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Here are expressed the staatagems of foes,
Elizaes conquests, and their falls that rose.
Take off the vaile, and ope your dimmed eies,
All ye seduced, by the man of sin:
Conceiue aright, consider whence do rise,
And where the dangers of this Realme begin.
Looke into Rome, the piller of your pride,
And flatter not the things should be enuide:
As treasons, murders, and conspiracies,
Dreadfull Inuasions, and sad miseries,
These are her fruites, they cannot be denide.
Can thirst for blood, stand with Religion?
Can hatefull murder, craue a recompence?
Then holy writ is but a fiction:
Tweene sinne and sanctitie no difference,
To murther Princes, meritorious:
A worke, that makes the worker glorious.
Is't faith by workes, or workes by faith they showe
In sheading blood? and seeking ouerthrow
Of Prince and people? a thing most odious.


How did Pope Paule the fourth, fawne on the French,
And fed their second Francis with desire
By force, to mount faire Englands Regall bench,
Who was with ease inuited to aspire
In Maries name, his Queene, & Queene of Scots?
He did pretend with sword to solue the knots
That rightly knit Eliza to the Crowne.
But right by force, is sildome seene puld downe,
Nor for her right Eliza would cast lots.
As Paule pretends in sentencing our Queene,
No Queene, French Francis in conceit was King:
And stylde him King, as if he King had bene:
And Francis soaring by ambicious wing,
Eggd by the Guise, did send his force with speede
To Scotland, (English Papists first were feede
To aide the French) and thence the Realme t'inuade,
A match but halfe, not by both parties made.
Though strong cōceit might thinke it won indeed.
But when Eliza saw French Francis rise,
And fetch his runne to leape into her Land:
She knew the practise of seditious Guise,
On whose aspiring wyles the King did stand.
The Pope, the King, and Papists stoode
Combinde in one, in hot aspiring moode.
And our Eliza lately raisde, behelde
This play begun, Ensignes displayde in fielde,
She not dismayd, nor fearing Enuies broode.


But soone consulted with Nobilitie,
Resolu'd, and sent her warlike forces hence:
They passe the Tweede in magnanimity,
As eger of their Queenes and Realmes defence.
The French were to the Scots vnwelcome guests,
Therefore the Scots made English high protests,
To ioyne their forces to the English bandes,
A Realme with Realme, in loue combined stands,
Farre more secure, then it disiuncted rests.
But when the French had view of English force,
And saw Elizaes loue had wonne the Scots,
The French dismay, and sue for quicke diuorce,
Wishing Pope Paul were present at the lots,
Where he with his vnwonted warlike trayne,
Had seene sad sorrow, sequell of disdayne,
That erst disdaynd Elizaes Diadeame,
To take it off, and rob her of her Realme:
An expedition plotted by his brayne.
The French saw ruine right before their eyes,
If they should buckle by the dint of sword,
A dreadfull myst of feare on them did rise,
And they sought peace by plaine submissiue word,
And yeelded rather to returne with shame,
Then enter combate for the cause they came.
So Solon-Cecill and graue Wotton went
And gaue them parlie, and the consequent
Did wholy tend to great Elizaes fame.


The King and Queene of Scots and France should leaue
The armes and titles of Elizaes Realmes,
By them vsurpt, to which Pope Paul did heaue
With English gems to decke their diadeames,
And further yeelded their submission,
As did Eliza set condition.
What greater honour could succeed then this?
What greater victory then yeelding is?
A regall guise to haue compassion.
Here were three vertues in Eliza found,
Her true and constant Magnanimity,
Her franke Compassion, and her Wisedome sound,
All prest at once, confirmd her dignity.
From whom haue sprung the dangers of our Queene?
From whence haue all fowle Enuies working beene?
But from the fountayne of that poysond well,
Of Romish Bushops; and their cursed cell?
Where are fell Euries and fowle Monsters seene.
Did not Pope Pius quartus who succeedes
The former Paul, appeare like venemous?
And did he not sow here seditious seedes?
And did not againe Pope Pius quintus,
Succeeding him gaue tokens of despight?
Who did her sacred Maiesty indite
With his fowle Bull, that came with ougly roare,
Into this land, her Highnes to vnmoare,
And to bereaue this Kingdome of her light.


