heartily, whilst the Doctor look'd sadly; and go∣ing over with his Grace to Lambeth, soon saw the last of his life.
5. Anastasius the Emperor was slain with Lightning; so was Strabo the Father of Pompey the Great; so was also Garus the Emperour, who suc∣ceeded Probus, whilst he lodged with his Army upon the River Tigris.
6. — Child; his Christian name is unknown, was a Gentleman the last of his Family, being of ancient Extraction (at Plimstook in Devonshire) and had great Possessions. It hapned that he hunting in Dartmore, lost both his company and way in a bitter snow; having kill'd his Horse, he crept in∣to his bowels for warmth; and wrote this with his blood;
He that finds and brings me to my tomb,
The land at Plimstook shall be his doom.
That Night he was frozen to death, and being first found by the Monks of
Tavistock they interr'd him in their own Abbey; and sure it is, that the Abbot of
Tavistock got that rich Manor into his possession.
7. Arrius, who deny'd the Divinity of Christ, was sent for by the Emperour Constantine to make recantation of his former heresies; but he first wrote out a copy of his own opinions, which he hid in his bosome; and then writing out the re∣cantation expected from him, took oath that he did really mean, as he had writen; which words the Emperour reserr'd to the recantation, he to the paper in his bosome: but God would not be so cozened, though the Emperour was; for as he pass'd in triumph through the Streets of Constan∣tinople, he drew aside into a private house of ease, where he voided his guts into the draught, and so dyed.
8. Alexander the Elean Philosopher swimming over the River Alpheus, light with his breast up∣on a sharp reed, which lay hid under the wa∣ter; and receiv'd such a wound thereby, that he dy'd upon it.
9. Heraclius the Ephesian, fell into a Dropsie, and was thereupon advertis'd by the Physicians to anoint himself all over with Cow-dung, and so to sit in the warm Sun; his servant had left him alone, and the Dogs supposing him to be a wild Beast, fell upon him, and killed him.
10. Milo the Crotonian, being upon his journey, beheld an Oak in the Field, which some body had attempted to cleave with Wedges; conscious to himself of his great strength he came to it, and seising it with both his hands, endeavoured to wrest it in sunder, but the Tree (the Wedges be∣ing fallen out) returning to it self, caught him by the hands in the cleft of it, and there detain'd him to be devour'd with wild Beasts, after his so many and so famous exploits.
11. Polydamas the famous wrestler, was forc'd by a tempest into a cave, which being ready to fall into ruines, by the violent and sudden incur∣sion of the waters; though others fled at the signs of the dangers approach; yet he alone would remain, as one that would bear up the whole heap and weight of the falling Earth with his shoulders; but he found it above all humane strength, and so was crush'd in pieces by it.
12. Attila, King of the Hunns, having marryed a Wife in Hungary, and upon his Wedding Night, surcharg'd himself with Meat and Drink; as he slept, his Nose fell a bleeding, and through his Mouth found the way into his Throat, by which he was choak'd and kill'd, before any person was apprehensive of the danger.
13. Calo-Iohannes, Emperour of Constantinople, drew a Bow against a Boar in Cilicia, with that strength, that he shot the Arrow through his own hand that held the Bow, the Pile of it was dipt in poyson, as 'tis usual in huntings, and of that wound he dyed in a few days, and left the Empire to his Son Emanuel, Anno 1130.
14. Giachetus Geneva, a man of great reputa∣tion amongst the Salucians, though he was stricken in years, and had had some Children by his Wife, yet being addicted to Venus, he privily let in a Girl at the back door; and when one night he delay'd his coming to bed longer than he was ac∣customed to do; after they had knock and call'd in vain at his Study door, his Wife caused it to be broken open, and there was Giachetus, and the Girl, found both dead in mutual imbraces, and in a shameful and base posture.
15. In the nineteenth year of Queen Elizabeth, at the Assize held at Oxford, Iuly 1577. one Row∣land Ienks, a Popish Bookseller, for dispersing scandalous Pamphlets, defamatory to the Queen and State, was arreigned and condemned; but on the sudden there arose such a damp, that al∣most all present were endanger'd to be smothered: The Jurors dyed that instant. Soon after dyed Sir Robert Bell, Lord Chief Baron; Sir Robert de Oly, Sir William Babington, Mr. de Oly high Sheriff, Mr. Wearnam, Mr. Danvers, Mr. Fettiplace, Mr. Harcourt Justices; Mr. Kerle, Mr. Nash, Mr. Green∣wood, Mr. Foster, Gentlemen of good account; Serjeant Barham, an excellent Pleader; three hundred other persons presently sickned and dyed within the Town, and two hundred more sickning there dyed in other places; amongst all whom there was neither Woman nor Child.
16. Anacreon the Poet had exceeded the stated term of humane life; yet while he was endea∣vouring to cherish the poor remainders of his strength, by the juyce of Raisins; the stone of one of them stuck so fast in his dry and parched Throat, that it occasioned his death.
17. Pope Adrian the Fourth, being at Anagnia, thundring out excommunication and curses against the Emperour Frederick the First, retired to a Fountain for coolness sake, out of which he drank a little water, together with which a Flie entred his Mouth, and so clave unto his Throat, that it could not be removed by any endeavours of the Physicians, so that to the amazement of all men he perished thereby.
18. Tarquinius Priscus, while he was at Dinner, feeding upon Fish; one of the Fish-bones stuck so unfortunately cross his Throat, that (not being to be remov'd) he miserably dyed thereby on the same night.
19. Drusus Pompeius, the Son of Claudius Cae∣sar, by Herculanilla, to whom the Daughter of Sejanus had a few days before been assured, being a Boy, and playing; he cast up a Pear on high, to receive it again into his mouth; but it fell so full, and descended so far into his Throat, that stop∣ing his breath, he was presently suffocated by it, before any help could be had.
20. Terpander was an excellent Harper, and while he was singing to his Harp at Sparta, and opened his mouth wide, an unhappy waggish per∣son that stood by; threw a Fig into his Mouth so unluckily, that he was strangled by it.
21. Lewis the Seventh, sirnamed the Grosse;