Londini Speculum: or, London’s Mirror
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                  Londini Speculum: or,
                     
Londons Mirror, Expreſt in ſundry Triumphs,
Pageants and Showes, at the Initiation of the right
Honorable Richard Fenn, into the Mairolty of the Fa-
mous and farre renowned City London.
 
All the Charge and Expence of theſe laborious projects both
by Water and Land, being the ſole undertaking of the Right
Worſhipful Company of the Habberdaſhers.
               
               Londons Mirror, Expreſt in ſundry Triumphs,
Pageants and Showes, at the Initiation of the right
Honorable Richard Fenn, into the Mairolty of the Fa-
mous and farre renowned City London.
All the Charge and Expence of theſe laborious projects both
by Water and Land, being the ſole undertaking of the Right
Worſhipful Company of the Habberdaſhers.
Right Honourable:
               
               EXcuſe (I intreate) this my
                  
boldneſſe, which proceedeth
rather from Cuſtome in others,
then Curioſity in my Selfe, in
preſuming to prompt your Me-
mory in ſome things tending to
the greatnes of your high place
and Calling; You are now entred into one of the
moſt famous Mairolties of the Chriſtian
World. You are alſo cald Fathers, Patrons of
the Afflicted, and Procurators of the Publicke
good. And whatſoever hath reference to the true
conſideration of Iuſtice and Mercy, may be Ana-
logically conferd upon pyous and iuſt Magiſtrates.
               
               
               boldneſſe, which proceedeth
rather from Cuſtome in others,
then Curioſity in my Selfe, in
preſuming to prompt your Me-
mory in ſome things tending to
the greatnes of your high place
and Calling; You are now entred into one of the
moſt famous Mairolties of the Chriſtian
World. You are alſo cald Fathers, Patrons of
the Afflicted, and Procurators of the Publicke
good. And whatſoever hath reference to the true
conſideration of Iuſtice and Mercy, may be Ana-
logically conferd upon pyous and iuſt Magiſtrates.
And for the Antiquity of your yearely  Go-
vernment, I read the Athenians elected
               
               vernment, I read the Athenians elected
A2
               
               
               theirs
               
               
               The Epiſtle Dedicatory.
               
               
                  
                  theirs Annually, and for no longer continuance:
                  
And ſo of the Carthagians, the Thebans, &c. And
the Roman Senate held, that continued Magi-
ſtracy was in ſome reſpects unprofitable to the
Weale-publicke, againſt which there was an Act
in the Lawes of the twelve Tables. And it is
thus concluded by the Learned, that the Domi-
nion of the greateſt Magiſtrates which are Kings
and Princes, ought to be perpetuall; but of the
leſſe which be Prators, Cenſors, and the like, only
Ambulatory and Annuall. I conclude with that
ſaying of a wiſe man, Prime Officers ought to
Rule by Good Lawes, and commendable Ex-
ample, Iudge by Providence, Wiſdome and Iu-
stice, and Defend by Prowes, Care, and Vigi-
lancy: Theſe things I can but Dictate, of which
your Lordſhip knoweth beſt how to Diſpoſe: ever
(as now) remayning your Honors
               Humble ſervant,
                  And ſo of the Carthagians, the Thebans, &c. And
the Roman Senate held, that continued Magi-
ſtracy was in ſome reſpects unprofitable to the
Weale-publicke, againſt which there was an Act
in the Lawes of the twelve Tables. And it is
thus concluded by the Learned, that the Domi-
nion of the greateſt Magiſtrates which are Kings
and Princes, ought to be perpetuall; but of the
leſſe which be Prators, Cenſors, and the like, only
Ambulatory and Annuall. I conclude with that
ſaying of a wiſe man, Prime Officers ought to
Rule by Good Lawes, and commendable Ex-
ample, Iudge by Providence, Wiſdome and Iu-
stice, and Defend by Prowes, Care, and Vigi-
lancy: Theſe things I can but Dictate, of which
your Lordſhip knoweth beſt how to Diſpoſe: ever
(as now) remayning your Honors
Thomas Heywood.
ALL Triumphes have their
                  
Titles, and ſo this, according to
the nature thereof, beareth a
name: It is called Londini
κάτoπτρoν, that is, Speculum, more
plainly, Londons Mirrour, neither altogether
unproperly ſo termed, ſince ſhe in her ſelfe may
not onely perſpicuouſly behold her owne ver-
tues, but all forraigne Cities by her, how to
correct their vices.
               
               
               Titles, and ſo this, according to
the nature thereof, beareth a
name: It is called Londini
κάτoπτρoν, that is, Speculum, more
plainly, Londons Mirrour, neither altogether
unproperly ſo termed, ſince ſhe in her ſelfe may
not onely perſpicuouſly behold her owne ver-
tues, but all forraigne Cities by her, how to
correct their vices.
Her Antiquity ſhe deriveth from Brute, line-
ally diſcended from Æneas, the ſonne of Anchi-
ſes and Venus, and by him erected, about the
yeare of the world two thouſand eight hundred
fifty five: before the Nativity of our bleſſed Sa-
viour, one thouſand one hundred and eight:
firſt cald by him Trinovantum, or Troy-novant,
               
               ally diſcended from Æneas, the ſonne of Anchi-
ſes and Venus, and by him erected, about the
yeare of the world two thouſand eight hundred
fifty five: before the Nativity of our bleſſed Sa-
viour, one thouſand one hundred and eight:
firſt cald by him Trinovantum, or Troy-novant,
B
               
               
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               
                  
                  New Troy, to continue the remembrance of the
                  
old, and after, in the proceſſe of time Caier Lud,
that is, Luds Towne, of King Lud, who not onely
greatly repaired the City, but increaſed it with
goodly and gorgeous buildings; in the Weſt
part whereof, he built a ſtrong gate, which hee
called after his owne name Lud gate, and ſo
from Luds Towne, by contraction of the word
and dialect uſed in thoſe times, it came ſince to
be called London.
               
               old, and after, in the proceſſe of time Caier Lud,
that is, Luds Towne, of King Lud, who not onely
greatly repaired the City, but increaſed it with
goodly and gorgeous buildings; in the Weſt
part whereof, he built a ſtrong gate, which hee
called after his owne name Lud gate, and ſo
from Luds Towne, by contraction of the word
and dialect uſed in thoſe times, it came ſince to
be called London.
I will not inſiſt to ſpeake of the name of
                  
Maior, which implyeth as much as the greater,
or more prime perſon; ſuch were the Prætors,
or Prœfecti in Rome, neither were the Dicta-
tors any more, till Julius Cæſar aiming at the
Imperiall Purple, was not content with that
annuall honour, which was to paſſe ſucceſsively
from one to another, but he cauſed himſelfe to
be Elected Perpetuus Dictator, which was in ef-
fect no leſſe than Emperor.
               