And did he not dispence with fealtie,
That English Nobles and her subiects swore,
And plainely plighted to her Maiestie?
And stirr'd he not the Northerne Lords, to gore
Her Highnesse liege-men with his filthy Bull?
Though he preuailed not, his hornes were dull,
Yet did his complices obey his hest,
And rais'd their force, the Pope to reinuest
Whence he was driuen, their hearts of gall were full.
Full of despite, breath'd on them by that beast,
That bellow'd horrour to the silly sheepe,
Whose bloud they sought to make their Enuies feast.
But he that gaue these silly ones to keepe,
To great Eliza gaue, Eliza will
And powre, she suffer'd not the Wolues to kill
Her lambes, but sent her sauing heardsmen hence.
Sussex and Warwick, who were their defence.
At whose aduent, the Bull failde of his skill.
And failing fled: An vgly sight to see
A beast dismembred, not by butchers knife:
The head amaz'd did flie: the hornes too free,
Brake off. The members do dispaire of life.
Head hastes to Scotland, left the bulke behinde,
The body, armes, and legges were discombinde.
And suddenly captiu'de, subdude or yelde,
Depriu'd of hope, (as men disarmde in fielde.
See now their errour, led before as blinde.


Some of the trayne had iustly doome to dye,
Most did implore, and got Elizaes grace,
And yet not one could reason iustifie,
As fit to liue, of this rebellious race:
All vertues doe attend Elizaes trayne,
Valour, and Mercy, Iustice with these twayne,
Approue her absolute heroicke Queene:
No former worthy, more diuine hath beene.
Nor won more honour, neuer touch of stayne.
But how could Pius Pope excuse his spight,
In seeking true Elizaes life by sword?
How could he voyde iust sentence of his pride,
Her to depose, by his ambitious word?
How could he cleare himselfe of subtilty,
Pretending to dispence with fealty?
Spight, pride, and fraude, a trine aspect of hell,
Presaging ill euent out of that cell.
From whence proceedes nought but impiety.
This impius Bull of Pius baited thus,
Came led to London in false Feltons hand,
He tide the beast, and left it furious;
At th' Bishops pallace in a leaden band
The Bulheard left the game for others playe,
His seruice done, dispaire egd him away:
The Bull grew meeker, was with ease vntide,
The gamester gone, the game was not reuide,
But left vnplaid vntill another day.


Francke gamester Felton laie aloofe awhile,
To heare and note, successe of this fierce beast,
At last found out, and brought from darke exile,
And sawe the game all done, become a ieast:
Himselfe came forth to play his part on stage
In publike view (Pope Pius trustie Page.)
He acted all, as traytors vse to doe,
That after doome to execution goe.
Meane while the Bull was curbed of his rage.
The powers diuine, that euer shelter make
To shield Eliza from foule Enuies hand,
Stood vp and stopt the currant of this lake,
That threatn'd daunger to her selfe and land:
And leaues her not depriued of reueale
Of all complots, that would subuert her weale.
He Madders and Barlowes conspiracies
Bewraide: ere they brought forth their villanies
They dide: Iustice admitted no appeale.
My pensiue soule (recomforted to see
Elizaes freedome, and her constant loue:
How Truth and Mercy, in her linked bee,
And how her vertues her spred fame approue)
Cannot but lift in loue her worthy praise,
And laude his name, who her for vs did raise:
And in her set Religion (aptiuate)
Free for Religious to participate
Iehouah's bountie in Elizaes dayes.


Iehouah's bountie and his loues defence,
Defendeth her and vs in her from foes:
Praise him, he seekes no other recompence.
He heau'd her vp, and we in her arose,
We did arise, by tyrannie cast downe,
Shee, shee, (our Moses,) lifted to the crowne,
Saw Corah, Dathan, and Abiram rise,
(Rebellious troupes) and sinke before her eies.
Dispaire them swallow at Elizaes frowne.
Confusion swallowes Rebels, none can stand
When they conspire in publique, or conceald,
For who so takes a traytors taske in hand
To worke Elizaes wrecke, is soone reueald.
Their treasons seene, whence is originall?
Sot Someruiles, and that proud Parries gall,
That swore her death with resolution,
Couertly contriu'd by Romes elusion:
What issue came? their owne infernall fall.
And yet was Parry by the Pope assurde
His fact was worthy merit of heauens blisse:
What hellish vipers hath these Popes procurde,
To aime at her whose glorie makes them misse?
Her glory graced with Iehouahs grace,
Disgraceth them with her great glories face:
What could the fourteene great heroykes doe,
Whom eke the Pope to murder her did wooe?
Did they preuaile in that they had in chace?


