Mode fly Triumphing over Impudence. OR, SOME 71 31 1 Upon a late PUBLISHED BY Elizabet Mi d w i f e and Lady Errant. together with The D E P o S ITIO N S of Richard Adams ' of Lincolns-Inne Elqj againft her, before his M a J E s t y and the Right Honourable the Lords of His Majefties Privy Council. Mnfwer a Fdol according to his Folly, left he he wife in his Conceit. Prov. 26. 5. own Exempla , Quy Socci fuperantriflm, luBuftpe Cothurni. Claudian. LONDON, Printed for Jmathan JVtlkins at the Star in Cheapftde near Mercer s-Chappel, id 80. \ £ I • I •; & }'■ V S < . * * r 7 \ f' t 1 ■ 5 lie b •$ k ■» M . V • Ar ** rs «nc\ A SOME t O Upon a late A Publifhed by Celltef and LADY ERRANT. / N the Title page of our Lady Err ants Romance, I lee, inftead of a Copper Cutt, exprefling her Ladyfhips gracelels features, an odd thing, like fome Talffman, deviled and made when Jupiter ■was in Gemini, or the Counterfeit of a Seal' of fome antiquated Princefs of Jerufalem, or of the Famous Lady, the renowned Queen and Conlort of John Van Ley den, a Taylor and Monarch of Munjleri In this remarkable Hierog liphick the following rarities are contain¬ ed ; One Verfe of Juvenal tranfproled into falle Latine one Rag of falfe Englifh; one Molehill,one Pidgeon ; one bit of ; one old Crojje, one young CroJJe, four Infant Croffes; one , and one Rote. My requqft is, that Father , having firft: obtain'd from Mrs. Rockley, his former Leman, a dilpenlation Au- thentick, might before his Pilgrimage to St. Mary of Trvybourne, reftifie this device of his Patronels. t I Our Mother Midwife, or Sifter of Lynthia ( pag. i.) doth bold¬ ly enter, or rather Mounfonthe Friar, Paine alias Nevil the Slop- leller, and Gadbury the Botcher, enter in her fhape, and make her remind us; That (he was once a P, but afterward became a Papifi, and in that Religion found Doctrines agreeing to her Moralls, which we doubt were Ipecial ones; then llle tells us, 'That foe hath fatisfed ( fhe hopes ) any indifferent perfon in her firfi change; as aljoin her continuance therein. ' Good Mother ! we fhall better latisfied when the * Law hath palled upon you for your Re¬ conciliation to the Church of Rome', you are too well skilled in the Statutes to be ignorant, that this 'firft Page of your Pam¬ phlet, upon profecution, without a Danger field* may trufs you up* A 2 ,01 h%L f A ' ,jw.: „ ■; , Or fend you again into Richardfons Garret. I fhall proceed; pag. 2. Our Lady being fully confirmed, thinks it her duty, through all forts fif hazards (to deck old Cellier ail over with horns) to relieve the poor imprifoned Catholicks, who in great numbers were loch in Gaols flarving for want of Bread; and fome Months before faw the Countefs of Powis,fhe workt wonders if wee'll believe her : Yet all this Midwife brings out of thele Mountains, amounts to fcarce a Moule ; Firft fhe lets us to underhand; that towards the end of January, 1678. Hie performed a folemn Embafly from Catparn Pugb ( 'CafiltmainsConfenor, a difcarded Jefuite) then in the Colledg "of Newgate, to Powis Houfe in Lincolns-Inne-fields ; then fhe claps in four¬ teen" lines of ftuffe ( which fhe had from Medbourn the Player) and this file calls a Narrative of Oats and Bedlow in Spain ; This fhe leaves in the good Duke of Lautherdales hands; Then fhe informs us, that the Lady Powis beftirs her lelf like a notable Amazon: .And by her pious and charitable endeavours ( fays Madam Midwife ) there was A weekly Charity collected,' of which I had the difpofing, but was fo far from diverting any part thereof that I fill went out of Purje ; Of which truth, both the Pr if oners and others have been very fenfible fince my lmprifonment.Here Mad.am Errant prepares her Plea before any living Soul hath brought in her , and confidently averres, fine kept no contribution Money to her own ufe : It feems the Pnfbners were not very well fatisfied in your Integrity, good Madam", till you became one of them, cryed Whore firll, and made your Apology. Why lb? No Crime, no Excufe. Next fhe proceeds to acquaint m with a lamentable Pale, How on Phurfday January the Ninth, 1678. floe dined New¬ gate, and at four a Clock coming down Stairs with five Women, of which three were Prolef ants, we heard terrible Groans and Squeeks which came out of the Dungeon, called the condemned Hole, 8cc. Thert fhe runs on with a Tale of one Corral a Coachman, of the great Holes in his Leggs, and of his manifold Tortures in Newgate, a Duke threatned to run him through, beat him, him by the Hair ; and another great Lord laid down a Heap of Gold; that a perfon in habit of a Minifler food by all the while, &c. - ' ' ' " * > * • ■ r ■ - * ^ » - - \ .V,v • ' V < t C r;'A \ . \ As to the Narrative of Fourteen lines of Oats and 'Bedlow in Sp ain, the true ftory ftands thus: One James Bedlow the Brother of William Bedlow, the witnefs, might rob Mr. Oats, when he was in Spain, and it may be James hath left no good fame behind him there or any where elfe; but what's that to William ? he ne¬ ver behaved himlelf ill in Spain. Onely Madam Midnight and the others of her Tribe, moved by their Catholick charity, are here and in all other places very careful not to mention James, but to pin all his crimes upon the Innocent Shoulders of William, thereby to render his Teftimonies of their Treafons the lels - valid.. Y x The terrible Tales of Groans and Squeeks in Newgate, a man might fear, would have put our Lady Errant and her timerous five Sifters into a fright, rather than upon an Inquiry. It was in truth no more than this: Maddam Errant and her five - Mates had dined, and drank abundance of Claret and burnt Bran- C . j . ' 4 V. ^ \ - • - ' • , \ • , , ' \ ( . ( - ■ / . . ' * ■ ' 2 1 k/ ^ ' ♦ ■ L 5 3 dy in Newgate with Pugb, M Prefion, and other Priefts, and Papiftical Plotters; hence coming to a freer air, their heads were infpired, and became replenifhed with hidden Nodes of Groans and Squeeks, not heard then, or ever firice, by any of mortal race, belides themfelves; At that time their Tails too were not free from Noife ; they were as egregious , as their Noddles; and by their frequent Popismas outwhiftled lo many Flagellets, to the admiration of all the Hearers: Then, then was