To the rea­der.

HE, that generallie readeth the histories, not oneli of the old auncient Philosophers but also of al writers in these daies, shal easely perceiue and vnderstand, that the most hard and difficill thīge of al other is, for any mortal man to wythstande the inuincible force of nature, who as we see dayly endeuo­reth her selfe to the verye houre of death, to ouercome mans witte, rea­son and force. For althogh we be encouraged earnestlye, by our master and sauyoure Chryst, with the hope of perpetuall pleasures, and the per­fyte beliefe of euerlastinge lyfe, to leaue these vayne, folyshe and most vncerteine desiers or delectacions of thys most wretched world, and bol­dely, without feare, to passe through the ports of death, out of this vile, [Page] caducke,If nature be of such strength, neuer thinke that Spaniardes can chāg their vile nature. and most transytorye life: yet ye see, that nature is of such a mightie power, in her moste ouer­thwart operacions, that al manlines, all force, strength, power, riches, ho­nor, wisdome, and knowledge not with standing, she compelleth all mē generallye to feare death, to resiste death and to flye from that porte, throug [...] the whiche we should passe to euerlasting life, and eternall felicite. I meane that like as nature force­ably compelleth vs, contrarye to all reason, to resiste death, for the vtter moste of oure power, when by no meanes we can escape or flie from it: Euen so nature cōpelleth me, being an Englishe mā, for the natural loue which I beare towardes my coun­trye, to take vpon me contrary to al wisedome, if I would seke mine own priuate safetye, to declare the nature of spaniardes, ct discouer their most vile, and detestable treasons, whiche by no meanes I can deuise to expres [Page] plaīly, or to bryng to any perfect end and good order, because their moste cursed condicions be so vncerteyne and notable. But although I can not expresse my maters, either wittelye, eloquently or learnedlye, yet I shall desier thee, moste gētile reader: al rethoricall writinge, and eloquent stile layde a parte, to haue an earnest res­pecte to the perfecte grounde of the matter: whiche is either the preserua­cion, or destruction of the whole realme. The preseruaciō of the land, if all Englishe men wil loue charitably, faithfully, truly, and Iustly toge­ther, and euery one from the hyghest degree, to the loweste, seke, as we ar most bounden, stoutly, boldelye and iustly, to defende his natiue countri, and without feare manfully to wyth stande, and resist the fallible force, of our enemyes. The destructiō of our most noble kingedome, if one part of our nobilite and commons doe resist another, and treaterousli receaue our enemyes, assist them, aide them, [Page] or maintaine them:In Ant­werpe ther was at one tīe aboue xvii M. pounde of Englishe re [...]ones & grotes of good siluer, melted & newe stamped to mayntaīe your enemies. if ye suffer them to carye youre treasure oute of the lande, as they haue done very muche lately: if ye permit them to inhabite or plant themselues strongly with­in youre coastes, holdes, or hauen [...]ownes: if ye beleue false promyses: if ye wil be disceaued wyth greate giftes, or beggerly bribes: if any ambicion blinde your eies. And finally if there fall amongest Englishe men dissension, strife, treason, sedicion or rebellion: the whole realme shal­be destroyed, and all englyshe men brought to perpetuall bondage and slauery: yea the first, chefe, and prin­cipall workers of these mischeffes, how many so euer they be, shall be brought to the most shameful death as thou maiest plainly perceiue in reding this letter that foloweth. In the first parte of the whiche letter, thou shalt finde suche examples, as if thou diligentlye peruse and folowe, ac­cording to my exhortacion and doctrine, [Page] thou shalt finde out easely a million and moe mischeues touchynge the vile nature of Spaniardes, then I haue plainly expressed in writinge: In the seconde part I haue discouered suche treasons, as I founde written in their letters. And I declare theyr wordes, whereby thou mayest plainly perceaue, to what purpose al their flattering promises, craftye polices, great giftes and large bribes, be pretēted: and how it appeareth playn­ly, by their own wordes and letters, that they pretende none other thing but only to bryng our countrye vnder their subiectiō, & then to bring all our nobilitie to their vtter confusion and destruction. T [...]rdlye I haue showed the orders of tie kīgs courte, the maner of Spaniardes lyuing, how they purpose to appointe vs a viceroye, and how vilie he shal vse the Quenes maiestye, and al the whole realme afterwardes. Laste of all I haue showed thee what vilany, [Page] shame and dishonor they haue reported by the Quenes highnes and her honorable Ladies, what honor Lon­dōe hath wonne in punishing vice, and exhorted all men to kepe loue, quietnesse,Folowe this coū ­sell. peace, and tranquillite, a­mongest themselues, and when ne­cessite compelleth them, to take all wholly one perfect way, in defendīg their countrye, & withstanding their enemyes: whiche exhortacion if englishe men will obserue, and kepe, puttyng their whole trust in oure Saui­oure Christ, he will vndoubtedlye, defende them, that they may be sure to liue quietly in their coūtry, wyth­out feare of the malice or cruell ty­rannye of all nacions. One thinge I haue thought necessary to admonish the in, good reder, because I am but yonge, and a seruyng man, continuallye brought vp in seruice, without all knowledge, or learnyng, and am at this present among Spaniardes, where I can haue the aduise of no lerned [Page] man, as thou maiest perceiue by the vnsauery telling of my tale, and the rude stile of this my inordinate letter to place my worke in order, a­dorne my matter with apte wordes, or fine eloquent frases of rhetorike: that thou nother reproue my work, thoughe there be many barbarycke wordes, and folishe frases, ignorant­lie placed, out of time or good order Nor thinke me parciall because I speake alwaies of Spaniardes vyces, without reciting any vertues: Nor yet be not offended wyth any folishe reasons, which I according to my cō science haue made concernynge our religion. But rather thynke trulye, that the naturall loue, which I beare [...]o my natyue country, consyderyng all these eminent mischefes, whyche [...]e at hande, and the detestable trea­ [...]ons, whiche at this present be wor­ [...]ing for your destruction, cōpelled [...]e to sende ouer this rude letter ha­tely, without correcting or amēdīg it [Page] and plainly, without dissimulacyon▪ to discouer such treasons, as I knew, and geue englyshmen warninge spedely, lest I should haue come to late, when the matter had been past remedy. I thought it not nedeful to write of their vertues, because they sette out al their vertue to the vttermost themselues, when they were laste in Englande, so that euery mā knoweth it perfectly: but to showe their hidde vices and treasons, whiche few men did vnderstande. And for religion, I wil not in suche posting spede take vpon me to teache ani doctrine, knowing mine own ignoraunce, though I haue shewed my rude reasons, but therin wil submitte my selfe to the correccion of those, which be perfectly learned in scripture, confessing this worke not to bee made, to confirme [...] any doctrine, most humbly besechīg thee, although many men bee of dyuerse and sundrye iudgementes, to iudge the best of this my rude letter [Page] [...]o pardon myne ignorauncye,For the defence of our na [...]iue coū trye. & to [...]pplye my worke, and thy selfe also to the same good purpose that I doe ordaine it vnto, and to accept it gē [...]ly, with as good a will, as I haue dy­ [...]ected it to thee. VVhereby thou maiest encourage me, to take other matters in hand e [...]reafter, for the honor and glory of god, and the cōmō vtilite of my natiue countrye. The Lorde Iesus Christe lighten and strengthen vs in all verite, and preserue England from Spa­nishe bondage and slaue­rye. Thy louinge frende Iohn Brade­forte.

To the right [...]onorable lords &c. the erles of Arū [...]ell, Darby, Shreusebury ct Pēbrok, [...]eir true and faythfull seruaunt wi­ [...]eth, as to al other of our nobilite increase of grace in gods fauour, wyth perfect honor, and the preseruacyon of their most honorable estates and country. Thoughe ye reioyce not in readyng my foolyshe reasons, yet geue God thankes, that I haue discouered suche detesta­ble treasons.

THere haue been certain pestiferous bokes and letters lately printed in Englyshe, vnder the cloke of a feruēt zeale, or loue towardes our country, against Spaniardes, by the [...]euelishe deuice of certayne here­tikes, [Page] thinking therby to grounde i [...] the hartes of all people, according t [...] the olde accustomed and most curse [...] polices of hte deuill, many abomin [...] ble heresies, and moste detestable [...] rors,Beware of them. stinking before the face of go [...] and man.

One of the whiche bokes hath cō [...] to my handes, entitled a supplicacio [...] to the Quenes maiestie, wherby it apeareth perfectly, that the authors o [...] the same bokes knew not perfectly the nature of Spaniards: but haue ther writtē it by report, then perfe [...] practise. VVhich bokes because fe [...] men dare vse them openlye, leste [...] youre lordeshippes, and other of t [...] Quenes most honorable coūsell, su [...] vile stinking wedes should be rot [...] vp, and with the most folishe gath [...] rers cast out of the good corne, I t [...] haue not ben redde of your honor So that where the said bokes sho [...] haue declared vnto your lordship [...] the nature of Spaniardes, thei pro [...] nothing at al, nor shold though th [...] [Page] came before your sight. But accor­ding to their pretensed purpose, the [...] haue vndoutedly infected many sim [...]le persons. VVho, being desierous [...]o gather the pleasaūt swete flouers of the gospell, doe lacke the shoes,The doctors of the churche. which Sainct Paule cōmaundeth vs, [...]o put on our fete, that we may, with [...]ut daunger of pricking, passe fresh­ [...]y throgh the s [...]arpe thornes. I haue [...]herfore purposed, right honorable [...]ordes, to leaue the full ans [...]eringe [...]o the said heresies, because I perceue the authors themselues lacke that [...]odly knowledge, which I desier to obteine: And some what to declare vnto you the nature of them, wyth [...]hom I am dailye conuersaunte, tru [...]ing your lordships wil fauorably re [...]eiue my work, because I wil declare [...]othing by report or hearesaye, but [...]he [...] those thinges, whiche I knowe [...]erfectly by experience. I wil write [...]othing to disturbe the trew & most [...]odly state of oure religion, whiche [...]he Quenes maiestie moste gracious­ [...]e setteth oute at thys present, and [Page] wherein god hath preserued me: not yet, to disturbe the quiete estate of the common wealth: But in shewing what is pretended to the contrarye declare vnto you the way, if it please you to folowe my counsell, how to preserue youre lordeshipes, and the whole realme, from most miserable bondage and captiuite. I purpose to declare a part of the naturall disposicion of Spaniardes: certayne of thei [...] premeditate mischeues, and pretensed treasons,Not the halfe. not onely agaynst you [...] most honorable persons, but also agaynst the whole realme: so farre, a [...] I haue heard, seene and proued, fo [...] the space of two or .iii. yeres in thei [...] companye. My frendes putte me t [...] learne their language and compelle [...] me to liue amongest them, because myghte knowe perfectlye, whethe [...] their nature were so vyle, as men [...] ported, or not. And I assure your lor [...] shipes, and all my frendes, that the [...] lefte reporte, that euer I heard Englishmen [Page] speake,The kīg except in all euill. by the worste of all Spaniardes, is nothinge to the vile­nes which remaineth amongest the best of that nacion, except the kīgs maiestie. Ye wil say the noble men be very ciuill persons.Obiecti­ons. In very dede I haue not seen so muche vertue in all the reste, as in that moste noble Prince the duke of Medenazelye.The duke of mede­nazelie. A Prince, vndoubtedly, endewed with perfect humilite, trueth, loue, charite and all other prince like vertues. There be many other noble menne,Marke the na­ture of the nobi­bilite & their polices. vndoubtedly very wise and politik, which can throughe their wisdome binde themselues for a time from their nature, and applye their condi­cions to the maners of those menne, with whom they would gladlye bee frended. VVhose mischeuouse ma­ners a man shal neuer knowe,These be the rotes of Spa. nature. till he come vnder their subiectiō. But thē shall ye perceiue perfectly their puf­fed pride, with many mischeffes be­side, their prowling, and polīg, their [Page] bribinge and shauing, their most de­ceitfull dealing, their braging and bos [...]ing, their flatteringe and faininge, their abominable whore huntynge with most rufull ruling, their doings vniust, with insaciate lust, their stout stubbernnes, croked crabbednes and vnmeasurable madnes in enui, pride and lecherie, which, thei saie, god lo­ueth hartelie, vaine glorie, and hipo­crisie with al other vilanie, of what kinde soeuer it be: supersticion, desolacion,the worst of all is when the kīg doth maintaīe mischief continu­ally, and besto­weth his power in wicked­nes. extorcion, adulacion, dissimulacion, exaltacion, suppression, inuocacion, and all abominacion: with in numerable moe mischeues, whiche I coulde plainlie declare, that no nacion in the world can suffer. Their masking and mumbling, in the [...]oli time of lent, maketh many wiues brente, the king being present nighte after nighte, as a Prince of moste mighte, which hath power in his hande, that no man dare withstande: yet if that were the greatest euil, we might suffer [Page] it wel. For there is no mā liuing, but would suffer the kīg to haue wife sister, doughter, maide and all, bothe great & smal, so many as he liste, no man would him resist. But the worst of all the companie muste haue my wife priuelie, when I am present bi: this is more vilanie, that one muste kepe the dore, will not that greue you sore, ct dare not speake for your life when another hath youre wife. Perhaps the king, yet that were a noble thing. Naie perchaūce sōe other slaue or vile pockie knaue, this thīg in dede shal make your hartes blede, when youre wife beareth the marke of that nightes warke, whiche still wil abide, vnder neth her side, and greue her sore, halfe a yeare & more: ye perhaps with such mocks you mai both cōe to pockes. For fewe of thē be cleare, thoughe they make lustie cheare, as Surgentes doe me tell, and sōe I see right wel, whiche did me cō pel sore agaīst mi wil, to take so much [Page] paine, as to make plaisters fine for the same thyng, which hath made me conning. But wherfore should I spēd my time, in showing so mani of their vile condicions, as I knowe moste perfectly. For me thinke I heare sōe noble man starte at these fewe prin­cipall pointes,Noble mens knaues. saying: what a vyle knaue is this, that raileth so muche against the Quenes frendes▪ would to god that wer trewe: we know moste perfectly,No [...]e they loue her treasure faithfully, and her crowne hartely. But if her grace worke prudently, she shall perceiue spedely, they loue her per­son fainedly▪ I haue not spoken the worst nor the most, lyke a rayler, but showed a small nomber of rype ro­tes, from the which spring a thousād moe mischeffes, for out of eueri rote spring .vii. braunches,Marke how the spanishe fruite springth and out of e­uery braunche doe spring .vii. worse wormes or stinkinge serpentes of more mortall poison, then either the rotes or spitful braunches. As for example, [Page] take their pompynge pryde,The first rote and first braunch. and ye shall proue their purpose once obteined, thei wil treade your heads in the dust, and compel you to liue at home porely, without bearing rule in the commen wealth. Thinke you, to liue at home in your country: no they knowe perfectly you woulde then haue all people vpon your part and make insurrections, to driue thē out of the lande: they wil prouide for this matter, and put you to death louingly, before you make such con­trouersye, that they may gather vp againe their great giftes, vpō youre treasures, and maintaine their gorgious garmentes, with their false bry­brie: their fine Spanishe brauerye with oppression of the pore people, and bye their lustye liueres with ex­ceading great excises. There be ma­ny other braunches, but I shewe these for a brefe example, that ye may by your wisedomes picke oute the rest. And yet if ye pull of euery braunch [Page] vii. serpentes,The ser­pentes of the firste braunche ye shal finde a deuelish companie.