               
               Maior, which implyeth as much as the greater,
or more prime perſon; ſuch were the Prætors,
or Prœfecti in Rome, neither were the Dicta-
tors any more, till Julius Cæſar aiming at the
Imperiall Purple, was not content with that
annuall honour, which was to paſſe ſucceſsively
from one to another, but he cauſed himſelfe to
be Elected Perpetuus Dictator, which was in ef-
fect no leſſe than Emperor.
And for the name of Elder-man, or Alder-man,
                  
it is ſo ancient, that learned Maſter Cambden in
in his Britan. remembreth unto us, that in the
daies of Royal King Edgar, a noble Earle, and of
the Royall blood, whoſe name was Alwin, was
in ſuch favour with the King that he was ſtiled
               
               it is ſo ancient, that learned Maſter Cambden in
in his Britan. remembreth unto us, that in the
daies of Royal King Edgar, a noble Earle, and of
the Royall blood, whoſe name was Alwin, was
in ſuch favour with the King that he was ſtiled
Healf
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               
                  Healf Kunning, or halfe King, and had the ſtile
                  
of Alderman of all England: This man was the
firſt founder of a famous Monaſtery in the Iſle
of Ely, where his body lies interred, upon
whoſe Tombe was an inſcription in Latin,
which I have, verbatim, thus turned into Engliſh,
Here reſteth Alwin, couzen to King Edgar, Alder-
man of all England, and of this Holy Abbey the mi-
raculous founder. And ſo much (being tide to a
briefe diſcourſe) may ſerve for the Antiquity
of London, and the Titles for Maior or Alder-
man.
               
               
               of Alderman of all England: This man was the
firſt founder of a famous Monaſtery in the Iſle
of Ely, where his body lies interred, upon
whoſe Tombe was an inſcription in Latin,
which I have, verbatim, thus turned into Engliſh,
Here reſteth Alwin, couzen to King Edgar, Alder-
man of all England, and of this Holy Abbey the mi-
raculous founder. And ſo much (being tide to a
briefe diſcourſe) may ſerve for the Antiquity
of London, and the Titles for Maior or Alder-
man.
I come now to the Speculum, or Mirrour. Plu-
tarch tels us, That a glaſſe in which a man or woman
behold their faces, is of no eſtimation or value (though
the frame thereof be never ſo richly deckt with gold &
gemmes, unleſſe it repreſent unto us the true figure and
obiect. Moreover, that ſuch are fooliſh and flattering
glaſses, which make a ſad face to looke pleaſant, or a
merry countenance melancholy: but a perfect and a
true Chriſtall, without any falſity or flattery, rendreth
every obiect its true forme, and proper figure, diſtingui-
ſhing a ſmile from a wrincle; and ſuch are the meanes
many times to bridle our refractory affections: for who
being in a violent rage, would be pleaſed that his ſer-
vant ſhould bring him a glaſſe wherein hee might be-
                  
               
               
               tarch tels us, That a glaſſe in which a man or woman
behold their faces, is of no eſtimation or value (though
the frame thereof be never ſo richly deckt with gold &
gemmes, unleſſe it repreſent unto us the true figure and
obiect. Moreover, that ſuch are fooliſh and flattering
glaſses, which make a ſad face to looke pleaſant, or a
merry countenance melancholy: but a perfect and a
true Chriſtall, without any falſity or flattery, rendreth
every obiect its true forme, and proper figure, diſtingui-
ſhing a ſmile from a wrincle; and ſuch are the meanes
many times to bridle our refractory affections: for who
being in a violent rage, would be pleaſed that his ſer-
vant ſhould bring him a glaſſe wherein hee might be-
B2
               
               
               hold
               
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               
                  
                  
                  hold the torvity and ſtrange alteration of his counte-
nance? Minerva playing upon a Pipe, was mockt by
a Satyre in theſe words.
nance? Minerva playing upon a Pipe, was mockt by
a Satyre in theſe words.
Non te decet forma iſtæc, pone fiſtulas
                  Et Arma capeſse componens recte genus.
               That viſage miſ-becomes, thy Pipe
                  Caſt from thee, Warlike dame,
                  Take unto thee thy wonted Armes,
                  And keepe thy Cheekes in frame.
               But though ſhe deſpiſed his Councell for the pre-
ſent, when after, playing upon the ſame Pipe, in which
ſhe ſo much delighted, ſhee beheld in a river ſuch a
change in her face, ſhee caſt it from her, and broke it a-
ſunder, as knowing that the ſweetnes of her muſick could
not countervaile or recompence that deformity which
it put upon her countenance, and therefore I have purpo-
ſed ſo true and exact a Mirrour, that in it may be diſ-
covered as well that which beautifies the governour, as
deformes the government.
               
               
               ſent, when after, playing upon the ſame Pipe, in which
ſhe ſo much delighted, ſhee beheld in a river ſuch a
change in her face, ſhee caſt it from her, and broke it a-
ſunder, as knowing that the ſweetnes of her muſick could
not countervaile or recompence that deformity which
it put upon her countenance, and therefore I have purpo-
ſed ſo true and exact a Mirrour, that in it may be diſ-
covered as well that which beautifies the governour, as
deformes the government.
One thing more is neceſsitouſly to be added,
                  
and then I fall upon the ſhowes in preſent agi-
tation: namely, that the fellowſhip of the Mer-
chant Adventurers of England were firſt truſted
with the ſole venting of the manufacture of
Cloth out of this kingdome, & have for above
 
                  
               
               
               and then I fall upon the ſhowes in preſent agi-
tation: namely, that the fellowſhip of the Mer-
chant Adventurers of England were firſt truſted
with the ſole venting of the manufacture of
Cloth out of this kingdome, & have for above
this
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               
                  this 4 hundred years traded in a priviledged, &
                  
wel governed courſe, in Germany, the Low Coun-
tries, &c. and have beene the chiefe meanes to
raiſe the manufacture of all wollen commodi-
ties to that height in which it now exiſteth,
which is the moſt famous ſtaple of the Land,
and whereby the poore in all Countries are
plentifully maintained: and of this Company
his Lordſhip is free: as alſo of the Levant, or
Turkey, and of the Eaſt India Company, whoſe
trading hath beene, and is in theſe forraine ad-
ventures: alſo who ſpent many yeares and a
great part of his youth abroad in other Coun-
tries.
               
