SION.
O That's a
Cordial! But my grief does borrow
Some fresh
Objections to renew my sorrow:
For some that wish me well, do yet, in spite
Of Gospel Beamings, and the clearest Light,
Retain some
Romish Fragments, which displease;
The meek, the humble, self-denying JESUS.
His way of Worship, Scripture does express;
No useless Pomp, no Artificial Dress
Becomes Religion: Chastity abhors
The
Garb, the
Painting, and the
Gate of
Whores.
Why should my Friends a Virgin-Church pollute
With any Relicks of that Prostitute?
[Page] Why Gawdy things, that never had a Name
In sacred Records, our Profession shame?
Why are our
Rites enamel'd with their
Gloss?
Why must our
Gold be mingled with their
Dross?
Why father
Reformation is supprest,
T'uphold a
Grandeur that's
Usurp'd at best?
Why
Doors and
Windows must be shut up quite,
To stop the Radiance of a further Light?
And why must such as disallow those Tricks,
Be branded as the vilest
Schismaticks?
But that's not all: My Children more refin'd
From those Corruptions, do afflict my mind.
O depths of Sorrow that disturb my rest!
O racking Grief that rends my woful breast!
Some are so Carnal, some so swiftly hurl'd
Into the Labrinths of th'inticing World,
That in the hurries of that crouded Road,
They find small leasure to attend their God;
Preferring filthy Gain, and ill got Wealth.
Before the means of their Eternal Health.
Some that in words respect me, I behold
In that
[...]ad posture, betwixt hot and cold.
Sometimes they seem for Sanctity; sometimes
Slide with the current of prevailing Crimes:
Their Pulses beat with an alternate Motion;
Now for the
World, then for some faint
Devotion
[...]
Some that unto my Tabernacles were
Admitted, left me for
Egyptian Fare:
These not content with my Coelestial Diet,
Do run with others to excess of Riot.
[Page]
[...] to be
popular, away would give
Those
Gospel-duties that are positive:
From such as these, my Sorrows do increase,
That sell Gods
Order for a seeming
Peace;
Such open Gaps that do pervert the Laws
Of my just
Right, and well-defended
Cause.
But O! how many easie
Christians take
Their
Rest in
Forms, and no distinction make
'Twixt Shell and Kernel, that rely on
Duty
As if it were the sole adorning Beauty?
Such give the Lord the more invalid part,
Present their body, but deny their heart.
Are not some
Pastors careless to provide
A
Word in season, for the
Flocks they guid?
Some are too backward to supply the need
Of painful
Lab'rers, that their souls do seed;
Discourag'd by close fisted
Avarice,
Despis'd, neglected, through this
Hellish Vice.
My
Workmen Languish, and have cause of moan;
To see their
toyl so ineffectual grown.
The most Pathetick Preaching scarce can
[...]ve
Some
Rocky Hearers to the Grace of Love.
Must
Hag-fac'd Envy, and
foul-tongu'd Detraction,
Invonom'd
Malice, and unfaithful
Action
[...]
Ill grounded
Slander, and uncertain
Rumor
[...]
Ba
[...]k biting Quarels, and the worst of
Huthors
Be practic'd thus? Ah grief of griefs to see
Wives
Prosessing People act iniquity
To such a Pitch!—Some
Husbands and some
Do lead such shameful, such unfavoury Lives;
[Page] Whilest mutually at strife, they do impeach
That Name that should be very dear to each:
Such Pride, such surly, dogged
reprehension
For every toy, such sharpness and contention
As does disgrace
Religion, and does lay
Blocks and Offences in a
Converts Way.
Ah! why can't Saints in Families eschew
That which meer
Heathens are asham'd to do?
Their Houses are the Scene of
Civil Wars,
Of Brawls, of Discord, and
Domestick Jars.
In grace or comfort can they find increase,
Or
Heavenly Blessings, who are void of Peace?
How oft do
Parents ill Example draw
Their tender Children to infringe the Law
And Sanctions of the everlasting God:
Do they not spoil them when they spare the Rod?
To strict Extreams some Parents do adhere,
Check not at all, or else are too severe:
On
Back and
Belly they bestow much cost,
But care not if their precious Souls be loft:
Are they not guilty of Prodigious Folly
That teach them
Cour:ship, & neglect what's
holy?
A Child untutor'd, (a meer lump of sin,)
May justly curse its cause of having been.
Such as instruct, do doubly them beget,
By timely Lessons lab'ring to defeat
Their growth in ill; such mold their better part,
By wise prevention of a Canker'd heart.
O! then's the time to give 'em Form and Mold;
For Trees admit no bending that are old.
[Page]
[...] timely sow such
seed they would have grow,
Will surely reap according as they sow.
Some like the Ape, that does by hugging kill,
Prompt on a Child to tip his rongue with ill
In his first prattle: But it is less pain
To form good Habits, then reform the vain.
On th'other hand, how many Children do
Prove vain, rebellious, disobedient to
Their godly
Parents? Slight their careful teaching
Makes Games of Prayer, and a mock of Preaching
Contempt of Parents, of what kind so e'er,
Contracts a bitter Curse, which every where
Will find them out. But O my a king Soul
Beats sad Alarms of Grief! I must condole
The dismal Fate of Youth! Alas how few
The ways of God and Holiness pursue!
But very eager to obey the Devil,
In quickly learning every reigning Evil.
Here you may see, if you survey the Nation,
Our Youth grown old in vile abomination:
Such early Graduates in the Hellish Science,
Setting both Heaven and Hell at loud defiance.
Let Grace and Vertue grovel in the Dust,
Their Youth and Strength they'l sacrifice to Lust.
That sacred Precept in the Word of Truth,
To mind their Maker in the days of Youth,
They scorn to heed: Ah fools! that would begin
Conversion, when they can no longer sin.
But know, prepo
[...]
[...]
[...]ots, the day of Doom
(That dreadful
[...] of Accounts) will come.
[Page] How dare you run this vile
Carter, till Deam,
Like a
Grim Serj
[...]ant, comest'arrest your breath,
When
Tongues do faulter, & your
Eye strings crack
When stings of Horror do your
Conscience rack,
When Hells
Abyss sets ope its spacious Gate,
And
Troops of Devils round about you wait,
When nought but
Horrour and
Confusion seizes,
Upon your Sences, when those
foul Diseases
You got by vile
Debauches, have at length
Destroy'd your Person, and subdu'd your
strength,
Is this a season to detest your Lewdness,
To talk of
Vertue, or pretend to goodness?
Egregious Fools! how dare you to delay
Your Souls affair to that
uncertain day!
O! Can you trust so
grand a work to that
Moment of
Anguish? when you know not what
(When Sound) your end will be, nor yet how soon
Though brisk at
Morning, you may die ere
Noon!
And if unchang'd, your certain
doom will be
To lye in
Hell to all
Eternity.
SION.
WHen
S
[...]l once touches our
Meridian Line,
It straight descends, does by degrees decline;
Its heat grows less, its disappearing
Light
Yields to the
Sable of approaching night:
Just so the
Gospel in its
Altitude,
Once shot such
Beams, that in this
Isle ensu'd
So great
Conversion, that those former days
Did feel its blest and universal Rays.
[Page 36] A general
Heat did warm this happy
Nation,
From its benign and pow'rful
Operation:
But now it falls! and from our
Horizon
Its vig'rous influence is almost gone.
Thousands of
Sermons lately have been Preacht,
But very few (if any) sinners reacht:
How ineffectual is the quick'ning word?
It shines, but warms not; its but like a Sword
That's fair to sight, but has no Edge at all;
Few prick'd at heart, and scarce do any fall
A
[...] Jesus feet, or have a s
[...]nce of Sin.