the old Verfe of a Drunken Crony fulfilled, ff Inquinis dr Capitis qua fint t Juvenj'- A drunken C. keeps' no P. Madam Errant! this was propheti¬ cally fpoke of you, many years before the Majfe-Book was known to the world; and it is a much fitter Motto for your Device, than that wherewith Fryar Mounfon furnillied you (out of the fame Author ) for your Title-Page. • All this bufsle of Groans and Tortures were only raifed thus: A fellow had in a drunken humour made a Quarrel in the Gaol; for which he was ordered to be punifhed, according to the com¬ mon ufe of that place; this was all the matter, as I was affured by one ( well acquainted with the Officers of the Houfe ) whom I got to go the fame Evening to enquire, and as Captain fon will aifert. Nor is there any more truth in the Romance of Corral, - a Rafcaily Elackney Coachman, who was for fome words about Sir Edmundhury Godfrey, committed to Newgate by the Houfe of Lords, in the heat of that affair: This being Squeezed andhafped in a Trough, looks like fome Legend invented or new vamped by. Friar Mounfon ; and the Ridiculous actions of the Duke, the Lord and the Parfon, are fuch as no man in his wits can believe; like that other the Papifts framed about the fame time, concerning the Cow-keeper of St. Giles, and the Lace of Sir Edmundhury God¬ freys Cravat. The laid Corral hath lately, before the Right Ho¬ norable the Lord Maior, under his hand and upon Oath, denyed he was any ways tortured, or that any Duke, or Lord, or Mi- niffer were with him in Newgate, or ever acted any fiich thing as this Maddam Errant relates. Next fhe proceeds to the Grand Intrigue of giving Danger field a vifit in Newgate, about the tenth of April, 1679. where in very hum¬ ble and religious words he beggd her Charity, and then gave her Arti¬ cles againfl Captain Richardfon, as fhe faith ; which are fuch noto¬ rious, Mucked, ftupendious Lyes (and in many places of her Pam¬ phlet contradicted by her felt) as none but a Miftrifsof fiich im¬ pudence, fiich a brazen brow'd Procuratrix, fuch a Buckle and Thong of Leachery, as Elizabeth Cellier the Popes Midwife, living in Arundel-flreet, M'ould ever have dared to publifh ; Arraigning the City of London therein for Cruelties, not much inferiour to the bloody Papal Inquifition : It concerns that Honourable Metro¬ polis to vindicate its reputation; as, I doubt not, but it will in due time. 1 The 8,9, 10, 11, 12. pages, are replenifhed with Stuffe and ■ davits. She acquaints the Reader how fhe got Mr. Dangerfield over to the Bench, and indeed ( as her forefather Satan hath fome- time fpoke truth ) fhe very honeftly confirms his Narrative. Then " ' 1 B ( , befpaters I tf] . C - • bel patters the Earl oi Shaft sbury, with moft falie, moll Improba¬ ble and Nortfenfical Incongruities; as any one, who hath but even heard the name of that Prudent and great man ( one of the w if eft of Mortals) will eafily believe : The Earl of Shaftsbury, I do here politively averr, had neither then, or ever fince, a Servant named 'fobnfan( file calls him lb, that fhe fays tranlacled with Stroud; ) Neither did any of the Earls Servants ever fee Mr. Stroud in the KJngs Beach, except Mr. S, who upon the firft Noife of this Fable in 1679. went over to Mr. Stroud, who gave under his hand before Witnefs, That he never Jaw any of the faid Earls Servants to his knowledge, in all his Among her many flout and Refblute Champion-Vouchers, or people of , to make up die Aft ( according to ancient and Modern way of Commedy) fhe induces Jam Mofely, the notorious, infamous Bawd ; who ('tis true ) flood not in the Pillory, nor had the Credit of the Cart; her flipping away after Sentence, and getting over into , prorogued her Penance, but never yet pardoned her Offences or her Fine ; a fair pair of Heels being all the Pardons fhe ever yet had for her many years praftifing Nefarious Arts : She being not pardoned, whether her Jffidavit for the Catholick caufe, "be better than Dangerfields Oath after his Pardon, for that of the Prote- flants ; or whether two Bawds, conjoyning in tertio, have not fpoiled the Proverb, Two of a Trade cannot agree; is humbly left to the ferious confideration of a learned Judge. By this time it feems, Mr. Dangerfield, or Madam Colliers pretty Spaniard, as her felf ufed to call him, had done his work in the KJngs Bench \ fhe hath now occafion for his more clofe and fecret fervice ; therefore Ihe becomes indefatigably fedulous to agree with his Creditors, coEeBs a (umme of Money, pays his Debts and Fees ; and finding him an a (live Tool for her ufe, and adapted to perpe¬ trate any wickednefs the Popifh Interefl would imploy him in, file takes him home, makes him firft Ufher to Caftlemain at Crofs, in tutoring the Boyes of St. Qmers in the three liberal Arts of Sawcinefs, Impudence and Lying ; which good Office he held at the Old Baily afterwards ; Madam the Errant, Midwife, confelfes he attended and fetcht Victuals and Drink then and there for the Wit¬ nefs. After fuch brave fervice, Madam (fhe here affumes a great deal of State) gives Mr. Dangerfield fummons to attend her at Bo wis Houfe, pag. 1 ]. Thither her pretty Spaniard bent his Courfe, that being the ordinary Rendevouz of the Cabal ; and there fhe lets him to know, in the prefence of Mr. Henry Nevil, Pain, that K»ow (he would put it into his power to be an Hone ft man, he had a to be fo ; and would get him an Enftgns place under the Duke of Munmouth, or elfe an employment to go to Sea, hc. Here's a power of Ceremony more than needed ; for fhe had a long time before lodged hint in her own Houfe, and was fatisfied in his Abilities ; -y^et our Lady Errant is relolved to keep up the Antick Mode of Romances, and fo will I once. Now our Dido and /Eneas .* ;i , | _ ' •• • "% '• S ' t ' i I .Ttneid. 1. 