               
               wel governed courſe, in Germany, the Low Coun-
tries, &c. and have beene the chiefe meanes to
raiſe the manufacture of all wollen commodi-
ties to that height in which it now exiſteth,
which is the moſt famous ſtaple of the Land,
and whereby the poore in all Countries are
plentifully maintained: and of this Company
his Lordſhip is free: as alſo of the Levant, or
Turkey, and of the Eaſt India Company, whoſe
trading hath beene, and is in theſe forraine ad-
ventures: alſo who ſpent many yeares and a
great part of his youth abroad in other Coun-
tries.
Now the firſt ſhow by water is preſented by
                     
St. Katherine, of whom I will gibe you this ſhort
Character: She was the daughter of King Coſtus,
and had the generall title of Queene of Famogoſta,
becauſe crowned in that City, being lineally diſcended
from the Roman Emperors, who as ſhe lived a Vir-
gin ſo ſhe dyed a Martyr, under the Tyrant Maxen-
tius, whoſe Empreſſe with divers other eminent per-
ſons ſhe had before converted to the Faith: ſhe rideth
on a Scallop, which is part of his Lordſhips Coate of
Armes, drawne in a Sea-Chariot, by two Sea-horſes
with divers other adornments to beautifie the peece; the
 
               
               
               St. Katherine, of whom I will gibe you this ſhort
Character: She was the daughter of King Coſtus,
and had the generall title of Queene of Famogoſta,
becauſe crowned in that City, being lineally diſcended
from the Roman Emperors, who as ſhe lived a Vir-
gin ſo ſhe dyed a Martyr, under the Tyrant Maxen-
tius, whoſe Empreſſe with divers other eminent per-
ſons ſhe had before converted to the Faith: ſhe rideth
on a Scallop, which is part of his Lordſhips Coate of
Armes, drawne in a Sea-Chariot, by two Sea-horſes
with divers other adornments to beautifie the peece; the
B3
               
               
               Art
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               
                  
                  
                  Art of which, the eye may better diſcover, than my pen
                  
deſcribe, and why ſhe being a Princeſſe, and Patroneſſe
of this Company of the Haberdaſhers, who onely ruled
on the Land, ſhould at this time appeare upon the water,
and without any iuſt taxation, to make that cleare, ſhee
thus delivereth her ſelfe.
               
               
               deſcribe, and why ſhe being a Princeſſe, and Patroneſſe
of this Company of the Haberdaſhers, who onely ruled
on the Land, ſhould at this time appeare upon the water,
and without any iuſt taxation, to make that cleare, ſhee
thus delivereth her ſelfe.
St. Katherines ſpeech by Water.
               
               
               GReat Prætor, and grave Senators, ſhe craves
                     
                     A free admittance on theſe curied waves,
                     Who doth from long antiquity profeſſe
                     Herſelfe to be your gracious Patroneſſe:
                     Oft have I on a paſſant Lyon ſate,
                     And through your populous ſtreets beene borne in ſtate:
                     Oft have I grac’t your Triumphes on the ſhore,
                     But on the Waters was not ſeene before.
                  Will you the reaſon know why it doth fall,
                  That I thus change my Element? you ſhall:
                  When Triton with his pearly trumpets blew
                  
                  A ſtreperous blaſt, to ſummon all the crew
                  Of Marine gods and goddeſſes to appeare,
                  (As the annuall cuſtome is) and meet you here:
                  As they were then in councell to debate,
                  What honour they might adde unto the ſtate
                  Of this Inauguration; there appear’d
                  
                  His Caducaus ſilence might command;
                  
                  Whilſt all attentive were to underſtand
                  The tenor of his meſſage: who thus ſpake.
               The Sire of gods, with what you undertake
               Is
               
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               Is highly pleas’d, and greatly doth commend
                  That faire deſigne and purpoſe you intend;
                  But he beheld a Machine from an high,
                  Which at firſt ſight daz’d his immortall eye;
                  A royall Arke, whoſe bright and glorious beams
                  Rivall the Sunnes, ready to proove your ſtreames:
                  A veſſell of ſuch beauty, burthen, ſtate,
                  That all the high Powers were amaz’d thereat;
                  So beautified, ſo munified, ſo clad,
                  As might an eight to the ſeaven wonders adde:
                  VVhich muſt be now your charge; ’twas Ioves owne mo-(tion,
                  That all of you attend her to the Ocean.
                  
               This not withſtanding, ſuch was their great care,
                  (To ſhew that o’re you they indulgent are)
                  That Neptune from his Chariot bad me chuſe
                  
                  Two of his beſt Sea-horſes, to excuſe
                  His inforc’t abſence: Thames (whoſe breaſt doth ſwell
                  
                  Still with that glorious burthen) bad me tell,
                  That Ioves command ſhall be no ſooner done,
                  
                  But every Tide he’le on your errands runne
                  From hence to the Lands end, and thence againe
                  Backe, to conveigh your trafficke from the Maine:
                  My meſſage thus delivered, now proceed
                  To take your oath, there is no further need
                  Of my aſſiſtance; who on Land will meete you,
                  And with the ſtate of greater Triumphes greete you.
               Theſe few following Lines may, (and not im-
pertinently) be added unto Jupiters meſſage,
delivered by Mercury, which though too long
for the Bardge, may perhaps not ſhew lame in
the booke, as being leſſe troubleſome to the
Reader than the Rower.
               
               pertinently) be added unto Jupiters meſſage,
delivered by Mercury, which though too long
for the Bardge, may perhaps not ſhew lame in
the booke, as being leſſe troubleſome to the
Reader than the Rower.
Dance
               
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               Dance in thy raine-bow colours Protæus, change
                  
                  Thy ſelfe to thouſand figures, ’tis not ſtrange
                  VVith thee, thou old Sea-prophet, throng the ſeas
                  With Phorcus Daughters, the Nereides,
                  
                  And all the blew-hair’d Nymphes, in number more,
                  Than Barkes that float, or Pibbles on the ſhore:
                  Take Æolus along to fill her ſailes
                  
                  With proſperous windes, and keepe within his gailes
                  Tempeſtuous guſts: which was no ſooner ſaid,
                  
                  But done: for all the Marine gods obey’d.
               The ſecond ſhow, but the firſt by Land, is
                  
preſented by the great Philoſopher Pythagoras,
Samius, the ſonne of Menarchus; which being
outwardly Sphericall and Orbicular, yet being
opened it quadrates it ſelfe iuſt into ſo many
Angles as there be Scepters, over which his Sa-
cred Maieſty beareth title: namely, England,
Scotland, France, and Ireland, concerning which
number of foure, I thus Read: Pythagoras and
his Schollers, who taught in his ſchooles, that
Ten was the nature and ſoule of all number;
one Reaſon which he gave (to omit the reſt)
was, becauſe all nations, as well civill as barba-
rous, can tell no farther than to the Denary,
which is Ten, and then returne in their account
unto the Monady, that is one: For example,
from Tenne wee proceed to Eleven and Twelve,
 
                  
                  
               
               
               preſented by the great Philoſopher Pythagoras,
Samius, the ſonne of Menarchus; which being
outwardly Sphericall and Orbicular, yet being
opened it quadrates it ſelfe iuſt into ſo many
Angles as there be Scepters, over which his Sa-
cred Maieſty beareth title: namely, England,
Scotland, France, and Ireland, concerning which
number of foure, I thus Read: Pythagoras and
his Schollers, who taught in his ſchooles, that
Ten was the nature and ſoule of all number;
one Reaſon which he gave (to omit the reſt)
was, becauſe all nations, as well civill as barba-
rous, can tell no farther than to the Denary,
which is Ten, and then returne in their account
unto the Monady, that is one: For example,
from Tenne wee proceed to Eleven and Twelve,
which
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               
                  
                  which is no more than Ten and One, Ten and
                  
Two, and ſo of the reſt, till the number riſe to
an infinite.
               