Were they not found by high Iehouahs eye,
That winkes not at foule Enuies lifted fist?
He sees and swayes their foule malignitie:
And smites them downe within selfe Enuies list.
Yea though they do contriue their spight
In forraigne parts, farre off (they think from sight,
Iustice bewrayeth them where so they hide,
And selfe conceit leaues not them vndescride:
Themselues discouer in dispairing night.
Yea though they practise darknesse in the darke,
As diuellish witchcraft, and the Magicke arts:
The diuel deceiues them, and they misse the marke,
Yet he not his, their play is of two parts.
They aime to hit, high Ioues annointed Queene,
And misse, he aimes at them, (his wiles vnseene,)
And hits. The Pope yet holiest of the rest,
Chiefe actor, finding former shifts not blest:
He will haue execrable arts be seene.
And for his Nigromantiall practises,
Pickes out infernall instruments for fact:
As Prestall, Phayer, and their complices,
Hot-headed Story, maister of the act,
This worke commenced, darke & deepe as hell,
Yet brought to light, and lifted from that rell.
The diuel assured them Elizaes death,
(He loues to lye) beleeue not what he saith,
Though traytors do, so did Achitophell.


Achitophel bewitched, did bewitch
Faire Absolom, a sonne vnto a king:
Mou'de him to mount, to hit (but did not hiche)
His fathers crowne, high Iustice clipp'd his wing.
So are the wings of these fowle traytors cut,
That want not will, their flight in practise put:
But fall in seas of deepe dispairing shame,
And Story styled with great Sophies fame,
Arm'd with fowle Enuy, mist the aimed but.
The white, (Eliza) daz'd their diuellish eyes,
They could not see, nor make their art to proue:
Arts maister could not make that diuel rise
That was of powre to hurt Iehouahs Doue.
Yet Story striuing to accomplish that
Which in his high aspiring fancy sat,
Was sent a present by Iehouah's hand,
From Flaunders, where he most secure did stand:
All men well know the guerdon that he gat.
Yet Phayer and Prestall found a fayrer day,
Elizaes mercy, her reuenge exceedes:
Though mercy in this case might well say nay,
And Iustice cut downe these infernall weedes.
But Iustice left them not excus'd herein,
For Phayer fell after to high treasons sin:
Di'de for the last a guerdon for the first,
High traytors haue no doubt a dropsie thirst,
Which sildome quencheth when it doth begin.


What soules keepe silence, but reioyce to see
The speedy falles of all Elizaes foes!
Whose foes, are foes to all that faithfull bee,
Her faith, firme faith, their faithlesse works disclose,
And none sit sad to see it, but the crew
Of Enuies couert workers out of view,
Whose hearts are hidden for a while in darke,
They will be seene by some externall marke,
And shew the poysond fruit that therein grew.
For none so walke, inuisible in Spight,
But word, or worke, or guise, or garment will
At last bewray them, and bring all to light,
The fume will breath and show what they distill:
Throgmorton in hearts closet long conceild
His Enuies fire, at last brake forth reueild,
A flame to light the bringing in of Spayne,
To pull Eliza downe, a painfull strayne,
A deepe fetcht note, words to make Princes yeeld.
Nay, weapons were preparde, the Kingdome giu'n,
Our liues were sold, all offices disposde,
And in conceite, they had deposde our Queene,
All vp but one; but when it was disclosde,
The game did turne. Throgmorton came to light,
Then, Pope, was pensiue, Spanyards in sad plight,
Their hope a dreame: when they awakt, they saw
That shaddowes bring not substances in awe.
Nor words like swords, to arme a man to fight.


This mystie morning cleared with the Sunne,
Bewray'd Throgmorton with her splendant beames:
He leaues his closet when his dreame was done,
And findes Eliza rooted in her Realmes
Which he had solde to them that could not buye,
He could not sell Elizaes dignitie:
Yet nought did want but sure possession,
And that was hoped by his confession.
Here was presumption, and credulitie.
Seller presumes to sell what was not his,
Buyers beleeue, yet had not Quid pro quo:
What man of lawe can rightly censure this,
Pactum or nudum pactum, yea or no?
The buyers sue not seller for the same,
Nor then required, or for bargaine came:
And yet Throgmorton was attach'd therefore,
And paide his head, for recompence: and More,
And his consorts went not without their shame.
Who sees these fruites, that grow vpon that stocke
Of Romes despight, that spread into this land,
And loaths them not? and would not moue the block
Laide in the way to weake Elizaes hand?
Who doth not ioy to see their ill successe?
Who doth not wish in heart a sound redresse?
The banishment of all that hatefull crew,
That lurke vnseene, and some in publique view?
Or wish their loue, and their despights release.


