A rod for the fool's-back, or, Dr. Chamberlin and his proposal vindicated from the foul aspersions of a dirty, scurrilous scribler, who pretends to answer the paper of the comparison, between the doctor's proposal and Mr. Briscoe's. Chamberlen, Hugh. 1694 Approx. 36 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 9 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2007-01 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A31630 Wing C1887 ESTC R32614 12730428 ocm 12730428 66467 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A31630) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 66467) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1522:18) A rod for the fool's-back, or, Dr. Chamberlin and his proposal vindicated from the foul aspersions of a dirty, scurrilous scribler, who pretends to answer the paper of the comparison, between the doctor's proposal and Mr. Briscoe's. Chamberlen, Hugh. [2], 14 p. Printed and are to be sold by John Whitlock ..., London : 1694. Reproduction of original in the British Library. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. 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Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Chamberlayne, Edward, 1616-1703. -- England's wants. Briscoe, John, fl. 1695. Taxation -- England. Great Britain -- Economic policy. 2006-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2006-07 Apex CoVantage Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2006-08 Judith Siefring Sampled and proofread 2006-08 Judith Siefring Text and markup reviewed and edited 2006-09 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion A Rod for the Fool's-Back , OR , DR. CHAMBERLIN And His PROPOSAL VINDICATED , From the Foul Aspersions of a Dirty , Scurrilous Scribler , who pretends to Answer the Paper of the Comparison , between the Doctor 's Proposal , and Mr. Briscoe's . LONDON : Printed , and are to be Sold by John Whitlock , in Stationers-Court , near Stationers-Hall . 1694. A Rod for the Fool's-Back , OR , DR. CHAMBERLIN And His Proposal Vindicated , From the Foul Aspersions of a Dirty , Scurrilous Scribler , who pretends to Answer the Paper of the Comparison , between the Doctor 's Proposal , and Mr. Briscoe's . ON sight of this notable piece of Confidence , or rather Impudence , that this Abusive Fellow does present his Reader withal , I thought , that both Doctor Chamberlin and his Project , as well as the Author of that Paper , whom he calls Pamphleteer , were utterly to be overthrown and confounded at once , with unanswerable Arguments , and those quoted out of the Doctor 's own Books too , ay and the Paper examined by every Paragraph ! Most certainly there is a full stop put to all the Doctors Proceedings now , and he must never dare to trouble Mankind any more with his projects : For our most discerning Scribler conceiting that he hath found out , that the Author of that Paper neither understood the Doctors or Mr. Briscoes Proposals , or does wilfully design to mislead his Reader ; and knowing , that Mr. Briscoe is better emploied in Publishing , &c. He therefore intends to take upon him the task , to shew how notoriously the Author hath prostituted his reputation , by publishing most palpable absurdities , and no less notorious untruths . And by your good have Mr. Impudence , I shall tell you , that on farther scrutiny , I shall make it appear , that you are not able to perform the task you have undertaken ; but that this task is most palpably too hard for your slender abilities . I cannot tell whether you have done this with the connivance of Mr. Briscoe , or altogether of your own head , for that you say , he is better emploied in publishing a Second Edition of his most Ingenious Book ; ( with most incomparable additions ) such I warrant ye , as the like were never seen , heard , or understood before ; because saith he , our Pamphleteer himself is forced to confess it to be such ; there 's a clincher for yenow that 's unanswerable . Well Sir , I 'le venture to explain the meaning of it , tho' it be without the Author's leave , and thus it is . The excellency of this Book , for which it is so commended , doth not consist in the Twenty several Proposals as he imagines , because they are all much worse and more perplexing to consider , than the Doctors ; but in the management of the Arguments against the present Bank and Lotteries , which are such destructive ways of raising Money ; all which hath been already hinted at in the Doctors , and others Answers to Books Written for the said Bank , which he hath more copiously handled in his own Book , and therefore it was called Ingenious , and may be applied to the Doctor 's Proposal , as well as to Mr. Briscoes : For besides , the Doctor hath Written , though not Published , a compleat Book , being a large Manuscript on this Subject , and it may be without exception equal to Mr. Briscoes , and therein hath fully Answered all Objections , and