               Two, and ſo of the reſt, till the number riſe to
an infinite.
Againe hee affirmeth, that the ſtrength and
                  
vertue of all number conſiſteth in the quater-
nion; for beginning with one, two, three and foure,
put them together and they make ten; he ſaith
further, that the nature of number conſiſteth
in ten, and the faculty of number is comprized
in foure: in which reſpect the Pythagoreans ex-
preſſe their holy oath in quaternion, which
they cal’d τετρακτύν as may appear in theſe words.
 
                  
                  
                  
                     
                  
               
               
               vertue of all number conſiſteth in the quater-
nion; for beginning with one, two, three and foure,
put them together and they make ten; he ſaith
further, that the nature of number conſiſteth
in ten, and the faculty of number is comprized
in foure: in which reſpect the Pythagoreans ex-
preſſe their holy oath in quaternion, which
they cal’d τετρακτύν as may appear in theſe words.
                        Per tibi noſtræ animæ præbentem tetrada Iuro,
                     Naturæ fontemque & firmamenta perennis.
                  
                  For they held the ſoule of man to ſubſiſt in
                  
that number, proportionating it into theſe foure
Faculties, Mens, Scientia, Opinio, Senſus, the
Mind, Knowledge, Opinion, and Sence, and therefore
according to that number Pythagoras frames his
Speech, alluding to thoſe foure Kingdomes over
which his Maieſty beareth title.
               
               
               
               
               
               that number, proportionating it into theſe foure
Faculties, Mens, Scientia, Opinio, Senſus, the
Mind, Knowledge, Opinion, and Sence, and therefore
according to that number Pythagoras frames his
Speech, alluding to thoſe foure Kingdomes over
which his Maieſty beareth title.
SAcred’s the number foure, Philoſophers ſay,
                  
                  And beares an happy Omen; as this day
               C
               
               It
               
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               It may appeare: foure Elements conſpire,
                  
                  Namely, the Water, Earth, the Aire, and Fire,
                  To make up man: the colours in him bred
                  Are alſo foure, White, Pallid, Blacke, and red.
                  
                  Of foure Complexions he exiſteth ſoly,
                  Flegmaticke, Sanguine, Choler, Melancholy.
                  His meate foure ſeverall digeſtions gaines,
                  
                  In Stomacke, Liver, Members, and the Veines.
                  Foure qualities cald primæ within lie,
                  
                  Which are thus titled, Hot, Cold, Moiſt, and Drie.
                  He acts his whole life on this earthy ſtage,
                  In Child-hood, Youth, Man-hood, Decripit age.
                  The very day that doth afford him light,
                  Is Morning the Meridian, Evening, Night.
                  Foure ſeaſons ſtill ſucceſsively appeare,
                  
                  Which put together make a compleat yeare.
                  The earth, with all the Kingdomes therein guided,
                  Is into foure diſtinguiſh’d parts devided.
                  
                  The foure Windes from the Worlds foure quarter blow,
                  
                  Eurus, Favonius, Auſter, Aquilo.
                  All Morall vertues we in foure include,
                  
                  As Prudence, Iuſtice, Temperance Fortitude.
                  Court, City, Campe, and Countrey, the foure CCCs;
                  Which repreſent to us the Foure degrees,
                  Requir’d in every faire and flouriſhing Land,
                  Subſtract but one a Kingdome cannot stand.
                  Foure Colonels are in this City knowne,
                  
                  Of which you, honoured Sir, have long beene one:
                  And thoſe foure Crownes, (for ſo the high Powers pleaſe)
                  Embleme the Kings foure Scepters, and foure Seas.
                  
                  The **Quinta per-
ennis.fift Imperiall Arch above, proclaimes
                  ennis.fift Imperiall Arch above, proclaimes
That glorious Crowne, at which his Highneſſe aimes.
                  
               Thus
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               Thus is our round Globe ſquard, figuring his power,
                  
                  And yours beneath Him, in the number foure.
               The third Show.
               
               
               THe third Pageant or Show meerly conſiſteth of An-
ticke geſticulations, dances, and other Mimicke po-
ſtures, deviſed onely for the vulgar, who are better de-
lighted with that which pleaſeth the eye, than conten-
teth the eare, in which we imitate Cuſtome, which alwaies
carrieth with it excuſe: neither are they altogether to be
vilefied by the moſt ſupercilous, and cenſorioius, eſpe-
cially in ſuch a confluence, where all Degrees, Ages, and
Sexes are aſſembled, every of them looking to bee pre-
ſented with ſome fancy or other, according to their ex-
pectations and humours: Since grave and wiſe men have-
beene of opinion, that it is convenient, nay neceſſitous, up-
on the like occaſions, to mixe ſeria iocis; for what better
can ſet off matter, than when it is interlaced with mirth?
From that I proceede to the fourth.
               
               
               ticke geſticulations, dances, and other Mimicke po-
ſtures, deviſed onely for the vulgar, who are better de-
lighted with that which pleaſeth the eye, than conten-
teth the eare, in which we imitate Cuſtome, which alwaies
carrieth with it excuſe: neither are they altogether to be
vilefied by the moſt ſupercilous, and cenſorioius, eſpe-
cially in ſuch a confluence, where all Degrees, Ages, and
Sexes are aſſembled, every of them looking to bee pre-
ſented with ſome fancy or other, according to their ex-
pectations and humours: Since grave and wiſe men have-
beene of opinion, that it is convenient, nay neceſſitous, up-
on the like occaſions, to mixe ſeria iocis; for what better
can ſet off matter, than when it is interlaced with mirth?
From that I proceede to the fourth.
The fourth Show.
               
               
               IT beareth the Title of an Imperiall Fort: nor is it com-
pulſive, that here I ſhould argue what a Fort is, a
Skonce, or a Cittadall, nor what a Counterskarfe, or halfe
Moone, &c. is; nor what the oppoſures or defences are:
my purpoſe is onely to expreſſe my ſelfe thus farre, that
this Fort which is ſtil’d Imperiall, defenc’d with men
and officers, ſuiting their functions and places proper to
ſuch a muniment; doth in the morall include his Maje-
ſties royall chamber, which is the City of London, for to
that onely purpoſe was the project intended.
               
