 summary: And that it is not so , whatever they pretend , is evident from their own Constitutions n , where the Title of one Chapter is , that the Constitutions do not bring any under an obligation to sin ; but how little it answers that Title , any one that reads the Chapter may perceive ; for it's the●e said , that it seems to us — that no Constitutions , &c. can bring under an obligation to mortal or venial sin , unless the Superior in the name of Christ , or in the virtue of obedience should command it : and then that may be done in the cases so judged of , which tends much to a private or universal good . ‖ If a Confessor that hath heard another man's Confession should be demanded , whether such an one had confessed such a sin unto him or not , he may not only say I know not , but answer directly , that he hath not confessed any such thing unto him , albeit he had so done ; and that the said Confessor may not only say , but swear also this answer of his , understanding and reserving in his mind , that the Penitent hath not confessed unto him so as he may utter it , &c. keywords: book; doth; hath; jesuits; king; mariana; opinion; person; saith cache: A66402.xml plain text: A66402.txt item: #129 of 147 id: A66435 author: Williams, John, 1636?-1709. title: A vindication of the history of the gunpowder-treason and of the proceedings and matters relating thereunto, from the exceptions which have been made against it, and more especially of late years by the author of the Catholick apologie, and others : to which is added, A parallel betwixt that and the present popish plot. date: 1681.0 words: 35786 flesch: 74 summary: This Garnet did offer in his own behalf , that he was bound to keep the secrets of Confessions , &c. and when asked by the Earl of Nottingham , if one confessed this day to him , that to morrow morning he meant to kill the King with a Dagger , if he must conceal it ? answered , that he must conceal it . But all this while this is far otherwise , it being very notorious that this Plot was discovered out of Confession to Garnet and Greenwell , &c. as will appear from the account which Garnet himself gives of it , ( as far as he was concerned . ) keywords: apol; author; c. p.; case; catesby; catholick; confession; design; doth; garnet; good; great; hath; ibid; james; king; letter; man; persons; plot; powder; proceedings p.; religion; saith; sir; thing; time; treason cache: A66435.xml plain text: A66435.txt item: #130 of 147 id: A66585 author: Wilson, Thomas, 17th cent. title: A sermon on the gunpowder treason, with reflections on the late plot by Thomas Wilson ... date: 1679.0 words: 8810 flesch: 71 summary: But can you pull the Sun out of Heaven , or toss about the Mountains ? Neither shall your Hell-gates prevail against the Church of Christ , to throw it down and lay it wast utterly , which is built upon the firmest Rock , and which that mighty Son of man , the Son of God , compasseth with his Arms. NO notice is given what was the particular occasion of the penning of this Psalm ; but we see in general it was some eminent deliverance ; which the Psalmist commemorates , acknowledging God to be the Author of it , and exciting Israel to bless his holy name for it . keywords: deliverance; earth; fear; god; hath; heaven; israel; king; lord; man; men; people; plot; power; tcp; text; wicked cache: A66585.xml plain text: A66585.txt item: #131 of 147 id: A67231 author: Wyvill, Christopher, Sir, 1614-1672?. title: A discourse, prepared for the ears of some Romanists (at a general quarter sessions, in the north, when they were summon'd to take the oaths.) By Sr. Christopher Wyvill baronet, one of His Majesties justices of the peace in those parts: and now profered to the eyes of them all date: 1679.0 words: 4070 flesch: 62 summary: Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A67231) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 29697) keywords: church; eebo; english; king; pope; rome; sort; supremacie; tcp; text cache: A67231.xml plain text: A67231.txt item: #132 of 147 id: A67654 author: Wild, Robert, 1609-1679. title: An exclamation against popery, or, A broad-side against Rome occasioned by His Majesties last gracious speech, when he was pleas'd to express his willingness to maintain the truly antient Protestant religion / by R.W. date: 1678.0 words: 1640 flesch: 70 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A67654) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 43237) keywords: eebo; english; rome; tcp; text; thy cache: A67654.xml plain text: A67654.txt item: #133 of 147 id: A67878 author: Boswell, William, Sir, d. 1649. title: A true narrative of the Popish-plot against King Charles I and the Protestant religion as it was discovered by Andreas ab Habernfeld to Sir William Boswel Ambassador at the Hague, and by him transmitted to Archbishop Laud, who communicated it to the King : the whole discoovery being found amongst the Archbishops papers, when a prisoner in the Tower, by Mr. Prynn (who was ordered to search them by a committee of the then Parliament) on Wednesday, May 31, 1643 : with some historical remarks on the Jesuits, and A vindication of the Protestant dissenters from disloyalty : also, A compleat history of the Papists late Presbyterian plot discovered by