Confessing how rebellious they have been:
It is a dismal and apparent sign
That night comes on, when
Phoebus does decline,
When heat and fervour fail, our
Hemisphere
Will quickly see its Glory disappear.
The Ev'ning of the nat'ral Day is come,
When Harvest-work-men are repairing home:
So when quick Summons of
Omnipotence,
Removes the Dressers of this
Vineyard hence;
We may conclude the
Gospel-morning past,
Because Gods Servants disappear so fast,
Can I, when
Gap-defenders fall asleep,
But like old
Isr'el, for my Prophets weep?
How can the naked and unguarded
Flock,
Sustain the brunt of an invading Shock?
When of its
Sh
[...]ph
[...]ras it is thus bereft,
When scarce a
Moses or a
Joshua's left,
How many active Guides, most dearly lov'd
By Me, have been in little time remov'd;
[Page 37] Scarce can I dry mine Eyes for loss of one,
But News arrives of many others gone:
If that my Head were waters, and each Eye
A well of Tears, I could distil e'm dry.
Bright Lamps extinguish't; and no other Lights
Appear to chase the horrour of our Nights!
Shook by concussions of my Foes I stand,
Whilst few are rais'd to hold my trembling hand!
It thus my
Horsemen, and
Commanders dye,
What will become of the poor
Infantry?
Who can support the bur
[...] of the Day,
When such brave
Hero's o
[...]ly drop away?
Is Summer past, or is the Harvest done?
That such presages of a Storm come on!
Sure God (as
Monarchs do) intendeth wars,
When he recalls his choice
Ambassadors.
Ah too licentious World! come, look about,
Before the Lord, the
bloody Flag puts out:
When God from
Sodom, righteous
Lot did call,
Sulphureous Flashes did consume them all.
Another ground of my prevailing fear
That
England's black
Catastrophe is near,
Is that, as in the closure of the Day,
The Evening
Wolves do range abroad to Prey:
So
Romish Beasts in monstrous Swarms do peep
From their black
Caverns, to destroy my sheep:
Such hate the
tell-tale-light, and therefore hide
Themselves in
Dens, untll the
Ev'ning tide.
Their cursed
products are resolves of Night,
Like silent Currs, that in the dark do bite.
[Page 38] Another
symptom of the days declension,
Is when the
shadows do increase dimension:
So when I look about, I plainly see
Our Ev'ning shadows very long to be.
In
Humane Bodies when the Head grows hoary,
It notes decay of Vigor, Strength and Glory.
Gray hairs are thick upon our
Ephraim's Head,
His strength decays, his Face is withered.
When joynts grow
Palsy'd, & the Blood's
congeal
Into a
Jelly, can the Man be heal'd?
When Limbs grow stiff, and feeble
Age does plo
[...]
Its wrinkled Furrows
[...] the Patients brow;
When heat gives place to a benumming cold,
When doting Fancy cares not to be told
Of its approaches to a certain
Grave;
When it rejects the Phisick that would save,
The case is desperate, for the
Patient's just
Upon the Point to be intomb
[...]d in Dust:
E
[...]n so (Alas!) this Gasping Nation lies
Under the pressure of sad
Maladies:
Tis sick at heart, yet seems a verse to take
That sacred
Physick, whose
Ingredients make
Diseases Vanish, and would ward the blow
Which will (I sear) produce its overthrow.
Ah! must our
Glory (like a brittle Glass
Reduc'd to Fractions) into
Atomes pass:
So Rude a
Chaus! an unform'd confusion:
Threatning the whole with utter dissolution.
Once
Happy Isle, I grieve at thy condition:
Where's thy
Repentance? where is thy Contrition
[Page 39] Thou hast been counted our
Emanuel's Land,
The Gospel seems on
Tip toe now to stand,
To bid thee
farewel: Must thy Sun so soon
Be
set! before it did approach to Noon!
Must that illustrious
Morning light be gone,
That spread its Beams through all our
Horizon?
Must wretched
Malice, and prodigious
Lust,
Must bare-fac'd
Pride, and impudent
Distrust,
Rob thee of this inestimable
Jewel?
How canst thou be so pittl
[...] so cruel
Unto thy self? Sin is the flaming Dart
That cuts thy Veins, and wounds thy very heart.
Can
Sion chuse but send out mournful Cries?
And weep thy downfal in sad Elegies?
Within thy Bounds my Tabernacles were
Built up, and I did long inhabit here.
Thy
Gospel-glory, and
Renown's gone forth
Into all Parts and Corners of the Earth.
Thou may'st be justly stil'd the place of Vision?
(Though made by Foes an
Object of Derision)
The joy of Saints, the
[...]otestant's delight,
The
Mark and
Bu
[...]t or
Antichristian spite.
But if the Crown be
[...]avi
[...] from thy Head,
And
Romish Clou
[...]s
[...]
[...]ustre over spread;
What heart so braw
[...]y, but thy doleful Cry
Must move to pity
[...] what re
[...]tless eye,
Can see thy fall, and not dissolve to drops?
O fleeting joys! O disappearing hopes!
O hastning horrour! O invading s
[...]ts!
Had
I a S
[...]n of
[...] empti
[...]d tears,
[Page 40] My boundless, helpless grief wide open sets
The Sluces for its streaming Rivulets.
The very Air drest in prodigious Forms,
Must groan in Thunder, and must weep in Storm
[...]
Nature, of strong Convulsions sickned is,
To see this horrid
Metamorphosis!
Where Gospel Pastors did some Millions seed,
Must blind and sottish ignorance succeed?
Must all their throats be cut that won't adore
The hateful
Carcass of a
Rotten Whore?
Must all that execrate
Rome's Superstition,
Be murder'd by a bloody
Inquistion?
Must such as won't to
Idols bow, be broke?
Must flaming
Smithfield, belch out fire and smoke
Of Martyrd Saints? must all that will not turn
(With Bibles and good Books) together burn?
Must
Monkish Torys, meer
Incarnate Devils,
Possess our
Land, and pester it with
Evils.
Of such an odious and abhorred
Grain,
That but to name 'em is a
lasting stain?
Must our Renowned Ministers give place
To
Romish Block-heads? O the vile disgrace
Of such a
Change! Must an
Adult'rous Priest
Belch out his
Mass, where they have Preached (Christ)
Must that absurd and irreligious
Tribe
Who
[...]etter
Conscienes, and regard a
Bribe
Beyond their Souls, be Leaders to our
Flocks?
Must
paultry Non sence, and those
Apish Mocks,
Mis call'd
Devotion, s
[...]l the
House of Prayer?
Must
Pestilence insect our
Purer Air.
[Page 41] Must
Sodom be translated to our
Isle,
And filthy
Priests our chastity
defile?
Must satans Factors in a humane shape,
On modest
Virgins perpetrate a
Rape?
Must all our painful
Ministers be driven
To fiery Stakes, if they renounce not
Heaven?
Must our dear
Infants lose their harmless lives
In flaming
Faggots, or with
Popish Kinves?
Must guiltless blood through all our streets rebound
A mournful Echo? must the horrid sound
Of
Axes, Whips, and dreadful Scourges tear
Our aking hearts, and pierce the yielding Air!
All this will be, if
Rome can but prevail!
Amazement stops my Speech! my Spirits fail!
I only can in
Interjections cry,
I sink in
Trances! O!
I dy! I dy!
SION'S PRAYER.
O Lord of Hosts, consider my Estate,
Let me remain no longer desolate.
Have I not been most precious in thy sight?