8. Congreffi junguntdextras, mediifque refidunt JEdibm, & tandem fermone fruuntur. t •' • ' Cellier. Ceflier.My Pretty Spaniard, all that is in my-power, i'le do it for thee/ Arjd what is not in my power ? Generals by Sea and Land dare deny me nothing ; their Wives, their Miffes, are all in my Hands; for I bring them all to Bed. The rolling Wayes of the Surly Ocean are calm to me; the Heaven afpiring Mountains how them- felves to me; the Woods, the Brady Groves, the fertile Plains do me Homage ; becaufe thole who command them, do lb i Nay, the Azure .Skies with the Starrs therein, act as I bid them. Is not Gadbury, their Secretary, the Servant of my Foot-ftool ? Does not he 'remember and forget, deny and averre, Swear and Forfwear what I would have him ? .. Danger field. Your Authority is very large, Madam. Cellier. As for the Mules, they are my Handmaids. Don't I direcft the Pen of the great N.evil here prelent ? I taught him to Pray 111 Verfe to the Saint and Martyr Coleman'. 'Tis I manage the immortal Genius of the Learned Munfon. Am not I a chief Counltllor and Confident to the Right Honourable and High-foui'd Virago, in whole Palace we now refide ? Do's not fine Trot up and down to gather Contributions for the diftreffed Cathoiicks ? and when i he hath got a Parle, doth fhe not commit it to my Pocket, and my Diftribu- tion ? Believe me, I'le let lome Hick to my own fingers; fhe that lerves at the Altar, ought to live thereby. We'll not want Money, my Boyes; let the Cathoiicks feed upon Meditations; we'll live well in the meantime. Dang. When we are gone, all's gone with us, Madam. Cell. But here's a final! Job to be performed e're we arrive at our Haven of happinels. A perfon or two muft be put out of the way. Come, come, you 111 all not go to Sea; nor be an Enfign; you are a good man for the Holy Caufe; Starrs are flrong as Gadbury hath allured me; you'l keep your Coach and fix Horles, and then you lhall marry my Daughter. A Presbyterian Plot is contrived ; you muft have a part in that Play, you know; but in the mean time, I have taken a care to put ycu into bulinels ; to pretend to ga ¬ ther up fome old, rotten, delperate Debts for my Husband. Dang.I am willing to ferve you, and the Caufe, with my felf, Dear Madam. —y • f *■ ». . . 1 , ..t ■» 4 * f * - ' "r '* "* " - ■ " w-" Such like Difcourfo as this paft, which our Lady Errant puts in¬ to another form in her Pamphlet, and tells the World their great Care and Piety to make Mr. Dangerfield honefi, and of her dili¬ gence to provide him places. But no doubt it is an Egregious Fable, as even her own ftory makes apparent. For the Engins of Satan were then moft bulily Contriving a Plot, and how to make the World believe the Dijfenters were the Authors thereof. In the mean time, the Presbyterian Plot goes briskly on; and ftands as a Skreen to fhadow their other Real Plots, and long contrived Villanies. Mr. Dangerfield is new-cloathed, and replenillied with Money, and to endear him the more, taken into Peltiers Bed, fur- nillTfd with Daggers to affajftnate the KJng, and the Earl of Shafts- bury, Comilftoned to frequent the Coffee-houfes as a Spy; thus Mr. Dangerfield is now transformed into an Honefi man, according to the Catnolick Doctrine of Mrs. Midwife before mentioned. ' : - Si* ■" C«3 „ ' . » Sir R. Peiton is next drawn in, and meets the Earl of Peterbo¬ rough, by our Midwifes means, at Gadburys houfe; then is by her Midwifemip handed to the Duke of Tork, and fhe jells us, his Roy¬ al Highnefs received him kindly, and Sir Robert made to ferve, &rc. I hope he will. And then fhe goes on, pag. 14. to per- fwade all people that, For her part it was no motivebut her Loy¬ alty and Duty to his Majefty, and Love to Truth and fuftice, that engaged her. Very fine indeed ! To endeavour the total ruine of multitudes of good and faithful Sub) eels, to provide and Daggers to deftroy the Perlon of her King, in our Midwifes lick Cant and Charity, is Loyalty and Duty to. his , and Love to Truth and Juftice. I believe fuch a piece of Hypocritical Impu¬ dence cannot be found in the Annals of any Age. Here Friar fon (for he compiled this Scene ) hath outdone all the Friars, that ever went before him; here the Devil is proved an Afs, degraded, dethroned, and our Midwife placed on his^ Tribunal. Here are the Verles of Pope Pius the fecond truely fulfilled: Non audet Stygius Damon tent are, quod audet Ejfrcenis Monaclius , plendque fraudis Anus. - - j % ■ , j Now matters ripen apace; take it in our Midwifes words Epi¬ tomized. : . •v . * • X •* - $ * - t ' ... i : Sir William Waller and CollonelManfel come with prefent pay j The old Rump Officers are new rigged, and Penftons paid them by the Kings-head Club; Commiffions are given out in. the Names of the Keep¬ ers of the Liberties of England, in Parchment with thirteen Seals at them. She encourages Dangerfield to go on; gives him Money and Inf ractions ; They write down all; they both go to the Earl of Peter¬ borough with what they had writ; Hprefently brings them to his Royal Highnefs to him they deliver their Paper for the KJngs ufe ; his Majefty gives it to Secretary Coventry, and commands Dangerfield to attend Collonel HaKa.ll with more of his Difcover ies, orders him 4.0 1. the better to enable him to proceed. > Let me here crave liberty to enlarge upon this, more than I have on others of her Stories, or than I fhall hereafter: When the Po- pifh Cabal found their wicked nels laid open, and their Machina¬ tions to change the Government and Religion dilcovered to the whole Kingdom, and condemned by the Reprelentatives thereof in full Parliament, not being able any longer with their .old preten¬ ces of Loyalty, Services, Sufferings for the , and fuch other ifale fluff, to Have off their impending punifhments," and finding their many little Tricks and Projects, they had* pra&ifed fince their Plot broke out, to prove Abortives, relolvedto turn the Tables and try a New Game ; which was this. They Plot up a Plot againft their old Plot, and preteiid Republicans, Presbyterians, Independants and other Diffenters, are the Authors and AftSrs j and not confidering that a fecond Villany was not likely to palli¬ ate the firft, by this means they conceived it poffible to beat out one Nail with another, and if not totally to run down the old ► • Plot, [?]