Mr. Dangerfield, wherein an account is given of some late transactions of Sir Robert Peyton. date: 1680.0 words: 20034 flesch: 58 summary: eng Charles -- I, -- King of England, 1600-1649. First then it is a Maxim most true and undoubted , That a Vacuum in Nature may be as soon allow'd , as that there is any Court of King of Prince where these Jesuits do not swarm and abound , if they can but creep in at the least Creviss . keywords: arch; bishop; business; cellier; dangerfield; design; grace; hand; house; jesuits; king; kingdom; lady; letters; lord; majesty; mrs; papists; plot; popish; powis; religion; sir; things; time; william cache: A67878.xml plain text: A67878.txt item: #134 of 147 id: A69629 author: Blount, Charles, 1654-1693. Appeal from the country to the city. title: A Brief answer to Mr. L'Estrange, his appeal date: 1680.0 words: 7236 flesch: 54 summary: A Brief answer to Mr. L'Estrange, his appeal 1680 Approx. A Brief answer to Mr. L'Estrange, his appeal Blount, Charles, 1654-1693. keywords: appeal; cit; good; king; l'estrange; nation; people; plot; tcp; text; world cache: A69629.xml plain text: A69629.txt item: #135 of 147 id: A69734 author: Chetwind, Charles. title: A narrative of the depositions of Robert Jenison Esq with other material evidences, plainly proving that Mr. William Ireland, lately executed for high treason, was in London the nineteenth of August, 1678, notwithstanding his condfident denial thereof both at his tryal and execution / collected by Charles Chetwind, Esq. date: 1679.0 words: 13694 flesch: 70 summary: A narrative of the depositions of Robert Jenison Esq with other material evidences, plainly proving that Mr. William Ireland, lately executed for high treason, was in London the nineteenth of August, 1678, notwithstanding his condfident denial thereof both at his tryal and execution / collected by Charles Chetwind, Esq. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 864:4) A narrative of the depositions of Robert Jenison Esq with other material evidences, plainly proving that Mr. William Ireland, lately executed for high treason, was in London the nineteenth of August, 1678, notwithstanding his condfident denial thereof both at his tryal and execution / collected by Charles Chetwind, Esq. keywords: august; day; ireland; jenison; london; lord; oates; said; sir; time; windsor cache: A69734.xml plain text: A69734.txt item: #136 of 147 id: A69741 author: Christian, Edward. title: Reflections upon a paper intituled Some reflections upon the E. of Danby in relation to the murder of Sir Edmund-bury Godfrey, in a letter to a friend. date: 1679.0 words: 1958 flesch: 63 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 103529) keywords: danby; earl; reflections; tcp; text cache: A69741.xml plain text: A69741.txt item: #137 of 147 id: A69994 author: Everett, George, Shipwright. title: A second letter to Mr. Miles Prance in reply to the ghost of Sir Edmond-bury Godfrey date: 1682.0 words: 4081 flesch: 60 summary: Ghost , and pretended to be an Answer to my said Letter . And conceiving You are better acquain●ed with Ghosts than my self , I thought fit to direct my Answer to that Ghost to You , and thereby shew the ridiculousness thereof , as also vindicate the Truths contained in my said former Letter , and shew You and the world further circumstances to justifie the same , and therefore , according to the method of my former Letter , I shall proceed by these Heads . keywords: body; evidence; ghost; letter; prance; tcp; text cache: A69994.xml plain text: A69994.txt item: #138 of 147 id: A70144 author: Greene, Richard, 17th cent. title: The popish massacre as it was discovered to the honorable House of Commons, sitting in a grand committee for the suppression of popery, in the month of June 1678 at the time of the Parliaments prorogation / by Richard Greene ; or, the IV part of the present Popish Plot, farther discovered and demonstrated ; being part of Dr. Tonges collections on that subject, published for his vindication ; whereby it may appear, who were the inventers, and contrivers of this plot, and who the movers of the first discoveries of it, in which he is still a great sufferer and no plotter. date: 1679.0 words: 9670 flesch: 48 summary: Some Particulars omitted in the foregoing Relation of Greens Discourse with Boyer , Numb . II. BOYER told Greene , that it would be the latter end of next Summer , before they should effect their Design . Greene questioned Thomas Woodhouse about what time the Words were spoken by Mr. Boyer to Mr. Robert Woodhouse , the said Hatters Brother , and he found by him that it was the same time that he the said Greene had the same conference with Captain Thomas Boyer , viz. keywords: boyer; duke; greene; king; massacre; papists; parliament; plot; popish; richard; text; thomas; time; woodhouse cache: A70144.xml plain text: A70144.txt item: #139 of 147 id: A70153 author: Bedloe, William, 1650-1680. title: The examination of Captain William Bedlow, deceased, relating to the Popish Plot taken in his last sickness, by Sir Francis North, Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas ; together with the narrative of Sir Francis North at the council board, and the letter of Sir Francis North to Mr. Secretary Jenkins relating to this examination. date: 