               
               pulſive, that here I ſhould argue what a Fort is, a
Skonce, or a Cittadall, nor what a Counterskarfe, or halfe
Moone, &c. is; nor what the oppoſures or defences are:
my purpoſe is onely to expreſſe my ſelfe thus farre, that
this Fort which is ſtil’d Imperiall, defenc’d with men
and officers, ſuiting their functions and places proper to
ſuch a muniment; doth in the morall include his Maje-
ſties royall chamber, which is the City of London, for to
that onely purpoſe was the project intended.
The Speaker is Bellona, whom ſome held to be the
                  
Daughter, ſome the Siſter, others the Nurſe of Mars the
               
               Daughter, ſome the Siſter, others the Nurſe of Mars the
C2
               
               god
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               
                  
                  god of Warre; neither in any of theſe is any
                  
impropiety, or ought that is diſſonant from authority,
becauſe Enyo, which is Bellona, implyeth that which put-
teth ſpirit and courage into an army, &c. Antiquity cal-
led her Duellana, that is, the goddeſſe of warre; to whom
their Prieſts ſacrificed their owne blood, and before
whoſe Temple the Facialis ſet a ſpeare againſt ſome
prime pillar thereof, when any publicke warre was to be
denounced: Shee was moſt honoured of the Thracians,
the Scithians, and thoſe wild and barbarous nations, upon
whoſe Altars they uſed to ſacrifice a Vulture, which is a
ravenous bird, uſed to prey upon dead carcaſſes, and aſ-
ſemble themſelves in great flocks after any fought bat-
taile: but this Diſcourſe may to ſome appeare imperti-
nent to the project in hand, and therefore I thus proceed
to her ſpeech.
               
               impropiety, or ought that is diſſonant from authority,
becauſe Enyo, which is Bellona, implyeth that which put-
teth ſpirit and courage into an army, &c. Antiquity cal-
led her Duellana, that is, the goddeſſe of warre; to whom
their Prieſts ſacrificed their owne blood, and before
whoſe Temple the Facialis ſet a ſpeare againſt ſome
prime pillar thereof, when any publicke warre was to be
denounced: Shee was moſt honoured of the Thracians,
the Scithians, and thoſe wild and barbarous nations, upon
whoſe Altars they uſed to ſacrifice a Vulture, which is a
ravenous bird, uſed to prey upon dead carcaſſes, and aſ-
ſemble themſelves in great flocks after any fought bat-
taile: but this Diſcourſe may to ſome appeare imperti-
nent to the project in hand, and therefore I thus proceed
to her ſpeech.
Bellonaes Speech upon the Imperiall Fort.
               
               
               THis Structure (honour’d Sir) doth title beare
                  
                  Of an Imperiall Fort, apt for that ſpheare
                  
                  In which you now moove, borrowing all her grace,
                  As well from your owne perſon, as your place;
                  For you have paſt through all degrees that tended
                  Vnto that height which you have now aſcended.
               You have beene in this City (’tis knowne well)
                  
                  A Souldier, Captaine, and a Colonell.
                  
                  And now in times faire progreſſe, to crowne all,
                  Of this Metropolis chiefe Generall.
                  
                  You, of this Embleme, which this day we bring,
                  To repreſent the Chamber of the King,
                  Are the prime governour: a Royall Fort,
                  
                  And ſtrongly ſetted, as not built for ſport,
                  But for example and defence: a Tower
                  Supported by no leſſe than Soveraigne power:
               The
               
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               The Theologicke vertues, the three Graces,
                  
                  And Charites have here their ſeverall places.
                  
                  
                  Concordia
parve res
Creſcunt,
is the Mot-
to of the
Company
of the
right Wor-
ſhipfull
Habber-
daſhers.
                  parve res
Creſcunt,
is the Mot-
to of the
Company
of the
right Wor-
ſhipfull
Habber-
daſhers.
(By which ſmall mites to Magozines increaſe)
                  Have reſidence: now oppoſite there are
                  To theſe, and with them at continuall warre,
                  Pride, Arrogance, Sloath, Vanity, Preſtigion,
                  Prophaneſſe, the contempt of true Religion,
                  With thouſands more, who aſsiduatly waite
                  This your Imperiall Fort to inſidiate.
                  
               You may obſerve i’th muſicke of your Bels
                  Like ſound in Triumphes, and for funerall knels;
                  
                  Marriage and death to them appeare all one,
                  Masking nor mourning cannot change their tone:
                  With our Fort ’tis not ſo, whoſe faire pretence, is
                  
                  To comply with the nature of offence,
                  Errors: ſhe knowes in low termes how to chide
                  
                  Great faults, with greater noiſe are terrifi’d:
                  But ſhe can load her Cannons, and ſpeake loud
                  To encounter with the arrogant and proud:
                  Whats further in your Prætorſhip aſsign’d,
                  
                  You, in your Londons Mirrour there may find.
                  
               The fifth ſhow, cald Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               THis beareth the title of the whole Triumphe; of
                  
Glaſſes pertinent to this our purpoſe, there bee
ſeverall forts, as Opticke, Perſpective, Proſpective, Multi-
plying, &c. The preſenter is Viſus, or Sight; for what the
minde is to the ſoule, the ſame is the eye to the body, be-
ing the moſt precious part thereof. Sight is the moſt
ſoveraigne ſence, the firſt of five, which directeth man to
the ſtuddy & ſearch of knowledge & wiſedome; the eyes
are placed in the head as in a Citadel, to be watch-towers
               
               Glaſſes pertinent to this our purpoſe, there bee
ſeverall forts, as Opticke, Perſpective, Proſpective, Multi-
plying, &c. The preſenter is Viſus, or Sight; for what the
minde is to the ſoule, the ſame is the eye to the body, be-
ing the moſt precious part thereof. Sight is the moſt
ſoveraigne ſence, the firſt of five, which directeth man to
the ſtuddy & ſearch of knowledge & wiſedome; the eyes
are placed in the head as in a Citadel, to be watch-towers
C3
               
               and
               
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               
                  
                  and Centinels for the ſafety, and guiders and conducters
                  
for the ſollace of the body.
               
               for the ſollace of the body.
We reade that one Marcus Varro was ſir-named Stra-
bo, for the excellency and quickneſſe of his ſight, who
from Libæum, a Province in Scicilia, could diſtin-
guiſh and give an exact account of all ſuch ſhips as came
out of the haven of Carthage, which two places ſome
hold to be more than an hundred Italian leagues diſtant:
indeed no man can better eſtimate the vertue and value
of the ſight, than he that is made blinde and wants it, nei-
ther could I deviſe a more apt Speaker to preſent this
Mirrour, than the ſence of the ſight, without which, the
pureſt Chriſtall is of no uſe at all.
               
               bo, for the excellency and quickneſſe of his ſight, who
from Libæum, a Province in Scicilia, could diſtin-
guiſh and give an exact account of all ſuch ſhips as came
out of the haven of Carthage, which two places ſome
hold to be more than an hundred Italian leagues diſtant:
indeed no man can better eſtimate the vertue and value
of the ſight, than he that is made blinde and wants it, nei-
ther could I deviſe a more apt Speaker to preſent this
Mirrour, than the ſence of the ſight, without which, the
pureſt Chriſtall is of no uſe at all.
The Pageant it ſelfe is decored with glaſſes of all ſorts:
                  
the perſons upon or about it are beautifull Children, e-
very one of them expreſſing their natures and conditions
in the impreſaes of their ſhields, eight of the prime of
which ſuiting with the quality of the Optick ſence, beare
theſe ſeverall Inſcriptions: Aſpice, Deſpice, Conſpice, Pro-
ſpice, Perſpice, Inſpice, Circumſpice Reſpice:
               
               
               
               
               the perſons upon or about it are beautifull Children, e-
very one of them expreſſing their natures and conditions
in the impreſaes of their ſhields, eight of the prime of
which ſuiting with the quality of the Optick ſence, beare
theſe ſeverall Inſcriptions: Aſpice, Deſpice, Conſpice, Pro-
ſpice, Perſpice, Inſpice, Circumſpice Reſpice:
BEhold me Sight, of the five ſences prime,
                  
                  (Now beſt complying with the place and time)
                  Preſenting Londons Mirrour, and this Glaſſe
                  
                  Shewes not alone what ſhe is, or once was,
                  But that the ſpacious Vniverſe might ſee
                  In her, what their great Cities ought to be;
                  That every forraigne Magiſtrate from hence
                  Might learne how to diſpoſe his Opticke ſence.
                  