. Plot, to cool and damp it, and to replenish the fickle heads of the vul¬ gar with many odd dories and jealoufies; to fright the Epi 1 copal Cler¬ gy and Church Protefhnts, with fears of their Livings and forms of Prayer ; and to perplex the King (I humbly beg Pardon if I think amifs ) with doubtful thoughts, and Redintegrations of defigns, like former troubles, tumults and Common-wealths. The E debts of their contri¬ vance in a meafure anfwered their expectation ; to which the late Stub¬ born behaviour of the five Jefuits and Mr. Lang horn had not a little con¬ tributed. Thefe men by their many Imprecations and alfeverations at the Gallows, had made feveral perlbns, who believed themfelve's Matters of much rea on, turn S, and ftrangely Staggered the uncertain Populace, who were not skilled in the Politicks of the So¬ ciety of Jefus. In like fort a certain Author, ail this pad Summer hath been carefull to dore the Stalls with his Roman Rhetorick by way of Introductory preparatives to this Volume of Lyes, publifhed ( but contrived by the Popifh fabtion ) under the name of Cello re. The f ela- it i well forelaw (they being fubtil men ) that, if they had confelled any thing, not only their favourers, but even their very Zealots and Bi¬ gots would have fallen off; Their Caufe would have been ruined, beyond all hopes of Recovery in thefe, or future times. They'being obliged to obey, and believing their Priviledges were diffident in ford Confcientu to fecure them in this world, and in the World to cd ne, made no bones to utter any uncouth and Ejaculations. T- con ¬ vince all men of their Jugling, here follows one taken trora many more of the fame fort, that the Jefuits have, or enjoy as tneir own, by Communication from another Order ; The Book was Printed at Antwerp by John Mturfe, 16 j 5. and entituled, Compendium Privikg to- rum & G rati arum Societatis Jefu. Quic uncfe ex noftris pcnitens & contritusNomen Iefu in mortis nominaverit, plenariam omnium peccatorum iuorum, etidm de qmbr >*, nifi morte prevemretur, confiteretur, indulgentiam Confequitur. Conceffam eft per Leonem Decimum Confrater nit ati Car it at is de 'Vr >e nthabetur in Privilegw impreffis.Fol. 72. pag. 2. fr Fol. 11 c, pag. 2. Whofbever of ours, penitent and contrite, at the very point of Dea th fhall name the Name of Jefus,obtains a plenary Indulgence for all his fins, even of thole, which unlefs prevented by Death, he ought to confefs. v C-■ f v Granted by Pope Leo the Tenth, to the Confraternity of Charity of the City, as it is had in their Priviledges Printed. Fol. 72. pag. -and Fol. 135. pag. 2.1 Our Mtcfwife informs us further, • Dangerfeld, about the latter end of September brought to her Stories of the great preparations of the factious ; that Goodwin, Alfop and the reft made great Collect ions ; That Sir W.iii- am Waller had three hundred Fdorfe-men ; that the City rvere ready to rife, m . - . gence, their facinerous attempt mifearried,was difrobed of its fair Man tk ■ of Fig-leaves, and thus denuded, expo fed to the whole Kingdom as a Ridicule ; only the Authors and Abettors thereof have not received ('tis great Pity ) their due Payments for their great deferts and merits. Danger field was committed to Newgatefiadbury to the e oun- tefs Powis to the Tower, Ricaut to Newgate, by the King and Councel. Oar Me da a the Midwife now (you may fee by her fooliih excufes, little Tales and Lies) makes many windings and doubles in her Courfe,- like a weary Hare : She writes to Danger field, and gives us a piece of her Enigmatical Epiffle ; which (he fays, ihe doth, beeanfe it was Truth ; receives an Anfwer from him,by which (he perceived he was a Rogue ; yet fends him an affurance of her ailifbance, together with her Motto; in which I fay, ihe was a Fool to truft one Ihe knew was a Rogue, if what file tells be truth. Now Sir William Waller friaps her up, and would have her to the Earl of Shaft sbury, (as true as the reft) but file refufes, becaufe fhe had been to attend that Honourable Perfon with a Dagger in her Placket not long before; fhe refufes likewife the Oaths of Supre¬ macy and Allegiance,'becaufe file knew fhe could not keep them ; feolds and Rants out, ihe's a Foreign Merchants Wife, will bring AmbafTadors and Kings of France, and I know not what Goblins, to Hector for her ; forgetting what Opinion all the Judges gave under their hands in 1678. in cafes of Foreign Merchants: yet (God knows ) her Husband is no more than a Broker to Foreign Merchants, and her felf a Brokerefs of Buttocks. She adds further, that Sir William fent her to the , for denying the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance that were never tendred her. Fy ! Friar Mounfon, and thou the Noble Nevill, learn to put your next matters better together for fhame ; St. Coleman will not hear the Prayers of fuch Dander noils; He's afhamed of the foolifh Contradictions ye make your Votaries to commit. Did not your Ve¬ hicle juft now quarrel with the Juftice, and deny the Oaths; and in the fame breath you make her lay, they were never offered her ? In the interim, Mr. Dangerfield turned honeft, confefs'd the whole In¬ trigue, and had his full Pardon ordered him by the King and Council. November the ift> our Lady Errant was brought, file faith, before the Council, where (lie is very Comical, and talks like a woman of Wit, to the Lord Chancellour; on a fudden turns lerious, and a man would think, Religious, for file kneels, not to fay her Prayers, or confefs her Crimes,but forlboth, to beg the King that (Joe not be , to w/jb His Majefty would not believe her : and I prefume fhe had her wifh. I obferve, this woman makes a horrible ftirre with Tortures in divers / places of her Legend, as in her foolifh Tales about Prance, Corral the Coachman, ebw 1 . The intent our Papifts have in telling fuch miierable Stories, is, not only to Intoxicate the more fimple People, and their own Bigots, but to afperfe the King, Lords, Commons, Laws, Judges, and in effedt all the Kingdom, with barbarous Cruelties, thereby to make the whole ■ EnglifbName and Nation odious to all the known world. £)ur Laws and Cuftoms never allowed Tortures, (there being evert Statutes againft them) as all knowing Papifts underftand well enough ; though I am not Ignorant that Father and have in former times foifted upon the World Cam fans wracking in the Tower, and Pictures of Tortures; from feme of whole feandalous Tales and •. 