1680.0 words: 3011 flesch: 69 summary: The examination of Captain William Bedlow, deceased, relating to the Popish Plot taken in his last sickness, by Sir Francis North, Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas ; together with the narrative of Sir Francis North at the council board, and the letter of Sir Francis North to Mr. Secretary Jenkins relating to this examination. The examination of Captain William Bedlow, deceased, relating to the Popish Plot taken in his last sickness, by Sir Francis North, Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas ; together with the narrative of Sir Francis North at the council board, and the letter of Sir Francis North to Mr. Secretary Jenkins relating to this examination. keywords: francis; north; sir; tcp; text; william cache: A70153.xml plain text: A70153.txt item: #140 of 147 id: A70423 author: L'Estrange, Roger, Sir, 1616-1704. title: L'Estrange no papist nor Jesuite discussed in a short discourse between Philo-L'Estrange and Pragmaticus. date: 1681.0 words: 4279 flesch: 75 summary: Attributed to L'Estrange by Halkett and Laing and by G. Ketchin, Sir Roger L'Estrange, p. 415, though not by Wing (2nd ed.). This somthing gravels me if it be true : but what is all this to the proving L'Estrange no Papist ? so long as people write and talk against him and call him Papist , I cannot find in my heart but believe them . Philo. keywords: church; l'estrange; man; papist; philo; prag; tcp; text cache: A70423.xml plain text: A70423.txt item: #141 of 147 id: A70694 author: Wall, John, Saint, 1620-1679. title: A narrative of the proceedings and tryal of Mr. Francis Johnson, a Franciscan, at Worcester last summer-assizes Anno Dom. 1679 written with his own hand as followeth. date: 1679.0 words: 19088 flesch: 58 summary: For , before I or any man else can understand the Contents of these Oaths to be true , as to call God to witness that I believe them to be as true , just and righteous , I must be able to desine what is Faith or Heresie in these Contents I swear to , and I must know the full extent of all cases of this nature that God has left to all Temporal Princes and their Power ; I must also understand the full extent of all cases of this nature of power spiritual which God hath left in his Church in or over Christian Kingdoms of Temporal Monarchs , which power in these Oaths I am to swear on the one side , and forswearing the other . To this my Answer to my Lord was , That I had all my life time been so fearful of such rash Judgment , that I do declare it in the presence of God , as I did before him , that I had rather dye , than presume to pronounce the sentence of damnation against any man ; but I told his Lordship , that if he pleased to give me leave , I would relate what I had said to him , and others , upon the like occasion , which the Judge being willing to hear , I told him , that I being at this man's Mother-in-law's house , who was of no Religion , no more than this Witness , and the Mother desiring to hear what Catholicks held , and the reasons for which we believe such points of Faith , I told her what we held , and shewed her the proofs for what we held in her own Bible , and when she made any difficulty whether such texts of Scripture were to be understood as we understood them , or in any other sense , I shewed her out of the Protestant Practice of Piety , and out of the Protestant Common Prayer-Book , that not only Catholicks ▪ but all Protestants understood them in such a sense ; and she having those Books by her , I turned those places to her to read in her own Books , and so she did , and yet neither the Bible , nor Common Prayer-Books , nor Practice of Piety , could satisfie , or make her believe ; whereupon I told her , that if she were a Christian , she must believe something ; for , as she believed , so she should be saved : — I told her also what the Bible declared to her , That without Faith it was impossible to please God , and I bad her consider the text that saith , Whatsoever is not of Faith is sin ; as also the text that saith , The just man liveth by Faith , and desired her to read those words of our Saviour , where he saith , He that believeth shall be saved , but he that believeth not shall be damned ; which she did read ; and this Witness being then present , and I saying the same then before him , I suppose , from this text , he accused me that I should say , he would be damned , because I repeated , and shewed them our Saviour's words , as they appear in that place of Scripture . keywords: charity; death; faith; god; hope; judge; king; life; man; oaths; priest; self; things; witness; world cache: A70694.xml plain text: A70694.txt item: #142 of 147 id: A71292 author: B. W. title: An additional discovery of Mr. Roger L'Estrange his further discovery of the Popish plot wherein Dr. Titus Oates and the rest of the King's evidences are vindicated from the aspersions cast upon them in that pamphlet : together with some new observations upon the said discovery not heretofore publisht / in a letter to Dr. Titus Oates by B.W. date: 1680.0 words: 16240 flesch: 16 summary: against the King , Government and Religion ; but what question or distinction this Author will make , we shall see anon , for there is his Diana ; but that