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The Cloud opened: Or, The English Hero. By a loyal and impartial pen.

Quam facile fit cæcus dur vitæ, et obscura lux temporum historia? Si

non amentiæ, rarus est qui non ineptiæ litavit, unicus sit qui Deo et

veritati obtulit.

London, printed, A. D. 1670. Quarto, containing forty-eight pages

Two Letters written by the Right Honourable Edward Earl of Clarendon,

late Lord High Chancellor of England: One to his Royal Highness the

Duke of York: the other to the Duchess, occasioned by her embracing the

Roman Catholick Religion.

A modern Account of Scotland: Being an exact description of the country,

and a true character of the people and their manners. Written from

thence by an English gentleman. Printed in the year 1670. Quarto,

containing twenty pages.

The Queen's Wells: that is, a Treatise of the nature and vertues of Tunbridge

Water. Together with an enumeration of the chiefest diseases, which it

is good for, and against which it may be used, and the manner and o: der of

taking it. By Lodowick Rowzee, doctor of physick, practising at Ashford,

in Kent. London, printed for Robert Boulter, at the Turk's-Head, Bishop's-

gate-street, 1670. Octavo, containing eighty-two pages.

A Discourse, setting forth the unhappy condition of the practice of physick,

in London, and offering some means to put it into a better; for the interests

of patients, no less, or rather much more, than of physicians. By Jona-

than Goddard, doctor of physick, fellow of the college of physicians, and

of the Royal Society, and a professor of physick, in Gresham college.

London, printed by John Martyn and James Allestry, printers to the Royal

Society, 1670. Quarto, containing sixty-two pages.

Reasons and Proposals for a Registry or Remembrancer of all Deeds and In-

cumbrances of real estates, to be had in every county, most necessary and

advantageous as well for sellers and borrowers, as purchasers an: lenders.

To the advance of credit and the general good, without prejudice to any

honest-minded person, most humbly offered to consideration. By Nicho-

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THE

HARLEIAN MISCELLANY.

THE UNHAPPY MARKSMAN:

OR,

A PERFECT AND IMPARTIAL DISCOVERY OF THAT LATE BARBAROUS AND UNPARALLELED MURDER COMMITTED BY

MR. GEORGE STRANGEWAYS,

FORMERLY A MAJOR IN THE KING'S ARMY,
ON HIS BROTHER-IN-LAW,

MR. JOHN FUSSEL, AN ATTORNEY,

ON FRIDAY, THE ELEVENTH OF FEBRUARY.

Together with a full Discovery of the fatal Cause of those unhappy Differences which first occasioned the Suits in Law betwixt them. Also the Behaviour of Mr. STRANGEWAYS at his Tryal-the dreadful Sentence pronounced against him-his Letter to his Brother-in-Law, a Member of Parliament-the Words by him delivered at his Death; and his stout, but christian-like Manner of dying. Published by a faithful Hand.

Strangulat inclusus dolor, atque cor æstuat intus.

OV. TRIST. 1. v.

London: Printed by T. N. for R. Clavell, at the Stag's Head, in St. Paul's Church-yard, by St. Gregory's Church. 1659. Quarto, containing thirty-two Pages.

S'

SINCE* the various relations of this sad and horrid act, even in the city where it was committed, are so many, that the illegitimate births of those corrupted parents must of necessity fill more distant places with so spurious an issue, that when it comes to be nursed with those usual adjuncts, which either envy or love will extort from most relators, it may possibly grow to so monstrous a form, that all the vestigia of verity must of necessity be lost in its variety of disguise; wherefore it was thought fit by one that is not only a lover of truth, but an honourer of both the parties deceased, before a farther travel hath warmed her with impudence, to unveil report in so clear and impartial a discovery, as may neither deform the truth, nor disgust their relations.

Mr. George Strangeways, commonly known in the country, where he chiefly resided, by the name of Major Strangeways, an

This is the 57th in the catalogue of the Harleian Pamphlets: and published at the request of one who signed the recommendation with E. F.

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office which he had, with much honour and gallantry, performed in the unhappy war*, was second son to Mr. James Strangeways, of Mussen, in the county of Dorset: a gentleman of an antient and unblemished family, whose virtues this unhappy son of his, till sullied by this rash act of ungoverned fury, did rather seem to illustrate by a constant course of worthy and manly actions, than any ways to degenerate from the best atchievements of his most successful predecessors. He was now about the five or six-andfortieth year of his age: a person that had a brave and generous soul, included in a stout and active body. He was of stature tall, and framed to the most masculine proportion of man; his constitution, such as rather fitted him for the active employments of busy war, than the more quiet affairs of peace-affecting studies; yet was he not so much a stranger to those arts, which are the adorning qualifications of a gentleman, but that he had sacrificed to Minerva, whilst in the Temple of Mars; and, in the most serious consultations, had always a judgment as dexterous to advise, as a heart daring to act. What he appeared most unskilled in, was love's polemicks, he having spun out the thread of his life without twisting it in matrimony.

He was in some trivial actions, performed since the time of his imprisonment, condemned for a parsimonious sparing, too low for the quality of a gentleman; which, if true, I much wonder that he, whose former frugality was but the child of discretion, being now so near a supersedeas from all the afflicting wants mortality trembles at, and having none of his relations, whose necessities craved a subsistence from what he left behind, should, near his death, save that with dishonour, which in his life he spent with reputation.

But to detain thee no longer with the character either of his person or qualities, which probably some of his many enemies may unjustly censure for partiality; I will hasten to as full a relation, both of the original ground of their unhappy difference, aud the fatal conclusion of his implacable wrath, as it hath been possible by the most diligent inquisition to obtain, both from the nearest in acquaintance to both parties, and such ocular informations as were observable in much of the time from his sentence to his execution.

The father of Mr. Strangeways, dying about some ten years since, left him in possession of the farm of Mussen, leaving his eldest daughter, Mrs. Mabel Strangeways, since wife to Mr. Fussel, his executrix.

The estate being thus left, Mrs. Mabel, being then an ancient maid, rents the farm of her brother George, and stocks it at her own cost; towards the procuring of which stock, she engaged herself, in a bond of three hundred and fifty pounds, to her brother George, who, presuming on her continuance of a single life, and, by consequence, that her personal estate might, in time, return to her then nearest relations (of which himself had a just reason to expect, if not the whole, the greatest share), he not only entrusted her with the fore-mentioned bond, but likewise with that

• Between the king and parliament, in 1612,

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