Compare 1577 edition: 1 Wherefore after a great host conuenient for that purpose assembled, and monie for maintenance of the warre readie gathered, and the realme set in an order vnder the gouernement of the duke of Gloce|ster protector (which during the kings absence appea|sed diuerse riots,King Henrie the sixt in per|son goeth with an armie into France. and punished the offendors) the king with a great power tooke shipping at Douer on saint Georges euen within night, and landed at Calis on the morrow being saint Georges daie, and sundaie,S. Albons. by seuen of the clocke in the morning. He remained in Calis a good space, Ed. Hall. and from thence he remoued to Rone, being there receiued with all triumph. He ta|ried in that citie a long time, his nobles dailie con|sulting on their great businesse & weightie affaires.
¶In this
kings time, & somewhat about this yeare,
Abr. Fl. ex Polychron.
A widow without Al|gate murthe|red in hir bed by a Breton whome she charitablie reléeued.
Neuerthelesse, God (whose mercifull nature ab|horreth the effusion of mans bloud) prepared a pu|nishment for the malefactor, who passing through the suburbs of London, without Algate (the place where he had committed the murther) the women of the same parish and stréet (as it were inraged) came out with stones, staues, kenell doong, and other things, wherewith they so bethwackt him on all parts of his bodie, that they laid him a stretching,The murther reuenged by women at the appointment of Gods iu|stice. and rid him quite of life. In the wreking of this their teene they were so fell and fierce, that the constables with their assistants (which were no small number) dooing what they could by their authoritie and maine strength, EEBO page image 606 were not able to rescue him out of the womens hands; who had sworne in their hearts (as it séemed by the maner of their reuenge which was void of all mercie) to sée the end of such a villaine as most vn|naturallie had slaine a woman, a neighbour, a wi|dow, a pitifull woman, a good neighbour, an honest widow; the wretch himselfe being a fugitiue, a stran|ger borne, a begger, and he to whome she shewed hir selfe the staffe of his support. O singular ingratitude which nature abhorreth, law dissalloweth, heauen dis|claimeth, God detesteth, humanitie condemneth, and euerie good bodie to the verie death defieth; as the old distichon excellentlie and with good sense noteth;
Lex & natura, coelum, Deus, omnia iuraDamnant ingratum, moerent illum quo natum.