O do not therefore my Petition slight;
O let thy Bowels to thy Children move,
In tender token of Parental love.
Shall
Sion totter? and the Beast grow steady
In his proud Seat? hast thou not try'd already?
What some advantage, or what Gospel good,
Is to be hop'd for, from the wicked Blood?
Canst thou expect they'l serve thee better Now?
Are they mo
[...]e like to bless the World below,
Then thy poor
Sion? if their measures be
Repleted brimful of Iniquity,
Then by just for feiture, their right is gon,
To Earthly power, and Dominion,
Will these thy saving Gospel Truths preserve?
Or in pure Worship at thine Altars serve?
Will these protect the Innocent and good,
And not provoke thee with their crying blood?
[Page 71] Will they make Judgement in right channels go!
Extirpate Vice? Make Righteousness to flow
Like mighty streams? are they in Covenant
With Thee? Or wert thou ever pleass'd to grant
Them any Promises that they should wear
The Sacret badges of thy Name? and bear
The Soveraign Rule? will Fathers, and young men,
Within thy Church be priz'd and honor'd then?
Shall they not rather, by their Barb'rous hands,
Be butcher'd, for obeying thy Commands?
Will not thy Childrens Souls in danger be
Of swift Damnation, by
Rome's blasphemic?
If Laud on Earth and Praises will be given,
If Hallalujahs will be sung in Heaven,
To thy great Name, for raising
Babylon,
And bringing
Sion to destruction:
If then the Door of Grace be open'd more,
For Mens Salvation, then it was before.
If Sinners access unto the blessed
Jesus,
Be made more free; if cure of Soul Diseases
Be then more easie, then let
Sion fall.
And
Rome usurp Dominion over all.
But if in sight of thine all-seeing Eye,
Their Monstrous Crimes are of so black a Dye
[...]
If from their very springing they have been,
The vilest Wretches, and the worst of men:
If for the future they intend to be
The Perpetrators of all Villany.
If their black sins, of gross Idolatry,
Pride, horrid Mu
[...]thers, and Adultery,
[Page 72] Mount up to
Heavens great Imperial Throne,
If thy Oppression makes thy Churches groan
[...]
If they will burn thy Scriptures and suppress
All Books that treat of Gospel holiness?
If guiltless souls of every sex and age,
Will be made sacrifices to their Rage;
If they are Foes, without thy Covenants,
If they will trample on thy precious saints;
If they (because thou didst not hear and save
Thy praying
Sion, from a sinking Grave)
De
[...]de thy Glory, and blaspheme thy Name,
And put thy faithful ones to open shame.
Deu 32.26
Then hear O Lord, thou see'st my power is gone,
In thee
I trust, besides thee there is none,
That can thy
Sion, from her Foes deliver;
O draw some flaming Arrows from thy Quiver
To quell the pride of this oppressing Crew,
Thy mighty Arm alone can them subdue.
On thee
I fix an absolute Reliance,
Do thou but help,
I'll bid them all defiance.
Hear and consider, for thy Mercy sake,
On gasping
Sion some compassion take.
I have been ransom'd with the precious blood
Of thy dear
son, and fill'd with heavenly Food,
O Lord,
I pray, thy Churches sins forgive,
And In sweet concord let thy Children live;
Teach them true saving knowledge from thy word
That they may worship Thee with one accord.
Thou canst the Prostrate raise, and cure his wound
For nothing difficult for thee is found.
[Page 73] Thou knowest my grief, O Lord, incline th
[...]
[...]
Revive my hope, and chace away my fear.
In
Achors Valley open thou a Door,
And make me sweetly sing as heretofore;
I pray Thee break the Bonds of my distress,
And lead me from this dolesome Wilderness,
O let me shine like
Sots illustrate light,
And be's and Army terrible in fight.
Pull off that Vail that does thy
Sion cover,
Those clouds, O scatter that I may discover
What thou dost mean by this thy dispensation,
And what my work is in this Generation.
Its time for thee to plead thy Peoples cause,
When wicked men make void thy righteous Laws.
Thou canst destroy them with their brim-full Cup,
And lofty Cedars, by the roots pull up;
But Lord remember for to spare thy Vine,
That spreading Plant which thou hast chosen thine,
Make that to flourish and be ever green,
And full of clusters as before't has been.
From
Egypt thou hast brought it heretofore:
From thence I pray deliver it once more,
Let thine hand plant it, give it stedfast root,
That all the Land may feast upon its Fruit;
O let its Cordial Juice the Nation fill,
And let its boughs o'reshadow ev'ry Hill:
From Sea to Sea do thou her branches send,
And her, from all her Enemies defend,
Make up her Hedge, her Fence, be thou a Wall,
To keep her from the violence of all
[Page 74] Rapacious Bears, and from the greedy Boar
That would destroy it, and its fruit devour.
Lord from on high thy lovely Vine behold,
Thine own Plantation, valued more than Gold;
Canst thou deny thy helping hand the while
Wild Beasts thy Vineyard ravage thus and spoil,
I am
Christ's Spouse, his undefiled One.
Canst thou permi
[...]me to be trod upon;
[...] by thy Grace I am intitled so,
Great God relieve me, and divert my wo,
I am surrounded on all sides with pain.
O let me see thy lovely smiles again.
Thou hast withdrawn the beamings of thy grace,
And wrapt in Clouds the splendor of thy Face;
O this has caus'd such anxious grief and smart,
As tears my Soul, and rends my very heart
To tears of blood, whilst thou the glorious Sun
Of light art hid: O whether or shall
[...] run.
For Beams of comfort in this dolesome hour?
Whilst I lye delug'd in the brinish shower
More would she speak, but her great passion ties
[...] mournful tongue: the Blood-gates of her eyes
In chrystal Streams do represent an anguish,
That makes her vital operations languish.
Sank in dispairing sounds, she scarce appears
It breathe our live, but by her sighs and tears.
SION.
O Matchless Grace, and Love beyond degree!
Now
I am certain there is none like Thee,
In Heav'n or Earth, were there ten thousand more
For thou hast found a Salve for every Sore.
[Page 81]
Transported by thy Love, with joy I cry,
My Ravisht Spirit must exalt the high
And mighty Lord, by whose unbounded grace,
My hearts enlarg'd to run the blessed Race;
Thou shalt conduct me to thy Living Springs.
From thence I'll mount up, as with Eagles Wings,
Unto the Heavenly Mount of Faith's
desire,
Where I thy Grace and Glory will admire:
Then I'll descend from those
Abodes above,
To be embraced in the
Arms of love.
I'll hold thee fast, and never let thee go,
For by thy loss, O what a Depth of Wo
Did
I sustain! in what a dreadful case
Was
I, when thou didst hide thy
glorious face!
Thee having, though nought else, what have
I not?
Without thee, though all else, what have I got?
Lord having all things, and not thee, what have
I?
Let me enjoy but thee, what further crave I?
Without thee nothing is of worth to me:
All things are vile—when once compar'd to thee.
To be thy portion, Lord, thou didst me chuse,
And thou my Portion art: I'll ne're refuse
So rich a Grace: thou art my
Heritage,
Thou art a God of Love from Age to Age,
And therefore evermore I'll d well with thee,
For thou alone, my hiding place shalt be,
In time of trouble and of fury great,
I will unto thy holy Name retreat;
Which is a sure defence to all that fly
With care and speed from their iniquity.
[Page 82] When
I was down, thou list'st me up on high,
[...]nd
I thy Name will therefore magnify.