likewise hath made several Proposals of greater and lesser value , all which Mr. Briscoe ▪ hath not only seen , but hath had some of them in his Possession for two Months together , and therefore knew the better how to frame his own by it . For before Mr. Briscoe was brought acquainted with the Dr. by Mr. Salisbury and Mr. Prime , he was altogether Ignorant , and wholly unacquainted with this project , or any thing like it ; but was instructed by the Dr. therein , because he was recommended as a Man , that might be serviceable , after which time he accompanied the Dr. to a meeting of some Scotch Noblemen , Gentlemen and Merchants . But Mr. Briscoe always was so crafty , as to diswade the Dr. from publishing any thing in Print , lest the World , said he , should be too much enlightned ; and likewise he discouraged the Doctor from making application to my Lord Rumny , or the Court , for that he was confidently assured , they would never encourage any thing of this kind ; and yet at the same time was underhand , without acquainting the Doctor therewith , Printing this Book , and hath Dedicated it to the King , yet privy to all the Dr's . proceedings , and joined with him in a Proposal , which he undertook to bring to pass . Pray now , but behold what a Snake the Doctor hath cherished in his bosom all this while ! But what could otherwise be expected of a Stock-Jobber . I can tell you just such another story of two Men , who may be named R. and B. You must know then , that R. was an honest worthy Gentleman , who communicated to B. a notable sharper , ( tho' unknown to be such to R. till after tryal ) a proposal , which might be advantagious , for which they must get a Patent : B approves of it , and promiseth all his assistance , on which with some others , as I remember , they agree to take out a Patent , but a little after , R. went out of Town on his own business ; B. in the mean time gets the Patent to be engrossed , and the while R. unlook'd for returns , and by chance sees this Patent engrossing ; presently takes it in his hand to read ; the principal Clark , or Master of the Office seeing that , says to R. O Lord Sir , we had a particular charge from B. that you of all Men should not have a sight of it , and so goes to take it out of R's . hand ; Nay says R. if you have a mind to go to Cuffs for it , withal my Heart ; but I am resolved to read it now I have it ; which he did , and saw that his name was no where mentioned , though he was and ought to have been the principal person concerned therein . And then R. having an Interest in the Court , immediately procured a stop to be put to it , and some other things of the like nature have been practiced by the said B. Now the Doctor was not altogether so wary it seems . Next I shall proceed with Mr. Impudence by Paragraph . Paragraph First , I allow Mr. Impudence hath quoted the Doctor right , but pray observe what a notable Remark he hath made on the Pamphleteers disingenuity , or forgetfulness in giving an account of only how 8000 l. of the Doctor 's 10000 l. is to be disposed of , but says not a word of the 2000 l. the Doctor hath reserved to himself . And what of all this now ? What occasion was there of mentioning of it in that place ? When as it hath been told in the Doctor 's Printed Proposal already , and the Paper being but a short Abstract ; the Author of it would have been altogether as impertinent as your Worship , if he should have repeated any thing more of it in that place , than might serve his purpose . But of this Mr. Impudence shall say something more of it presently . It may be so , and I believe to as little purpose . For his Second Paragraph , It is also very right quoted , wherein Mr. Briscoe offers that the like current Credit be raised on Gentlemens Estates of 100 l. per Annum , engaged to pay 10 l. per Annum for ever . Now for the Remark . Why , says he , I find Mr. Pamphleteer , that you understand not that Mr. Briscoe proposes ; for whosoever peruses his 16 , 17 , 18 , 22 , 23 Proposals will find almost Twenty several Proposals or Terms for raising Money These Proposals , I believe are like some fruitful Bitches , that carry half a dozen Whelps in their Bellies at once ; and we may as well say of Mr. Briscoes Proposals , as of Hudibras his Tropes . No sooner he his Mouth did ope , But presently out flew a Trope . I suppose if his Book be more carefully perused , you may find Proposal in every line , or at least a great many more then may appear at first 〈◊〉 I can't tell whether the Doctor hath so many Proposals ready cut and dry'd by him , tho' any Man may judge his Proposal may be varied many ways ; but this I know , that this one Proposal alone of the Doctors , is worth much more than all Briscoe's numerous company of Proposals , and let him invent as many more as ever he can to boot . Farther he goes on , And this for ever , is no more then , that he who takes up Bills of Credit upon his Estate , must pay 10 l. per