               Aſpice ſaith, Looke toward and upon
                  
                  Deſartfull men whom this Age frowneth on.
                  And Deſpice caſt downe thy powerfull eye
                  
                  On the poore wretch that doth beneath thee lye.
               Then
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               Then Conſpice take counſell firſt and pauſe
                  
                  With meditation, ere though iudge a cauſe.
                  Proſpice bids looke a farre off, and view
                  
                  (Before conclude) what dangers may inſue.
                  
                  Perſpice wils, in ſifting doubts, then ſcan
                  
                  The nature of the matter with the man.
                  Let every cauſe be ſearcht, and duely ſought,
                  Saith Inſpice, ere thou determinſt ought.
                  
                  Circumſpice ſaith, looke about to immure
                  
                  So great a charge, that all within be ſure.
                  Conſiderate Reſpice inioynes thee laſt,
                  
                  To caſt thine eyes backe upon all things paſt.
               For Londons ſelfe, if they ſhall firſt begin
                  
                  To examine her without, and then within,
                  What Architectures, Palaces, what Bowers,
                  What Citadels, what turrets, and what towers?
                  Who in her age grew pregnant, brought a bed
                  Of a New Towne, and late delivered
                  
                  Of ſuch a burthen, as in few yeares ſpace,
                  Can almoſt ſpeake all tongues, (to her more grace.)
                  Then her Cathedrals, Temples new reparing,
                  
                  An act of true devotion, no man ſparing
                  His helping hand, and many, ’tis well knowne,
                  To further Gods houſe have forgot their owne.
               Vnto her outward ſhape I doe not prize her,
                  But let them come within to anatomize her.
                  Her Prætor, ſcarlet Senate, Liveries,
                  
                  The ordering of her brave ſocieties:
                  Divine Aſtræa here in equall ſcale
                  
                  Doth ballance Iuſtice, Truth needes not looke pale,
                  
                  Nor poverty deiected, th’Orphants cauſe,
                  And Widowes plea finde helpe; no ſubtile clauſe
               Can
               
               
               Londons Mirrour.
               
               
               Can make demurre in ſentence: a faire bearing,
                  And upright doome in every Court appearing:
                  Still to preſerve her ſo, be’t your indeavour,
                  And ſhe in you, you her ſhall live for ever.
               I come now to the Linvoy, or laſt Speech, when his Lordſhip, after
                  
his dayes long and tedious trouble, retireth himſelfe to his reſt at
night, in which Pythagoras the Speaker briefly runs over the paſſages
of the Pageants before expreſſed after this manner.
               
               his dayes long and tedious trouble, retireth himſelfe to his reſt at
night, in which Pythagoras the Speaker briefly runs over the paſſages
of the Pageants before expreſſed after this manner.
The Speech at Night.
               
               WE to a Valediction are confin’d,
                  
                  (Right Honoured) and intreat You beare in minde
                  
                  What was this Day preſented: Your chiefe Saint
                  A Martyr once of the Church militant,
                  But now of the tryumphant, bids You ſpare
                  
                  Your ſelfe this Night: for to a World of Care
                  You are ingag’d tomorrow, which muſt laſt
                  
                  Till the whole progreſſe of Your Yeere be paſt.
                  
                  The Spheare-like Globe quadrated, lets You know,
                  What Pro-Rex doth to the four Scepters owe.
                  
                  Your Military honours (in your Dayes
                  
                  Of leſſe commend) th’ Imperiall Fort diſplayes,
                  
                  And Londons Mirrour, that all men may ſee
                  
                  What Magiſtrates have beene, and ought to be.
                  
                  Set is the Sunne long ſince, and now the Light
                  
                  Quite fayling us, Thrice Honourd Sir, good Night.
                  
               For the Artiſts, and directors of theſe Pageants and ſhowes, John Chriſt-
mas and Mathias, the two Sonnes of Gerard, their now deceaſed Father,
a knowne Maſter in all whoſe Sciences he profeſt. I can ſay no more but
thus, that proportioning their Workes according to the limits of the gates
through which they were to paſſe, being ty’de not to exceede one Inch ei-
ther in height, or breadth: My Opinion is that few Workemen about the
Towne can paralell them, much leſſe exceede them. But if any ſhall either
out of Curioſity or malice taxe their ability, in this kind of Art, I referre
them to the Carving of his Majeſties Great Ship lately built at Woolwitch,
which Worke alone is able both to ſatisfie mutation, and qualifie Envie.
               
               
               mas and Mathias, the two Sonnes of Gerard, their now deceaſed Father,
a knowne Maſter in all whoſe Sciences he profeſt. I can ſay no more but
thus, that proportioning their Workes according to the limits of the gates
through which they were to paſſe, being ty’de not to exceede one Inch ei-
ther in height, or breadth: My Opinion is that few Workemen about the
Towne can paralell them, much leſſe exceede them. But if any ſhall either
out of Curioſity or malice taxe their ability, in this kind of Art, I referre
them to the Carving of his Majeſties Great Ship lately built at Woolwitch,
which Worke alone is able both to ſatisfie mutation, and qualifie Envie.
FINIS.
               
               
               
               
               
            References
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MLA citation
. Londini Speculum: or, London’s Mirror. The Map of Early Modern London, edited by , U of Victoria, 26 Jun. 2020, mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SPEC1.htm.
                  
               Chicago citation
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               Londini Speculum: or, London’s Mirror.The Map of Early Modern London. Ed. . Victoria: University of Victoria. Accessed June 26, 2020. https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SPEC1.htm.
APA citation
 2020. Londini Speculum: or, London’s Mirror. In  (Ed), The Map of Early Modern London. Victoria: University of Victoria. Retrieved  from https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SPEC1.htm.
                  