[...] Lord, with Patience
I will undergo
Their indignation, for
I well do know
I have provok't thy great and glorious Name,
Which is the cause that
I do suffer shame:
Although at present I am low and mean,
Poor and despis'd, and so long time have been;
Thou canst all Sorrows to thy
Sion bless,
I therefore in thy pleasure acquiesce;
I'll wait upon thee till thou dost arise
To break in pieces all mine Enemies:
My precious Cause then I do leave with thee,
Which thou, O Lord, wi
[...]t surely plead for me;
Thy Voice is, to my
ravisht Soul so sweet,
That I'm reviv'd, and
set upon my feet:
I'll speak thy
Praise in Songs, because I see
That
Glory near, which thou hast promis'd me.
And now thou bloody
Whore, that art my Foe,
My
tim
[...]'s at hand, which thou shalt quickly know.
My God has not forsaken me, for now
He will advance me, and make thee to bow:
Then shalt thou hide (for shame) thy filthy head,
Whilest I, in
Triumph, shall upon thee tread;
Because so long, thou hast upon me trod,
And in
Contempt hast said,
Where is thy God:
He will therefore in Right
retaliate,
And bring just
Vengeance on thy cursed
Pate.
[Page 83]
BABYLON.
POOR Sion!
thou art much mistaken:
I'm mounted high, thou art forsaken:
Sure thou art Frantick,
when thou dost
Make such a vain and groundless boast:
The final Conquest must be mine,
And swift D
[...]struction must be thine.
For all my Wounds I've got a Cure,
From all your Darts
I am secure.
I am arriv'd at height of Bliss.
My Glory
in its Zenith
is.
I am a Queen,
and shall remain
Supream on Earth,
I only reign
In glit
[...]'ring Grandeur
over all.
Great Monarchs
Me their Mistriss
call:
How can I fall, when such a Prop
Supports, as my Lord God the POPE?
All Men on Earth, his Vassals
are,
Who sits in Peter's
holy Chair:
The Empire of the World
he hath,
He keeps the Keys of Hell and Death.
Dost think he fears the little tricks
Of thy small brood of Hereticks?
He can make use (when he doth please)
Of Peter's Sword,
as well as Keys.
His Canons ro
[...]r,
as loud as Guns,
To crush thy feeble Pigmy-Sons.
[Page 84]
Let but his Bull
s give an Alarm,
Hee'll make all Christendome
to Arm
Themselves in my defence,
and work
Thine Overthrow;
didst thou not lurk
Some hundred Years,
that none could see,
Or know, what was become of thee?
He that could rend
thy force asunder,
Has still the Strength
to keep thee under;
He will thee in subjection keep,
So that thou shalt not dare to peep.
Am I not armed with the power
Of all the Earth?
I can devour
Your Int'rest
at a single Mess,
I have
fit Cooks such Meals
to dress;
Th'Imperial
and the Regal Sword
Are brandish'd when I
give the word;
Great Princes, Dukes
and Nobles will
With all their force My Mind
fulfil:
My Gentry
who brave Heroes
are,
Resolved be no pairs to spare,
Their Very Lives
they'l freely spend
To bring my purpose to an end:
My Brisk Mounsieurs,
My Spanish Dons
Will over match thy silly Sons:
My Rogue; in Grain,
I ready have,
Obedient like a Turky-Slave:
If bid to thrust their bloody Knives
In throats of Fathers, Children, Wives,
In any's
but their
[...] they'l do't,
And lay them sprawling at my Foot.
[Page 85]
I've Teagues
and Torys
at my beck,
Will wring their heads
as Chickens
Neck:
Try'd Villains! that will never start
From Mothers Womb
to tear the heart
Of Unborn Infants;
they'l D
[...]flour,
Then rip hir up in half an hour:
Faint Rogues
will melt with qualms of fears
At Fathers Groans, or Mothers tears:
But mine are void of any sense,
Not plagu'd with bawling Conscience.
To some I give no constant pay,
Yet they can bunt and live by Prey.
Your Infant, that (like Carps)
are stew'd
In their own blood, their Chops
have chew'd.
The Fathers Cawls
shall make a light
For those sweet Banquets
of the Night.
What ere my greedy S
[...]ack
craves,
But Nod, 'tis done, by ready Slaves:
They know no Scruples
nor dispute,
But act just like a Turkish Mute.
Besides all these, I could describe
Vast Musters
of my Sacred Tribe:
My Clergy
makes a num'rous Host,
That wait in Swarms
in every Coast.
Yea, ev'n in all Rebellious Regions,
I have in secret Armed Legions:
A Great Grandee
my Ensign
carries,
The Jesuits
are my Janisaries.
Thou see'st what Troops
do guard my Chair,
What canst thou do then but Despair?
[Page 86]
Thou s
[...]est me loag'd in safe abode,
Whilst thou're forsaken by thy God.
Hee's doubtless pleas'd with my behaviour,
For I alone have got his Favour.
Th' Apocalyptick Prophecy
Tou falsely do to me apply;
For I from Sin
am washed clean;
Thou art the Whore,
be there does mean:
I am the Church,
and therefore I,
Thy Threats,
thy GOD,
and Thee,
Defie.
SION.
LEave off, leave off, thou
Bloody minded Whor
[...]
Imagine not that thou shalt
Evermore
Thus
Dom
[...]neer in
Pomp and saw
[...]y Pride,
For God e're long, thy
Rulers will divide.
Those
Mighty Ones, in whom is all thy Trust,
Long shall not hold, but into pieces must
Be surely broken: thou shalt quickly see
The swift beginning of thy
Misery.
Those that did love thee most, will hate thee so,
That they will seek thy utter
Overthrow;
As was their Love, their hatred then will be,
And to destroy thee they will all agree.
Thou hast inslay'd them to thy bruitish Lust,
Whilst they (like
simple Fools) in no wise durst
Offend or cross thy base and bloody mind;
That they have been
b
[...]witcht, they then will find.
[Page 87] By thine
alluring Voice, and
lustful Eye,
To joyn with thee in black iniquity.
Thy
Flatterys shall then no more deceive;
Nor thy base
Whoredoms, Thousands more b
[...]rev
[...]
Of inward peace, and outward riches, so
As they have been, to their eternal Wo
[...]
Then shall they see thy
Villanous intent,
In setting them against the
innocent.
To Glut thy base Adulterous Desire.
Their sinful hearts were in a flaming Fire.
And through the instigation of the Devil,
Became partakers of this monstrous Evil.
But, what approaches? Hark! methinks I hear
Some
Dreadful Noise! see how the
Mountains tear
And Mighty Hills do into pieces fly;
Whilst
Lig
[...]ining flashes through the angry sky;
The
Stars and
Planets in Confusion hurl'd,
Have banisht
Natures Order from the world.
See how the melting
Orbs of heaven sweat, (heat,
Like Parchment Parcht, and shrivel'd up with
Loud
Thunder-cracks through the enraged Air,
With frightful Aspects
Meteors do appear,
To usher in the Day of heav'ns dreadire
On those, who do against the Saints conspire.
Gods (long incensed) Majesty is come
To judge the
Whore, and pass her final Doom.
Of
Treason she is under an
Attainder,
For which impartial Justice will arraign her.
Shee's seiz'd upon, and in the
Jaylors hands,
Who only waits for
Justices Commands.
[Page 88]
Jehovah bids, that
Babylon the great
Be forthwith brought before his
Judgment Seat.
JUSTICE:
MOst Soveraign Lord, who is it dares gain-say
What thou command'st? I must & will obey,
[...]o here I bring the
Scarlet Strumpet forth
Before the who createdst
Heav'n and Earth:
Thy
Judgement Seat she seems to slight and scorn,
Says she's as
guiltless as the Child unborn.
JEHOVAH.