As for example. VVhen ye bee trodden vnder foote, marke my woordes well, euery skur [...]eie knaue shal come to your house and take the best part, leauing you the worste. Ye muste obeie him like a Senioure,A Senior ye must geue them the best beddes, and take the worste pacientlie for youre selfes: for you haue lord Dannes cōe againe of them, and thei shall putte you in rememberaunce of the mise­res that your parentes suffered vnder them, whiche ye haue forgot, thei ar so long past.

The worste of them shall bee better estemed, with the kinge and his counsel, then the best of your realme, ye must be gladd to geue them place not of curtesie, but of perforce: they must be set in the higheste place, and you in the loweste. If one of them be appointed in your house, by the kinge or his counsel, or els receyued [Page] for his moneie,Obiecci­ons. the house must be his and not yours.

And yet will he departe withoute taking leaue or paying for lodegīg.

Some man will saie, that is not true: for they haue paide eueri man iustly the vttermost pennie. I speake not of that, whiche thei haue done in Englande, but of that which the most parte of them dooe in these coun­tries, and thei wil dooe, when they maie beare rule, euen amongest you in Englande.

And yet, I thinke, there be some, that paid not verie iustly for al thīgs when thei were amongest you laste. For I my selfe knowe manye wor­shippeful menne, which, if thei durst, woulde take their othe, and seke for recompence, that lodged, ye that lodged Spaniardes, in their house a yeare and more, and lette them haue halfe a dossen beddes and chaum­bers with all thinges perteininge to them, a greate parte of their [Page] fyre woode,The Spaniardes kepe chereles kitchens and such other stuffe for buttery and chereles kitchen, ct c. And yet the Spaniardes at their de­parting would nother paye for ma­ny thinges that were stollen, nor for many thinges that were lost, as thei said, nor for many thinges, that wer broken and rente, nor to speake plaī ­ly, for many thinges whiche were so bawdye,Pockie plaisters. with their pockie plaisters, that no man could lye in them after­wardes. I know diuerse of them, that paide their accoumptes so iustlye, & toke their leaue so hōestly:The ma­ner of ta­king leue among Spani. that their hostes knew not of their departing, but left the bakers, bruers, bouchers, woodmōgers and coliers, one of thē to paie anothers skore. Yf thei departed stoutly in these dayes, when they dissembled al goodnes, when thei trusted to winne the gouernaūce of the realme and the crowne with gentle­nes and good condicions: what wyll thei doe, I praye you, whē they haue the crowne indede. But to returne [Page] ye muste geue them leaue to speake, when you must holde your peace, ye must cap to them in all places where ye see them, although it be not your custome, or rather thers in dede, yet he is a very rusticall beast, that doeth it not to thē: for ye know, the worste of them is a Senior: ye must preferre them in all thinges, and geue all the names of honor, excepte maiestie, to the vilest slaue amongest them. VVoulde not any man be agreued to reade my worke, if I should shewe al their peuishe pride, is ther any mā so folishe, that thinketh I coulde not easely sucke out of their pride a thousande pestiferous poisons, and yet not racke it halfe so sore, as a wise mā both would and could doe.The se­conde example of flatterie. The brā ­ches. Take another example, loke vpon their flatterie, which is the least faulte of fiftye and the smallest rote of all the reste: Remēber their pleasaunt promises, repaide with preposterous performacions: ye shall proue, that the vileste [Page] wretche of them all shalbee in more credite, then the best of your frends. And yet their promises shalbe so fair that an [...] man liuing woulde credite their wordes. Their countenaunce, shalbe so pleasaunte towardes you, that ye would thinke thē to be your verie frendes, whē in verie dede thei shal seke your vtter destruction, and to cast you out of fauoure. Ye shall be gladde to make long laboure for smal matters:Another obiecciō made by slatterers and at the last not sped▪ And yet would they be in god your faithfull frendes. Some of their false flattering fauorers will saie, that all men maie perceiue perfectly, that I slaunder Spaniardes wrongefullye: for they haue holpen many synce their comming into England. But remember I tolde you they counterfeited condicions,These were coū terfeite cōdiciōs to disceue vs. because they mighte seme like vnto vs, and the more e [...]sely disceaue vs.

For that, whiche thei haue done in Englande, was no part of their nature, [Page] but the greatest part of dissimu­lacion,Dissimu­lacion. and a plaine preparaciō to disceaue oure nobilite. For wherefore should thei seke to maintaine oure nobilite, and the honor of the realm in his own estate: doe ye thinke, if thei obteine the crown, thei wil maī teine the nobilite and the realme v­pon their own charges: were it not better for them to destroie the nobilite and bring the kingdome,This thei goe a­bout dy­ligently. whiche thei loue so well, to their own com­modites. Mark more of their naturs. One of them shal laugh to your face when his acquaintaunce shal kil you behinde youre backe. Howe manye Englishe men did the Spaniardes kil in their arses, or not much aboue the arse, whē thei wer in Englād last of fauour receiued: most cōmōlie one of thē wil talke with you pleasaūtly, & kil you sodēlie whē he sēeth most your frend How many bitter biting serpentes, thinke you, do spring oute of euerie braunche. Take their plea­saunte promyses, where one of [Page] them shal seme your frende, and bee your vtter enemie.The ser­pentes of the firste braunch. Therfore they woulde not that you shold know their treasons. Take this point of wisdom. This is painfull. They saie euerye foole canne beware of his enemye whiche he knoweth: but I assure you he is a wise man, that can heare their false faining flattery, and abhorre thē as his mortall enemies. One of them shal flatter you in the [...]all, when another worketh mischeffe in your chā ­ber. Thei wil borow al that you haue if ye knowe not their condicions, & pay nothing at all. Thoughe ye wyll lende them no money, yet either for faire or foule, ye muste credite them til a paye daie, eyther willingly or a­gaynst your will.

And then will they stillely steale a way and pay nothing: for the paye day shal either be at their departing, or els so lōg before, that of force thei must take vp .iii. times so much more to leaue vpon the skore, before their departing.

They wil speake like faithful frends til they haue their purpose, and then [Page] beraile you like deuils with cursinge and grīnīg, swering and shaking the heades.

So that ye shalbe gladde to lose your own right,Note. that ye may get out of their companie. But if ye woulde lose your goodes, to be dispatched from such villanes companie, howe much yet shall it greue your heartes to be vnder their subiection, to lette them rule you continuallie, that thei maie poole you lawfullie. Yet some of them wil take their leaue crafteli: and leaue a sturdie stuarde to make a rekeninge: and the stuarde in one nighte shall steale away and paie no thing.

Thei wil flatter you more falselie, then any nacion in the worlde:take hede mi lordes thei be false trai­tors to­wardes you pri­uely. and that many of our noble menne shall proue perfectly in short time, if they worke not wiselie: & yet for all this ye may not say they lie, whē in dede they cannot speake t [...]ueth. Thei wil boast themselues to be moste righteous [Page] iudges on the earthe. But if ye come once in trouble, the falseste knave in their companie, if his tale be once told, shal cause you to be cast in prison immediatlie: and there shal ye remaine till ye bee gladde to saie, that trueth is falsehode, and falsehod is trueth.

For ye maie not saie, as ye know wel inough, that the falseste knaue amōg thē hath tolde a false tale. Is not this equall iustice:And shal doe if I seke all my life time. doe ye not see it is in vaine and ouer tedious to wryte all thinges. I am farre past my promes, and yet the farther I seke, the more deuellishe frute I finde.

Let vs leaue all order, and take a­nother rote by chaunce, that ye may be sure ye cannot goe amisse, but ye shal finde euerie tree bringing forth her fruite plentifullie. As for exam­ple. Marke their abominable and moste supersticious hipocrisie.

[Page]And ye shall proue,the third example of super­sticious hipocrisi The braū ches. they care [...]or no parte of Goddes moste holye seruice, but a masse onelie, whether it be holy day or woorke daie. If the masse be begonne before their com­ming, God heareth not their praiers.

But if thei be presente al the masse time, thoughe they talke of al maner bawdie vices, the matter is good en­oughe: thoughe thei knelle, all the [...]ime masse is celebratinge, spienge, where is the fairest woman, it is wel: thoughe thei praie not .iii. wordes, and those with oute all deuocion, yet is he holie enoughe.

If he imagine all that time, howe to obtaine another mannes wife, maide or daughter, it is no sinne: when they deuyse to disceiue ano­ther man, to spoile him of his goods, to robbe him of his good name, to [...]ill him or suche like mischefe, it is no offence.