you Doctor , or any other of the King's Witnesses in this case have in the least occasioned such a question , is not in my apprehension to be deduced from any of your Evidences , and I believe that no man that hath ever heard , read of , or seen the Arts of those Persons charged with that horrid Plot in any of their Massacres , either at home or abroad , that ever they made any distinction of Persons that were Dissenters from themselves in Doctrine or Practice : From what can it be imagined they would have done it by , or in this Plot , or that they did so intend by it , only to cut off the Members of the Church of England , and leave the Dissenters from them , or only cut off the Dissenters , and leave the Members of the Church of England , there is no shadow of colour for it , and it 's fully proved by you to be intended general to all Dissentets from the Church of Rome . But if any one did so he was to blame , and was I suppose as much under a mistake as the Author is in his Pamphlet , and the Subject matter of it ; for I take it to be undoubred , that the person or Power that may be petitioned to , hath a power of granting and denying : as for instance ; if a Party of his friends should in a petition to his Majesty set forth according to their apprehension , his merits by his Pamphlet and pray a reward for him , his Majesty might refuse it , and on the other hand if you , Doctor , and others by petition to his Majesty , should set forth how he hath traduced his Majesty , the Government and the Kings Witnesses in his said Pamphlet , and pray that the same , and he , might be left to the Law to be punished according to their demerits , the same might and would be granted ; but in regard he could not , or at least would not make a further Discovery of that Damnable and hellish Plot Discovered by you ; give me leave to tell you , if he could have been convinced by any other Evidence , or Testimony , than Dives and his brethren , how he might have done it , by publishing to the world , as the truth is , that the singer of God hath been in this Discovery of your's throughout ; for it cannot proved , be that you , Doctor , had the least advice or assistance of any one man , to guide or help you to contrive the way you took , and was to take , ( and that with eminent danger and vast hazard , and great difficulty ) for the making your self Master of this Discovery in less than a year . keywords: author; church; discovery; dissenters; doctor; england; evidence; government; hath; king; man; pamphlet; papists; plot; religion; says; truth cache: A71292.xml plain text: A71292.txt item: #143 of 147 id: A79691 author: Church of England. title: A prayer to be used on Wednesday November 13 In the office appointed for that day, immediately after the prayer for the High Court of Parliament (which is to be read during their session:) and next before the prayer of Saint Chrysostom, both in the morning, and evening service. By the Kings special command. date: 1678.0 words: 1311 flesch: 63 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; prayer; tcp; text cache: A79691.xml plain text: A79691.txt item: #144 of 147 id: A80568 author: Loyal Britain. title: A cordial for England, or a character of true Britains [t]ogether with a narrative and recital of all Popish plots in England since the days of Queen Elizabeth. And a prophesie of Romes downfal, by a Loyal Britain. date: 1678.0 words: 2295 flesch: 71 summary: A cordial for England, or a character of true Britains [t]ogether with a narrative and recital of all Popish plots in England since the days of Queen Elizabeth. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 2333:13) A cordial for England, or a character of true Britains [t]ogether with a narrative and recital of all Popish plots in England since the days of Queen Elizabeth. keywords: eebo; england; english; plot; tcp; text cache: A80568.xml plain text: A80568.txt item: #145 of 147 id: A82013 author: J. D. title: A true narrative of that grand Jesuite Father Andrews who lived at Hardwick in Monmouthshire. How he fled into a large wood to escape justice. How he came to an untimely end, and the manner of his burial. In a letter to a friend in London. date: 1679.0 words: 1699 flesch: 67 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A82013) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 136199) keywords: andrews; eebo; father; tcp; text cache: A82013.xml plain text: A82013.txt item: #146 of 147 id: B04744 author: Ephelia, fl. 1679. title: A poem as it was presented to His Sacred Majesty on the discovery of the plott, written by a lady of quality. date: 1679.0 words: 1334 flesch: 71 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. B04744) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 181448) keywords: eebo; english; tcp; text cache: B04744.xml plain text: B04744.txt item: #147 of 147 id: B05600 author: Gibson, Alexander, Sir, d. 1693. title: A proclamation for a publick general fast throrowout the realm of Scotland date: 1678.0 words: 1450 flesch: 60 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. B05600) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 179628) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: eebo; scotland; tcp; text cache: B05600.xml plain text: B05600.txt