H
Er Crimes lay open, and her Facts declare,
Turn up her Skirts and let her Faults appear:
Let th'Universe by her Indictment
see
The Cause of my most just Severity.
JUSTICE.
DRead
Sov'raign of the World! I will proceed,
And will her black
Indictment loudly read.
Come forth
great Whore! & hear your dismal charge
Which shall by proofs be evidenc'd at large.
By th'Name of
BABYLON, thou'rt hither cited,
And by the Name of
Whore, thou stand'st Indicted.
[Page 89] Thou void of
Grace, and Gods most
[...]oly Fear,
To
[...]atans Mach
[...]ations d
[...]st adhere;
With him to p
[...]ot against thy Sov'e
[...]gn Prince,
To whom thou oug
[...]' toy
[...] Pr
[...]h
[...]m
[...]n
[...]nce.
In
[...]
[...] was thine o
[...]ly
[...]
(O
[...] Holy Law no
B
[...]g
[...] a
[...]ows)
Yet thou hast him pe
[...]f
[...]iously fo
[...]look,
And to thy self another H
[...]band took;
And with a graceless
Impude
[...]c
[...] ar
[...]
[...]
By thy l
[...]wd
[...]rain to an
[...]
[...].
Thou hast d
[...]thron'd him and thy
B
[...]az
[...]n face
Sets up a monstrous Trai
[...]or in his place,
To whom thou hast Blasphemous T
[...]tle
[...] given,
Exalting him above the God of Heaven.
Thou hast not only play'd th'
A
[...]ulteress,
B
[...]t pl
[...]in
Ia
[...]latry thou d
[...] pro
[...]ess;
O
[...]
Treason,
[...]ur
[...]er, Th
[...]t, (
[...]horred things!
O
[...] burning Cities, poysoning of Kings,
Of undermining States, and furthermore,
Of spoiling
[...]rade, and making Kingdoms poor;
Of hor
[...]id Plots, of causeless bloody Wars,
And of contriving cruel
Massacres
Thou guilty art; thy bloody Rage has hurl'd
Millions of Innocents out of the World:
Prodigious Numbers have in divers Lands
Been Sacrific'd by thy blood-thirst
[...] hands,
Insatia
[...]e
B
[...]cheries that know n
[...] end!
Thou flab
[...]'st men when thou Pity didst pretend.
In times of
Peace thy horrid rage has shed
Blood without Measure, thou hast murtuered.
[Page 90]
(Perfidious Wretch!) thy nearest Neighbours when
They thought themselves
the most secure of men,
Thou hast made
Currents of their guiltless
blood
To run like Waters of a mighty Blood;
So void of Pity, your inhumane Rage
Destroy'd the
Saints, and spar'd no Sex nor Age.
Speak
Bloody Whore, hold up thy
Graceless Head,
Guilty or Not? By Law thou art to Plead.
BABYLON.
Look down, Blest Virgin!
and bid Justice
stay:
Speak to thy Son
to drive my Foes
away:
You Glorious Saints, who near St. Mary
stand,
In my distress, lend me your helping hand.
All Angels,
and Arch-Angles
I invoke,
To strengthen me, and to divert the stroke:
These Hereticks
will work my Overthrow,
I am amaz'd, I know not what to do!
BRLZEBUB.
WHat needs my
Darling thus to stand and pause
Thou know'st the Custom of out
Romish Laws,
Though black as Hell, yet be not so forlorn;
Swear, that thou'
[...]t
guiltless, as the Cild unborn.
What Violence to
Hereticks you do,
Is lawful, honest, and your Duty too.
[Page 91]
JUSTICE
PLead
Vile Delinquent! or thou shalt receive
The
Fatal Sentence which I am to give.
BABTLON
I
Do affirm the Charge is false,
and I
All Points of this Indictment
do deny.
Produce your Proofs, I'll stand in just defence
Of my apparent, spothss Innocence.
JUSTICE.
THat like a
Harlot, of thine own accord,
[...]h
[...]u hast forsaken thine Espoused Lord,
Will be made evident (to thy disgrace)
By clear
probation in its proper place.
You say, that you your God can daily make,
Which is an Idol of a
Wafer c
[...]e.
If thou dost
Shrines, and
Images adore,
And prov'd to be th'
Apocalyptick Whore;
If thou upon the
Scarlet Beast doth sit,
And Lewdness with so many Kings commit;
It clearly follows from these
Marks, that thou
Art a meer
strumpet, and hast broke thy Vow.
[Page 92] If thou art by the
Papal Edicts led,
Disowning Christ, and making
that thy Head:
The consequence is clear, for thou must be
Guilty of
Whoredome and
Idolatry.
And to examine thy notorious Deeds:
This great
Tribunal out of hand proceeds:
Call in the Witnesses—
-
Waldenses.
-
Albig
[...]nses.
- Protestants of
Piedmont.
-
Savoy, &c.
D
Read Lord! we're here,
And with our just
Complaints do now appear.
That bloody
Whore, the Pris'ner at the Bar,
Has follow'd us with a perpetual War,
Because we would not to her
Idols bow,
Nor her curs'd
Edicts and base pranks allow.
About the dismal year of
Fifty five,
A dreadful
Massacre she did contrive
Within the Territories of
Savoy,
Where thirty thousand Souls she did destroy
In three days time curs'd
Edicts bid them turn
To
Popery, or they must hang or burn.
Which when those
Innocents refus'd to do,
Most horrid Execution did ensue;
Our Brethrens Brains out of their heads were beaten
And by her Imps were fry'd and after eaten:
[Page 93] Our Children rent to pieces, thrown to Dogs,
And our dear Pastors flung (as Meat) to Hogs;
Others on Pikes into the Air were tost,
An
[...] many others they alive did roast;
Some
[...]y'd with Ropes they piere'd unto the hearts,
And hung up others by their
Secret parts.
Houses and Barnfulls they have burnt, so that
Our Suff'rings are beyond an Estimate.
-
Bohemia.
-
Germany.
-
Poland.
-
Lithuania, &c.
TO satisfie this cruel
Strumpets Lust,
Some thousands have been turned unto du
[...]
Our Towns and famous Cities of Renown
She hath dis-peopled, burnt or broken down:
The Ruins still appear, and desolations
In many places of our
spoiled Nations.
Great Multitudes un numbred were our Slain
Which in the Field unburied did remain:
Our Brethren they have hung upon a Beam
And then consum'd them in a lingring flame.
Some she has into boyling Cauldrons put,
And many others into pieces cut,
Without respect unto the
Hoary Head,
Into their Throats they pour'd down melted
Lead;
And many other deaths she did contrive:
Some burned were, and others flead alive.
[Page 94] into deep Mines, three thousand Souls and more,
At several times were tumbled by this
whore,
Because they would not their
Religion leave,
And unto
Romish Superstitions cleave,
That worthy Man
John Hu
[...]s, was burn'd to death,
For owning of the
Apostolick Faith;
Ferom of Prague to fill her Measure up,
She made, soon after, drink of the same cup,
'I were endless to enumerate our grief;
From thee,
just Judge, we do expect Relief.
FRANCE.
AH! How shall I my inward grief disclose!
What
Tongue is able to recount my woes?
Prodigious Numbers of my
Natives have,
By this
whores means, sound an untimely Grave.
The barb'rous
Harlot would not be content,
To kill or drive them into Banishment,
But with unheard of Cruelties she must
Their Bodies mangle, to asswage her Lust;
Some hang'd in Water, yield their strangled
breath;
Some brain'd on
Anvils, some were
starv'd to death;
Some hall'd with
Pullies, till the top they meet
With heavy weights and loads upon their feet.