1 , . Sculptures t L'Ci Sculptures, I fuppofe Friar Mounfon and Henry P.tin framed our Mid- wives tortures, Racks, Troughs, Polls, with an Impudence improved beyond that of thofe wicked Apoftates and Impoftors, their more in¬ nocent Predeceffors. Neither do our proceedings againft Criminals require any tortures ; for with us a Party accufed, after laying guilty or not guilty, is by twelve men caft or acquitted. Now the Courfe where the Imperial Laws are ufed is much different; there is a neceffity for tortures, and by lex tali- cms, of Executions too, unheard of and impractical in our Nation. Our Midwife was again recommended to but alas ! at White-Hall Gate Hie began to quicken ; a pretence fire often made ufe of, during the ieveral times floe was had before the Council, and fell into a fvvoun : arriving at Newgate, in contradiction to her former lyes, fhe writes fut had a very good Bed in Cat tain Richardfbns and a Maid Ordered to lye in the Room with her. This Maid fhe corrupted to carry Letters in Bottoms of thread for her. Pag.icq, 20,21. fhe replenifhes us with a Dialogue between her felf and Mr. Dangerfield in Newgate : A Dialogue, I fhould rather call it a Dream; becauie Dangerfeld never faw her face in Newgate after her Commitment thither ; Here fire huffs with many rants and refblutions, ftollen out of Romances and Piayes; and after (he hath fufficiently applauded her felf, concludes gag. 22. with a pitiful Tittle tattleofbeing locked up clofe ina Room, not fuffered to have a Breath of Air, her Bread, her Linnen, her every- things fearcht; yet fhe faith, Captain Richardfon fuffered her to go into a large Room that looked into Doctors Garden; contradictions v. e mult Pardon. Pag.22. and 23, affords us another of her Dialogues or Dreams be¬ tween Sir William Waller and her felf; where the Lady as the tale is told, proves too hard for the Knight. Pag. 23. After Hie had turned up h r Hoods, and had, after fbme Qoeftions and Anfwers, given the Lord Chancellor the Lye, fhe with her wonted impudence in making Sir J horn.is Doltmanput in words ( as fire fays ) into her letter that were not there, molt fhamefully abides the whole Council; then fhe intro¬ duces Mr. Gadhury with his "Jupiter in Gemini, See. Then fhe hath ano¬ ther Fling at the EarlofShaftsbury ; and jumbles together a Hodg podg of fencelefs fopperies, of a Coach, of Mr. Shepheard, of the figure of One; of the Earls thinking her an excellent woman, with fuch like Ruff, altoge¬ ther as improbable and untrue, as her former tales of Stroud and John- fon, her Affidavits made by Hill, Woodman, ( the Jefiiits Porter ) Anne Mofeky the Bawd,her namelefs Voucher or Knight of the Poft, and fuch like worthies of the Kjngs-Bench. Next time ( gag.24. J fhe is brought before the Council, after her Hoods were turned up, and pratling abundance of fawcy Impertinen- cies, fhe atacks her Maid Margaret with ftealing a Silver Spoon. And being asked whether fire is with Child or no ? makes anfwer, She is not certain, telling the King and all his Council ( Oh moll imparallel'd impudence and Ingratitude !) 7 his is a time in which no comgajjton is Jhown to Sex, Age, nor Condition. Ingrateful wretch ! with what face durft you put fuch a Lveon a King, without whofe pity and Compaflion neither you, or any of your party had now breathed the air of England. A King even guilty of Clemency and goodnefs towards his Enemies .• what feverities have been praCtifed in his Reign? what Sex, Age, or v Con- » ( - V * ' * ~ /. . M Condition, was he ever incompailionate to ? He delerves from you and your party, more Loyalty and other Repartees. Pag. 27. She was before the Council, and holds on her old way of Lying and Impudence, traduceing then one Mr Adams of Lincoln?s Inn, whole Depofitions againft her follow. ' " 1 * ■ 1 11 '' ' 1 • ! ' 7 f • The Examination of Richard yfdams of Lincolnes-Imi, Elqj upon Oathj taken the 2 8C^- day of , 1 6 7 p. before His Majefty, and the Right Honourable the Lords ot His Majefties Privy Council. THis Ex am in ant faith, that about two or three years fince he became ac¬ quainted with Mrs. Cellier a French the ac- compt of being a Lawyer, and a CommiJJioner upon the Statutes oj Banckrupt, and about the 24th of September, laf paft, he was prevailed with to oive Mrs. Cellier a Meeting at the Devil Tavern near Temple-barr, to confult with other perfons about the Management of a difcovery of a long conceal7d Eft ate of one Mr. Dowdelwell a Bankrupt,a Debtor unto Mrs. Celliers Husband 500 1. as [beJaid.And at was accompanied with one Mr. Dangerfield, Willoughby, who ly began the Duke of York's Health in a glafs of Wine; that this Examinant had omitted naming the Health, Mrs. Cellier urged this Examinant to gratifie the Gentleman her good friend therein ; being comply- e:d with by this Examinant, then Dangerfield attempted to engage this Ex¬ aminant in a difcourfe with him, reviling^ perfons of the Presbitery perfwa- fton: his deftgn not taking effect, Mrs. Cellier pafjionately expreffed great Affections unto this Examinant ; declaring, that (he was lately arrived in England ,.anddefire'd to know of this Examinant, what was become of the old Popi-fh Plot; Condoling the condition of our Kjngs lofs of Reputation be¬ yond Sea f, for Jbedding f0 much innocent Blood, as perfvafded thereunto by that wicked Villain Shaftsbury ; bidding this Examinant have patience but one Moneth longer, and he Jhould fee the Plot blown up with a : And that his Royal Highnefs was re (liefs untill the Plotters were dijcovered: faying thus, 7 heir Names are well known unto us, they are many Num¬ ber,and Great ones: and bidding this Examinant not to (land in his own I'oht, faid jhe was in a capacity of raifmg his faying, fhe fpake affecti¬ onately unto him, and telling him that he was more capable of fervingthe Kjng and Duke of York's Inter eft, than other perfons were, being a Caft- off at Court. To which fayings this Examinant replied, Vnlefs (be meant his being tur ned out of the Commiffion of the Peace in good Qompany, not with Fools or Kjiaves: And further faith, that Mrs. Cellier was full of dif- comfe, in extolling the great charity of the Lord Powis's Lady towards the diftrejfedCatholicks. in Brifon, blaming this Examinant for