Cent , per Annum for ever , till the principal be paid , and that for ever may be in Twelve Months , if he pays in his Money at the Years end . Why then Mr. Briscoe ought to have said , till the Principal and Interest be paid in , as in the Case of Mortgages , that are redeemable , and not have used these words for ever , which were improper in that place ; but Sir , Must it follow then , that the Author must be blamed for his want of understanding , when Mr. Briscoe did not use proper and intelligible expressions ? For you allow the Author hath rightly quoted him , by your Repetition , and Explanation of Mr. Briscoe's meaning . Paragraph the Third , But as this is a far less encouragement to the Freeholder then the Doctors ; so there is much more care and trouble to settle Estates according to Mr. Briscoes Rules . Remark , Prithee Mr. Pamphleteer do not you pretend to pass your judgment of what is more or less incouraging , you have acquitted your self so ill in this Paper , that no body will give a white Farthing for your Opinion . Now Mr. Impudence , wherein does it appear , that the Pamphleteer hath so ill acquitted himself ; is it only because you say so , for we have none but your lying expression for it , for hitherto in all these Three Paragraphs you have not made it appear , that he hath either mislead his Reader , or shewed any Ignorance , or prostituted his Reputation , or published most palpable absurdities , or notorious untruths as you at first engaged to show ; but hath acquitted himself very well with true quotations : And what follows ? VVhy Mr. Briscoes proposals lie before the Parliament , and they are more capable of judging then ten thousand such little scriblers as you are . This is 〈◊〉 cum privilegio , truly Sir there is no body will dispute that point with you , and I do not doubt but in the end their judgments will 〈…〉 , ( if they shall think fit to embrace either of them ) 〈…〉 ; the first , because it will furnish them with more Money to pay their debts , if they have any , and encrease their Estates ; the 〈…〉 that it hath past the approbation of two of their Committees , and Printed in their Votes as both profitable and practicable , and that Briscoes hath not . The Fourth Paragraph , So that an Estate of the same value yields to the 〈◊〉 by the Doctors Proposal 6000 l. paying 100 l. per Annum , for 100 Years , which at 6 l. per Cent , raises 360 l. which is 260 l. more than the same Estate yielded before ; and an 150 l. Yearly more then Mr. Briscoe proposeth . Remark , Yes , Mr. Pamphleteer , you say true . That 's much you will make so free a Confession Mr. Impudence , still here is neither absurdity , nor untruth in all this . But here now comes the Kill-Cow at last , and the principal matter , that destroys the Doctors project . Says he , And the same Estate might yield the Freeholder 96000 l. if settled for the payment of 100 l. per Annum , for 1000 Years ; for if once , you come to exceed your Fund , and to say the 2000 l. Fund is a security for 10000 l. you may as well add another nought to it ; and say , it may be a security for 100000 l. As to the parallel it is unintelligible nonsence . There 's for you now Doctor in plain terms , and unless you can unriddle this Riddle , and explain this great Mystery , or take this great stumbling-block out of the way , your proposal is lost for ever . But what doth Mr. Impudence make of the Committee at the same time , that past their approbation of it to the House , that it was both profitable and practicable ? O! but this is an Objection , that he hath found out since . Very well Sir , since the case is so , I will undertake in both the Authors and the Doctors place to Answer and Explain this mighty difficulty ( though I doubt not but the Doctor is able much better to do it himself , if he shall think it worth his while to take notice of such a feeble Champion as you are ) and make you appear as Ignorant , and absurd a fellow , and as great a lyar , as you would falsly represent both the Doctor and the Author to the World. For neither the Doctor , nor the Author do any where affirm that 2000 l. Fund or Value in Land is a Security for 10000 l. as you say they do ; for though an Estate of 100 l. per Annum , by this most excellent Proposal , does raise the value of 6000 l. to the Subscriber , yet it does not follow , that the Doctor says it is worth it to sell at the Market-price , or is a Fund sufficient for so much , if he had , you would certainly have quoted the Page : But this Mr. Impudence and Mr. Ignorance too , is your own false Notion , that you would fix upon the Doctor to render his Proposal ineffectual ; as more plainly you tell us in the last Page , That the Doctor proposes four Millions , meaning for himself , for ever , which is as much as the 200000 l. per Annum Land proposed by the Doctor , for the security of the whole two Millions is worth , so that the Fund for the whole Sixteen Millions is in Nubibus . For in plain terms the Doctor hath made no provision for that . And farther a little lower , In the Third point we agree , only as I have said , I cannot come up to the Doctors Notion to make 2000 l. value in Land , to be a security for 10000 l. No , nor the Doctor neither , as you have told the story . But for that I hear several Men , who being not rightly informed of the Doctors Proposal , are apt to be drawn to an ill opinion thereof , by means of such as your Blockheads Idle suggestions : Therefore to undeceive them , I shall lay down the Doctor 's words in his own Proposal , which are these , That any person , that hath an Estate of 150 l. per Annum , may subscribe the same for the payment of 100 l. per Ann. for 100 Years , until the Sum of 200000 l. per Ann. be compleated ; that on every such Rent of 100 l. per Annum , the Doctor by order of the Commissioners shall Issue out Tickets to the value of 10000 l. and no more , whereof 4000 l. shall be to the Subscriber , and 2000 l. to some publick Joint-stock , but the profit thereof to the Subscriber , and the rest to other uses , &c. In all this , the Doctor says not a word , that the Rent of 100 l. a Year is worth , or a sufficient Fund for 10000 l. but what he proposeth is , that an Estate of 150 l. a Year , together with the 2000 l. Stock in Trade , is a sufficient security for the payment of a Rent of 100 l. a Year to the Commissioners , which does not amount to that great Sum of 10000 l. till an Hundred Years be expired ; and this he might have added withal , that this said security does every Year grow stronger , as the Rent is constantly paid in ; for when 99 Years are past , there will remain but one Year more , and supposing the Rent to have been constantly paid , there will then be put 100 l. due , yet the said 150 l. per Annum Land together with the said 2000 l. Stock , is all still tyed to make good the payment of the said remaining 100 l. but then I know you are in haste to reply , How comes 10000 l. to be raised and lent on this 150 l. per Annum Land ? For no Man will lend above 1500 l. at most on such an Estate , and 2000 l. is the usual price for an 100 l. a Year . This is the Mystery , which is thus easily to be made plain . The 10000 l. is not to be borrowed at Interest of any private Person , or publick Society ; for then the Parliament must pay at least 8 l. per Cent , it being a tryed Case the last Sessions , when they borrowed 1200000 l. of a company of Men , who would not deposit the Money without 8 l. per Cent , and a farther contract , to be made a company of Bankers with privileges to give out Bills , that might be of advantage enough to make their Money and Bills together yield above 30 l per Cent at least ; and incommode all the rest of the Nation to the ruine of many : But all this Money is to be raised out of a Mint , wherein Brass Tickets of 5 l. Value are to be formed , for which no Interest is to be paid ; and the project , like a Mine , is able to support its own Costs and Charges ; these Tickets when confirmed by an Act of Parliament , and secured by Land as aforesaid , are and will be full as useful to all Intents and purposes , as if we had discovered a Gold or Silver Mine . Now the Value of 10000 l. in these Tickets are to be made , and lent to the Subscribers , and other uses as aforesaid , and to be repaid , but not all at once with Interest , as in the case of all other common Mortgages , where the Creditor can call in both Principal and Interest when he pleases , but to be an Hundred Years in paying at an Hundred Pound a Year only , which in the end makes up Ten Thousand Pound ; so that if any Subscriber is behind in his Rent but one Year , you seize the Rents of his Estate , of 150 l. and the profits of 2000 l. in Stock , and that certainly will quickly pay that Years Rent of an Hundred Pound , and then all is free again till another Years Rent be behind : So that the difference only consists in the manner of repaying it , which makes the Hundred and Fifty Pound a Year a good Security . Thus after the same manner , if you have an Inn , Rented at Eighty Pound , and a Ground at Twenty Pound , in all an Hundred Pound a Year , and the Tenant hath a Lease for Ten Years , which at the end of the term in all will amount to 1000 l. and perhaps all the Goods in the House are not worth above Sixty Pound , when this Tenants Lease begins , will you say , that this is a good Security for a Thousand Pound , or that this Man is to pay you a Thousand Pound ? No sure ; but rather he being an honest careful and obliging Man , he is good Security for a Rent of an Hundred Pound a Year in that Inn. For in such an Estate any Landlord will trust an Industrious Careful fellow with so much , tho' he be poor , when he will be unwilling to trust him with an Hundred Pound in Ready Money , and thus the Poor Man may pay a Thousand Pound by that time the Ten Years are expired ; The case being truly thus : Then I say , That an Hundred and Fifty Pound a Year , whose Purchase is Three Thousand Pound , with the Two Thousand Pound Stock , is a very large Security for Ten Thousand Pound to be repaid at an Hundred Pound a Year , without other Interest : And thus it may be a Security for Ninety Six thousand as he says , though being a most prodigious Dance he could not comprehend the manner of it . This point then , I hope , is sufficiently cleared , and you Mr. Impudence proved most notoriously guilty of Evil speaking , lying , and slandring . Now if the Doctor had proposed to raise a Thousand Years Purchase , on an Hundred Pound a Year , then the Sum would have been so great , that but few Subscribers could have the benefit of it , whereas by such a number of Years as an Hundred , there is room enough for all the Members of the House of Commons if they please , and Fifteen Hundred Men more to Subscribe , to raise such a Sum as Twenty Millions , out of which they may pay their Debts , and discharge their encumberances ; besides a supply of Four Millions to carry on the War , and Royal Fishery , which Briscoe's Proposals say nothing of . But to return to Mr. Impudence again , who after he hath declared himself a conceited lump of Ignorance , says , He is willing to pass by the unintelligible Nonsence , and Remarks the leaving out of the Doctor 's Two Thousand Pound reserved for himself ; which he begrutcheth the Doctor very much , of which more anon . Says by the Doctor 's Proposal , the engaged Estate will be , after an Hundred Years , discharged from this encumbrance , and free for the like settlement , which being engaged for ever by Mr. Briscoe's can admit of no further improvement , and 't is much better to raise Ten Thousand Pound on the same Estate , than Two Thousand Pound . Remark , In Mr. Briscoe's Proposals , Eighteen and Twenty Third , an Estate by his Method may be settled Five or Ten times over , for and Hundred Years . Why , Mr. Impudence , I pray you tell me now the difference between Mortgaging an Hundred Pound per Annum , for Ten Thousand Pound to be repaid as per Doctor 's Proposal , and Mortgaging of it for Twenty Years , and then pay it off , and so for another Twenty Years , till an Hundred Years be compleated , discharging the said Mortgage every Twenty Years , according to Briscoe's Proposal ? Will not there be more than the value of Ten Thousand Pound paid in Principle , Interest and Charges by that time ? And is not a greater Sum abundantly more serviceable , than a Sum that 's less by a Fifth part ? For you your self confess it when you say a little after , you are sure it is better for the Nation to have an Hundred Thousand Pound raised upon an Estate , than Ten Thousand Pound , as is said . But Mr. Impudence proceeds . And with submission it is nonsence , I tell you again to raise Ten Thousand Pound on Two Thousand Pound Fund , and those you would have take your Brass Tickets will say the same . To my certain knowledge , Mr. Impudence , that 's another great lye of yours , for that there are very many of them do know and say to the contrary , and for those that do not , I hope they will better understand it , when they have read thus far ; Especially when they shall observe , that neither this Mr. Blockhead , nor his great Master Mr. Briscoe , from whom he hath his Instructions , doth make any difference between a Fund of Land settled for the payment of Ten Thousand Pound presently , as they understand it , and Ten Thousand Pound to be an Hundred Years in paying , as the Doctor proposeth . Every body knows , that according to the Market-price in England , Land is reckoned at Twenty Years Purchase , and then Ten Thousand Pounds buys Five Hundred Pound a Year ; and if lent on a Mortgage , they will expect a Thousand Pound a Year to be tyed for Security , and yet reserve a liberty to call it all in , whenever they please , and therefore it 's esteemed as Ready Money . Now since both the Blockhead , and Mr. Briscoe go about to confound the Doctor 's Proposal with this false Notion , that Ten Thousand Pound in present Money , and Ten Thousand Pound that is an Hundred Years in paying , is equally the same thing , and of the same value , for so they most Fallaciously represent it , I would therefore ask both the Blockhead and Mr. Briscoe this one question ; Suppose they had Ten Thousand Pound to dispose of , and here are two offers made them , one of Five Hundred Pound per Annum , to be sold for such a Sum , and another of a Hundred and Fifty Pound a Year to be Mortgaged for a Hundred and Fifty Years , the profits whereof does amount to Twenty Two Thousand Five Hundred Pound at the end of the said term , and as so much Ready Money according to their Notion , is to be valued , Which of these two offers will they let go their Ten Thousand Pound for ? No doubt they would think it an hard bargain , if they were forced to take the Hundred and Fifty Pound per Annum for their Money ; though according to their own way of reckoning it will raise 22500 l. One thing is very remarkable in all that write against the Doctor 's Proposal , that they love dearly to repeat the same thing over and over again , as in one Squirt's Pamphlet , and others , as if they were all of the same Welsh Strain . So here again he hints at the said Two Thousand Pound reserved by the Doctor , though he mentioned it a Second time just before the Fifth Paragraph ; which at last serves his purpose no more , than if he had only knock'd his heels against the ground . As to the Sixth Paragraph , I have not Mr. Briscoe's Book to peruse , for it seems he did not send any to the Doctor , or his Friends ; and they are not to be had at the Booksellers , so cannot reply to it : But dare engage the Author will stand by , and make good what he has Written , notwithstanding in the close of his Remark Mr. Impudence says ; And if this be not as I assert , I will give the whole World leave to account me as Impertinent , Prevaricating , and Falsifying a Scribler , as our Pamphleteer hath shewed himself to be . Very well Mr. Impudence ! And the World may with very good Reason call you by these Names , and with many more , and worse Epithites , and yet do you no manner of wrong or injury in the least ; for by your Scribble , you should have but little value for your Credit , or rather no Credit to save . He that Steals , or Picks a Pocket , may as well say , if it can be proved upon him , He will give the World leave to call him Rogue , and Thief ; that being no more than the Title of his Profession , will not hurt him at all . And pray Sir , What matter is it , what the World says of such a sorry Fellow as you , that hath no Name and less Sense ? If you had shewed any Wit , it might have attoned for your Rudeness , but Nonsence and Railing can hardly deserve a Pardon ? Paragraph the Seventh , Both this Paragraph , and the following Remark , is particularly about the Doctor 's reward for his Proposal : The design of the Paper , I find to be in an especial manner to lessen and destroy the Doctors Proposal , that by such a method they may the better advance , and promote Mr. Briscoe's Multitude of little Proposals , which he hath filled his Book with all , in hopes , that some one or other of them may probably take , like an Adventurer at Lotteries , who put in Five Thousand Pound , in hopes of one Prize , though it fell out they were all Blanks , and I believe his will prove no better : But if either of them does take , then let him alone to benefit himself by it , though he says nothing of his reward there ; for all that knows Mr. Briscoe , do well understand that he does not use to concern himself in any private or publick affair , especially those of the publick , without he can tell which way to get a large recompence for his pains . Now since they have endeavoured to expose the Doctor 's Proposal of a Land Fund , to be both Nonsensical and Insufficient , I believe I have cleared that to full satisfaction : So that it appears the fault lies in their want of Brains and Understanding , which hath brought forth both this Libel and Briscoes Book , for otherwise Mr. Briscoe could have no occasion to Print so many lesser silly Proposals as he hath , wherein he hath entrenched as well on Mr. Killegrew's Proposal off 〈◊〉 some time ago to the Parliament , as on the Doctors . I come now to shew one other little design of theirs , which hath no other end at all , unless it be to let the World know , that the Doctor hath carved out too large a Portion for himself , which alone hath a Fund as they say , and for the rest he hath provided no Fund , but what is in Nubibus ; at which Mr. Impudence is much disturbed , as appears by his so frequent repetitions , and so much scribble at last together about it : Notwithstanding all which I have plainly demonstrated , there is provided a full and safe Security for it all , here on Terra Firma . And though the Doctor hath carved out such a good round Sum as Four Millions , yet it is not all for himself , for Mr. Impudence confesseth , that he is to pay out of it the Lord Keeper , Master of Rolls , and Judges , to be at the charge of making all the Tickets , pay all other Officers , and Offices disperst up and down in every County , and after all these are paid , what think you may remain to the Doctor at last , you should have cast up that too , as well as Briscoes charges . Suppose the Doctor had a Million of Money left him , What is any Man the worse for it ? That you have taken such repeated notices of it , Does any Man lose by it , or is cheated out of his right , or wronged any manner of way ? Or rather will not every Subscriber ( though the Doctor be so largely paid out of it ) increase his Estate to above double the value , and gain much more by his Proposal , then he can or will by any of the best of Briscoes Proposals take which you will ? And he have a great many , that are spick and span new , an whole Ware-House full of them , so that you may go in , and take your choice of all sorts and sizes , and of all manner of Prizes ; but those of the better sort hath several more in them , and they are marked , Sixteen , Seventeen , Eighteen , Twenty Two and Twenty three Proposals ; 't is very strange to me if the House of Commons be not quickly cloied with all this cluster of Proposals , especially if they are brought in the Spaeker's sight , he may be apt to call out to Mr. Briscoe in the same manner as was once spoken to a much Nobler Person at the Sessions of the Poets . Put up your Trumpery good Noble Marquiss , And provide him some Straw in a Room that dark is . If the Doctor had contrived a project so much for the benefit of the Nation , and had left himself out , or forgot himself in , then you might have had much more cause to put him in the Dark Room , after he had been at so great Expences of time and Money : And why it should not be as much commendable in him , to provide well for himself and Family , as his Proposal will do for the Nation in general , if Enacted by Parliament ; or why he should not be allowed to pay himself , when every Treasurer , or Man in Office doth the same , and that honestly too , I cannot tell . But this Impudent Booby does not know what he would be at . Oh but he saith , that the very Commissioners themselves , as the Lord Keeper , Judges , &c. must all come to him for their Salleries : And what if they do ? What are they worse for it ? Why may not they go to him , as well as to any of the Under Officers of the Exchequer ? I suppose they will not stand much on that , who they go to ; so as they can receive their Money whenever they go , or send for it . For therein lies the stress of the business . But after all , though the Doctor has laid down such a Method in his Proposal for himself to be Mr. Workman , and to have the payment of the Salleries , ( as I think he hath most right to the management of it , that is the Inventor ) yet it does not follow , that the Parliament are obliged and tyed to follow his Rules , any more than they are to do , as Mr. Briscoe does propose , or to raise no more or less Money than Twenty Millions ; but it is left to their discretion to alter what they please , to make who they will Treasurer , and to give the Doctor something or nothing in consideration of his Proposal : However it was convenient and necessary , that some sort of a method should be laid before them , Or else how should they know what to do with any Proposal ? Well then , since both the Doctors , and Briscoe's Proposals are before the House , you may ask a Parliament Man , in Case he were , or were not in Debt , which he would rather chuse , the Doctors that will supply him with 6000 l. or Mr. Briscoes that can raise but 2000 l. on the same Estate of 100 l. per Annum , to serve his occasions ? And lastly , when Mr. Impudence comes to the last Page , there is but little beside a Repetition of what hath been said before , and not worth a reading ; only this is to be observed of him , that Billingsgate can hardly match his in ill Language . As for Mr. Briscoe , by what hath been said , I think , his behaviour does really deserve a reproof , which I shall give him in a Latin Sentence . Sat poenae est meruisse poenam . But as for Mr. Impudence , it is well for him , that he conceals his Name , for otherwise , there is no Gentleman that knew him , but what would judge him fit to be Kick'd out of all Civil Company for a Rake-hell . While I was sending this to the Press , there was given to me another of Mr. Impudence's Lybels , which he hath Re-printed , with an impudent Preamble on the top of it ; by which , I perceive that Mr. Briscoe , and the Blockhead are great Cronies ; and so may they always be , for they are only fit for one anothers Company . And whereas he saith , He will take care , that Mr. Briscoes , and the Doctor 's Books shall both lye exposed at the publick Coffee-Houses , to the view of all Persons , that so they may see by the comparison , that the Doctor is not that Man of Sense , he would have the World believe him to be . I desire he will be pleased to let this Paper likewise lie there a long with them , that so they may the better judge of the matter , when they have read what all Parties have said : And whether he hath not Cause enough to be ashamed , if there be any such thing as shame in him , which is much to be doubted . And though he threatens another parcel of Nonsense in a Second Impression , yet perhaps he may alter his mind , after he hath perused this Paper , wherein the Case is laid so plain , that it 's hoped the Scribling Dunce may be convinced that there is no fear of the Doctor 's running his head against a Post ; but rather , that this Blockhead being so void of Sense , and therefore so much resembling a Post , may run his head against the Doctor , with design to overthrow his Person , as well as his Proposal . FINIS .