Rap's Maidens
[...]ab'd, poor in ants yet unborn,
From Mothers wombs by
blooay hands mere torn
How many thousand guiltless Christians were
Butcher'd in the
Parisian Massacre?
[Page 95] Some broke on
Crosses, some were cut in twain,
Whilst others languish in a lingring pain,
Our worthy Kings have lost their Noble Lives
By
Jesuits Poysons, and by
Monkish Knives.
I can produce an uncontrolld Record
Of many Thousands Murder'd by the Sword.
It would require whole Volumes to transcribe
The bloody acts of this Infernal Tribe.
Deep dolour hinders what I would say more!
O glorious Judge! avenge me on this
Whore.
- Italy,
- Spain,
- Portugal,
- Low Countrys, &c.
REnowned Judge! those witnesses that have
Their Grief presented & do
Judgment crave,
Save us much labour, sor we heretofore
Have felt the same, from this blood-thirsty Whore.
Besides, being next her Seat, and near her power,
Her greedy Jaws our Brethren did devour
With cruel Spite, and without intermission,
We have been tortur'd with her Inquisition.
No Tongue can speak the unexampled terror
Of that curst Pattern of Infernal horrour.
They count it mild, when they our Persons burn,
And wives and children into ashes turn;
They say they'r
courteous when our
throats they cut
Or when in
Dungeons (vile as
H
[...]ll) we're put.
[Page 96] They say they favour us, when they employ
Their Daggers, Pistols, A
[...]es to destroy.
In
[...]in
[...]ting flames they did our Brethren roast,
On Ha berts tops we saw our Insants tost:
All this we've suffer'd, and a thousand more,
And that by means of this Infernal Whore.
IRELAND.
Could deepest grief receive Additions, I
Wou
[...]d give examples of
[...]er Cruelty.
I can her in more mon
[...]trous colou
[...]s draw,
T
[...]an bloody
Nero, o, C
[...]ula.
Th
[...]e horrid
[...]ortures which my Brethren say
She exer
[...]s'd on them, the
[...]am I may
Affirm t'have suffer'd, by the in
[...]tigation
Of this vile S
[...]rumpet, who
[...]e abomination
Stinks in the Nostrils' of each civil Nation.
Her cur
[...]ed Priests, when first they did begin
Our Mass cre
[...]proc
[...]aim'd it was a sin
Unpardon
[...]ble, if they durst to give
Quarter, or our necessities relieve;
Some they stript naked, then they bid them go
Through Bogs & Mountains, in the Frost & Snow.
Men, W
[...]m n, Children, then were butchered,
And all that spoke our Language punished;
The very Cattle, if of
English breed,
They
[...]li
[...]t and mangled, that they could not seed.
With joy, that
Romish, and rebellious Brood
Have wash't their hands in Martyr'd
English blood.
[Page 97] Thousands of naked Protestants that fled
From these
Barbarians have been famished.
Their faithless Gentry, that pretended love;
Perswaded th'
English that they would remove
Their Goods to them; Yet (once possession got)
They (like persidious wretches) cut their Throat.
Numbers of naked Women they did drive
Into a Barn, and burnt them all alive.
Each Sex and Age, that could not from them fly,
Did by these Blood ho
[...]nds, without mercy die.
Once at the fatal Bridge of
Portladown,
A thousand Souls these Mil
[...]reants did drown;
A couple (with five Children) first they hung,
And in a Hole th'expi
[...]ing bodies slung;
The youngest on the Mothers breast d
[...]d stick,
Cries,
Mammy, Mammy, yet is buried quick.
Some hack to pieces, travailing Women strip, d,
And half born infants from their bellies rip'd!
Which (with their Mothers)
[...]ungry Dogs did eat
And Swine sed on them, as on common meat.
When some poor Souls in burning houses cry,
The V
[...]llains said,
How sweetly do they fry!
When holy Scripture in the flames did cast,
They cry,
Tis Hell-fire, and a lovely blast;
That blessed Book, when some have trampled on,
They cry,
Plague on't that has the mischief done.
They made poor Wives, their Husbands blood to spill
And trembling Youths, their aged Parents kill.
They forc'd the Son to stab his D
[...]arest Mother,
And then one Brother to destroy the other.
[Page 98] Some they put fast in Stocks, then teach a Brat
To rip them, and make Candles of their Fat.
How many Virgins did they Ravish first?
Then with their Hearts-blood quench their eager thirst
[...]
Some they did bury just unto the head,
And left them on surrounding Grass to feed.
Stuck fast on Ten
[...]er-hooks; grave Matrons were;
And Virgins hang'd up in their Mothers hair.
Some, with their small Guts, forced were to run
About a Tree, until their Life was gone.
The Mouths of godly Ministers they cut
Unto their Ears; betwixt their Jaws they put
A monstrous Gag, then with a Romish scoff
They bid them
Preach, their mouthes were large enough.
In these furies brag'd, (that to their joy)
They did two hundred thousand Souls destroy,
We therefore pray, as others did before,
For a just Sentence on this bloody Whore.
SCOTLAND:
O Monstrous horror! Oh abhorred sink
Of Villany! O bloody Throats that drink
The Bloods of Innocents! which ost they quaft
As freely as a common Mornings Draught!
Thousands of mine were butcher'd by this Whore;
In that poor Nation, that has spoke before:
The sufferings of my guiltless Natives, were
Equal with theirs in every tittle there.
[Page 99]
[...]et this blood thirsty Curtezan of
Rome,
[...]as not content, but tortur'd me at home,
[...]ome burnt, some hang'd, some scourg'd, some banished,
[...]ome drown'd, and some in Dungeons murdered,
[...] sinking G
[...]et forbics me to inlarge,
[...]r e
[...]e with ease l'd aggravate
[...]e cha
[...]ge.
Since Gospel light did in my Borders shine,
[...]he thirsted to destroy both me and mine.
[...]er lmps all parts, like filthy Locusts fill.
And such as they cannot delude, they kill,
Her Wolves put on the habit of my Sheep,
And in their Folds destroy them as they sleep.
They have an art to work upon the weak.
That they Gods Order should in pieces break,
Under pretences of reform'd Devotion,
They instigate the Rabble to Commotion;
That in those troubled Waters they may fish,
And bring about their long expected w
[...]sh.
Their cursed Politicks have been employ'd,
To ruin those that they have so decay'd
[...]
A thousand Forgeries they do invent,
To charge their Plots upon the innocent,
That (whilst they act the Rogues in Masquerade)
Poor guiltless Saints the Victims may be made.
Thus have I open'd something of my Grief,
And from the Judge expect a quick relief.
[Page 100]
ENGLAND.
HAD I as many Tongues at my commands,
As
Argus Eyes,
Briareus Hands;
I fearce could in a Century express
One half of my unspeakable distress!
In every Age I had some Sons of Light.
That would discover
Romes Egyptian Night;
Yet they no sooner on the Stage appear,
But that her Setting Dogs, like Blood hounds, were
Upon the scent, and never left pursuit,
Until to death they did them persecute,
My Royal Edicts this bold Whore has broke,
And on my neck clapt her Tyranick yoke.
Vast Treasures from my Natives were extorted,
And to inrich her Exchequer transported.
Prodigious Sums she yearly squeezed hence,
For Pardons, Obits, Annales, Peter-pence.
And though each Land where she her triumphs led
Whose swarms of Locusts, Priests and Friers were
[...]ed.
These (as the
Fanizaries to the
Turk)
Were faithful Slaves still to promote her work:
Whilst to maintain these Drones, she swept away
The Fat and Wealth of Nations for their prey.