not improve¬ iny his Inter eft with his Lady, who had expreffed great kindnefs for this Ex¬ aminant : Adding further,that this EProphetick fayings unto t he LordPowis, at his Cafual meeting of his Lord(hip in L u mbardftreet, D wave 1 m-3 #»■* gave hi'm great dijlurbance , relating unto the Death of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey ; And that Mrs. Cellier at their departure out of the Devil Ta¬ vern, earnefly dejired this Examinant to fee her at her houfe, boajling, that the Lady Pqwis often did her the Honour of calling upon her at her Houfe. . i • • [ . ■ A:.',. J . ■ ' > Our Midwife, pag.27. alTures the Lord Chancel lour, that Mr.' lielpt tojheai her of 500 k Mr. Adams had never any concern with her, but as a Cornmimoner upon the StahTes againfi: Bankrupts, when her Husbands Eftate was feizedby the Cuinrniuioners Warrant,and prized at 32 I. or thereabouts. Yet this , woman proclaims very confidently to the World, pag. 31, 52. that Jf - if and alone, without the help of Man or Woman [be hath expended *000 1. in the Common caufe. Me- thinks the was very uncharitable to • .cried, not to Ipend a little in her own Caufe ; perhaps fhe belie ved the Sheriff of Middle/ex and his Bums were poor diftrefied Catholicks, and el/teemed them fit objects for her charity, and accompts the ? 2 L ( die price of her Goods ) among other great fumroes expended in. her Picus ufes. Notwith- ftandinghcr gfeat GoodnCiS and Libera h:y,flie attacks Mr. threatens him with a Letter, that he pretended was writ by the Duke to the Lord Chancellour, to his Detriment: Mr. Adams laid, lie had done her 110 wrong ; and not believing (nor any body elie) that file had fuch power with the Duke, fhe impudently replies, She had done him many fectet Services, and as long as men kifs the. r Mifes and Wives, no¬ thing could be deny'd her in raifing any mansFortunes, a Disbanded JuJFice, intimating Mr. Adams to be fuch, which might be 011 this occafion : One Timothy Bald alias Cotton, a Prieft, and ano¬ ther perlbn, after they had ccnverfed with Harlots in Whetfions Park all night, (whith was the night of a Sabbath, day) they blew up in the morning a -Quarrel with other Bailies, and were with their Comrades lent to Gaole by Mr.. Adams, then a Juftice of Peace : For which per¬ haps he was Disbanded. , ' - To conclude, after file had with abundance of Impudence railed the King and his Chancellour, fhe' was remanded to Newgate. Pag. 30. We finde her before t ':e Council again, where there is a que (I toH about a Walk upon Tower Wiiarfe with a Lord Chief fuf ice, and one Sir George Wakeman is mentioned, with ten thoufand Pounds , which our Midwife faith file read in Pamphlet. I never faw any fuch Pamphlet, nor fuel; Walk but leave them both to Father Time, the Man-Mid¬ wife of truth, to bring forth and take care of. - When file hath intollerably affronted the Council, related many tilings in her own praife, told another'idle Tale of the Earl of Shaftsbu- ry and his Nephew* of Penn the Quaker,'and foifted in impertinent fop¬ peries of Achitophelsy Abfaloms,of Sir R. transformed into Hu'h&y 6 her ten thoufand Pounds Expence in the Common Caufe, and given a peculiar Character of her own Modefty, file goes onto her Trial; and declares fhe was Arraigned the 30th- 1680. at the Kjngfj Jh nch Barr, before Sir William Scroggs the chief JufHte, for High Treafbn : That on May the 14th- file made a ftep to (ler Hall again, to hear feme ws of her Trial, where fhe found the Court, it feems, fitting ; and being acquainted that her friend Gad-bury was not well, after file had told many querulous Lies of her Hui- - ' bands 1 "' ■ ~S x \ >• ' • ' ' / . .* . x ' ' ' ■ , ; : Cm] bands loffes, befpattered the Lords of the Council, and beftowed a few Complements upon the Lords her Judges; the chief Juftice very civilly makes aniwer, That the IIth* 0/June, is appointed for her Trial, according to her defee; and then bids the Kjtper of Newgate take her backhandufe her with refect: And I hope Captain obeyed the voice of his Lordflhip. June the nch- ( being the day of St. Barr abas') is come, our La¬ dy Midwife takes Coach for the City of Weftminfter, arrives at the Hall, is conducted to the Court, where hie findes the Lords her Judges expecting her coming. This great Perfonage underftanding that her Name as a Confeffor, was already in the Roman Kjlender, is not willing to have any but Saints or Holy Men of her Jury ; ( not confidering what a puzzle the Sheriff would be put to, to provide fuch for her) and requires, That no body, that had not taken the Sacrament lately, might be of her Jury. At laft twelve iuch are agreed up¬ on, ( though 110 Saints ) as, fhe fays, /he believed were Honejl Men, and would do her no wrong; I believe fa too: Then to work they went. The King's Council, Sir Crefwel Le, Attorney General, Sir John Maynard, Sir A. Sawyer, and Sir George Geoffreys: They produce their Evidence, ( viz.) John Gadbury, Thomas Dangerfeld, Margaret Jen¬ kins, Sufan Edwards, &c. Gadbury according to the Licence his Coufin Madam Celliers granted him before the Council, pag. 29. fwears ea- gainft her to this Eflect. • v » • ; ' • | w y ■ 7 hat he knew nothing of the Plot; that he had carried the Names of four Gentlemen, F to Sir R. P. hton, to the Duke, to have them made ces: That one Smith and another Gentleman came him,to go to the Lords of the Tower, tofvear againjl Mr. Oats • that he bad heard her fay, Dangeriield told her of a Presbyterian That when the Attorney /hewedhim tbe Atte/lation, which he had. fvorn,and given the Council under his hand, he faith, he did it for fear of hanging. 