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Provider: University of Victoria Database: The Map of Early Modern London Content: text/plain; charset="utf-8" TY - ELEC A1 - Heywood, Thomas ED - Jenstad, Janelle T1 - Londini Speculum: or, London’s Mirror T2 - The Map of Early Modern London PY - 2020 DA - 2020/06/26 CY - Victoria PB - University of Victoria LA - English UR - https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SPEC1.htm UR - https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/xml/standalone/SPEC1.xml ER -
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RT Web Page SR Electronic(1) A1 Heywood, Thomas A6 Jenstad, Janelle T1 Londini Speculum: or, London’s Mirror T2 The Map of Early Modern London WP 2020 FD 2020/06/26 RD 2020/06/26 PP Victoria PB University of Victoria LA English OL English LK https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SPEC1.htm
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<bibl type="mla"><author><name ref="#HEYW1"><surname>Heywood</surname>, <forename>Thomas</forename></name></author>.
                     <title level="m">Londini Speculum: or, London’s Mirror</title>. <title level="m">The
                     Map of Early Modern London</title>, edited by <editor><name ref="#JENS1"><forename>Janelle</forename>
                     <surname>Jenstad</surname></name></editor>, <publisher>U of Victoria</publisher>,
                     <date when="2020-06-26">26 Jun. 2020</date>, <ref target="https://mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SPEC1.htm">mapoflondon.uvic.ca/SPEC1.htm</ref>.</bibl>
                  
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 Contributions by this authorJoey Takeda is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:Joey Takeda is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Chase TempletCTResearch Assistant, 2017-2019. Chase Templet was a graduate student at the University of Victoria in the Medieval and Early Modern Studies (MEMS) stream. He was specifically focused on early modern repertory studies and non-Shakespearean early modern drama, particularly the works of Thomas Middleton.Roles played in the project- 
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 Chase Templet is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:Chase Templet is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Tye Landels-GruenewaldTLGData Manager, 2015-2016. Research Assistant, 2013-2015. Tye completed his undergraduate honours degree in English at the University of Victoria in 2015.Roles played in the project- 
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 Contributions by this authorTye Landels-Gruenewald is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:Tye Landels-Gruenewald is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Quinn MacDonaldQMResearch Assistant, 2013. Quinn MacDonald was a fourth-year honours English student at the University of Victoria. Her areas of interest included postcolonial theory and texts, urban agriculture, journalism that isn’t lazy, fine writing, and roller derby. She was the director of community relations for The Warren Undergraduate Review and senior editor of Concrete Garden magazine.Roles played in the project- 
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 Quinn MacDonald is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:Quinn MacDonald is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Kim McLean-FianderKMFDirector of Pedagogy and Outreach, 2015–present. Associate Project Director, 2015–present. Assistant Project Director, 2013-2014. MoEML Research Fellow, 2013. Kim McLean-Fiander comes to The Map of Early Modern London from the Cultures of Knowledge digital humanities project at the University of Oxford, where she was the editor of Early Modern Letters Online, an open-access union catalogue and editorial interface for correspondence from the sixteenth to eighteenth centuries. She is currently Co-Director of a sister project to EMLO called Women’s Early Modern Letters Online (WEMLO). In the past, she held an internship with the curator of manuscripts at the Folger Shakespeare Library, completed a doctorate at Oxford on paratext and early modern women writers, and worked a number of years for the Bodleian Libraries and as a freelance editor. She has a passion for rare books and manuscripts as social and material artifacts, and is interested in the development of digital resources that will improve access to these materials while ensuring their ongoing preservation and conservation. An avid traveler, Kim has always loved both London and maps, and so is particularly delighted to be able to bring her early modern scholarly expertise to bear on the MoEML project.Roles played in the project- 
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 Contributions by this authorKim McLean-Fiander is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:Kim McLean-Fiander is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Janelle JenstadJJJanelle Jenstad is Associate Professor of English at the University of Victoria, Director of The Map of Early Modern London, and PI of Linked Early Modern Drama Online. She has taught at Queen’s University, the Summer Academy at the Stratford Festival, the University of Windsor, and the University of Victoria. With Jennifer Roberts-Smith and Mark Kaethler, she co-edited Shakespeare’s Language in Digital Media (Routledge). She has prepared a documentary edition of John Stow’s A Survey of London (1598 text) for MoEML and is currently editing The Merchant of Venice (with Stephen Wittek) and Heywood’s 2 If You Know Not Me You Know Nobody for DRE. Her articles have appeared in Digital Humanities Quarterly, Renaissance and Reformation,Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Early Modern Literary Studies, Elizabethan Theatre, Shakespeare Bulletin: A Journal of Performance Criticism, and The Silver Society Journal. Her book chapters have appeared (or will appear) in Institutional Culture in Early Modern Society (Brill, 2004), Shakespeare, Language and the Stage, The Fifth Wall: Approaches to Shakespeare from Criticism, Performance and Theatre Studies (Arden/Thomson Learning, 2005), Approaches to Teaching Othello (Modern Language Association, 2005), Performing Maternity in Early Modern England (Ashgate, 2007), New Directions in the Geohumanities: Art, Text, and History at the Edge of Place (Routledge, 2011), Early Modern Studies and the Digital Turn (Iter, 2016), Teaching Early Modern English Literature from the Archives (MLA, 2015), Placing Names: Enriching and Integrating Gazetteers (Indiana, 2016), Making Things and Drawing Boundaries (Minnesota, 2017), and Rethinking Shakespeare’s Source Study: Audiences, Authors, and Digital Technologies (Routledge, 2018).Roles played in the project- 
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 Contributions by this authorJanelle Jenstad is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:Janelle Jenstad is mentioned in the following documents:Janelle Jenstad authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:- 
                                    Jenstad, Janelle.Building a Gazetteer for Early Modern London, 1550-1650. Placing Names. Ed. Merrick Lex Berman, Ruth Mostern, and Humphrey Southall. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana UP, 2016. 129-145.
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                                    Jenstad, Janelle.The Burse and the Merchant’s Purse: Coin, Credit, and the Nation in Heywood’s 2 If You Know Not Me You Know Nobody. The Elizabethan Theatre XV. Ed. C.E. McGee and A.L. Magnusson. Toronto: P.D. Meany, 2002. 181–202. Print.
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                                    Jenstad, Janelle.
 Early Modern Literary Studies 8.2 (2002): 5.1–26..The City Cannot Hold You : Social Conversion in the Goldsmith’s Shop.
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                                    Jenstad, Janelle.
 The Silver Society Journal 10 (1998): 40–43.The Gouldesmythes Storehowse : Early Evidence for Specialisation.
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                                    Jenstad, Janelle.Lying-in Like a Countess: The Lisle Letters, the Cecil Family, and A Chaste Maid in Cheapside. Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 34 (2004): 373–403. doi:10.1215/10829636–34–2–373.
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                                    Jenstad, Janelle.Public Glory, Private Gilt: The Goldsmiths’ Company and the Spectacle of Punishment. Institutional Culture in Early Modern Society. Ed. Anne Goldgar and Robert Frost. Leiden: Brill, 2004. 191–217. Print.
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                                    Jenstad, Janelle.Smock Secrets: Birth and Women’s Mysteries on the Early Modern Stage. Performing Maternity in Early Modern England. Ed. Katherine Moncrief and Kathryn McPherson. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007. 87–99. Print.
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                                    Jenstad, Janelle.Using Early Modern Maps in Literary Studies: Views and Caveats from London. GeoHumanities: Art, History, Text at the Edge of Place. Ed. Michael Dear, James Ketchum, Sarah Luria, and Doug Richardson. London: Routledge, 2011. Print.
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                                    Jenstad, Janelle.Versioning John Stow’s A Survey of London, or, What’s New in 1618 and 1633?. Janelle Jenstad Blog. https://janellejenstad.com/2013/03/20/versioning-john-stows-a-survey-of-london-or-whats-new-in-1618-and-1633/.
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                                    Shakespeare, William. The Merchant of Venice. Ed. Janelle Jenstad. Internet Shakespeare Editions. Open.
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                                    Stow, John. A SVRVAY OF LONDON. Contayning the Originall, Antiquity, Increase, Moderne estate, and description of that Citie, written in the yeare 1598. by Iohn Stow Citizen of London. Also an Apologie (or defence) against the opinion of some men, concerning that Citie, the greatnesse thereof. With an Appendix, containing in Latine, Libellum de situ & nobilitate Londini: written by William Fitzstephen, in the raigne of Henry the second. Ed. Janelle Jenstad and the MoEML Team. MoEML. Transcribed. Web.
 