Such as would not be by her Witch craft led
Were tortur'd, murther'd, burnt or Massacred.
The Papal Beast could in a Frolick tell,
I was his Fountain inexhaustible.
[Page 101]
[...]he planted Priests, and Ganimedes she rooted,
Within my Bowels, which the Land polluted;
With such a pest of vile Debaucheries,
As Pagans, Turks, and Infields outvies.
She crushes any that her Acts opposes;
My Kings she Poisons, Murders or Deposes.
Some she deludes her Sov'raignty to own,
And does instruct them to betray the Crown.
Her lurking lmps do menace me with storms,
Like
Egypts Frogs in pestilential swarms.
She is so greedy nothing will suffice,
Unless I'm more a general Sacrifice.
Tis known to all the Earth, how many ways
She martyr'd Protestants in
Marian dayes.
Then was I made a dismal Field of Blood,
Which ran like currents of a swelling flood.
She stirs the
Spaniard in a great bravado.
For to invade me with his proud
Armado.
The hellish
powder Treason she prepares,
At once to blow up Commons, Kings and Peers.
Her hellish Brands (without a spark of pitty)
Consum'd to ashes my Imperial City.
Nought but my Ruine her can satiate,
My Justices she does assa
[...]sinate.
For many years she has been carrying on
A damn d intreague for my Destruction.
And all the wayes that Satan prompts her to
Contrive my fall, she's ready still to do.
Her spite and malice nothing will abate,
Its still more deadly and inveterate.
[Page 102] Dread Providence shall ever have my thanks;
That has discover'd her infernal pranks;
Yet I am still in danger, and therefore
Do b
[...]g just sentence on this bloody Whore,
The Evidence Summed up.
O Gulph of horror! O profound Ab
[...]ss!
Was ever mischief half so black as this!
Thou monstrous Whore, what language can express
The boundless measure of thy wickedness.
Throughout the Earth thou hast such mischie
[...] wrought
As is amazing to a humane thought.
It would compel a heart of stone to melt,
When it revolves what
Protestants have felt.
Thy bloody fury and infernal rage,
Has persecuted them in every age.
Thou m
[...]d'st the Magistrates their Enemies,
And all the tortures which thou could'st devise,
Thou didst inflict as testimony shows,
Some thou didst hang by the Head, some by the Toes,
Some Millions thou didst burn and broil on Coals,
And others starve to death in stinking holes.
Some thou didst cut to pieces very small,
And Infants Brains didst dash against the wall.
Upon their bodies thou didst tread like dung,
Thou hadst no mercy upon old or young.
By thy curs'd crew were Women ravished,
Who then (like Butchers) knockt them on the head.
[Page 103] Some had their Eyes and Tongues by thee pull'd out
Some were made harborless, and forc'd about
To wander, till in Woods and dismal Caves
They found their wosul and untimely Graves.
What rocky heart but justly may admire
Thy rage, that made poor Children to set fire
To fatal piles in which their Parents dear
In cruel
[...]lames consum'd to ashes were.
Thy wicked Agents have some Millions slain,
Who did endure the most inhumane pain,
Thy Bishops, Monks, and Fryers could devise.
Whose blood to me for speedy Vengeance cries.
The wayes thou took'st to run a Soul from error
Was unexampled flesh-amazing terror
Of horrid R
[...]cks whereon a Man must lie,
Tortur'd to death, and dying cannot die.
Accursed wretch, didst thou not give Commission
For to erect thy bloody Inquisition?
That loathsome Dungeon and most ghastly Cell,
A place of horror representing Hell,
Where nothing is so plentiful as tears,
Where Martyr'd Protestants can find no ears
To hear their cries and lamentable moans,
Nor hearts to pity their extorted groans;
Where Saints in
Torments all their dayes must spend
Not knowing when their suff'rings will have end.
Thousands by thee were in
Bohemia slain.
Whose Carkassos unburied did remain.
Thou madest thy
Vassals fall upon that Nation,
On no less penalty than their Damnation.
[Page 104] Didst thou
[...]ot promise upon that condition
To give them full and absolute remission,
The vilest wretch that on the Earth has stood,
You
[...]ully pardon'd, if hee'd shed the blood
Of one
Bohemian; O stupendous rage!
Not to be parallel'd in any age,
But by thy self, 'twas judg'd
De Alva's Crime
That he destroy'd no more in six years time
Then eighteen thousand Souls; were they so few
In the account of this blood-thirsty crew!
But if the Wretch (
De Alva's) bloody bill
Come short in numbers, yet his hand did fill
It up with torments; dreadful to rehearse,
The very mention cannot chuse but pierce
A M
[...]rble heart, make
[...]nfidels relent,
Torments that none but Devils could invent,
But it all this was over little still,
His Predecess
[...]rs did enlarge the Bill;
For from the time thy hellish
Inquisition
Did from the Devil first receive Commission;
[...]y cruel torments (which they still retain)
There were a hundred fifty thousand slain,
From that black Season when the hellish rage
Of
Jesuits acted on th'
European Stage.
In
England, France, in
Italy and
Spain,
By thy accursed bloody hands were slain
Nine hundred thousand Souls, or thereabout,
(E're many years had run their
circuits out)
O
[...] poor
Americans by cruel
Spain
In fifty years were many
Missions slain.
[Page 105] The poor
Waldenses whose enlighted eye
Thy filthy Whoredoms quickly did espy.
Thou hast with raging Persecutions rent
And murder'd Parents with their innocent
And harmless Babes, thy more than barb'rous crew
Their cursed hands did in their blood imbrue;
At once were eighty Infants famished,
And many thousands basely Murthered.
When some have fled unto obscurest Caves,
Thy Villains made their hiding place their Graves.
What part of
Europe now can make their boast,
And say they have not tasted (to their cost)
Of thy malignity? What shall I say
Of
Germany, whose Martyr'd Spirits pray
For speedy Vengeance on thy cursed head?
That Sea of blood thou hast in
Ireland shed,
C
[...]ies night and day for Justice; now I fix
My serious thoughts upon black sixty six,
Thou bloody Strumpet, how canst thou repair
The loss of
England's great Imperial Chair,
How many rich men were to Beggars turn'd,
When that brave
[...]sles Metropolis was burn'd
By thy accursed lmps, Fire-brands of Hell,
Inc
[...]rnate Devils without parallel.
Brave Merchants of their great Estates be
[...]est,
To day Rich Men, tomorrow nothing left;
Their Wives and Children h
[...]rbourless became,
Their Substance all consumed in the flame.
But to conclude, I have not yet forgot
Thy Powder-Treason, nor thy Modern Plot:
[Page 106] Nor all thy dismal Villanies that were
Done
[...]n the
Marinaolian Massacre.
Should I but recapitulate thy charge,
And speak of all thy Rogueries at large
'Twould fill vast Volumes; Often did I see
The Lord of Life was Crucisy'd by thee
When his dear Members blood by thee was shed,
Millions unnumbred
[...]afely Murthered.
Yet still thou hast the impudence to say
That thou art innocent unto this day.
Thou shameless Courtezan, didst thou not run
With filthy Panders, and renounc'd the Son
Of Glory, this did thine Espousals break;
Canst thou deny it, shameless Strumpet, speak.
BABYLON.
I Am the Mother Church, and hence deny
That filthy Name I am Indicted by.
The odious Epithets of
Scarlet whore,
Is daily laid unjustly at my door.
I am Christs Church, his Spouse, and only Love,
His undefiled one and spotless Dove.
Pray then forbear the Sentence, look about
To find that Whore and Grand Delinquent out.