Oh how would our Eliza them imbrace?
How would she guard their liues in truthes desires?
How happy they, if they were in her grace
Cut from that tree, of bloodie Romes aspires?
That still aspires, and still her braunches fall,
They rot, consume, infected with her gall:
A wonder that they will not shunne the snare,
When they their owne with others lots compare:
They see the mirror, yet not mou'd withall.
What are their liues vnto the Papacie?
As are base Turkes to their graund Seignior
Who wayes ten thousand liues in policie,
As flies; So Catholicke Superior,
Oh silly soules, that dreame of dignitie
And high aduance for hatefull treacherie,
To bring their natiue land, to forraigne spoile,
Their friends, and kinsmen, guiltlesse to their soile.
Selfe guerdon death, hell for their sallary.
What recompence had Romes chiefe champion
Sent to this lande from that great Bishops side?
Their Alpha and Omega Campion
And his consorts, concealed yet espide.
They came in colour to winne soules to blisse,
Of all the Locustes sent, the glosse is this:
When to draw subiect, duties, and their loue,
From true Eliza, and high treasons moue.
Against their Queene, their true pretending is.


For can a subiect stand, liege to his Lord,
And yet giue sentence with his mortall foe?
Or can a man serue two with good accord,
When in desire they wish each others woe?
Its hard to wade in meane, betweene two friends,
In equall seruice Ielousie depends.
Therefore who workes to win a subiects loue
From her that hath it warranted aboue,
T'anothers loue, all knowe what he pretends.
They may pretend, and be igniferent,
Zealous in shewe, to win a man from sinne,
When all they worke, is to make malecontent,
And drawe the doubtfull to diue deeper in.
For if their workes were of right Wisedomes skill,
They would in publique, practise to instill
Their right aduise, that all might be aduised,
As Paul did preach in publique, not disguished:
Who feare the light (no doubt) their deedes are ill.
Did Campion that famous Doctor showe
In publique schoole, or in the open view?
Or did he preach? or his high gifts bestowe
On all? as well he might, if they were true.
Nay, came he not in couert, fearing light,
And kept in darke, and salyed in the night?
As one that would surprise the silly sheepe,
Fled from the folde, and from their shepheards keepe,
And do not all the Locusts thus by flight?


Haue they the habite coresponding gift?
As they pretend their gift is to forgiue?
If that their gift, and colour not a drift,
To lay their poyson in Religious hiue.
Then let them come, but not in Ruffins weede,
That come to kill, when they pretend to feede:
Some come like Ruffins, some like men of warre,
The blinde, the lame, they know not what they are,
How can they aske them then the things they need?
They feare the sword (they say) therefore they lye
As Leopards; white, and blacke, and greene, & gray,
Attired thus to act diuinity:
Beseemes it them? It fits a stage aray:
But if these colours be to cloake their guile,
As they assume vnto themselues exile,
Then sure they feare the light, and walke in darke,
Pretending one, and ayme another marke:
Denominate by one, and haue another stile.
What neede they feare the Magistrate, or sword?
If they do well, no perill can befall,
No perill falles on them of true accord,
That do accord with Truth, not gorgd with gall,
They gorgd, vngorge, and with the fume infect
Elizaes Liege-men: who againe reflect
The same on those that truly loyall be,
And wrest the wils, of many by degree,
To couer Treason, which they should detect.


Who then beleeues, these monsters come to saue?
Or can forgiue? If they seduce from loue,
Though they haue titles as the Angels haue,
And be in show as is the Turtle Doue:
They are but spyes, or Spiders to compact
The webbe of mischiefe, which some else must act:
In eighty eight, the yeare of greatest hope
Of Englands ouerthrow, aduance of Pope,
The Spaniard hoped to be English backt.
But was kept backe, Iehouah curbd his rage,
Reuerts his matter to another end'
He by his power, his fury did asswage,
And his Armado, did both breake and bend:
It brake by force, it bended with desire,
To turne againe, they saw it best retire,
Some did retire; Against their wills, some saw
And felt Elizae forces and Ioues Law:
Who still inhabites wrongers to aspire.
Yet sure Romes Locusts had enuenomed
Some gyddie heads, hote, weary of their weale,
And wonne them to consent (but blindly led)
To their inchants, and gaue their vowes for seale,
To ioyne their forces to Elizaes foes,
Yet would they haue Eliza to suppose
These Romish witches to be tollerable.
In her Kingdomes indeed most execrable,
Couertly contriuing Elizaes woes.


