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A96700 England's vvorthies. Select lives of the most eminent persons from Constantine the Great, to the death of Oliver Cromwel late Protector. / By William Winstanley, Gent. Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698. 1660 (1660) Wing W3058; Thomason E1736_1; ESTC R204115 429,255 671

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regaining the Dutchy of York wrongfully conferred on his Brother Clarence by the last Parliament Hereupon many of note joyned themselves with him so that whom they refused to serve as King which had been an act of loyalty they condescend to aid as Duke of York which was absolute rebellion it being high treason in a Subject though never so apparently injured to seek his remedy by Arms. Having thus increast his Army he marches towards London and although the Marquess Mountague Warwicks Brother with a far superiour power lay then at Pomfret to impeach his journey yet let he him quietly pass not permitting any act of hostillity to be shewed or advantage taken by which gross oversight he ruined himself and Warwick too for no sooner was Edward past this danger but many of the Nobility with mighty Forces repaired to him Whereupon forgetting his oath he takes upon him the title of King and marcht directly to Coventry fierce in his desire to give Warwick battel who lay there encampt and now his Brother Clarence with all his Forces forsakes his Father-in-law the Earl of Warwick and joynes with his Brother Hereupon uniting their Forces they march up to London which after some show of resistance submitted its self Warwick having now joyned with his Brother Mountague follows after him whom to oppose King Edward having settled the Town to his obedience led forth his Army at St. Albans they both met where betwixt them was fought a most bloody battel in which the Earl of Warwick and his Brother Mountague valiantly fighting were both slain and their whole Army totally routed To this violent end came the Earl of Warwick and indeed how was it possible such a stormy life could expect a calmer death he was questionless valiant for a Coward durst not have thought those dangers into which he entred upon the slightest quarrels His soul was never quiet distasted still with the present and his pride like a foolish builder so delighted to pull down and set up that at length part of the frame that himself had raised fell upon him and crusht him to death His varying so in approving contrary Titles shewed either a strange levity in judgement or else that ambition not conscience ruled his actions In sum that greatness he so violently laboured to confirme in his posterity came all to nothing Almighty God ruining their designs who think by pollicy though contrary to Religion to perpetuate their posterity The Life of King RICHARD the Third FRom the pen of so credible an Author as Sir Tho. Moor was to other Historians chiefly derived the History of this King they so admiring and trusting to what he delivered that without any alteration of his words an unusual respect we have hitherto except two or three other Modern differing Writers received all from the Knights Tradition He was a person indeed of unquestioned integrity but how carefully and honestly his Works by others might be publisht after his death is not yet well determined Sir Simon D'ewes Mr. Selden and other eminent Antiquaries of our times being in their learned discourses often too sensible of some abuses offered to the Chronicle of this Richard The truth is if as in respect of our own times we have known the best of men so traduce certainly where there hath been some more then ordinary failings envious persons will think they cannot render him odious or ugly enough Richard the Third vulgarly known by the name of Crook-Backt and so delivered by some Historians and Poets with what truth I know not since his Picture drawn in his life and as it is said to be to the life still preserved and suffered by his great enemy Henry the Seventh in the Long Gallery in White-Hall denotes the contrary and shews him him to be of a sweet and gracious aspect And John Stow who alwayes took great pains in his inquiry of the relations of the persons of Princes sayes That he had spoken with some ancient men who from their own sight and knowledge affirm that he was of body and shape comely Neither did John Rouce who knew him and wrote much in his description observes any otherwise But whether crooked or no if his actions were straight posterity hath the less to censure him He was the youngest Son of Richard Plantagenet the fourth Duke of York of that Royal Family born at the Castle of Fotheringham or as some write the Castle of Berkhamsteed about the year of our Lord 1450. a dutiful Son to his Father and a Loyal Subject to his Brother who stood alwayes firm to his side in that great defection of the Duke of Clarence and Earl of VVarwick as we have declared in the preceding life At the death of his Brother King Edward he was chosen Lord Protector and afterwards by the importunity of the people knowing his Abilities forced to take upon him the Regal Power and confirmed by Act of Parliament Therefore their cavils are vain and discover an extream malice and envy unto him that report him to have obtained the Sovereignty by indirect means As for his abillities for government hear Reverend Cambden an Author without exception