[Page]Yf a Spaniarde be going to churche on a Sabboth day, and remember a mischeuous dede to be wroughte,Great a­buse. he may returne to his mischefe, and geue a riall of plate to a Priest, that he ma [...] say masse: & that euil which he goth about, is good and iuste: that daie he may vse al vilanie▪ but if he haue bē [...] at masse, whosoeuer saieth he canne [...] sinne that day, shalbe called a Lutheran, though he returne after masse to al mischefe, as a dogge to his vomit, thoughe he folowe the worlde the fleshe, the deuill, and all his workes, yet preachers say not contrarie, but thei be gods deare brethren. Euerie man knoweth, the braunches, that spring out of this roote, be innume­rable.whoso speaketh the truth is halfe an heretike. Note the differēce. If ye cannot nomber the braū ­ches▪ how wil ye nomber the buddes or rather the biting serpents which spring from euery braunche. Ye wil call me halfe an heretike. Ther is difference, betwene confirming of heresie, and reprouing ipocrisie. I serued [Page] in kinge Edwardes time the ryghte worshippefull, and mi good master, sir william Skipe wi [...]he, in Lincolne­shere, and although he be offended with me, because more wildelie then wittelie I departed from his seruice, yet both he, and all that countrie can reporte mi doinges. For I am sure, though he knewe not my departing nor knoweth where I am, yet his worship wil recorde truely, that I ne­uer loued heresie, because I neuer pretended nor did ani euill, falsehode or mischiefe, towardes him. I haue not spoken this, because thou shouldest thinke, as heritikes teache, that the most holy sacrifice of the masse as we call it, shoulde be naught: frō which error thou shalt come easely, remem­bring that the holy catholike church hath ordained that most holi sacrifice in all partes like to the supper,The sacrifice of the masse the passion of Christe. and passion of our sauiour Christ, to be a perfect rememberaunce of his passiō [...]ill he returne to iudge the worlde. [Page] Heretikes wil say,Heretiks here ye may proue the masse to be but a rememberaūce▪ this, but, is heresie: for vndoubtedlye there is ministred and receiued, in or vnder the forme of bread and wine, the very body and bloud of oure sa­uiour Christ.

Another sore he­resie,VVe reade, saith another simple foule, that god made man, but we neuer reade that a knaue priest coulde make Christe. Nor thou shalt neuer reade this, so longe as thou lyueste. Howe is he there then: euen by hys moste holie omnipotente word. For like as it pleased him,Marke howe Christ is in the sa­crament. The ver­tue of Christ in the sup­per consecrate in the masse. beinge verye omnipotente God, to make himself for the ineffable loue, which he bare towards vs, by his omnipotēt word perfecte man. So likewise, it pleaseth his deuine maiestie, to bee ministred vnto vs, in the moste blessed sacramente, that we beeing manye mem­bers receiuinge that moste blessed sacrament wortheli may receue the [...] our sauiour christ, which is our head [Page] and being cōglutinate, and ioined to the same, may be made one perfecte & most semeli mistical body. I wold handell this matter more largely,Those mē which wil dis­pute in diuinite, ought to be per­fectly learned. The ser­pentes of the firste braunche The first and most deuelishe serpēt hath bit­ten the Priestes. Presum­tyon. but it is not semely to cast pearles amōg hogges. I meane, it is not meete, to mingle such diuine matters, amōgst such deuilishe dregges, as I haue be­gonne to write of.

And ye remember I told you, I lacked knowledge to entreate of suche hiegh diuinite: returne & loke what euill fruites spring out of this braūch of hipocrisie, for in that they thinke it sufficient for thē, to say, heare, or se masse, marke what foloweth. The Spanish priests may, for the deuelish example to all other persons, leade [...]hores to churche in the morninge, [...]ande in hande. VVhen the Priestes [...]e in the temple they wil talke more [...]ilie and more baudelye, then al o­thers, and yet will the vile wretches presume, to say masse immediatlye, thinkīg, as did the vile traitor Iudas, [Page] that he doth god good seruice, when he dāneth his own soule. After masse wil the deuelishe priest returne, lea­ding the whore home againe, keepe her companie all the daie time, with out exhortaciō to repentaunce, and lie with her al the night. I speake not of mens wiues, but curtesaunce and commen whores, that for money re­ceiue euerie knaue▪ I would not that any man should thinke the masse euil which this cursed priest doeth cele­brate: for the masse, which is vndou [...] tedly gods most holy worde, is so perfecte and so pure of it selfe,Marke this lye. that the euill prieste can not make it worse nor the good prieste can make it no better.

The euil priest can not corrupt it nor the good priest, can not purifi [...] it: for like as if a good priest doe ba [...] tise one childe, and an euil priest ba [...] tise a nother childe,A trewe example her bothe the children receaue one holy goste an [...] are both equally clensed from sinne [Page] Euen so though an euill prieste saye masse, and consecrate that most bles­sed sacrament, and ministre it to me, and a good prieste dooeth likewise minister to another man, yet bothe we receiue the most holy bodie and bloud of our sauiour Christ, and are both ioyned,The ver­tue of the sacramēts is not by the prists power, but by gods worde▪ the prists rewarde. yf we re­ceue worthely, we shalbe saued, iudging oure selues saith paul and made members of the same: for these holy misteries be not made by the good priest, nor the euil priest, but by goddes most holye worde.

VVhiche worde remaineth euer most perfect and pure: mary the euill priest, vndoubtedlie, offendeth ma­ny mens cōsciences most greuouslie, dishonoreth god moste shamefullie, with liuing so viciouslie cōdemneth his own soule perpetuallie, beecause he commeth presumptuouslie, to the [...]ordes borde vnworthelie: wher the good priest, cleane cōtrarie, brīgeth manie to gods verite, honoreth god perfectly, with keping perfect chari­te, and in liuing religiously, his soule [Page] shal liue assuredly with Christ continnually in ioye euerlastingly.The re­warde of a good priest▪ the abuse of gods seruice damnable. All men may perceiue that I write not thys, because any man shoulde thinke euil or despice gods moste holye seruice: But because al men may know, that the very nature of Spaniardes is abominable, in all thinges. Because eue­ry man may know, that gods moste holy seruice is pure, and perfect: And the abuse of it is damnable: and bee­cause al men may knowe,this oght not to be that suche cursed knaues make not onely gods worde, which is most good and god­ly, most iust and most trewe, but also all good priestes, euill spoken of and abhorred in euery place: what grea­ter mischife can there be, amongest Christen men, then that the Prieste shoulde thinke himselfe clensed with speaking the wordes, and the people iudge themselues purified with hea­ring the same. Be not these worse then the Pharisees, that thinke to be saued with saying wel and working euill: or if the Iewes were not saued [Page] with hearing christ himself preache,Hearing of masse doth saue no man how much lesse shall these wretches be saued with hearing masse: Marke and you shall finde al such supersty­cious hipocrisie damnable. The gospel teacheth vs, that not eueri one, which said, lord, lord,God, would haue vs to folow his com­maunde­mentes in worde and dede shal enter into the kingdom of heauen: but he that worketh the wil of god shalbe saued not the hearers of the lawe, but the workers, shalbe accompted iust. Not those which say the cōmaundemētes daily, but those whiche bothe say in their hartes, and indeuoure thēselfes in all their doinges to kepe the commaundementes, shall please god. Not those whiche say in their pater noster, good lorde deliuer vs from euill, but those whiche forgeue their neyghbours wyth all their heartes,what people the lord will pardone. and flye from synne wyth all theyr myghte, shall bee forgeuen of God, and be saued. Yet though we doe al thys, we cannot iustifie oure selues, because we can not fulfill the lawe. [Page] But our sauiour Christ hath fulfilled the law perfectly,Christ is the oneli redemer and the perfect fulfiller of the lawe. Note. and vndoubtedlye redemed vs, with the sheddinge of his most precious bloud. And there­fore he biddeth vs not seke to iusti­fie our selues, but commaundeth vs, to doe all that we can, towardes our own iustificacion: which Spaniards nother doe, nor wil not doe. Christē men must call them selues vnprofitable seruauntes, when they haue done all that they can doe:Ergo thei be not only neigh­bours to mors but also, mo­rishe Iews thē selues. but Spaniardes call them selues, gods profitable ser­uauntes, and do nothing. what shold I declare, how thei carie their beades openly, to be sene of all people: how they praye in euerye corner of the streates, that euery man maye heare them: how they knele at euery man [...] dore, before Imags knockinge, cros­singe, Sobbinge, syghinge wrin­ginge their handes,hipocrits waggynge their heades, with suche other vnseme­lye maners, that all menne maye perceiue their repentaunce, and within [Page] a quarter of an houre afterwardes ye shal finde these dissimulate sorowes abiected,Good Christiās doubtles and so is belzebub Almes. and the vnpenitente person among a nomber of arrante whores: doe ye not knowe that most part of them, wil not geue almes but where they may be set in a boke, that all their contremen may know, how much, and how mani times in the yer thei geue almes. VVhat other thing did the Iewes and Pharisees. Did not Christ in the .vi. of Mathew,Mat. vi. reproue suche hipocrisie: but let all christiās take this general rule: that like as our pater noster can not be made euyll, though cursed wretched persōs vse or rather abuse it hipocritically, but euer remainth perfect, pure & good, euen so the masse, almes dedes, holye breade, holy water, goinge with procession, auriculer confession, beades, Images, and all other thynges, which Christ & the holy catholyke church haue commaunded, ordeined, confirmed and established, to moue vs, [...] [Page] After the rootes, take the braunches out of e [...]eri rote,Mark this multipli­cacion. laste of all, put out the buddinges, or bitinge serpentes, so manie as ye canne, oute of euerie braunche, and ye shall proue, if ye re­kē perfectly, that these .lxxvii▪ rotes, where I haue named them but once, do sprīg .lxxvii. times in one yeare, and at eueri springe time, eche rote bringeth foorth .lxxvii. braunches, and euery braunche bringeth forthe lxxvii. serpentes, and euerye serpent spitteth oute lxxvii. kindes of poi­son.

And the least parte wil kil, if they but taist of it .lxx. Englishe mē.I meane with thoughts care and miserie to be in slauerie. For the Spanishe grounde is so hote, fertille, and frute full, that euery poison is worse then other, and the beste of them al vncurable: ye perceiue now perfectly that I raile not, excepte ye wil proue Christe himselfe a railer. I am sure Christ railed not, in declarīg the iniquites of the Scribes and Pharisees, because he spake but the truth [Page] and not so largely as he might haue done: trueth cannot lie, nor raile,The au­thors ex­cuse. and then ye muste nedes graunte, that I am no railing knaue, though ye nāe me so▪ because I haue spoken nothīg but the trueth, and not so muche by a thousande partes, as I both coulde and woulde proue, if I mighte haue leisure to write, and set out the rotes, braunches, serpentes and poisons, e­uerie one in order, as they ought to be. Surely but that I desier to showe your lordeships other matters briefly, I could write of the nature of Spaniardes: A volume importable. But If I should write all, that I knowe, ye woulde not credite me: ye ought to beleue al that whiche I haue writtē, because ye knowe perfectlye, I haue written nothing, but that whiche e­uerie man knoweth to be their com­men customes, and immutable ma­ners.