Elizaes woes, woe worth their trecheries,
Oh high Iehouah blinde their hatefull eyes,
Confound their wits, driue them to extacies,
Daunt their desires, draw them to obliquies,
And leaue them not, till thou haue throwne them downe
That ayme at thee, and at Elizaes crowne,
At thee Iehouah, to put out thy light:
At her, Truthes prop, the foe to dismall night
Wherein they walke, as deadly Wolues vnknowne.
Vnknowne to her, her innocencie beares,
No dread of ill; they yet creepe couertly
Into mens hearts, with counterfaited teares,
Perswade, disswade, coniure, and hold it piety
To wrest poore soules from true obedience,
Vnto Eliza vnder false pretence,
Of liberty and true religion,
When all their wiles tend to confusion,
Of Queene, and Realme, this, Romes beneficence.
Woe worth these Wolues, that dally with the sheepe,
As Cat with Mouse, till they worke heards-man gone.
Eliza gone, these Wolues will haue the keepe
Of all the flocke in false suggestion:
Oh liue Eliza, great Ioue let her liue,
And lead her swarme to thy all sacred hiue,
Where thy poore Bees, may shelter haue from those,
That sucke truthes hony, from theit harts with glosse,
That thy truthes, life, and light, do fanckly giue,


Where loe they giue the fruite of poison'd tree,
That eaten, please as honie doth the taste
In first, but second and in third degree,
Infects and killes, though't first a sweete repast,
But when digested, and the Conscience
Pertakes at full their confluence,
Then are the workings of this potion found,
Deadly deuouring, and all parts confound:
These Vipers, yet pretend great recompence.
They haue their recompence, but farre from blisse,
No Traitors, or Seducers can expect
Reward aboue (where sacred dutie is)
That yeeld no dutie to high Ioues elect,
(Annointed here). They blinded, seeke to blinde,
And drawe from dutie: bound, do seeke to binde
The silly soules that sue and seeke for light,
Their Duties loue, they binde by their dispight,
And yet pretend they haue a sacred minde.
A sacrilegious minde; for loe they steale
Mens hearts and rob them of obedience:
They breede sedition in the publique weale,
And worke the weake to stand on Conscience,
Conscience must not perunt the silly flies,
Falne in their webbe, to seeke the meanes to rise,
To ope their eyes, to moue their foote or hand,
To shun their snares, to heare or vnderstand.
They must not doubt or reason of their lies.


Oh silly soules bewitched with this crew,
Why will you follow their enchaunted wayes?
Wayle, and vnwrap you of this deadly clew,
Wherein these Spiders do intrap their prayes:
Heare and beleeue, truth will this snare vntye,
And set your Consciences at liberty:
And free you from these miscrean Cananites,
Infernall dogges, that vomit out despights
Against Messiahs truth and sanctity.
Come out from them ye captiu'd soules, and flye
Their deadly charmes, and let Elizaes grace
Preuaile with you, and do no longer lye
In that darke denne, whence issues all that race,
That raunge the mountaynes of traditions,
Full they pretend of true deuotions.
Beleeue them not, truth is not in their ken:
A mystie cloud hangs on them witched men,
Depriu'd of grace, guides to seditions.
Ye see the fruites of all the Locusts, sent
From that proude beast, that sits a God in show:
Haue they not drawne you to be discontent
With your sweete liberty, and loue you owe?
Haue they not wrought you to be obstinate,
To kicke against Eliza and her state?
Haue they not woode you to betray the land
Wherein you liue, wherein your comforts stand?
Do you not see their loues pretence is hate?


Hate them that hale you to that dismall way,
Loue her that lends you true protection:
Your selues detect, these couert wolues bewray,
And bring to light, these Locusts of infection,
That lurke with you, and leaue their sting in you,
Come you to light, learne truth, and liue anew.
Liue as good subiects, loue as Christians,
Imbrace the faithfull, leaue these Miscreans,
And you shall see great blessings will ensue.