Fuit dignissimus regno c non inter malos sed bonos Principes commemorandus That he was most worthy to Reign and to be numbered amongst the good not bad Princes And indeed those many and good Laws enacted in his time demonstrate him a good King though some have reported him to be a bad Man He was Crowned at Westminster with great solemnity most of the Peers of the Land being present soon after his Coronation he sent to the French King for his Tribute formerly paid to his Brother Edward in leiu of the Dutchy and Countries of Aquitain Normandy Poictou and Maine c. and now detained by the French King and doubtless King Richard had still compelled him to continue it had not eruptions of State and tumultary practices fatally diverted his Sword Soon after was a Parliament called wherein was attainted of High Treason Henry Earl of Richmond John Earl of Oxford Thomas Marques of Dorset Jasper Earl of Pembroke Lionel Bishop of Salisbury Pierce Bishop of Exeter the Lady Margaret Countess of Richmond Thomas Morton Bishop of Ely with many others King Edwards Children for whom the world so much censures him were adjudged uncapable of Government and the Crown by a Parliament in those dayes confirmed to King Richard in these words It is declared pronounced decreed confirmed and established by the authority of this present assembly of Parliament that King Richard the Third is the true and undoubted King of this Realm as well by right of Consanguinity and Heritage as by lawful Election and Coronation c. So that here to tax so general an assent were to say there were not one honest nor just man in that High Court and what greater scandall to the whole Kingdom and to those that have since succeeded them But as Honour is alwayes attended on by Envy so
puissant a Prince as his Majesty so openly eluded but a through feeling equal and proportionable to the injuries received But his patience hath gone beyond policy and as long as he had hopes that he could benefit the Churches by any other means he had no recourse by way of Arms so far that having been made an instrument and worker of the last Peace upon conditions disadvantageous enough and which would not have been accepted without his Majesties intervention who interposed his credit and interest in the Churches to receive them even with threatnings to the end to shelter the honour of the most Christian King under assurance of his part not onely for the accomplishment but also for the bettering of the said condition for which he stands caution to the Churches But what hath been the issue of all this but onely an abuse of his goodness And that which his Majesty thought a sovereign remedy for all their sores hath it not brought almost the last blow to the ruine of the Churches It wanted but a little by continuing the Fort before Rochel the demolishment whereof was promised by the violence of the Souldiers and Garrisons of the said Forts and Isles as well upon the inhabitants of the said Town as upon strangers in lieu whereas they should have retired they have been daily augmented and other Forts built as also by the stay of the Commissioners in the said Town beyond the time agreed on to the end to make broils and by means of the division which they made to slide amongst the Inhabitants to open the gates to the neighbouring Troops and by other withstandings and instructions of peace I say a little failed that the said Town and in it all the Churches had not drawn their last breath And in the mean time while his Majesty hath yet continued and not opposed so many injuries so many faith-breakings but by complaint of Treaty until he had received certain advice confirmed by intercepted Letters of the great preparation the most Christian King made to pour upon Rochel and then what could his Majesty of Great Brittain do but to vindicate his honour by a quick arming against those who had made him a complice of their deceits And to give testimony of his integrity and zeal which he hath alwayes had for the reestablishing of the Churches an establishment which shall be dear and precious to him above any other thing This is the sole end of his arming at this time and not any particular interest yet whosoever would doubt thereof let him consider the circumstance of times and disposition of affairs as they stand now with his Majesty For who will believe that he can have any design upon France or to have projected conquests here in a time so disadvantageous having now for his enemy one of the most puissant Kings of the world and if he had such a design surely he would have sent greater Forces than those now sent upon this action whereof if the number were known they would be Judged but Auxiliaries onely and that their aim is no other but for the good of the Churches which for many important reasons and considerations he findes himself obliged before God and man to protect and succour But if it be alleged that his Majesty hath been moved to take up Arms for other respects as the detention and seisure of the Ships and Goods of his Subjects at Burdeaux and other places of this Kingdom to the breach and manifest contravention of the peace betwixt the two Crowns which in this point tend expresly to the irreparable prejudice yea to the total ruine of Commerce in the rupture whereof the poor people of this Realm being not able to vent their Merchandizes groans not onely under the burthen of so many Taxes and Impositions but for the very necessity of life it self that the apprehensions his Majesty hath of the powerful encrease of the most Christian King by Sea hath moved him to arm for preventing the growth thereof And lastly that being hopeless of any accomodation of things he hath been constrained to put himself in arms The answer to all this is that whosoever shall search the Arrests Prizes and Seisures which have been made on both sides he shall finde his Majesty and his Subjects have hitherto profited by this breach and that it turned to their advantage In the second place he is so far off from being jealous of the pretended power of the French by Sea and that he should have reason to hinder it that there needs no more than for him to grant when he thinks it fit Letters of Mart to his Subjects and so these vain and feeble Forces at Sea might be dissipated without the employent of any Fleet Royal. Finally that there hath been a necessity to arm thus because there is no hope of accomodation otherwise the contrary will be most manifest to him who will consider the researches which have been made at several times as well by their own Ministers as by the Ministers of other Princes to his Majesty to treat of accommodating things at their instigation It appears by all this that his Majesty hath not been forced to arm for any particular interest but onely for defence of the Churches for the security and freedom whereof he stood responsible yet there are some that dare amuse the world that his Majesty hath a particular design in it and that he useth Religion for a pretext to gain a party by means whereof and by which conjunction he hopes to push on his purposes to the end at which they aym'd No no our Religion teacheth us otherwise his Majesties piety wherein he gives place to no man living will never permit him His design is the establishment of the Churches his interest is their good and his aim their contentment that being done these Drums beating those Ensigns displayed shall be folded up again And all this noise of War shall be buried in night and silence which would never have been but for their cause The King having raised good sums of money by loan and otherwise setteth forth a Fleet under the Dukes command for the relief of Rochel but the Duke returning home with ill success being discomfitted at the Isle of Rhe the King of France reinforceth his Siege whereupon the Rochellers sue once again to King Charles for supplyes who being necessitated for money assembleth a Parliament March 17. 1627. who readily and chearfully gave him five Subsidies whereupon the King granted them the Petition of Right That gallant Standard of Common Liberty deserving to be recorded to all posterity the substance whereof reduced to four heads take as followeth 1. They do pray your most excellent Majesty that no man hereafter be compelled to make or yield any Gift Loan Benevolence Tax or such like charge without common consent by Act of Parliament and that none be called to make answer or to take such oath or to give attendance or be confin'd or otherwise
Religion then the Ceremonies of it did publickly refuse it From hence proceeded Tragedies Tumults War and Invasion for upon the first reading thereof the people were so violent against it that the Dean and Bishop of Edenburgh hardly escaped with life nor were they onely the rascal multitude that thus opposed it but many of the Noblemen Barons and Gentlemen amongst whom the chief were the Earl of Hume and the Lord Lindsey To appease these disorders the King sent down the Marquess Hamilton in the quality of an high Commissioner impowring him with a Commission to use the utmost of his interest and power for the settling of peace but whether as some write he dealt deceitfully in aspiring to the Crown himself or no I judge uncertain but most certain it is that after his coming the differences encreased far greater then before and no question but it had become far better for the King had this Marquess been either a more close friend or an opener enemy The King being at home in no good condition used all means he could to pacifie his enemies abroad not onely winking at many of the foul disorders of the Scots but also yielded unto them in their desires for many things which nevertheless allayed not their spirits but rather encouraged them to proceed as they had begun For as Cleaveland hath it Nor Gold nor Acts of Grace 't is steel must tame The stubborn Scot a Prince that would reclaim Rebels by yielding doth like him or worse Who saddled his own back to save his horse Hamilton being returned into England the Scots began might and main to levy Souldiers to impose Taxes to raise Fortifications to block up some and seize others of the Kings Castles and to prepare for War The King not to be behinde hand with the Scots it being no good policy in War to strain courtesie who should begin first raised a considerable power to the maintenance whereof many of the Nobility contributed largely especially the Bishops it being for the preservation of their own Hierarchy March 27. the Army began to march the Earl of Arundel commanding in Chief but all the preparation both of one side and the other proved onely an interview of two Armies nothing being acted considerable in the way of engagement for after a few dayes attendance upon each other a Pacification was concluded upon distributed into these Articles On the Kings Part. 1. His Majesty to confirme what his Commissioner promised in his name 2. That a general Assembly be indicted to be kept at Edenburgh August 6. 3. That command be given for a Parliament to be holden at Edenburgh August the 20. 4. That he recal all his Forces by Land or Sea and restore all Ships and Goods arrested and detained since the pretended Assembly at Glasgow upon the Covenanters disarming and disbanding of their Forces dissolving their Tables and restoring to the King all his Castles Forts and Ammunition and releasing all the Persons Lands and Goods then under restraint or detained since the pretended Assembly of Glasgow This his Majesty to do by Declaration On the Scots Part. 1. The Forces of Scotland to be disbanded within eight and forty hours after publication of the Kings Declaration 2. They to render up after the said publication all Castles Forts Ammunition of all sorts so soon as the King shall send to receive them 3. They to hold no meetings treatings nor consultations but such as are warranted by act of Parliament 4. They to desist from all fortifications and those to be remitted to the Kings pleasure 5. They to restore to all the Kings Subjects their Liberties Lands Houses Goods and Means taken or detained from them since the first of February last This Pacification being solemnly ratified on both sides the King well hoped a general peace would ensue but what ever the Scots pretended the sequel shewed they intended nothing less for they still kept their Officers in constant Pay they did not slight their fortification at Leith they still continued their Meetings and Consultations they still disquieted molested and frighted all of different inclinations and which was worst of all they dispersed a scandalous Libel entituled Some conditions of his Majesties Treaty with his Subjects of Scotland before the English Nobility are set down here for remembrance Which Book tending to the defamation of his Majesty and disavowed by the Commissioners then present at the Treaty was by the command of the Council burnt by the common Hangman The King who intended to stay till the General Assembly was met seeing matters remain in this doubtful posture returned into England leaving the Earl of Traquair his Commissioner August the 6 the Assembly met at Edenburgh wherein Episcopacy the five Articles of Perth the High Commission the Liturgy and Book of Canons were abolished the Earl of Traquiar assenting thereunto The Assembly being ended the Parliament began who instead of reforming Abuses fell upon new moddelling the Government forming an Act Recissory whereby former Acts concerning the Judicatory of the Exchequer concerning Proxies and concerning confirmation of Ward Lands should be nulled Which being signified to the King he by his Commissioner the Earl of Traquair prorogued the Parliament until the 2. of June next These actings of the Scots warping altogether towards War were much forwarded by an accident November 19. it happened a great part of the walls of the Castle of Edenburgh with the Cannons mounted fell to the ground this being the Anniversary night of the Kings Birth-day was construed in the Grammar of Superstition an ominous presage of the ruine of the Kings design The King appointed the Lord Estrich Colonel Ruthen and the Governour of the Castle to take order for the re-edification of what was lapsed but the Scots would not suffer any materials to be carried in for reparation This Indignity the King concludeth intollerable and thereupon resolveth to relieve himself by force to this end a private Juncto is selected for the close carrying on of the design wherein it was agreed his Majesty should call a Parliament to assemble April the 13. next The King approved well of their Councel but withal said My Lords the Parliament cannot suddenly convene and the subsidies they grant will be so long in levying as in the interim I may be ruin'd therefore some speedy course must be thought upon for supplies The Lords willing to forward the business told him they would engage their own credits and the Lord Deputy of Ireland giving the onset subscribed for twenty thousand pound the other Lords writing after his Copy subscribed conformable to their Estates the Judges also contributed largely as also the Recusants who are ever sure to undergo the lash yielded according to their abilities From which Loyalty of theirs to his Majesty the more envious and schismatical sort of people gave out that the King was in his heart a Papist I have thought it my duty to insert in Latin and in English his Majesties Declaration
Discord being now grown a Sea of Dissention the King and Queen poste to Hampton Court yet before he went that he might clearly demonstrate his real intentions to compose all differences he consented to the Petition of the Parliament to exclude the Bishops out of the House an act very prejudicial to himself for by this means the scale of Votes in the upper House which oft had turned to his advantage did by this diminution encline most commonly the other way Having staid about a moneth at Hampton Court the Queen went into Holland to accompany her Daughter Mary who was lately married to the young Prince of Orange The King the Prince the Palsgrave the Duke of Richmond and some other of the Nobility went down into the North intending to seize on the Magazine at Hull but the Parliament had before sent down one of their own Members Sir John Hotham who from the Walls denyed his Majesty entrance the King complaineth hereof to the Parliament but they justifie his Act yet what grains of affection towards his Majesty were wanting in Hull were found superabundant in the City of York who with the Counties adjacent declare unanimously for his Majesty Encouraged here with August 22. 1642. he sets up his Standard at Nottingham The Parliament in the mean time raised a considerable Army whereof the Earl of Essex commanded in chief And now were the gates of Janus unlocked and stern Mars released out of prison the seldom heard Drum rattled in every corner and the scarce known Trumpet sounded in every street now Factions banded Nick-names were invented Oaths framed and amongst the rest the Covenant obtruded against which his Majesty publisht this following Proclamation His Majesties Proclamation forbidding the tendring or taking of the late Covenant called A Solemn League and Covenant for Reformation c. Whereas there is a printed Paper entituled A Solemn League and Covenant for Reformation and defence of Religion the honour and happiness of the King and the peace and safety of the three Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland pretended to be ordered by the Commons in Parliament on the one and twentieth day of September last to be printed and published which Covenant though it seems to make specious expressions of Piety and Religion is in truth nothing else but a trayterous and seditious Combination against us and against the established Religion and Laws of this Kingdom in pursuance of a trayterous design and endeavour to bring in Forreign Forces to invade this Kingdom We do therefore straitly charge and command all our loving Subjects of what degree or quality soever upon their Allegiance that they presume not to take the said seditious and trayterous Covenant And we do likewise hereby forbid and inhibit all our Subjects to impose administer or tender the said Covenant as they and every of them will answer the contrary at their utmost and extreamest perils Given at our Court at Oxon the 9. day of October in the nineteenth year of our Reign Hitherto have we beheld England like a curious Garden flourishing with all the choicest flowers both for scent and colour that ever Flora watred with pearly drops or Titans radiant beams gave birth unto whose flourishing branches adorn'd with Turtles twinn'd in chaste embraces as if they simpathized of each others peaceful and fruitful vertues that Nature her self was enamour'd to walk into the twined Meanders of her curious Mazes here might you see the Princely Rose the King of Flowers so full of fragrancy that for its smell and colour it was the envy of all the world there might you see the Lilly Queen of Flowers there might you see the Olive Plants the Royal Progeny placed round about a table where Kings and Queens had used to feast the Nobility and Gentry emulating each other to excell in sweetness But now alas with our late discords the Scene is so altered that this curious Garden hath been over-run with Weeds I mean the miseries which followed upon these dissentions For as one writes the War went on with horrid rage in many places at one time and the fire once kindled cast forth through every corner of the Land not onely sparks but devouring flames insomuch as the Kindom of England was divided into more Battles then Counties nor had she more Fields then Skirmishes nor Cities then Sieges almost all her Palaces of Lords and great Houses being turned every where into Garrisons they fought at once by Sea and Land and through all England who could but lament the miseries of his Countrey sad spectacles were of plundering and firing Villages and the Fields otherwise waste and desolate rich onely and terribly glorious in Camps and Armies The Kings side at first prospered exceedingly the Earl of New Castle his General in the North overthrowing the Lord Fairfax and driving him into Hull in the West Sir William Waller a Parliament Chieftain was utterly defeated by the Lord Wilmot who came from Oxford with an Army of the Kings and having lost all his Army made haste to London and such as the fortune of the Field was was the condition of Towns and Garrisons for immediately after Wallers defeat the two greatest Cities of all the West were yielded up Bristol to Prince Rupert and Excester to Prince Maurice So that now the King was master of all the West save onely Glocester which he besieged with a Royal Army Essex himself the great General at the same time his Army decreasing suddenly some dying of sickness others for want forsaking their Colours was constrained to leave the Field and return to London quartering the sick and weak remnant of his Army at Kingston and other adjacent places until a recruit could be made for him so that it was judged by wise men if the King leaving Glocester had marched directly with his victorious Army to London which was then not at all fortified and miserably distracted with Factions within it or besides if the Earl of New Castle letting alone the besieging of Hull which likewise proved fruitless had poured out his numerous Forces upon the Eastern associated Counties he had been more successful then he was But Fata viam invenient Destiny will finde wayes that never were thought of makes way where it findes none and that which is decreed in Heaven shall be effected by means of which earth can take no notice of The King to no purpose thus spending his time at Glocester Essex the whiles recruiteth his Army with which marching from London eighty miles he raiseth the Siege and having relieved the Town in his retreat from thence encountered and vanquished the Kings Army near to the Town of Newbery Both sides excepting onely the inexhaustible riches and strength of the City of London by this overthrow seemed of equal strength yet each of them endeavours to make themselves stronger the Parliament calling in to their assistance the Scots the King the Irish The Earl of Leven was General of the Scots to whom joyned the Earl
Isle of Wight for a certain Letter was left on the Table whereby the King was advertised the there were some that laid wait for his life whereupon being frighted he privily fled from Hampton Court leaving a Letter behinde him written with his own hand to the Commissioners to be by them communicated to both Houses of Parliament in which Letter after he had discoursed somewhat about Captivity and the sweetness of Liberty he ended in these following words Now as I cannot deny but that my personal security is the urgent cause of this my retirement so I take God to witness that the publick Peace is no less before mine eyes And I can sinde no better way to express this my profession I know not what a wiser man may do then by desiring and urging that all chief interests may be heard to the end each may have just satisfaction as for example the Army for the rest though necessary yet I suppose are not difficult to consent ought in my judgement to enjoy the liberty of their consciences and have an act of Oblivion or Indempnity which should extend to the rest of all my Subjects and that all their Arrears should be speedily and duly paid which I will undertake to do so I may be heard and that I be not hindered from using such lawful and honest means as I shall chuse To conclude let me be heard with freedom honour and safety and I shall instantly break through this cloud of retirement and shew my self ready to be Pater Patriae Charles Rex The King had not been long in the Isle of Wight but he sends a Letter of great length to the Parliament in which he delivered his sense and opinion concerning the abolition of Episcopacy he disputed out of the dictates of his conscience much and gave touches also of other matters of all which he hoped that he should satisfie the Parliament with his reasons if he might personally treat with them therefore he earnestly desired to be admitted with honour freedom and safety to treat personally at London the Commissioners of Scotland with great vehemence also pressed that this desire of the King might be granted But the Parliament pretending tumults and innovations that might arise by the Kings coming to London which as they said was then full of Malignants sent down four Propositions to him to Sign which being done he should be admitted to a personal Treaty The four were these 1. That a Bill be passed into an act by his Majesty for settling of the Militia of the Kingdom 2. That a Bil be passed for his Majesties calling in of all Declarations Oaths and Proclamations against the Parliament and those who have adhered to them 3. For passing an Act that those Lords who were made after the great Seal was carried to Oxford may be made uncapable of sitting in the House of Peers ever after 4. That power may be given to the two Houses of Parliament to adjorn as the two Houses of Parliament should think fit The Commissioners of Scotland would seem in no wise to give their consent that these four Bills should be sent to the King before he treated at London therefore in a very long Declaration they protested against it the King likewise denyed to Sign them when they were sent unto him Upon which denyal a Declaration and Votes passed both Houses of Parliament in this manner The Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament after many addresses to his Majesty for the preventing and ending this unnatural War raised by him against the Parliament and Kingdom having lately sent four Bills to his Majesty which did contain onely matter of safety and security to the Parliament and Kingdom referring the composure of other differences to a personal Treaty with his Majesty and having received an absolute negative do hold themselves obliged to use their utmost endeavours speedily to settle the present Government in such a way as may bring the greatest security to this Kingdom in the enjoyment of the Laws and Liberties thereof and in order thereunto and that the Houses may receive no delay nor interruptions in so great and necessary a work they have taken their resolutions and passed these Votes following viz. Resolved c. by the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament that no application or address to be made to the King by any person whatsoever without leave of both Houses Resolved c. by the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament that the person or persons that shall make breach of this order shall incur the penalty of High Treason Resolved c. That the Lords and Commons do declare that they will receive no more any message from the King and do enjoyn that no person whatsoever do presume to receive or bring any message from the King to both or either of the Houses of Parliament or any other person To these Votes of Parliament the Army declared their consent and approbation and that they would live and dye in defence of the House of Commons but the people though before they were enraged against the King now seeing their errours resolved to plead his Cause Petitions upon Petitions are presented for a personal Treaty with the King for the disbanding of the Army and for the removal of all other grievances Langhorn Powel and Poyer three eminent Commanders who had done many and great services for the Parliament now declare themselves for the King and with an Army of 8000. men fortifie Pembroke and Chepstow Castles Sir Thomas Glemham in the North seizes upon Carlisle and Sir Marmaduke Langdale upon Barwick and fortified it the strong Castle also of Pomfret was then taken by the Royalists and the Governour stain Against these Sir Thomas Fairfax was marching Northwards but far greater dangers detained him in the South for the Kentish men not far from Gravesend were gotten together into an Army with whom were above twenty Knights Esquires and Gentlemen of the Countrey and amongst them divers Commanders formerly of the Kings Armies upon the approach of the Parliaments Army some two thousand of them march to Maidstone which they resolved to make good against the Army Fairfax after the dispute of some passages breaks up to them and assaults the Town with a great deal of boldness they on the other side defend themselves with unspeakable courage at last the Kentish men are overcome 200. being slain and about 1400. taken prisoners But the Earl of Norwich with about 3500. with much ado kept together and got over the River Thames into Essex whereupon Sir Charles Lucas raises what strength he could possible in that County to whom joyned the Lord Capel the Lord Loughborough Sir George Lisle Sir Bernard Gascoigne Sir William Compton with many more Gentlemen and Souldiers and having first taken the Committee-men at Chelmesford they marched to Colchester a Town of great Antiquity but the people heretofore accounted no great friends to Monarchy nor the Town of that strength to withstand so enraged
in one shew you the wonder of our times such a Proteus as few ages can produce such another he having like Ishmael every mans hand against him and his against all Who more violent against the Hierarchy of the Bishops then he none more against King and Kingly Government then he how violent was he aganst the House of Lords and they being down and another Government established without King and Lords he sets himself against that too such an opposite and Antagonist to all forms of Government whatsoever that he might fitly be compared unto the Rainbow which is never on that side of the world that the Sun is but wheresoever it appears it is in opposition against the Sun But to come to his Life he was Son to Richard Lilburne of the County of Durham during his miniority an Apprentice in London near London-stone to one Mr. Hewson a a dealer in Cloath whom he served about five years his Master declining his trade he moved him that he might have his liberty to provide for himself to which purpose he went into the Countrey to have the consent of his friends and afterwards made a voyage into Holland Before this his transportation he had made his ends having been of such an insinuating spirit that he won the love of some silly Schismaticks who for his strange though empty expressions deemed him as they have done others one inspired So that by that time he came out of his time and had served his Apprentiship who but Lilburne of note amongst the Sectaries his approbation desired and his counsels followed in all tumultuous and factious transactions It happened during the imprisonment of Doctor Bastwick censured for libelling by the Archbishop of Canterbury divers persons affecting the said Doctor out of their love resorting to him amongst the rest one of them took John Lilburne with him as his associate after plenty of chear Doctor Bastwick to solace his guests read to them his Lettany which he had written against the Prelates which Book was highly pleasing to them all Lilburne also hearing the said Lettany read and knowing that whatsoever was written in defiance of that power then generally hated would be very acceptable he desired of Doctor Bastwick to have a copy of one of them with which he would travel beyond Sea and cause it to be printed not doubting to be enriched by it the winde of this fancy transported him over Sea accompanied with a fellow whose fidelity he doubted not there he printed many Books and by them got much money selling them even at what rates he pleased afterwards coming into England bringing with him his printed trinkets hoping to have a new Mart the fellow that accompanied him was his betrayer who gave information to the Archbishop of Canterbury both where Lilburne and his Libels were who immediately dispatched a Pursivant with plenary authority who attached Lilburne and seized on his Books which were all afterwards burnt Lilburne himself was committed to the Fleet and refusing to take his Oath in the Star-Chamber was by them fined five hundred pound and censured to be whipt from the Fleet to Westminster and afterwards to stand in the Pillory which accordingly was executed and because he fell into a long speech against the Bishops and their Hierarchy they caused him to be gagged wherein he continued an hour and a half But the times altering the Bishops being Voted down by