And ye see by these exāples,Morishe maners. that I write not halfe the morishe maners [Page] whych they vse continually. Manye of my frendes haue geuen me coūsel to write my letter, but not my name for feare your lordeshippes wold punishe me, with imprisōment, rackīg, hanging, drawing and quarteryng, for speakyng agaynste the kinges coronacion, which I thynke ye cannot doe lawfully:take hede your selues, for this tou­cheth your lyues. Like as it is honore for a trew man to dye for the defēs of his coū trie, so it is shame, to die like a traitour, a­gainst his countrey Note. for so long as he is not crowned, that manne is no traitour that speaketh agaynst his coronaciō, but after his maiestie hath the crown the best of you all, that speaketh agaynst the Spaniardes proceadings, shalbe proued and ponished, lyke a rācke traitor. But I haue written my name plainly, that I may thereby, eyther geue youre lordeshippes war­ninge, to kepe youre honours & the whole realme oute of their bondage, Or els that I maye goe honestlye to the galowes, and ende this pore life, with an honorable death, for me & my countrye. VVhen your most honorable liues, if ye disenherit the [Page] realme of the crowne, shalbe ended with great dishonor, wretchednesse, miserie, and shame, for you and your successours for euer: yet I wolde hope to escape, when you are sure to die. For doubteles after that Spaniardes haue safely planted thēselues in the [...]ande, thei wold trust me to be their faithful frēd: because they knowe I [...]oue trueth,Spa. wyll neuer trust traitors. I say not ye be so. and am trewe to my coū [...]rey, when thei wil neuer trust your [...]ordeshippes, if ye wilbe so rancke & [...]als traitors, as to geue thē the crown of our realme willingly: & I woulde not your lordshippes should thinke me so foolyshe, as to speake agaynst his coronacion, if your lordeshippes graunt to it. Some men saie ye haue gone so faire, ye cānot turne backe. I know not what ye haue dōe, but I am sure, what ye may do.It lieth yet in your po­wer. if ye haue graū ted hī the crown, it shalbe muche better for you, to stād to that which ye may do, thē performe that which ye haue prōised. For I am sure, so lōg as [Page] the king of Ierusalē is not crowned in Englande, ye may chose, whether ye wil crowne him or not. And sure­ly if I were worthie to be one of the counsell in Englande, my counsel shoulde be, that the king should fir [...] be crowned in the Citie of Ierusal [...] lawfully,For christ chose to be king of the Iewes. because it is the more auncient and more noble kingdome, and bring all the Iewes into subiection and make them good Christians, before he shoulde haue the crowne o [...] England wrongfullie, either for fa [...] wordes, great bribes, false flatterin [...] promises, cruell manacinges, terribl [...] threatninges, or ani other false craf [...] polices.

I thought your lordeshippes ha [...] knowledge partly of their counsel as they reporte, that the frenche kin [...] knoweth yours. But now I percei [...] their secrete, priuie, and conclude counsels lie hidden from your lordshippes,Rude prī ciples. when ye know not the [...] principles, where vpon many gre [...] [Page] matters be grounded: if ye do knowe them, and wil not credit them,It preuai­leth not, to disclos treason, if ye will not with stande it or credit the truth God wit­nesseth with trueth, which boweth to nother party. whi this letter is written. Take warning in time or els. pardō me for writing in vaine: if ye know them not, howe can ye bee offended with me, for declaring to your lordeshippes such thinges, as be pretēded to your destruction, the losse of your [...]iues, landes, wiues and children, and finally the losse of your honors, the [...]uine of the realme, the suppressiō of [...]he commenwealth, & the bondage of your countrie for euer. Ye ought [...]he rather to credite me, beecause I speake nothing, god I call for wyt­ [...]es, for malice of Spaniardes nor to [...]atter Englishe men: I thinke neuer [...]o come seke bribes at youre handes [...]or my labour, and therfore it appea­ [...]th plainly, that I write for none o­ [...]er purpose, but only to ge [...]e youre [...]rdeshippes knowledge and war­ [...]ng of their most morishe maners, and cursed condicions, that ye maye [...]e more prudently prouide to with [...]and their terrible threatninges, pretensed [Page] treasons, and pestiferous polices, and so preserue youre honorable persons, and the whole realme oute of their tiranny and bondage. Do ye think, I durst be so bolde as to offēde god, in speakinge contrarye to the trueth, and lying slaunderousli and shamefullie, against my Christē brother: I know we are all brethren, if we haue the loue, and feare of God continually before our eyes, in our sauiour Iesus Christ, and we oughte to loue one another mutuallye like brethren:Nature causeth me, to discouer the Spani. treason. but as god deuided the langguages of men, so hath he caused euery nacion to loue more naturally all those, that be borne in the same self country, then foreners, and hath geuen,As Eng­land for Englishe mē. Spa. for. Spa. &c. according to his ineffable goodnes, certeine places of the earth for euery nacion seuerally to inhabite, cō maunding vs straightly, that one of vs shal not wrongfullye couete anothers goodes, and specially our Christen brothers, which cōmaundemēt [Page] the Spaniardes saye they will kepe. For whatsoeuer saye they is done in England, touching the crown or the gouernaunce of the realme,Seīg this must cōe to passe take good hede to your selues. Marke this poli­ce. The kīgs first good worke to England. At that marke thei all shote. shall cō [...] through procuremēt but of the coū sell themselues. For we knowe well enoug,h say they, that there be suche deuillishe people in Englād to work treason and make insurrections, that it is in vaine for oure kinge to haue the crown, except the counsell wyll also deliuer him certeine of the strongest holdes and porte townes, mark my wordes well, for his refuge at all times, till his maiestie maye be able to bring in power to withstande his enemies: and then we shall make all our hauen townes more strōge, to the [...]andes warde, then they be towardes [...]he see. But know ye for what purpose they pretende this policie: that [...] small nomber of Souldiours, maye [...]ee able to keepe the Realme, [Page] quietly,Let them not haue such vantage at youre handes. For the king sīce his com­mīg into England cannot yet get a grote, frō Spaine. The kīgs treserer wēt oute of englād but returned not till oure moneye was cōe ouer and new stamped, which made store euer sins in antwarpe and burne the countreye .iii. or iiii. times eueri yere til we can be contented, to obey all their constitutions, ordinaunces and lawes: they bragge that if thei may be vitled by the see at their backes, thei shal trou­ble, and toile Englishe men so long, til we be able to suffer no longer, for what great trouble wil it be for vs to burne, betwene Southhāpton & Douer. Thei trust the quenes hignes for the kinges maintenaunce, wyll poole the realme, with subsidies and beneuolēcies, so much as in her grace lieth, and geue al our treasure out of the lande, now at the kinges cōming to her grace: so that the kinges maiestie with our treasure, and his owne reuenewes in this time of peace, shal enriche himselfe, that when we haue small force of money because our [...] treasure shalbe caried out of the lād the king and all our enemies mai cō [...] into the realme, and worke mischefe against vs: for thei shall haue mone [...] [Page] from all places and aide of many na­cions. And they beleue assuredlie to be aided by the greatest part of oure own countre men. For the Quene & good men wil take their part against heretikes: thei thinke there bee but fewe noble mē in Englande, but they wil be contented,Take coū sel be tīe. These rentes be better lost, then found. ether by gift of the Quenes highnes, or els for greate bribes, riche rentes and good giftes, to graunt that the king may haue a iust [...]e title to the crown, or els receue him in vpon one partye, that he may ouercome the other perforce. And thei thinke there wilbe but few men against them for at their firste com­ming thei wil geue suche great gifts and pay mony to poore souldiers so largely, liberally, and surely,But whē thei be holpē and bear rule you shall pay it tri­ple in excises. that whē we haue scante of money, poore men wilbe content to serue for their mo­ney, gentell men and noble men for couetousnes to ēcrease their liuings and landes: but wott ye to what end [...]ll this cōmeth: Thoughe ye receiue [Page] them into the lād, & serue vpō their part,If ye be true a­mong your selfs thei dare neuer geue you bat­taile. If they kept not couenaūt with Millāe or Naples, howe shold thei kepe co­uenaunte with you yet dare thei not trust you, but ar mīded to pay you well for a time, that you may fight māfully againste your own coūtrey, whiles they come skirmishing at a backe winge, or els stād loking vpō you: for thei say thei be not so madd, as to fight with english men, & be killed like beasts: but whē ye haue brought thē in, & wōne thē the victori & stablished thē surely & quietly, thē, as I haue told you, wil thei destroy all you, & gather vp agayne their great giftes vpon your treasures.

Is not this a lamentable case, that we englishe men, for feare of mutabilite or chaunge of religion, which cō meth by gods ordinaunce, shall seke to plant willingly such a nacyon in our own country, as seke the vtter destruccion of the same: But thys is most miserable, most shamefull, mos [...] detestable & moste abominable, that so noble and prudent gouernours, a [...] [Page] your lord shippes, shoulde either for faire words, loue, feare, gifts, bribes,Let not these thinges blīd your eies, thē, may you like most noble gouernors, defende your own country. If ye no­ther care for youre own liues nor your children, I cā geue you no counsell to care for the whole realme. threatnings, manacings or any kind of couetousnes, seke the subuersyon of their coūtry, the destrucciō of the commē wealth, & the vtter decaye of your most noble bloud for euer. this last point doe I lamēt, more thē al the rest: for if any of your moste noble linage might liue in autorite, as the Spaniards sai in dede, we might haue some comforte, to restore the realme and the weale publike to his olde perfecte estate: but if ye deliuer the crown out of your hāds, I meane not the crown of gold onely, but al­so the power that goeth with it, ye shal in short time haue so great a fal, that their shal not liue one of youre [...]inage, that shalbe able to defend his own right, nor to rule, as his predec [...]s [...]ours haue done, nor yet to reuenge [...]is fathers death. This ye must nedes graunte, that it is necessarye for the [...]inges maiestie to worke the sureste [...]aye for hys owne commodite and [Page] preseruacion, that can bee deuysed or founde out by the aduice of his coun­sell.

And then I am sure there is none of you so foolyshe, that thinketh to beare rule in the common wealthe, or about the kinges maiestie:This suspicion ha [...]eth youre death for all the worlde knoweth the moste de­testable and most abominable trea­sons, whiche our nobilite doe worke against their own natural kinges continually.

And therfore Spaniardes myghte be called men of small wisedome, if thei cold not forecast such daūgers,I beseche your lordships to loke vp­rightly, I desire you not to remē ­ber me, nor my profit. but thei haue prouided for it well e­nough, would to god your lordships knewe perfectly so muche, as I haue sene with mine eies, and heard with mine eares, or els woulde for youre own profit, your owne honor, youre own wealth, the preseruaciō of your country, the loue of your children, & the safegarde of your own liues, credit my wordes. For then youre most [Page] prudent wisdomes coulde the better prouide to withstande their pretensed treasons. Ye will saye,Make good prouision with this warning Yet will thei deny that euer thei thought hereof. I wil shew onli that I saw in the leters howe coulde this felow see, heare, or kno [...] matters of their counsell: I was as all men knowe chamberleine to one of the kinges priuie counsell. And gaue my selfe with all diligence, to write and reade Spanish: which thing once obteined, I kept secrete from my ma­ster, and his seruauntes, that I myghte the rather with diligēt seruice be trusted in my masters closet or studye, and so reade suche letters, as I sawe broughte to the counsell chamber. VVhich thinge I did, as opertunite serued: yet I cannot vnderstande any part of their priuie and concluded counsels, but the effecte of suche let­ters as were written from one coun­seller to another.

I knowe not how, nor what they haue determined vpon the said let­ters, but I founde this written in certeine letters that were sent from the [Page] Emperours maiestie also,The ef­fect of the Em­perours letters. Marke if thei practise not after thys sort daily a yeare beefore the kinges comming oute of Englande, that the kinges maiestye should make his excuse to the quens highnes, that he woulde goe see hys father in Flaūders, & returne immediatly. But seing the good simple Quene, pardon me though I folowe the frase of the letters, is so Ielous o­uer my sonne, as the letter termed it, we shal make her agree to al our re­questes before his return, or els kepe him here exercised in other effaires, til we can agree with the counsell, who vndoubtedli wil be easeli wōn with faire wordes, great bribes and good giftes, politickly placed in tīe, with many other things,take hede mi lordes ye can kepe your gifts, but at the kinges pleasure, how these matters must be handled, how they must be brought to passe, how al parties muste bee folowed, whom they might truste, what men woulde disceue them, whom they muste winne with bribes, and whom thei myghte winne with faire promises, whō thei [Page] thought like trewe mē would vvith stand them,Marke whom thei cal trew mē and trai­tors, and hovve the false traitours vvoulde receue them: that the Emperoure vvould appointe the king such counselers for the same purposes, as he in many yeares had proued to be trevve and vvise in their doinges, so that the kinges maiestye myght be bolde at the first presente, to putte his truste in them, vvhom his father in lōg processe of time, & vvith greate experiēce, had proued and circumspectly picked out, amōge many false dissemblinge flatterers, vvith innumerable such prudent coū sels touchinge Fraunce, Flaunders, Naples, Millane, Boemia, Hungery, Turky, and diuerse other countryes, as betvvene Spayne and the Mores.