1 hen after large Commendations ofhimfelf and his true Protefancy , of Madam Cel¬ liers Loyalty and great Integrity, he merrily concludes with a Joque ; That Mr. Danger field had fworn him into the acquaintance of Lords and , whofe Honourable Phifnotxiies he hadneverfeen. Obferve how ill this ungodly Southfayer's Tale hangs together : He knows of no Plot; yet prefently owns that Cellier told him Danger field had told her of one. As to his making of Sir Robert Peitons friends Juftices, ( except himfelf was meant to be one) 'tis altogether Im¬ pertinent : So is the other Fable of Smith and a Gentleman, nothing to his purpofe, except he can, by Hitching Lies upon the back of any man he knows, extenuate his particular Crimes, and wipe off his own wickedneffe. The Atteftation, of which Mr, Attorney reminded him, indeed concerns him nearly ; though lie was very brief in his Anfwer, it is reafbnable the World fhould know the Truth, which amounts to this : That \ his Accufationof Treafons ^gainft Cellier and others, that he had fworn, and put his hand to at the Council Board, whileft he was in Jeopardy of his Neck, muff be judged no longer True than till the King had pardon'd him, and refcu'd him out of the Claws of Kjtch, in order to ferve his Ma- jefly and his Native Country : But after he had got his Black D 2 " Box, ["-'J . Box, Good-night N'tcoll He'll ferve his Coufin Madam Cellier, and like a Profligate Mifcreant, in EffeQ: deny the very Paper he had (worn and fign'd a Month or two before. Let Mr. Attor¬ ney argue thefe matters with this Commandment-Stretcher; I'le commit him to the care of his Coufin, his Captain, his Cobler, and his Friend Young Squire Tongue, till they devife New Plots to Confound Old ones, and make future Work for Pillo- ries. • • ' v ■ Our Lady Errant runs on, quotes Statutes, dictates Law to the Judges; next fays, the Judges made an Excellent Dilcourfe about Fellony, which fhe hath not given us, becaufe, as fhe confelfes, Jhe hath forgot it. Sufan Edwards her Maid fwears ( her Friend Dangerfeld fwore not that day ) that fire carried two Notes to Danger field in New¬ gate, (after he was lent thither by the Council) two Books of Accompts, one Gninny, and Twenty fhillings in Silver, from her Miflrifs, with this Meflage, Now wo* the time her Life lay in his Ends. Our Midwife found this pincht, grows very angry, falls a fcolding, and charging Sufan with robbing her, asks her, if fh e ever knew any difhonourable thing by her ? Sufan anfwers in the Affirma¬ tive ; which feeing our Midwife hath not fairly brought it to bed, I fhall truely relate. Our Lady Midwife, one Sunday Morning, weary of her Dull Husband Cellier, Roufes him about fix of the Clock, packs him out of doors to Maflfe; then wills Sufan to reach her a clean Smock, file wafhes her body with Rofe-water, Powders and Perfumes her (elf, flips to Bed again; commands Sufan to place certain Sweet-Bags under her Head and Buttocks, and then to withdraw .• Dangerfeld enters, Sufan locks the Door unknown to the Amorous Couple ; the Lock being a double fpring forbids Dangerfeld1 s Exit, without the kind affiftance of Sufan. Our Adulterefs fairly tells her Judges and Jury, this was no Trea- fon comprehended in the KQc of Edward the Third. Yet lhe fays, S -rgeant Maynard made fome malicious Reflections thereupon : Next after/ fome more Bawdery, fhe writes, that the Chief Jufiice made an Excellent Speech, fome of which flue gives us in thefe words: Of what ftd CLonfecjuence it would be, to admit fuch grofligated wretches to give Evidence ; and that the three Kingdoms might rue fuch a dayes work ; and that it would be an Inlet to the Greatef , to defroy our , Liberties and Efiates. t . * • '' '' * • If that grave and wife man made fuch a fpeech, no doubt he had fon for it: Then Dangerfeld, for ail his black Box, is found guilty of a Felony and Burglary at Wind/more Hill in EJfex, by a piece of Paper .* Robert Tetterfon and James Eaton, after they were often call'd, not appearing to fwear he was the man. To conclude, Madam Cellier is ve¬ ry formally acquitted, prays/or the Kjng, and his Royal Highnefs, and her Judges, and marched away about her bufinels. Dangerfelds Stag; were not fo aufpicious; he being recommended to the Mar fir all of the Kjngs Bench, is well beaten, and civilly put into a hole; This was Tryal of Elizabeth Cellier and Thomas Dangerfield ; and our Midwife concludes her ftory, as her Goufin Gadbury did liis Swearing, with a ■ • • ■ . ■ Jeff* I ' . C'7] . V }eft. Inftead of Guinneys fhe pays her Jury Complements, telling them, jhe wiH deliver nil their Wives with the fame fidelity they delivered her, and that Jhe had defended her felf again (I a Dragon and four , rt 'henjhe had no St. George to ft and by her. I find in fag.48. and her laft, mention made of one Merry Thorn of St. Anns-Lane, Weftminfter, and a marginal account how we may have better knowledge of him> in talking with his Father, , c. That he is called, the Parliament Teezer, and Council This Gentleman, whom 'tis fuppoled this Feminine Piece of Wicked- nels doth here traduce, averres, he hath not ulually been near the Council-chamber fince the Meal- tub Plot, ( when his being by her Lift rankt for a Traytor, caufed him to be there to vindicate his Inte¬ grity,) neither did fie ever ply in the Lobby to help tO lave Criminals in Parliament: He lay in Prilon for his Fathers debts, which many of the Creditors had probably loft, if he had not been lb honeft as to have become their Pay-mafter ; and his Brothers and Sifters portions had never been given them, or come to their hands, without the Interpo- fition of his Induftry, care and diligence ; which they have been lb far from gratefully acknowledging, that they have hindred him by their carriage lome thoulands, in the Sale of the Eftate, and undelervedly reproached him. I read in pag. $0. ofouf Midwifes late Tryal at the Old-Baily, that Ihe very boldly prelfes the Court to take notice of her remarkable Loy¬ alty ; and amongft other Lyes, protefts, Jhe ventured her life through Seas and Armies to ferve his Majefty; This I take notice of, becaule in her »v Pamphlet, pag. 27. Ihe confidently tells the Chancellor and Council, Jhe was never out o/England. I fhall rake no further into her Dunghill of Lyes and contradictions, but leave her in her Armour on a Theater, ereCted and provided at the publick charge for a perlbn of her delerts j whence, like her Bandito Mengone,Jbe is made famous to Pofterity ', may Regale her lelf with the choice S we§t-meats lent her by a great For- reign Minifter, and get into the Roman Kjilender lo loon as Ihe can, by her manifold merits of Lyes, Treafons and Adulteries.