E 174 I " hold their Peace; but that they, on te the contrarySide, moll nnchriflianly and moll unbrotherly, both publickly cc and privately read on thole that " thew'd thefe Humanities towards " them : Slandered them by all means et theycould, and moll untruly reported " of them, feeking by all Means their `` Difcredit." Beyond this, in the Year 1573, even after the Admonitions had been publithed to the Parliament and Nation, we find a Proclamation iffued by the Queen, from which it plainly appears, that the Dithops were far from being forward to profecute the Nonconformiíls, and that even to this time they continued to commit great Strype'srarkerDiforders. " The Queen's Proclamati- P 446 " on declared, that the was right for- " ry to underftand, that the Order of " Common-Prayer fet forthbythe com- mon Confent of the Realm, and by " the Authority of the Parliament, in `` the firll Year of her Reign, wherein " was nothing contai'd but the Scrip- " ture of God, and that which was " confonant unto it, was, now of late, cc of forre Men defpifed and (poke cc againfl, both by open Preachings `` and Writings; and of forre bold and " vain-curiousMen, new andotherRites " foundout andfrequented, whereupon Çon-
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