VVherof I knowe perfectlye they haue brought many thīgs to passe & mani thei be like to obtein, al which maters, because they pertein litle to our coūtrey, I wil passe ouer wyth [Page] silence.But why then is not the Quene endowed as fully in al his .xxv. kingdōs. For her own de­strucciō. In other letters I haue founde the case disputed that the quens highnes was bounde, by the lawes of god to endowe the kinges grace, her hus­bande, in all her worldly possessions and goods, so farre as in her maiestie lyeth, and they thinke she will doe it in dede to the vttermoste of her po­wer▪ No man can thinke any euill in the Quenes highnesse, thoughe her grace be something moued, whē such bondes, as touche her conscience, bee beaten into her memorie priuely. Let all men therfore take h [...]de, & beware diligentlye,Lette no man pre­tēde euill to the Quenes person, for then god wyll plage the whole realme. that no man be so bolde, or rather so deuelishe, as once to pretende any euill towardes the quenes maiestie, in pain of perpetual punis­ment. For vndoubtedlye [...]f any euyll should be wrought against her hyghnes person, god would not onely re­quire her bloude with condemnyng such malefactors for euer more therfore but: also would plage the whole realme most greuouslie for such wickednes. [Page] But if I wer worthy to geue your lordesh [...]ppes counsel,Beyng crowned he wil liue a­way and appointe you a sp. viceroye ye sholde banishe from the courte, except whē the king is present, which wil be ve­ry seldom what wai soeuer ye work, mistres Clarentius, Elizabeth Dyas, the Ladie of phisike, I know not her name, and all other that speake Spa­nishe. I wil not say that like foolyshe girles, doe loue Spaniardes, whyche might seme like to geue the Quene counsell in these matters.wemens councels deuelishe For they vndoubtedly haue and dooe beate into her heade, more then all you cā deuise to pull oute. The Spaniardes knowe not, whether the crowne do belonge to the Quenes maiestie or the realme, whether it be in her po­wer to geue it wher please her,Marke diligentlye what thei pretende after wardes, or in the power of the whole realme to bestow it lawfulli wher it of right shold be: neuertheles they can wel be con­tented to flatter youre lordeshippes till that be perfectly proued. And if they receiue any comforte therin, to [Page] bribe you freli til the same be deliuered,Here be­ginneth destructi­on. but then they must begin to gouerne and beare rule. For which go­uernmēt would to god I knew their counsels, or els that your lordships woulde beeleue that, whiche I haue heard and sene. I haue founde other letters, which I woulde not that any man should credit, touching mi lord Paget. That he should be the kinges aduersarie and the French kings sede debite, to declare vnto him all youre counsels.Talbotte the lords Greye, & Clinton must dye for cap­taynes. Ye se my lordes what the Spa. pre­pare for you.

But in these letters be conteined diuerse other: as the lord Treasorer is counted the kinges ytter enemye, the lorde Talbot is not their frende, the lord Grey they trust not, the lord Clinton thei loue not, therfore they think, if these and diuerse other lords in the North were made awaye, thei should be in lesse daūger, and the rather obtaine their purpose. And yet thei say, thei must of necessite flatter my lord Treasorer and my lord Pa­get [Page] craftili, til thei mai obtaine their purpose. Because thei two bee apte vessels to worke treason by. Ye may well perceiue therfore that they will flatter al you, seeīg they flatter these whom they take for their enemies, and so fayne these lies againste my lord Paget inuented treaterously, to make him out of the way, with the rest. For if euer the kinge beare rule, these which I haue named shalbe ex­amined as straitlye, as the Spanishe lawes wil extende to hādle the kīgs enemis. There be many other noble men, whose stowtnes must be pulled down, & their power abated.It shalbe more for your commodite, to agree among yourselfe Be true to youre countrey I write not this to bring any of these noble men in suspection, but that ye maye perceue, what wayes thei inuente to bring variaunce amongest you, that thei might be called to mak agremēt▪ for thei hope, if one part of the nobilite would once withstande the other, that then shoulde they be recei­ued, thoughe they preuaile not beefore time. But reade further [Page] and you shal know the trueth. They thinke your lordeshippes, my Lorde Admiral, the erle of Oxforde, and di­uers other,To thys ende ye shall proue their frēdship to extende. to be their frendes: there­fore they purpose if euer they beare rule to ioyne with you in councell, for a time, & the state of the realme once knowen, let you die pleasaunt­lie, with racking, hanging, drawyng, quartering, and whirling vpō whils ius [...]ly according to youre desertes,Obiectiō ye wil say the king doth not vse his coū sellers so in any countrei: in dede, the king hath in euery countrey certene churles of the same lande picked out whiche be craftie knaues,Crafty chourlish knaues. and canne finde at their hartes, for their owne lucre and priuat gaynes, to inuent all the waies possible, to pole their own country, according as his counsel can deuise to commaunde them, and to liue, as ye shal reade hereafter, according to the nature of Spaniardes. and so the true men to their country are traiterouslye ouer come perforce, [Page] but thei make another reasō for your destructiō, and sai thei may not trust,Mark I se names & what ex­ample shal de­stroy you those men long in the counsel nor about their king, nor kepe thē in auctorite, that willingly will bee false traitors, to their own country. I foūd two peces of a letter, but the third I could neuer finde, or els I shold haue knowen perfectlye, what bribes had been appointed for euery noble mā,It is bet­ter for your lordship to be Earle of Penbrok stil I can­not tel what sholde be done, but this ye were appointed at the first wherin the Erl. of Penbroke was appointed to be gouernour of the kingdōe of Granatha, and to haue fourtie thousande crownes of yerely rēt: but thei purpose, he shall enioye it but a short time. Do ye thinke my lord of Penbroke, that ye shall haue fourtie thousande crownes from Granatha, and liue safely in England: ye muste goe thether with the king or some other, to take such sure possession, that ye shal neuer returne

For I assure you thei dare not geue you so much power more thē ye haue and let you liue in your own countri▪ [Page] bee ye assured ye shall offende their lawes a thousande times,If they do not yet moue it to you to goe the­ther, they wil cut of your head ni England for such profet cā not long come out of Spain The erle of Darby betrewe my lorde Shreusbery lest ye lose your sonne & your auncetors praise for their trueth. Of your sōne my lorde of Arundell thys was written or he died, fear the sequel in youre selfe. The Spaniardes wold ended this or you shold vnderstode it & therfore now denye it. before ye know them, and your head shall per­haps pay for the first. My lord of Darby shal perceiue, that nother he, nor his sonne shal liue long after the kīg is crownd. The Erle of Shreusbery may well perceiue they flatter hym shamefully, when they goe about to destroy the noble lord Talbot. I am sorie that my lord of arundell hath escaped so many treasons as haue beē inuented beefore agaynst him, and shall now be disceaued and destroied amongst vile, treaterous, and moste false flattering Spaniardes. And yet I am sory that the realme should be robbed of so wise, so noble and so manlike a gentell man, as the Lorde matreues his only sonne: do ye thīke these thinges wil not come to passe or doe ye beleue, I haue not told you trueth, or truste you to liue styll in your countre: ye vndoubtedlye my lords, they dare not suffer you. The [Page] reason is this, thei say, that nacion & those men, that will woorke treason and be false traitours to, and against their own naturall kynge and coun­trey, the same men so sone as they be agreued, and beginne to smart, will woorke treasons againste them, and their king: but these thinges may be wrought in their time.

Ye thinke I speake my pleasure, but I assure you most truely I wryte nothinge of suspeccion, nor blinde iudgemente, but those things, which I haue seene and proued perfectlye and that be moste surely pretended and will vndoubtedly be wrought, if ye take no better counsell to withstand them. Marke my lordes if these bee well gotten goodes, that shalbe the destruccion of you, & your countrey for euer: doe ye not encrese your rentes properly, when ye seke the losse of your liues, and children, without remedy: be not those bribes dere bought that bring with thē the ruine and the subuersion of youre [Page] countrey,Marke what manyfolde mischiefs the beg­gerly bribes do bring, if it be not youre deathes at the end receiue them. The craf­tie treasōs be to hard for you to vnder­stande, but by Suspec­ting ma­ny thīgs. whiche if ye wolde then preserue England from bondage I would shew thē if I han­ged for it Youre lordships shall first curse the time of these bribes & false flaterye. So my lord Darbes sōnes title to the croun by hys wife will cost al iii. their life the bondage of the lande, the suppression of the cōmen wealth the beggerie of al the quens subiects, the losse of our liberte, the death of our nobilite, the perdicion of al oure rentes, lāds, goods and childrē, these thinges I haue found in their letters bu [...] doubteles, the kings coūsel haue pretended waightie maters towards you, in deuising how these thynges shalbe brought to passe: these be but rude principles, but in the grounde worke be prudent counsels. I knowe ye wil cal and accompt me a veri fole because I shewe you the trueth plaī ly, and put my selfe in daunger of hā ging to saue your liues, and preserue [...] my countrey from bondage, but foolishly or prudently I speake nothing but that which I knowe perfectly, y [...] may take my wordes, as it shal please your honors: if ye worke wittelye: as your lourdships cā do, if it plese you, I shal reioice at your preseruacion [...] but if ye wil submit your selfe to bō ­dage [Page] willingly, nowe ye knowe the daungers that wil folow, what man liuing would lamēt the miseres that shal fal amongest you. Herken there words after their writings. Thei purpose, if their power will serue, not to leaue one liuing, that by any maner title, ought to make claime for the succession of the cowne.

Ye will thinke there could not re­maine in them suche crueltie: it is in vaine for me to write trueth, if ye beleue me not. It is damnable without remedy, to call God for witnesse in false maters, and what would it pro­fit me, to saue your liues, preserue al Englande, or wine the whole world and condemne mine own conscience But in truth I dare folow the example of S. Paul, and call god for a iuste and true witnes, that I haue hard with mine eares and sene the same persōs, with mine eies, that haue said, if euer the king might haue a iust title to the crown, and obteine it, he wold make [Page] that most vertuouse Ladi Elizabeths grace sure,The La­die Elizabeth condemned. for euer comming to in­herite the same, or any other of oure cursed nacion: for thei say if thei cold kepe Englande in subiection, thei could doe more with Englande and Flaunders, then all the rest of the kinges kingdoms: therfore thei wyll not worke so foolishly, as to make dissension betwene these two lands and bring thē in controuersie or sett them at variaunce. But inuente all polices to ioyne them both a like vnder their subiection.thei haue promysed to bring ēglande in subiecciō to Flaunders. VVhen she muste die trust not ye to liue lōge after. Sedicion among your selfs wilbe your destruccion for traitors seke in englishmens variaunce, to bring in Spa▪ vpon thē. If ye liue quietly within yourselfs ye preserue your coū trei agaīst your enemyes &c. I speake of no fooles, but of the wisest sort, and no meane persons, though they knewe not me in such corners, to heare their counsels. Remēber if this warning be not sufficiente, to cause noble men to take hede, that so vertuous a La­dy so beautifull, and so comly a princes, should first of all, besyde all the greate nomber, that shoulde folow afterwardes, be eyther banished the [Page] lande, or els putte to death miserabli for that, whiche should be her own righte, by iuste and lawfull discente. If they, that loue wemen so wel, wil not fauour suche a Ladie, how much lesse wil thei fauoure youre lyues: I speake not this, as some men woulde accuse me, to make sedicion nor treson in the realme: for that were the beste waye for Spaniardes to come to their purpose.

