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"and voices their quires and copes could express, " attended by many Prelates and Nobles, who "payd this last tribute to her memory. This "was counted a piaculous action of the King's "by many, though some have not stuck to say, "that as Queen Elizabeth was willing to be rid " of the Queen of Scots, yet would not have it "her action, and being it could not be done "without her command, when it was done she 66 renounced her own act. So, though the King cc was angry when he heard his Mother was taken away by a violent death, recalling his Ambaf"fador, threatening war, and making a great "noife, (which was after calmed and closed up "with a large penfion from the Queen,) yet he "might well enough be pleased that such a spirit "was layd, as might have conjured up three “kingdoms against him.”

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JOHN KNOX.

Of this celebrated Reformer, who disgraced his useful and respectable character by outrage and violence, the Regent Earl of Morton faid, when he attended his funeral, "There lies a man, who "in his life never feared the face of a man; who "hath been often threatened with dag and dag

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ger, but yet hath he ended his days in peace. " and honour; for he had God's providence "watching over him in a special manner when ❝ his very life was fought."

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Timoleon, the Reformer of Corinth, when he caused his brother's blood to be fhed, turned afide his head, covered it with his cloak, and wept. The Scottish Reformer, however, not only performed the great work in which he was engaged with earnestness, but occasionally added want of feeling toward the perfons who fuffered for it. In defcribing the murder of Cardinal Beaton, he introduces a joke about his corpulency, and adds, "these things we write merrily." When he relates an account of an exhortation which he gave to the unfortunate Queen Mary, he adds, "I made the Hyæna weep weep*." His writings are in the fame ftyle with his fpeeches, and bear titles expreffive of the agitation and violence of mind of him who penned them; as, "The First Blaft of the Trumpet against the

The elegant Mary herself, on seeing the bleeding body of a young gentleman brought near her, who had been shot by fome of her foldiers, faid, " I cannot be refponfible for "accidents, but I wish it had been his father." So nearly equal in brutality are the polite and the coarfe, the uncultivated and the refined, the Sovereign and the peafant, when they fuffer their minds to be tranfported by the violence of paffion, or corrupted by the partiality of prejudice.

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"monftrous Regiment of Women;" and "A "brief Exhortation to England for the speedy

embracing of Chrift's Gospel, heretofore by the Tyranny of Mary fuppreffed and banished."

Knox in one of his Sermons told his hearers, “that one Mass was more frightful to him than "ten thousand enemies landed in any part of the “realm.” This gave much offence to Queen Mary. Lord Darnley, whom she foon afterwards married, was prevailed upon to hear him preach, and he entertained his ears with this text from Isaiah, “O Lord, other Lords than thou have "reigned over us ;" and, fpeaking of the government of wicked Princes, he faid, " that they "were fent as tyrants and fcourges to the people "for their fins;" adding, "that God occa“cafionally fets boys and women over a nation, "to punish it for its crimes," &c.

To animate the mob of Perth to pull down ca thedrals and monafteries, he exclaimed, « Pull “down the nests and the rooks will fly away." Yet, as it is fagaciously and humanely observed by Mr. Andrews, in his judicious and excellent Continuation of Dr. Henry's valuable History, "he reftrained his followers from blood; not " even by way of retaliation did a single man of “the Roman Catholic party lose his life for his

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"religion,.

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religion, if we except the Cardinal, who fell as "much on account of his defpotifm as his bi66 gotry. To a fierce unpolished race like the "Scots, a ftern taftelefs Apostle like John Knox "was perhaps necessary."

BUCHANAN.

THE following curious account is taken from the Thirteenth Book of the Scotch History of that learned and elegant writer,

"About this time, 1500, a new kind of mon"ster was born in Scotland *. In the lower part ❝of its body it refembled a male child, nothing "differing from the ordinary shape of the human "body, but above the navel, the trunk of the "body, and all the other members, were double, "reprefenting both fexes, male and female. The "King (James the Fourth) gave special order "for its careful education, especially in music,

* A very ingenious Surgeon, lately arrived from the Eaft-Indies, fays, that he left alive in Bengal, fome years. of ago, a boy of eleven years age with two heads, the one joined to the crown of the other, with a part of the neck appended to it, having the appearance of having been decapitated. When this Gentleman left the Eaft-Indies the boy was in perfect health.

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" in which it arrived to an admirable degree of "fkill; and moreover it learned feveral tongues; "and fometimes the two bodies did discover fe"veral appetites difagreeing one with another, "and fo they would quarrel, one liking this, "the other that; and yet fometimes again they "would agree, and confult as it were in com"mon for the good of both. This was also me"morable in it, that when the legs or loins "were hurt below, both bodies were fenfible of "this pain in common, but when it was pricked, 66 or otherwise hurt above, the sense of the pain "did affect one body only; which difference "was alfo more confpicuous at its death, for 66 one of the bodies died many days before the "other, and that which furvived, being half pu"trified, pined away by degrees. This monster "lived twenty-eight years and then died. I am "the more confident," adds the Historian, " in "relating this ftory, because there are many "honeft and credible perfons yet alive who faw "this prodigy with their own eyes."

LORD BURLEIGH

was very much preffed by fome of the Divines of his time, who waited on him in a body, to make fome alterations in the Liturgy. He defired

them

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