- - ' ' . . I ^ | , MM—Ml l'—■!.! ( ■■ 'V I ll ... II 1 - I V I 1 r I V. «•' - - < , _ . - I ^ # # > ' • ./ J A few (Remarks on the Lives of Padre Leonello Anderlonio de Mounfonio, and of Von Henrique Pagano Nevillano deSlopponio. • PAdre Leonello was born in the Land of Lincoln, was a Scholar under Mr. Dugard at Merchant-Taylors School, London \ after* wards he was lent to Eaton, thence to the Vniverjity, where he became a Papift, as many others do in thole much celebrated Man- fiBns, and fince a Fryar Dominican. He had not Friafd long in London, when he found many very zealous VotarelTes; among the principal whereof was one Madam Rock ley, a handlotne proper Woman; this holy Woman was E wholly * ; . . osj JPBWBf devoted to the fervice of our ftrenuous and hvong-backt Friar ; he fed. her"'inward Woman with the miraculous °difcourfes of his 1 Mouth, and her outward Woman with the Marrow of his Bones; one Board, one Bed, was tiled by them, whilft the Husband and Cuckold old Rock ley, pad: away his time, as an Anchorite in «' . Relied fcnx; .8> r! Oaf Friar could not alwayes feed on Capon and White-broatb ; beino- L\., ii 'A _ r • rv _ _ \x i_• .etc • i rr n *~s* le amltanceof * It but mark how ill ludf/vofi^U tryads r6n'tire heels of Virtue; One of his Devotes put fiis Pfdrix.in that- dilorderly oburfe, as could hot be managed luch it piece as uBejf CeUkt, and beget a -Smterkih .upon'her body, jyoriifienrfyrte ■■Pfyrahb NevHlwo de Slotf onto 'was-born nine months in his ufothers belly, Jthd twice fb many at her back ; He is defcended rr /> U . ^ i A. n from/the illuftrious Houfe of the Pagans'., to recite here the roll of his; Pedigree \Fou]d be neediefs and tedious ; let -what he himfelf i »» 11 % d j p r JO Oft "f (\ (~*l rff* r /u n " rl . f <(>., j i «, - " ,fi 'I t , i • a nalf< above the Clouds.. When lie was endued with lb much of the IblfaF Arfs as enabfedB'11'1 m~ ( ,,, .... came an Apprentice to a Slop-feller, I mean, a man that vends Indian Gowns, Petticoats and Dikloes. In a fhort time he fell in love with his Mafters.Maid, a buxome Girle; Lucrece (for that was her name ) lilped a little, which was rather a grace, than in¬ jury to her fpeech; her Eyes were black and fparkling ; her Nofe of fuch ;exa,£tnefs, as it might have ferved. Statuaries to make Nofes by; Jf^ther was her Heart comjfofed of Flints or Diamonds: She beli'rivfcd,' fire, and all others of her Sex were lent into the . world for a further purpofe than to fee and be In a little while fhe gave our Prentice that which once gone, as the Wife obferve, is,never to be found again. Lucrece is grown fat on a fudden ; flif Ivfifofips- dilcovefs the matter, turns her out of doors; and the a Charge, put our Prentice under a Guard of men a certain Manfion near C lerkenwell; where, after the Difoipline in C '93 'Tis certain out lie got; for we find lie afterwards ran away front liis Matter, and then he was feen in the Land of EJfex, with a Trencher in his hand, in the fervice of an honeft Gentleman, whole Daughter he perfwades to go away with him, and alfumes the Name of NevilLno *, In time he became Servant to a renown¬ ed Knight cal'd SegniorDon Elizio Letonio. The Proverb Trim tram was moft exactly compleated in this Mafter and, Man; For 'tis ge¬ nerally affirmed by all honeft People, that Segnior Don Elizio and Don Henrique have Epitomized the Villanies of Modern times, and Monopolized them to themttlves. Over thett two Worthies fail into the Ifiand of feme, where they foon fpawn'd an abundance of Poyfbn, whence venemous Beafts have grown in fuch plenty, that St. Patricks Miracle is become a meer Fiction. Here and then it was, that our Don Henrique transformed Qobbs into C ninnies. But after he returned to England, he very fpeedily, like a skilful Chymift metamorphofed his Aurum Tholofanum into Harlots, Pro¬ jects and Claret. Then he compofes a Tragedy of a certain Em- perour of Confiantinople, whom he never knew ; but in whole per- fon he vilifies a certain Prince, whom he very well knows. By vir¬ tue of this Tragedy he fail'd to ''Jamaica, with fbme Females he had Spirited , intending there to fell Coffee, ChocaU-tt and The Governour not liking this man of mifchief, feizes him, lends him cloathed in a Velvet Coat (which he had purchafed in Long- lane ) as a Cuffos to look after his Cowes. This Employ did not agree with his Genius or Garb ; at length he is remitted to his Native Countrey ; where being arrived, he falls to his old way of fupplying the Stage with Ribaldry and Nonfence. About this time, finding Coleman was grown a big fellow by keeping Intelligence, and other Arts, he intends to ftrike into that way; gets a great Houfe, and an Upholfterer ( who is not yet paid ) to furnifh it; plants a tali man at his door with a large Silver Plate on his Breaft ; and thus our Don is become wonderful great on a fudden , not minding the Proverb, He that will be Rich before , may be hanged before Noon. Now the Plot happens to be difcovered; Coleman!s inaufpicious Starres and great Friends permit him to be truffed up: Our Don writes a precatory Elegy to his Ghoft; and is clapt up in Saha Cuftodia; where we -will leave him at prettnt to fcrible, as he hath done ever fince, for the Chatholick Caufe, till he attends the Chariot of his worthy Predeceffor and Patron St. Coleman. FINISi Advertifement. Some Remarks upon EInathan Radingo Scldan Axholme, be Jhortly : v. > • " y epPf I.L ■ u *■ ✓ .... it J «. iU V? . 4-J V-'\ x>-' ' ,» \ . <■* ju *■«. - - - - - ' < I . ? * ' ' ~ >*. A ' -- A ... ' V. . ' I I ■ u i. ■ • . f ' v i .. i i, * ' - « - % - ■ • -4..V- ■ ■" - J' - ' ,:■/ "■>» - r ■ A a - >t. % % - i «■ * ; . - f> i . I -v^ir jy /. ?■.. \ ■ . >.» • . ■* V $ I -4 ' - ■ ' i i j-' i, •.» .-.. ;j \ ■ .. / ^ r - . ■ < / : .t ■ . « V -. u. . •- . • .-■< 4 *. '.l ■ y. > • . - jk -f ». > i ' ' 5 *• * . y - .. • h ■ ■ f f • " ■jt» .. ^ v ■ * ft A ^ v-' f , - . f J \ 1 f . c f, • - >| £.■ 'f V..--. . f\ , " . .. . *•' . * -« 1 '■ k * "" -• •• * ' ' , o* • 1 •T 'H ' " : ' 9 * . ^ . « ,w ^ . • .. i . ' ♦ . 2-. 1 fe / • i- w' ) *■ ' • -v ■ • ,\ / .• J ' . . > ; , r t r> . ' -- r/ » - % : I » v . J1'; \ \ u , I '" r-, "■ #s I j - * 4 ** v ■ : ; f - ' '' " ■ • .'k "1 *-.■ • * . ? v± *\ % 1 • . ; ' C , • - . p , ' *• ' J ' ■ <*y 1 # v'l ' ^ \ • .• v -