For our enemyes can neuer hurt vs, till we make dissension amongst oure selues: suche a time they looke for, suche a time thei desier, and such a time some noble men haue promysed them. Lette all menne, because I knowe not those traitors names that woulde prepare thys time, endeuour themselues, to lyue, & loue one another charitably and quietly, that ye maye all take one waye and hold together lyke good people, the better to preserue your country, & withstand [Page] al these deceitfull and most de­testable treasōs,The Quenes grace disceaued with flaterers and premeditate mischifes, which be pretended against you and your coūtrie. Ye haue heard many euils, but god is witnes I can­not for shame write nor declare the vile, shamefull, detestable, and mo [...]e abom [...]nable reportes,The Spaniardes reporte of the Quenes maiestie There wordes arge thei mēt more then was perfour­med, to speake trueth thei pur­posed ra­ther to wine her crown then her body. whiche they haue spoken by the Quens maie [...]ie: and yet her grace thinketh thē to be her very frendes: but this one trueth I wil shew couertlie, and wrappe it in as cleane cloutes as I can, desiring all men and the Quenes highnes herself most humblye, to take it after their words. The Spaniards say, if they obtaine not the crown, t [...]e may curse the time that euer their [...]inge was bounde in mariage to a [...]ife, so vn­mete for his maiestie by natural curse of yeres, but yet if the thing maye be brought to passe, which was ment, in the mariage in a king, thei shal kepe old riche robes, for high festif [...]l dais. If there be any man that doth not vnderstande [Page] this saying of Spaniardes, let the Q [...]enes highnes, so lōg as her grace▪ [...] haue any fauourable frendship of the kinges maiestie, kepe her selfe as heig [...] in auctorite & as rich, as she is at this presēt, or els her grace shall perceiue perfectly, as she maye partly at this present, that Spaniards naturally loue freshe wares, yōg deī tie dishes, and chaunge of new thīgs.Marke the most honora­ble and courte like cu­stomes in their courtes here in Flaūders I thinke the Quene will blame me, for showing this one trueth, but by that time her grace shall be glad, to tie horsses vnderneth her chamber windowe, to suffer vile stinking dōg hils at her priuie chamber staires, to see her garde chamber garnished a­bout with plaine wals, finely furny­shed with riche pallets, of st [...]ōg corse canuas, wel stuffed with strawe, the wals most comly colored with coles, to see sitting amōg her graces ye mē, curriers, carmen, and coblers, woode monges, vintners, and waggeners, pointers, pīners, and pedlers, showe [Page] makers surgeaunts,A misordered hospitall. The chappel chamber made whē strā gers be presente, the garde chamber The kīgs courte much more carterly thē a farmers house in the countrey. and sadlers, boke binders, bakers, bre [...]ers, with al kīde of lowsie loiterers, and euerye one a bagge, a budget, or a bot [...]ell [...]anged open beefore him, tyed vnder hys arme, or behinde vpon his backe, more like a moste misordered hos­pitall then a kynges garde chāber, that nother her highnes, nor any of her nobilitie, can passe that way. For in dede the gard [...] in the kīges courte be suche bawdye, burly beastes, that they neuer come in the kinges chap­pell, excepte for necessite when straū gers come to the courte and abyde the smell, of suche a stinkinge stue. Her grace will say I speake not all. VVhen her pallice gates shal stand open, without porters, that not only beggers, slaues, and all kinde of wretches, but also oxen, kine, hoggishe olde swinne, shepe and lambs, goats, kiddes, and rammes, cattes, dogges, geese, duckes, cockes, and hennes, with all other suche good houshold [Page] stuffe, may enter into her courte, and standing, rubbing, rowteing, diggēg deluing, and donging, before her chā ber windowe, like a good fermers house in the countrey, whē her highnes hall shall be one daye hanged with riche arreisse, and halfe a yeare after, ether shut, and locked vp,the king is the vylest tauerner of all his court or els furnished finely with spinners, silke-twiners, weuers of laces, rop makers, coblars, and botchers of olde hosen, moste shamefullie without all order, and be glad to kepe within her most princelike palice a vile stingking baudy tauerne, that euerye one of these fore saied craftes men,The kīge selleth wine and water more dearer thē other and hath the lyes hymselfe. and all other baudes, beggers, slaues, and vile drō ­ken wretches, maye bie within her courte breade, beare, nuttes, apples, and chese, and fetche wine and water out of the kinges courte, by iiii. penny pintes, and that with the dearest, accordinge to the olde, auncyente, and moste honorable customes of the Emperours maiesties courte, & [Page] the kinges maiesties palaies here in flaunders, her maiestie shall wel per­ceiue, that I kepe many thinges secret whiche I am ashamed to declare. Ye will thinke I speake the worste, but when the Quenes grace shalbe glad to fetche her wine out of the tauern by eight pense, and a halfe peny, the quarte: as the king and bothe the Quenes doe here in this courte,The kīgs wine fet­ched out of the tauerne by the quart but in England freely by Iugges & bottels. My lord Ambassadour is worthye of blame if more then this be not written, for he should se the Quene, be not disceaued herin. Thus ye shal liue when ye be in bondage. Tak hede ye sai not hereafter would to god we had done it, for now ye may do it her highnes shall well know, that I cold show much worse orders, and manye thinges more vile, more shamefull, and more dishonorable then these, and by that time all these thinges be wrought ordinarely, in the court of Englande, ye shall smell them more vnsauerly. Al mē that be here cōtīuallye, doe see muche more and many worse thinges, then I write. But if these things, wil not make your lordships worke wiseli and be circūspect in deliuering the crowne, looke further vpon youre proceadinges, and when your lordships shal be glad, if [Page] ye might escape so well, to be at the Spanishe counsels commaundemēt, and wander with Spaniardes from one countrey to another, and where ye liue at this present with all plentiful prouision in your own houses, be compelled to lie in good tiplinge houses, & rost halfe a capōe to your supper and kepe the rest for your di­ner, with a pinte of white wine and water, a pigge [...] petitooes, a younge shepe trotters, halfe a loine of leane mutton and iiii. or .v grene sallettes, as the best of the kings counsell doe liue daily, ye wil say, woulde to god we had kept the crown in our owne handes, for the right and lawful heires of the realme to whom it belon­geth by iust and lawfull discent, and bene trewe to our countrye, so that we might haue reigned still, and ly­ued more honorable, in reste, wealth and quietnes, then any nacion in the world. The Spaniards say your lordships most specially, and al the rest of [Page] our nobilite, with the moste parte of our counsel, be without knowledge, learning, language or perfect experience, and therfore thei hope though not spedely, yet in proces of tyme to disceaue and ouer cōe you, with their learning,I desir ye shold fo­low your own preseruacion wisdome, craft, and policy. Let your children therfore, if ye loue them, be brought vp in learninge, & wisedome, that they maye be able to gouerne the realme prudently, after your dayes. And folowe youre lordships, for the preseruacion of youre lyues, honor and children, this wor­thy and notable example of the most worthy king Codrus, who seing his countrey assauted, by the most cruell tiranny of his enemies, sought by all meanes possible to deliuer his people from bondage, with least destruccion of his subiectes bloud: and being answered that there was no way to preserue his realme, except he himselfe should be slaine, appareled hys most princelike person in a poore palmers wede, and after great lamentacion of [Page] his subiectes, whiche woulde rather haue lost life, lāds & goods,The king a turne spitte. then suffer so noble a king to die for their deliueraunce, became a tourne spitte in his enemies kitchen, and when hys aduersarie had prepared a great armi for the inuasion of his coūtre, he prouoked with cruell woordes,If panīs so muche loued their coūtrey, shold we Christiās betraie ours remem­bring the commen and publike weal of his subiectes, which he desired so earnestly, his enemies so much, that a skuruye kitchen slaue without mercye thruste him to the harte, wyth a whote spitte of yrone▪ who, beyng stripped naked to be buried, was knowen perfectly to be the king himself by a crosse vnderneth his brest: whos death so muche discoraged his ene­mies, that thei flyeng before his sub­iectes, when the battell shoulde bee fought, were slayne and taken in the chase, his countrey preserued, & hys maiestie obteined immortal fame. I wold wish your lordships, for your honors & the preseruacion of youre lyues and countreye, as I truste assu­redly [Page] ye wil, though not so daunge­rously,Kepe the state that ye haue. as this noble Prince did, yet with suertie obserue thys counsell: I meane ye are in suche estate, at thys present that ye maye withoute the daunger, or losse of ani mās life, kepe the crown & the realme quietli, but if ye will deliuer the crown oute of your handes willingly,Spani­ardes re­port Englande to be the strongest and beste kingdom on the earth. then wher ye ought to venter, ye to lose in dede life, landes, goods and rentes, with honor for the preseruacion of your coū trey: ye shal not only lose life, lādes, goods, wife and children, but also al honour, fame and renowne, with the moste noble, and the moste mightie kingdome, as Spaniardes say, on the w [...]ole earth, with the losse of innu­merable thousandes of Christen mēs liues. For what nacion in the world is able to suffer the verye nature of Spaniardes: haue I not showed you many things which ye cannot suffer: ye may expell nature for a tyme, as Spaniardes did in Englande lately, [Page] but al the world can not expell her so much, but she returnth in short space. what deuelishe nature is this, that no man can suffer: the time is shorte, or els I wold tel you much more: their pride is of such nature, that she can suffer no man, to be felow with her.The na­ture of Spani. Pride would euer be the highest, and then who hath more pride then Spaniardes, who canne beare rule aboue thē.Doubte­les I know no man can set forth more mysery, then the peo / ple be in in Naples and if ye go forth; ye shal come to the lyke. The Spaniardes denie not them selues to be the proudest and moste lecherous men liuing, and can they then be without all other vices, see­ing pride is the roote of al sinne, and the mother of all mischiefe. Their hartes wil boile and borst, to see a­ny nacion nere about them prosper in welth and tranquilite. I heare saye there be certeine bokes amongst you whiche in dede I neuer sawe, as the lamentacion of Naples: the mour­ninge of Millane, and suche other, which haue showed you the tiranny that Spaniardes haue vsed in other [Page] countries, and in those points I wold coūsel you to beleue the same bokes and take hede ye come not in like bō dage. For if ye do, be assured that the same tiranny, which thei haue vsed in other countries,But if ye wil not take warning of them which do shew you then shal you suf­fer al the plages that be named in this boke for youre incredulitie. thei will vndoub­tedly vse amongst you: for if thei fa­uored not those noble men, whiche thei say be Christned, how much les wil they fauour you, whom thei ac­coumpt worse then Iewes: but like as thei haue destroied the nobilitie in other countryes, euen so will they according to their pretensed purpo­ses destroie and murther you priuely one after another, so soone as they may beare rule amongest you. Some Spaniardes say we must not take ex­ample by those countres, which th [...]y be compelled to keepe perforce: but be you assured thei must bee compelled within one yere, to keepe England perforce also. For doubtelesse English men will neuer pay such excises willingly, as other nacions be [Page] compelled to pay against [...] their wil: nor let their rentes be raised so much aboue the rate whiche thei bee at in these daies, as Spaniardes woulde amount thē.Obiectiō Ye wil say the Spaniards kepe their olde rentaking:Marke ye people of England howe ye muste be taxed how can that be, when euery poore man must pay yerely for euery chimney in his house, and euery other place that is to make fire in, as ouen, fornes and smithes forge, a frenche crowne: wil englishmen, or can thei suffer to be poled and pilled moste miserably, in payēg continually suche poling pence, and intollerable tollages for all maner graine and breade, be [...]e, beare, and mutton, goose, pigge and capone, henne, mallard and chicken, milk, butter and chese, egges, apples & peares, wine white and reade, with all other wines beside, salt white and graye,Note thys. al thinges must pay, small nuttes, and wall nuttes, cheries, and chest nuttes, plumbes, damassens, philbeardes and al both gret & smal whatsoeuer thei maye se to fede the pore cōmenalte, [Page] Salmon and hearing, this is a shamefull thing,If ye can suffer this then crown the king of Ierusalem. The third part of al thinges: kepe your selues frō that bon­dage. Marke this yo men and husbande mē, kepe your li­berte, that ye pay not for your own chickens whē ye bee sicke. If ye fo­low this counsel, ye saue your ly­ues, your landes & contrey. And will with spede. For all your learning is lost, your law de­stroyed & al your liuinges decayed for euer▪ the office of trewe men. tench, ele or conger this shall kepe vs vnder, and make vs die for hunger, flounders, floucke, plaice or carpe, here is a miserable warke, that Englande must abide to main­taine Spanishe pride: ye paye youre tenthes for all these thinges, but I speake not of churche rentes, nor balifes fees, for that is but the tenthe part, but this shall greue your harte, to pay the thirde part more, that burthen waieth sorer then fines or rēts, tak hede therfore. Ye wil think their cōmēs be not so opprest: there is not a ye man, farmer nor husbande man in these partes, that dare eate a capōe in his own house if his frende come to viset him, but the capōe must cost him a noble, if it wer worth, xx. pēce and euen so of hennes, pigges, geese, chickins▪ and all other thyngs. Dooe ye thinke to make prouises for all these mischefes, which I haue rehear­sed: the best prouiso ye can deuise to [Page] make is, that for the auoiding of all these and innumerable moe mischefs ye kepe the crowne in youre owne handes, and geue it to no forreyne prince. For when the king is crow­ned, who dare withstand his doings doe not the lawes of Englande bind al men to obeie him: but seing thei vnderstande not our lawe, maye not the kinge chaunge it, as shall seeme good for him, by the aduise of his coū sel: I nede not to feare the daunger of my boke, for I heare say, I shalbe outlawed, with a pension writte, for .iii yeres pension, in cliffords inne. Do it spedely, least it take none effecte: for if Spaniardes beare rule fare wel all Englishe lawes, the kīg will reach you Spanish lawes, and looke what lawes Spaniardes make is not he a traitor that speaketh to the contrary but til his grace be crouned, it is mete for all trewe men, to holde with the right, and speake against his coronaciō. Ye say, the quenes highnes hath [Page] al power in her hande:Obiectiō we must obey her surely in actes that bee paste by parliament and cōfirmed by the hole realme, we ought to obey her highnes during her life: but I think there is no law confirmed and past, where by the Quene may lawfully disinherite the realme of the crown. And for that which is to come, eueri man mai lawfully speake against it: for she can make no such law without your aide. Yf ye read the enchiridiō of Erasmus in the leafe,Erasmus. lxxv. ye shall finde that the Quenes highnes or any other Prince,VVhat the quene oughte to doe. that wil folowe goddes commaundement and seke the kingdom of heauen, ought not to make any lawes or statutes agaynste the commen wealth of her countr, and that she ought not to doe that, which she may by her power, but that which she maye doe iustlye by the lawes of the realme.A trewe example For lyke as Christe was not borne for himselfe, nor died not for himselfe, but was borne to fulfil the [Page] law, liued to teache vs the perfecte trueth of the law, and died to redeme al those that woulde folow his steps and kepe his commaundementes: euē so the Quene ought not to do that thing which is for her own profet, her own pleasure or her own pryuat commodite but that which is for the commodite of the whole countrey, the profite of her poore people, and the strength, aide, preseruacion, and the comfort of the whole realme.How the Quene ought to go­uerne vs Her grace ought not to gouerne vs if she wil folowe Christe, but to se vs gouerned vprightly in all spirituall maters after gods worde, and in all temporall maters accordinge to the lawes of the realme iustlye, for oure preseruacion

In the .iiii. nexte leaues folowynge ye shall finde the offyce of a kynge, a magistrate, an officer and bishoppe. I shewe you the place because ye shoulde remember it [Page] and folowe it in this case. But if the Quenes grace wil not seke to winne heauen, with folowing Christe and keping his order, for the commodite and profet of all her people, then she must without grace, in breakeynge Christs order, and leauing his steps, without any seconde way folow the steps of the deuill, and so seking her owne priuat commodite, her owne wil & her own pleasure, rūne straight headlong to hell. Mary if the Quene be the last heire, so that the crown remaine wholly, perfectly and lawful­ly in her, without any other discente, she may by gods lawe geue it for the commen wealth of her subiects and the realme, where or to whom soe­uer pleaseth her, and then if it be for the commen wealth of the realme, as ye se plainly it is not, she mai geue it to her graces husbande the kinge: but if it belong to the heires of the realme, after her death, and if ther be any heires in Englande liuing after [Page] her,Mi lords for suche counsell ye shalbe more hardly plaged in hel then ye cā be in the towre. See what they take vpon thē or this. Geue a Spa. one inch, and he wil take a hū ­dreth fote. to whom the crown oughte to come by iuste and lawefull descente, she, and all that geue her such cursed counsell, doe committe deadlye and damnable sinne, in taking, and geuīg it, from them wrongfully. Yf ye could restore it againe afterwardes, and so make them recompence, she myghte haue pardon of god: but I am sure the Quenes grace, and all her honorable counsell, haue seene the kinges style where he writeth himselfe kinge of xxviii kingdomes, with Englande, Fraunce, and Yrelande, and there ye perceue, that he leaueth out the quen in all his writinges and deades, whatsoeuer he maketh or confirmth. And in the first leafe and first side of the patten, or rather the Emperours will which he hath made, to establishe the king iointly with him in the Empir, they write that the kinge wōne englande by the Quenes mariage, and vpon the seconde side of the sāe first leafe they write, that the king at this [Page] presēt hath autorite to make, chaūge, ordeine and constitute, what decres, statutes, ordinaūces or lawes soeuer please him in the same kingdom of England. Seeing the king, hauynge but the name geuen him, doeth take vpon him suche power, and bee [...]ore he hath the crowne dooeth expulse the Queene from all title of the realme or the crown:She shall be at low estate in short tīe. ye may be sure that when he hath the crown, he wil take from her all power and honor, sauing only she may haue the name to be his wife vvith his more beloued harlots: so that she shall neuer be able to restore the crovvn to the right heires.Beware of this, it were better for your lordships▪ to lose your heades & die in the trueth, then damne your fols in presūption. I haue sent you the copy of the sāe will, b [...]cause ye may know perfectly, that she shall neuer bee a­ble to restore the crown again to the right heires Then seing the Quene, and all your lordships, doe knowe as­suredly before hand, that she shal neuer be able to make recompence in restoringe the crowne againe to the [Page] right heires, and yet will presume to doe suche wrong, as vnlawfullye to take it from thē: ye must nedes graūt and beleue it truely, that not onelye the Quene but also your lordeships, if ye resist not this wickednes, and al other that help her, or geue her such cursed counsell, may be sure for such deuilishe presumpcion to goe to the deuil and be damned withoute mer­cye.Ye dys­ceaue the Quene when ye cause her to lose her hus­bande and her power also. Ye are disceaued

For Christ hath iudged youre do­inges before hande, saying: whosoe­uer sinneth againste the spirite shall neuer be forgeuen in this world nor in the world to cōe. Do ye not know my lordes, that ther was neuer trai­tor against king or Quene, that colde lōg prosper: & wil your lordships sek the destructiō of the quēe & the hole realme & think to lyue prosperously afterwards: wil ye be false traitors to the Quene & al your own coūtrey & think to be put in trust, & made mē of great power in straunge contries: [Page] There is no man at this present, that thinketh any treason to remaine in ani of the quēs most honorable coūsel but surely if ye crown king Philippe though ye could doe it by a iust law,Mark this parte of their na­ture. or if ye receue him in with disceitful­nes, guile, aide, fraude or subtiltie, to destroie the lande: vndoubtedlye all the world will accoumpt you rancke traitors,So wil the great Turke. Poore bakers daugh­ters of brussels. A far­mers acte of the kinges maiestie in Ant­werpe. and the very Spaniardes thē selues durst neuer reste in quietnesse, till it were rewarded accordingli. [...]il ye crowne the king to make him liue chast with his wife contrary to his nature: peraduenture his maiestie after he [...]ere crowned would be content with one woman, but in this meane time his grace wil euery night, haue v. or vi. to see whiche of them plea­seth him best. If thei wer ladies or gē tle wemen, it were more tolerable, but bakers daughters and such other poore whores, is to abominable. In Antwerp before shroftide, ther wer [...] as there be many at thys present, certeine [Page] merchauntes, which had verye faire wiues, whom the king cold not haue priuely.VVhere the king is so vici­ous, the people must neds be muche worse. They bragge more of this, then of all the warres that euer their king made. The kīgs maiestie a meri midwife at midde nighte.

But hearyng by chaunce of spyes, that some of the same wiues wer v­pon a night with their neyghbours wife, to helpe her in her trauel or la­boure of childe, the kinge with cer­taine other wente masking the therin womans apparell: and the kinges maiestie, as all Spaniardes reported for a greate honore, helde the wiues backe, till she had brought forth her childe.

But what was wrought amongest the middwiues afterwardes, lette o­ther men iudge: for I had not knowē this, but that all Spaniards, bragged of it themselues, that we mighte reioyce to haue for our king in Englād suche a stowte, bolde and myghtye prince, as durst maske amōg wemen and plaie the midwife, at midnight. I could not for shame write this, but that I thinke the Quenes highnesse, [Page] hath heard tel how sharpeli the go [...]d bishoppe of Castila was checked,The By­shop of Castyll. be­cause he desired the king to kepe him selfe for his wife, and told him it was not lawful for him to liue in such lothsōe lechery. The notable sermō, that this good bishoppe made though he lost his rochet for speaking agaynste lechery and such other vices, is talked of so much throughout al these par­ties, that I am sure this tale cānot be hidden. I write his name, because the Quenes highnes is bounde to geue him thankes and rewarde him wyth another bishoprick,They e­steme the crowne aboue the quen Vnlyke simili­tudes. Some good Lady shew oure Quene thys trueth, that her grace be not brought into mor miserye. Paget should brought in douch men and ben viceroy if vprors cold ben moued by the wrō ­ges that the Quēe attēpted last yeare that would put himselfe in such daunger of trouble to cause the king her graces husband to loue her. But know ye their re­portes: they saye the good bakers daughter is more worth in her goun then Quene Mary without her croū. God witnesseth with me, that it greueth my hart sore, to heare such vile reportes and so vnlike similitud [...]s. They say olde wiues muste be cherished [Page] for their yong riche giftes. For old wiues, say they, for faire wordes and a litle craftie cuckering wil geue al that they haue: but how they be v­sed afterwardes let the Quenes La­dies and gentill wemen discusse. If the king do so much esteme his wife in these dayes, when he seketh to ob­taine by her honor and great commodite: after what sorte will he vse her highnesse, when he hath obtained his purpose: doth the Quenes grace thīk to cause the kynges maiestie still to remaine in Englande, with geuynge him the crown: No I assure you plaī ly? and perfectlye the counsell of Spaines purpose is to establyshe o­ther matters: they haue determyned and agreed amonge themselues to a poynte a viceroye with a greate ar­mye of dronken douche men, with diuers other souldiers. And that the lord Paget knoweth by the false flatteryng words, whych I heard the Emperour [Page] speake before him, to the kīg the xv. day of Aprill, biddinge the king, make much of that man, for he was worthy to be cherished,The Quene shalbe a Nunne whē the king is crowned And euē so shal ye doe if ye write as long as ye lyue. promi­sing to make him the greatest man in England [...], to kepe vs in subiecciō, as I haue tolde you before, and lette the Quens highnes liue at her bedes, like a good auncient Ladie. Ye se the further I goe, and the more I write, the greater euils I find▪ but I promes you assuredlye, [...]f I shoulde write so muche of their viciousnes, as I know most perfectly, the ladies and gentell wemen woulde be muche ashamed. VVoulde to god the honorable la­dies of Englande knewe the vile re­portes, which Spaniardes haue reported by them: for then I assure you the good Ladies would not loue to kisse so pleasauntlye, and so many times, with straungers, nor to receue and sende into Flaunders so many milke mouthed messengers, and moste vn­trewe taletellers, nor receue & send [Page] so many tokens, with so louing and humble cōmendacions to their most louing, or rather most dissemblynge Spaniardes, in whom lyeth all their loue, all their hope, all their trust and confidence. Oh moste abominable whores: for I speake of no good Ladies: were ye borne in Englande, do ye liue in Englande, haue Englishmē kept you all this long tyme,Pockye Spani. Ye wold be offen­ded to be openly named for whores & yet ye loue Spa which name you openly so doe Englishe men put all their trust in youre honesty because ye shoulde be Spaniards whores▪ and leauing your own naturall husbandes and frendes putte all your trust, all your loue, whiche is very littell to those whom ye ought to loue, al your hope, al your comfort in vile pockie Spaniards: If I beyng an englishe man shoulde haue so ly­tle honesty, and tell so many of your names openlye, as I haue heard Spa­niardes name to bee their whores, many of you would lose your frēds, many be banished the courte, many be deuorced from their husbands, & [Page] sent to their most trusty and moste louing Spaniardes. I would name diuerse of you, which within these few days haue sent your messengers, whō I could also showe, and tokens to spaniardes in Flaunders, like arrante whores: but I wil fauoure you at thys present & kepe the counsels,Amende good Ladyes or els. which nother Spaniardes nor youre owne messengers wil hide nor keepe close, because I trust ye wil amende and be honest wemē hereafter now ye haue warning of their vilnes. Or els do ye not knowe right honorable Ladies, for now I leaue all whores,The ma­ner of Spanishe wemen. This is greate dishonor for youre husbāds, shame for youre selues & a great slaunder for youre countrey that the maner of spayne is, if one man kisse a nother mans wife or daughter it shal bee lawfull for her husbande or fa­ther to kil him: or doe ye not knowe that there bee no wemen in Spaine but commen whores, that will kisse any man excepte their husbandes: this hath caused Spain. to reporte in euery place that they may for a smal porcion of golde or a precious stone [Page] haue the best mās wife in our realme whiche reporte hath sprede so farre, that the yonkers of Spain do write, as god is witnes that I haue seē their letters to peuish boies, that the prin­cockes be so familierli receiued with Ladies of Englande, that they haue no minde on Spanishe wenches: for the Spaniards say and it is so in dede in their countrey:

Oscula qui sumpsit si non et cetera sūpsit, hec quoque, que data sūt, per dere dignus erat: he, whiche hath obtained kisses, say they, if he winne nothinge els, is worthy to loose that which was geuē him.But take hede with this war­ning, or els ye wil shortly be named and sha­med. For in Spain he that canne gette a kisse shall haue all other thinges: ye wotte what I meane: and they think the same trew in England also. Peraduenture some will be offended because I speake so plaine. GOD is my witnesse I can­not for very shāe name such, as I cold & haue heard Spaniards name with [Page] shame enough, nor showe you halfe the vile reportes whiche they accor­dīg to their nature haue made of you I write not this, because I think they haue obteined so much of the noble Ladies of Englande with kisses, as they maye doe of Spanishe whores, nor beecause I thinke their reportes trewe: for vndoubtedly I know their woordes to bee a thousande partes worsse then their dedes: but because the good and honorable Ladyes of Englande knowinge their vile re­portes may vse thēselues more straū gely towardes Spaniardes at theyr next returne.

So that they maye knowe perfectlye, that all noble mens wiues and daughters with other Ladyes, & gentill wemen, that by the curtesi of Englande wil receiue their frende with a kisse, be not commen whores for euery pockye Spaniarde. And surelye I would wishe you to leaue that curtesye, specially among Spaniardes. [Page] I geue you this counsell because I desire your honors and your husbands also, ye maye take my woordes as it please you.London The noble Citie of London hath wonne more honor for punishing whores thē for any other seuerall acte: and yet Spaniardes saye that all their diligent watches not withstanding ther be more mōgrels borne within this ii. yeres in London then Englishmens children.Mōgrels I speake not this because I think it so in dede: for I tolde you their woordes were worsse then their doinges, but bee­cause that moste noble Citie maye continew in their most verteouse punishing of vice,It is the chefest vertue to punish vice. remembringe what vilenes they woulde haue reported if they myghte haue had liberte. I woulde wryte many other thinges that appertayne to theyr nature, how swinishe they vse thēselues at their table, tearing their meate lyke dogges, drinking like horses, hangīg their heades ouer their disshes that [Page] one parte beeinge [...]lauored in their mouthes may fall into the cōmē dish afterwardes, smacking like hogges, howe vilie they vse themselues in their chambers &c. but beecause the time is shorte and many Englyshmē knowe these things, I will here make an ende, moste humblye besechinge your honorable lordeshippes to pardon my doinges, if I haue withoute knowledge written any thyng con­trary to your expectacion because I may doe it of ignoraunce: but be you assured my whole desier is, to seeke the maintenaunce of youre honore, and in declaring suche thinges, as be pretended againste oure countrey,Mi desier in writīg this letter to seeke the preseruacion of the whole realme. I shall therfore desier al noble men, worshipful men, yomen of the Quenes garde and all other officers of her highnes most honorable court that they and euery one of them wyl exhort the people in euery coast and part of the realme to liue in tranquillite, [Page] peace and concorde by this fami­liar example of Esopes husbande mā. VVho hauinge many sonnes, that despicing their fathers admonicions liued continually in debate and strif, studied to plante amongeste them loue, vnite, concorde & peace. Hys sonnes vpon a tyme beeing at home in his own house, he commaunded his seruaunt to bring before hym a burthen of roddes, such as husbandes vse for their plowes and other busynes, & commaunded his sonnes, the bundell being fast bounde together, to breake the same roddes wholly togethers.

But when their strength fayled, the good man bade hys seruaunt vntie the said burthen, and the roddes beeing losed, he commaunded euerie one of his sonnes to break one wād: which thing when they had dō with ease, the good olde father sayed, after this sorte shall it be amōgst you my children: if ye perseuer together in [Page] one louing minde perfectly,Note your enemies shal neuer ouercome you. But if ye will disseuer youre selues one from another, this your deuilishe discorde and variaunce shal make you an apte praye for your enemies: euen so I say vnto you most deare beloued brethren, that like as a castel builded in the middes of a stronge rocke can neuer bee wonne til discorde fall among the captaynes and souldyers, so that one parte treaterouslye suffer their enmies to enter in at the gats: so likewise Englande is strongly cō passed with strong rockes, which no artilery can pearse, and so long as englyshe men lyke good faithfull souldiers wil louingly and faythfully agre together,Kepe this order and ye shal saue your countrey and euery man from the highest degree to the lowest seke to maintaine the weale publike of hys natiue country and the state of the realme, al the worlde can neuer ouer cum vs: but if the noble men or one part of the commens wil aide & like [Page] false traitors receaue in our enemies,Be sure to flye these mischiefes or els ye worke your own destruction. All you haue ben disceaued by the flattering of Spa. take hede with this warning Yet thoughe your lordship wer not per­fect bee­fore take hede at the last. I desire your safe garde. Thys should been dōe if the Quene coulde haue moued sedicion by her quarels last yeare to the gentel men. or if sediciō, treason, rebellion, insurrections and such like mischiefes fall amongst vs and be wrought within our selues, our enemyes shall come in reioycing at our most deuilishe dyscorde, and destroye the realme, and bring all Englyshe men to such perpetuall bondage and slauerye as I haue here before declared. Yea those that be their greatest frendes & first bringers into the lande are appointed to dye the moste shamefull death so farre as I perceiue: there is pryuye treason working against you at this present, whiche will be brought to passe spedely, take wise counsel, man all your hauens strongly, least youre enemyes come vpon you sodenlye. I am sory that I gaue the lorde Page [...]e warning what treason is pretended against him: for I think ambicion so much blindeth his eies, that he hath no better grace but to goe about as many fleminges reporte, to conduct [Page] a great nōber of high Almaines priuely into Englande amongest you to destroie your corne and destroye the realme or els to take the Lord graie, the lord Depute of callis & the hold with all, whiche we haue here seene. Sodenlye suffer not youre enemyes to enter into the lande, as ye did the Danes in times past, in hope to driue them out after suche like sort. For I assure you the Spaniardes can & wil prouide more politike wayes to sup­presse the countrey and kepe vs in subiection, then euer the Danes dyd in times past. I shal therefore exhort you, and in the name of our sauioure Christe require you, to flie all maner thinges that may be like to make discord, debate, stryfe, sedicion, commocions, treasons, rebellions or such like mischiefes amongeste you

And speciallye leaue those moste deuilishe names of Papystes, here­tikes, Lutherans, protestauntes and [Page] suche like, accordyng to the Quenes moste gracyous proclamacion. Ioyne youre selues to gether wyth loue & amite, reioysinge to take vpon you the moste blessed name of oure saui­oure Iesus CHRISTE, the GOD of equitee, peace, loue and tranquillite, and to bee called Christians: knit your selues together in perfect cha­rite, loue together lyke Christen brethren, remembryng we haue al one father whyche is in heauen,VVe haue al one fa­ther, which is in heauē, then we ought to loue to­gether like bre­thren. & that we bee all redemed wyth one raū ­some, euen the shedynge of the moste precyous bloud of oure sauyoure Iesus CHRISTE: whose commaundementes if we wyll en­deuore oure selues to keepe for the vttermoste of oure power, and if we will take vpon vs hys moste myghtye name, he wyll vndoubtedlye defende vs wyth hys moste myghtye arme, so that we shalbe a­ble to withstād our enemies & liue in our countrei quietly in peace, loue [Page] and tranquillite, like as the children of god and louing brethren in our sauiour Iesus christ: to whom with the father and the holye goste iii. per­sons and one liuing god, which was without beginning, be­all honore and glorye worlde withoute ende. A­men.

Your lordships obedient, trew and faithfull seruaunte Iohā ­nes bradfordus.

Once agayne beware of had I wifte.

¶ A tragicall blast of the Papisticall trompette for maintenaunce of the Popes king­dome in Englande.

NOw fil the cup & make good chere,
This goldē chaines must neds obei:
Englād is ours both farre & nere,
No king shall reigne if we say nay.
Now all shauen crownes to the stāderd,
Make rome, pul down for the Spaniard.
Spare nother man, woman or childe,
Hange and hed thē, burne thē with fier:
VVhat if Christ wer both meke & mild
Satan our lord wil geue vs hier.
Now al shauen crounes to the standerd,
Make rome, pul down for the Spaniard.
Pope innocent our father old,
VVhen Peters ke is cold doe no good:
He cursed them a thousande folde,
And drowned them in Tibers floud.
[Page]Now al shauen crownes to the standerd,
Make rome, pul down for the Spaniard.
He said we must pauls swerde now take,
Splay the banner, strike vp the droome,
Fall to aray, pike and halfe hake,
Play now the men, the time is come.
Now al shauen crownes to the standerd,
Make rome, pul down for the Spaniarde.
Our golden hatte we must defende,
Though Christ say nay, we wil it haue,
And it maintaine vnto the ende,
Al kinges to vs be bonde and slaue.
Now al shauen crownes to the standerd,
Make rome, pul down for the Spaniard.
The Pope our father hath al rule,
The deuil to him wil neuer say nay,
But maketh him richly to ride on mule,
In worldly pompe which may not decai.
Now al shauen crownes to the standerd,
Make rome, pul down for the Spaniard.
The Spaniards hath sworne vs to defēd,
So that we betraye Englande to them:
Make hauock now the people to spend,
[Page]As Herode did once in Bethleem.
Now al shauen crownes to the standerd,
Make rome, pul down for the Spaniard.
Doe you not see this Englishe in feare:
Their hart is driuen into their hose.
xiii. we burned of late to gether:
Thei durst not snuffe ōce with their nose
Now al shauen crownes to the stāderd,
Make rome, pul down for the Spaniard.
Hey courage, courage, my felowes al,
The gettīg ship must bere a proud saile,
If we draw backe our kingdom wil fal,
If we be stoute nothing shal vs faile
Now al shauen crownes to the stādard,
Make rome, pul down for the Spaniard.
Lay shame aside, let honesty go,
Beare out al matters be they vntrew:
Say trew men be traitors & the Qu. foe,
Banish al trueth and falshode renewe.
Now al shauen crownes to the standerd,
Make rome pul down for the Spaniard.
Our iust must we haue, who can sai nay,
This god once said to our father Caine,
[Page]The world is our reigne & worldli staie,
VVe shal not decaye but alwais remaīe.
Now al shauen crownes to the standerd,
Make rome, pul down for the Spaniard.
The authour to Englande his naturall countreye.
England repent whiles thou hast space,
If thou couldest repent as Niniuie did,
Then sholdest thou be sure of gods grace
And so might thy enemies quite be rid.
But if thou be blinde and wilt not see,
Thē hasteth destructiō for to destroi the.
FINIS.

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