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                     Martin D. HolmesMDHProgrammer at the University of Victoria Humanities Computing and Media Centre (HCMC). Martin ported the MOL project from its original PHP incarnation to a pure eXist database implementation in the fall of 2011. Since then, he has been lead programmer on the project and has also been responsible for maintaining the project schemas. He was a co-applicant on MoEML’s 2012 SSHRC Insight Grant.Roles played in the project- 
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 Contributions by this authorMartin D. Holmes is a member of the following organizations and/or groups:Martin D. Holmes is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Brutus of TroyBrutus King of Great BritainKing of Great Britain and founder of London. Husband of Innogen. Father of Albanact, Camber, and Locrine. Son of Aeneas. Appears in Geoffrey of Monouth’s History of the Kings of Britain.Brutus of Troy is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Edgar the PeacefulEdgar the Peaceful King of England(b. between 943 and 944, d. 975)King of England 959-975.Edgar the Peaceful is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Neptune is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Æolus is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     St. Catherine of AlexandriaSaint Catherine(d. between 301 and 400)Venerated saint and martyr. Daughter of Constus.St. Catherine of Alexandria is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     PeacePersonification of peace. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Peace is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Thomas Heywood is mentioned in the following documents:Thomas Heywood authored or edited the following items in MoEML’s bibliography:- 
                                    Heywood, Thomas. The Captives; or, The Lost Recovered. Ed. Alexander Corbin Judson. New Haven: Yale UP, 1921. Print.
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                                    Heywood, Thomas. The First and Second Parts of King Edward IV. Ed. Richard Rowland. Manchester: Manchester UP, 2005. The Revels Plays.
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                                    Heywood, Thomas. The Second Part of, If you know not me, you know no bodie. VVith the building of the Royall Exchange: And the Famous Victorie of Queene Elizabeth, in the Yeare 1588. London, 1606. STC 13336. EEBO. Web. Subscr.
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                                    Munday, Anthony, Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, Thomas Heywood, and William Shakespeare. Sir Thomas More. Ed. Vittorio Gabrieli and Giorgio Melchiori. Revels Plays. Manchester; New York: Manchester UP, 1990. Print.
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                                    Thomas Heywood Heywood’s Dramatic Works. 6 vols. Ed. W.J. Alexander. London: John Pearson, 1874. Print.
 
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                     London is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     PietyPersonification of piety. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Piety is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Troya-NovaTroya-Nova New TroyPersonification of the geographic area and settlement of Roman London. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Troya-Nova is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     AlwineMember of the Knighten Guild.
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                     Astraea is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Julius Caesar is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Gerard Christmas is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Jupiter is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Venus is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     ZealePersonification of zeal. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Zeale is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Constus is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     VisusPersonification of seeing. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Visus is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     AeneasHero of the Trojan War in Greek and Roman mythology. Son of Anchises and Venus. Early modern Londoners believed him to be the father of King Brutus of Troy.Aeneas is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     LudLud King of BritainLegendary king of Britain. Early modern Londoners believed him to be a historical figure.Lud is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     John Christmas is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Matthias Christmas is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     John Okes is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Plutarch is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Bellona is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Marcus Terentius Varro is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Sir Richard VennSir Richard Venn Sheriff MayorSheriff of London 1626-1627. Mayor 1637-1638. Member of the Haberdashers’ Company. Knighted on 27 May 1638.Sir Richard Venn is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Satyr is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Triton is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Proteus is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Phorcys is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     Pythagoras is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     AspiceAllegorical representation of an aspect of sight derived from the Latin aspicio, meaning to look at or towards, to behold. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Aspice is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     DespiceAllegorical representation of an aspect of sight derived from the Latin despicio, meaning to look down upon. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Despice is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     ProspiceAllegorical representation of an aspect of sight derived from the Latin prospicio, meaning to look far off, to see into the distance. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Prospice is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     ConspiceAllegorical representation of an aspect of sight derived from the Latin conspicio, meaning to watch, gaze, or stare. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Conspice is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     PerspiceAllegorical representation of an aspect of sight derived from the Latin perspicio, meaning to see through something, to percieve clearly. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Perspice is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     InspiceAllegorical representation of an aspect of sight derived from the Latin inspicio, meaning to examine or inspect. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Inspice is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     CircumspiceAllegorical representation of an aspect of sight derived from the Latin circumspicio, meaning to look around, over or for. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Circumspice is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     RespiceAllegorical representation of an aspect of sight derived from the Latin respicio, meaning to look behind, look back at or upon. Appears as an allegorical character in mayoral shows.Respice is mentioned in the following documents:
Locations
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                     London is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     St. Bartholomew the Less (Parish) is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     LudgateLocated in Farringdon Within Ward, Ludgate was a gate built by the Romans (Carlin and Belcher 80). Stow asserts that Ludgate was constructed by King Lud who named the gate after himselffor his owne honor (Stow 1: 1).Ludgate is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     St. Paul’s ChurchyardSurrounding St. Paul’s Cathedral, St. Paul’s Churchyard has had a multi-faceted history in use and function, being the location of burial, crime, public gathering, and celebration. Before its destruction during the civil war, St. Paul’s Cross was located in the middle of the churchyard, providing a place for preaching and the delivery of Papal edicts (Thornbury).St. Paul’s Churchyard is mentioned in the following documents:
Organizations
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                     The Haberdashers’ CompanyThe Worshipful Company of HaberdashersThe Haberdashers’ Company was one of the twelve great companies of London. The Haberdashers were eighth in the order of precedence established in 1515. The Worshipful Company of Haberdashers is still active and maintains a website at http://www.haberdashers.co.uk/ that includes a history of the company and of their hall.![The coat of arms of the Haberdashers’ Company, from Stow (1633). [Full size
                  image] The coat of arms of the Haberdashers’ Company, from Stow (1633). [Full size
                  image]](graphics/Haberdashers_sm.jpg)  The coat of arms of the Haberdashers’ Company, from Stow (1633). [Full size image] This organization is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     The Merchant Venturers’ Company of LondonThe Worshipful Company of Merchant Venturers of LondonThe Merchant Venturers’ Company of London was one of the lesser livery companies of London.This organization is mentioned in the following documents:
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                     East India CompanyA joint-stock company formed to trade in the Indian Ocean region.This organization is mentioned in the following documents:









