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1577

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Compare 1587 edition: 1 When the Lord Thomas was ſet in coun|ſaile, his horſemen and ſeruants ruſht in to the counſaile Chamber armed and weaponed, tur|ning their ſecrete conference to an open parlet. The Counſaile hereof amazed, and ſilence with ſecuritie commaunded, the Lorde Thomas in this wiſe ſpake.

Compare 1587 edition: 1

Howſoeuer iniuriouſly wee be handled and forced to defend our ſelues in armes,Thomas Fitz Girald his re+bellious O|ration. whẽ neither our ſeruice nor our good meaning towardes our prince his Crowne auayleth, yet ſay not hereaf|ter, but in this open hoſtilitie which here we pro|feſſe and proclayme, we haue ſhewed our ſelues no villaynes, nor churles, but warriours and Gentlemen. This ſworde of eſtate is yours, EEBO page image 78 and not mine, I receyued it with an othe, and haue vſed it to your benefite. I ſhould deſteyne mine honour. if I turned the ſame to your an|noyance. Nowe haue I neede of mine owne ſword, which I dare truſt. As for the common ſword it flattereth me with a painted ſcabberde, but hath in deed a peſtilent edge, already bathed in the Giraldines bloud, & now is newly whet|ted in hope of a further deſtruction. Therefore ſaue your ſelues from vs, as from open enimies, I am none of Henrie his Deputie, I am his fo. I haue more mind to conquer, than to gouerne, to meete him in the field, than to ſerue him in office. If al the hearts of England and Ireland, that haue cauſe thereto, would ioine in this qua|rell (as I hope they wil) then ſhould he ſoone aby (as I truſt he ſhal) for his crueltie and tyranny, for which the age to come may lawfully ſcore him vp among the auncient Tyrants of moſt abhominable and hatefull memorie.

Compare 1587 edition: 1 Hauing added to this ſhamefull Oration many other ſlaunderous & foule tearmes, which for diuerſe reſpects I ſpare to pen, he would haue ſurrendered the ſword to the Lord Chancellor, who, as I ſayd before, being armed for the Lord Thomas his cõming, and alſo being loath, that his ſlackneſſe ſhould ſeeme diſloyall in refuſing the ſworde, or his frowardneſſe ouer cruell in ſnatching it vpon the firſt proffer, tooke the Lord Thomas by the wreſt of the hand, and requeſted him for the loue of God, the teares trilling downe his cheekes, to giue him for two or three wordes the hearing, which graunted, the reue|rend father ſpake as enſueth.

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