Bold Hereticks, who never would adhere,
To the true Faith and Apostolick Chair.
Have born my just rebukes, some more, some less,
As was their Pride, Rebellion, Wickedness.
[Page 107]
JUDGE.
THOU graceless Wretch, thou art b
[...]rest of shame
How durst thou thus deny thy proper Name.
Christ's Church, his Members never did annoy,
Nor persecute, and Millions thus destroy.
'Tis to no purpose for thee to dispute,
For all thy Forgeries I can confute.
I am thy Judge, and never will pass by
Thy horrid Acts, and bloody Villany.
The time's at hand when I'll fulfil my word,
And in just fury draw my glittering sword:
My frown shall make thy proud foundation quake;
And all the Pillars of thy House I'll shake.
Dost think because
I did forbear so long,
That
I'll revenge not my dear Childrens wrong.
What
I resolve to do or will command,
No Pope nor Devil can the same withstand.
He that presum'd great Monarchs to depose.
Shall soon be tumbled down by some of those
Whom he so crusht; from Hell he did ascend,
And thither shall be slung down in the end.
He'll surely fall and never rise again;
The hope thou hast of him is th re
[...]ore vain.
There's no recalling of the Sentence gone,
Thy Execution day approaches on;
Thy Pardon-Merchants then shall cry and bowl
And thy Destruction (in this sort) condole.
[Page 103] 'Illustrious City thou were great and sair,
'Most brave and sumptuous, ev'n beyond compare.
'Alas! how quickly are thy Judgements come,
'
Thy fall, thy ruine, and thy final Doom.
'Our Trade is gone, our gainful Merchandize
'Is lost, and no Man does regard our cries.
'O sad Destruction! we are all undone,
'What shall we do, or whither shall we run?
'O that the Mountains and the Hills would cover
'Ils, till the Vengeance of the Lord be over!
TRUTH.
MOst glorious Judge, since this bold Whore denies
Her filthy lewdness, and Adulteries,
Let me but prove it, and proclaim her shame,
'Tis known that
[...] a faithful Witness am.
It has been Evidenc'd by vision clear
That some strange Monster should on earth appear;
Which by imperfect views did first amaze
Sagacious minds when they on it did gaze;
W
[...]ich made mens Judgments to divide asunder
To see an Object of unusual wonder:
A Woman! City! and a Scarlet Whore!
The like on Earth was never seen before.
A Woman in her pompous glory drest,
And sitting on a Monstrous horned Beast,
Who is decypher'd by prodigious things;
His
ve! Horns (explain'd) are Crowned Kings.
[Page 109] And then this mighty wonder to compleat,
She's placed on a Seven hilled Seat;
She's stil
[...]d a Woman, and a Whore, because
She once submitted to Enacted Laws,
As other Women do, when they do wed
A
Husband, and enjoy a Marriage Bed.
And who this Woman is, shall now be known,
Her proper Title is (
Great Babylon:)
Who in great Pomp and Royal State doth ride,
Excelling haughty
Jezebel in Pride:
Who in our modern times hath boasting been,
That she rules all men as a mighty Queen,
Trampling on Kings and Crowned Potentates,
Commanding Kingdoms, Common Wealths, and States,
Requiring Subjects blindly to obey,
Pressing the Beast, and
Horns to kill and
[...]lay
At such a rate, as that all Christendome
Like Butchers bloody Shambles are become.
If by this Mark she is not understood,
Neither by Garb, Beast, Actions, or by Blood,
To other wayes of proof I'll quickly come
And shew this Whore to be the Church of
Rome.
The Woman which th' Apostle
John beheld
Array'd in
Purple, and in
Pompupheld
By that Blasphemous, Scarlet colour'd Beast
That was with Gold and Stones of value drest;
Holding a Cup full of
Abominations,
And black pollutions of her Fornications;
That with great Kings
Adultery commits,
And on a Sev'n hill'd
Habitation sits,
[Page 110]
Re. 17. 18
The holy Angel of the Lord explains
That 'tis that City which so proudly Reigns
Over the Kings of th'Earth; but all these Notes,
And what besides the blessed Spirit quotes,
With
Papal Rome exactly do agree,
She therefore must this bloody Strumpet be.
If all the Marks that of this Whore are given
Will not meet any where so plain and even
As on the Church and People
I did name,
Then certainly she is the very same;
First, then 'tis evident that there is none
May be so fi
[...]ly stilled
Babylon.
Was
Babylon a People of Renown
To that same height the Church of
Rome is grown,
Had
Babylon a great and peerless King?
This Church can shew an
Image of that thing:
Did
Babylon poor
Israel invade?
This Church on
Sion the same invades made.
Did
Babylon make
Salem desolate?
This hath brought
Sion near to that estate.
Did
Babylon make Prophets drink their Tears,
Shake Kingdoms, and fill Peoples hearts with fears?
This Church hath done so; yea, and far out done
Her Arch-type and so beyond her run.
Did
Babylon the Prophets bear away
Into Captivity, and make a prey
Of all the treasure that her hand could find?
This Papal Church is not a whit behind.
On th'a blest guides she laid her hellish hands,
Confining them to Prison under Bands;
[Page 111] As if 'twere not enough for her to do,
She seiz'd their persons, and their substance too.
Did
Babylon Gods Worship over throw,
Set up anldel, and command to bow?
This Church hath done the same, yea, and much more,
Fill'd heaped Measure, and much ru
[...]n
[...]ng o're.
'Twas she that took the Word of God away,
And by a string of Beads taught Men to pray.
She rob'd the Laiety of the blessed Cup,
And spoil'd the Feast where Children come to Sup,
At the Lords Table where they us'd to mind
The blessed things the
[...]r Saviour le
[...]t behind.
She did set up her Superstitious Mass,
As rank an Idol as yet ever was,
Commanding adoration to be given
Of equal honour with the God of Heaven;
Imposing Vows, unwarranted Traditions,
Implicit Faith, and thousand Superstitions,
Pretended Miracles, apparent Lies,
Damnabl
[...] Errors, and
[...]ond Fopperies;
She clogs the Conscience, and to make all well,
Boasts all her Dictates are infallible.
Did
Babylon the burning work begin?
Make a hot Furnace? Thrust Gods Worthies in?
This Church herein hath driven such a Trade,
That thousands, broiling Martyrs she hath made,
She sets the Pope above the holy one,
The great
Jehova
[...] and his blessed Son.
Tis she declares him Universal Head,
Tis she forbids the
Bible to be read.
[Page 112] 'Tis she that first did from the Faith depart,
'Tis she that wounded
Sion to the heart:
'Tis she hath been the occasion of all evil,
Tis she advanc'd the Doctrine of the Devil.
'Tis she that taught her Sons to Swear and Lie,
To vouch great Falshoods, and plain Truths deny.
'Tis she that did
[...]orbid the Marriage Bed,
Whilst her vile Clergy such ill lives have led.
Was it not she that Canon did create.
Commanding plainly to abstain from Meat,
Which God gave licence unto all to eat.
If from this charge she can her self defend,
Then may she make the Judge and Law her friend:
Or if she can produce another tribe,
To whom we may this Character ascribe;
With greater clearness than we do to her,
We will consent her Sentence to defer.
JUDGE.
Rome, since thou canst not make a fair defence,
And shew to all the World thine innocence.
'Tis very eviden
[...] that all these things,
Have been fulfill'd on Kingdoms and their Kings
And now is there no other People be,
That did the like, then thou alone art she.
Let thy denials trouble men no more,
Thou only art the bloody Scarlet Whore.
Therefore in Justice
[...] at length am come,
(Being long
[...]ovok't) to pass thy final doom.