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Now let us hear some mery songe Synge us a songe of some swete toyne as ye were wont to synge at Sion] where ye have lerned to synge so longe.

3.

To whom we answerd soberly

beholde now are we in youre honde how shulde we under captivite

synge to the lorde in a straunge londe Hierusalem. I say to the

Yf I remembre the not truly

My honde playe on the harpe nomore Yf I thynke not on the alwaye

Let my tonge cleve to my mouth for aye and let my loose my speache therfore.

4.

Yee above all myrth and pastaunce
Hierusalem I preferre the

Lorde call to thy remembraunce

The sonnes of Edom ryght strately

In the daye of the destruccion

which at Hierusalem was done

for they sayd in their cruelnes

Downe with it, downe with it, destroye it all
Downe with it soone, that it may fall
Laye it to the grounde all that there is.

5.

O thou cite of Babilon

Thou thyselfe shalt be destroyed
Truly blessed shalbe that man

which even as thou hast deserved Shall rewarde the with soch kyndnesse As thou hast shewed to us gyltlesse which never had offended the Blessed shall he be that for the nones Shall throwe thy chyldren agaynst the stones To brynge the out of memorie.

CHAPTER VIII.

STEPS TAKEN IN ENGLAND FOR THE

SCRIPTURE.

PROMULGATION OF THE

INJUNCTIONS OF CROMWELL, AS VICAR-GENERAL, FOR THE SETTING UP OF A BIBLE IN EVERY PARISH CHURCH. DECLARATION OF THE KING ΤΟ BE READ BY THE CURATES IN THE CHURCHES, THAT IT WAS HIS MAJESTY'S PLEASURE AND COMMAND, THAT THE BIBLE SHOULD BE SINCERELY TAUGHT AND OPENLY LAID FORTH IN EVERY PARISH CHURCH. THE BISHOPS PERSUADE THE KING TO TAKE MEASURES AGAINST THE IMPORTATION FROM ABROAD OF REFORMED DOCTRINES. ACT OF THE SIX ARTICLES. FALL OF CROMWELL. CONSEQUENT DECLINE OF THE RE

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FORMED PARTY.

BUT now to turn our attention to the steps that had been taken in England with regard to the promulgation of the Scriptures. Lord Cromwell, as vicar-general, had, in the month of September, 1538," issued certain injunctions to the clergy," amongst which were the following clauses :

a Stow's Annals.

b Ex reg. Cranm. fol. 99. b. printed in Wilkins' Conc. M. B. They are there improperly classed under the year 1536. These injunctions are also printed in Fox's Acts and Monuments, vol. ii. p. 389.

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Item, that ye shall provyde on this side the feast "ofnext commyng, one boke of the whole "Bible of the largest volume in Englyshe, and the "same sett up in summe convenyent place within the "said churche that ye have cure of, whereat your

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parishners may most commodiouslye resort to the "same and rede yt; the charges of whiche boke "shal be ratablie born between you the parson, and "the parishners aforsaid, that ys to say, the one half by yowe, and th' other half by them.

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"Item, that ye shall discorage no man pryvely or apertly from the readinge or hearing of the same Bible, but shall expresslye provoke, stere, and ex"horte every parsone to rede the same, as that whyche ys the verye lively worde of God, that every chris"ten man ys bownde to embrace, beleve, and followe, yf he loke to be saved; admony shinge them neverthelesse, to avoid all contention and alterca"tion therin, and to use an honest sobrietye in the inquisition of the true sense of the same, and referre th' explication of obscure places to men of higher jugement in Scripture."

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He also ordered that the Lord's prayer in English should be read, and that they should examine their parishioners therein, and in the creed.

Whether this injunction referred to Matthew's Bible, or to the one that was then printing in Paris, and which, as we have seen, was expected soon to be finished, cannot be ascertained; for as the day is not named in the injunctions, we cannot tell whether it was one sufficiently distant, to have rendered it

probable that the Paris edition would be before then published. The king at the same time, gave out a royal declaration, which the curates were requested to read in their several churches; informing the people, that it had pleased the king's majesty to permit and command the Bible, being translated into their mother tongue, to be sincerely taught by them, and to be openly laid forth in every parish church.

As the following part is somewhat curious, it is given word for word.

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"And if at any tyme by reading any Doubt shall "come to any of yo" touching the sense and meanyng "of any pte thereof, That thenne not geving to "moche to yo' owne mynds fantazies and opinions "nor having thereof any open reasonyng in yo' open "Tauernes or Alehowses, ye shall haue Recourse to "suche lerned men as be or shalbe auctorised to preache and declare the same, Soo that avoyding "all contentions and disputacōns in such Alehowses " and other places vnmete for suche conferencs and "submytting yonr opinions to the Judgements of "suche lerned men as shalbe appoynted in this behaulf, His grace may wel pčeyue that yo" vse "this most hiegh benefyte quietly and charitably euy of yo" to the edefying of himself his wief and famylye in al thinges aunswering to his hieghnes good opinion conceyued of yo" in thadvauncemēt "of vtue and suppressing of vice w'out failing to vse "suche discrete quietnes and sober moderatyon in

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MS. Cott. Cleop. E. v. fol. 327, without date, but assigned by Strype, in his Life of Cranmer, to the year 1538.

"the premisses as is aforesaid As ye tender his gracs pleas and intend to avoyde his hiegh indignacōn

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“ and the pill and daunger that may ensue to yo" and eũy of youe for the contrary."

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Cranmer also, who, the see of Hereford being vacant, held a visitation in it in this year, published some injunctions to the parsons, vicars, and curates, commanding them to procure the Bible, or at least the New Testament, in Latin and English, and to study it diligently, and to prevent no one from reading the same; but rather encourage them, to the end that they might reform their lives, and learn their duty."

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But we are told that many of the priests opposed these measures as much as they could. "They read "confusedly the word of God, and the injunctions "set forth and commanded by them to be read; humming and hawing, and hauking thereat, that scarce any could understand them."-" They bad "their parishioners, notwithstanding what they read, being compelled so to do, that they should do as they did in times past, to live as their fathers; "and that the old fashion is the best and other crafty and seditious sayings they gave out among "them."

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Notwithstanding, however, Strype tells us, that "it was wonderful to see with what joy this book of "God was received, not only among the learneder

Stry. Cranm. p. 70.

• Id. ibid. Strype quotes Cott. MS. Cleop. E. vi. p. 222, but there is nothing of the sort there.

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