Parliament and a War ensuing betwixt them and the King these his sufferings caused him to be looked upon by the Parliament who preferred him to the Office of Lieutenant Collonel in their Army wherein he behaved himself most gallantly particularly at Brainford where he with about 700. men withstood the Kings whole Army about five hours together and fought it out to the very Swords point and to the Butt end of the Musket and thereby hindred the King from his then possessing the Parliaments Train of Artillery and by consequence the City of London in which act he was taken prisoner without Articles or capitulation and was by the King and his Party then lookt upon as one of the most active men in the whole company and should have been therefore Tryed for his life had not he by his wit avoyded the same by sending to the Parliament who thereupon sent a Letter to Oxford threatning them with lex talionis they having at the same time many of their great eminent men prisoners in the Tower Warwick Castle and other places which put a period to all further proceedings against him and freed him by an exchange Returning to London he begins to set abroach his factious opinions writing a Pamphlet wherein he termed the Laws Norman innovations with other unparallel'd speeches all which he sent to Judge Reeve who himself or some other for him made a complaint unto the Lords who immediately summoned him to appear before them which accordingly he did where being commanded to kneel at the Bar he refused saying That he had learned both better Religion and manners then to kneel to any humane or mortal power how great soever with many other aggravating and ambitious speeches which committed him close prisoner first to Newgate and afterwards to the Tower where he continued above twelve moneths together but this not a whit calmed his spirit but was rather like Oyl cast on the fire finding occasion from these his troubles and imprisonments to enveigh more bitterly against the Government and Governours then in being terming the Parliament to use his own words in his scurrulous pamphlets A pack of dissembling juggling knaves a company of tyrants the most perfidious false faith and trust-breakers that ever lived in the world and ought by all rational men to be most detested of all men that breathe treacherous self-seeking usurpers of the name and power of a Parliament most treacherously to do what they list Saying That Corah Dathan and Abiram were never more against Authority as the General viz. the Lord Fairfax and his Councel nor the Anabaptists at Munster with John of Leidon and Knipperdolling were never more contemners of Authority nor Jack Straw and Wat Tyler nor all those famous men mentioned with a black pen in our Histories These with infinite other railing tearms his pamphlets are stuffed and farced withal not fit to be bestowed on the most inveterate enemies can be encountred in this Life the young Gentleman was very prodigal of such Rabshekah expressions as his impudence was most conducing to his desperate designs c. For these and many other single rapired expressions of the nature contained in several Books which he wrote he was committed to the Tower and by a special Commission of Oyer and Terminer tryed upon a Charge of High Treason at the Guild Hall in London October 24 25. 26. 1649. Many were the Commissioners that sat upon his Tryal and multitudes of Spectators that came to behold it I have inserted his Tryal thus at large not onely as in respect of the
eminency of it but as many passages in it from his own lips give further illustrations of his Life The first Tryal of Lieutenant Collonel John Lilburne was at the Guild Hall in London the 24. of October 1649. being Wednesday The Commissioners Names of the extraordinary Commission of Oyer and Terminer for the Tryal of Lieutenant Collonel John Lilburn were these Thomas Andrews Lord Mayor Richard Keble Lord Commissioner Philip Jermyn Judge of the upper Bench Thomas Gates Baron John Pulestone Justice of the Common Pleas. Francis Thorp Barron and Member Robert Nicolas Member Richard Aske Justices of the Upper Bench. Peter Warburton Justice of the Common Pleas. Alexander Rigby Baron but absent Sir Thomas Fowler Sir Henry Holcroft Sir William Row Sir Richard Saltonstall Sir Richard Sprignall Sir John Woolistone Sir William Roberts John Green John Clarke John Parker Serjeants at Law William Steel Recorder John Fowke Thomas Foote John Kendrick Thomas Cullum Simon Edmonds Samuel Avery John Dethick Robert Tichburn John Hayes Aldermen Henry Proby Common Sergeant Thomas Brigandine Nathaniel Snape Edward Rich Owen Roe Tobias Lisle Austin Wingfield Richard Downton Daniel Taylor William Wibend Silvanus Taylor The Court was called O yes made All persons that were adjourned to the Court required to make their appearance The Lieutenant of the Tower of London Collonel Francis West was called to bring forth his Prisoner according to the precept Whereupon Collonel West Lieutenant of the Tower brought up the Prisoner out of the Irish Chamber where he had been some time before the sitting of the Court and was guarded by the said Lieutenant and a special Guard of Souldiers besides And being brought to the Bar the Sheriffs of London were directed to take the Prisoner into their custody Silence commanded the Crier said John Lilburne hold up thy hand Lieutenant Collonel Lilburne directed himself to Master Keble one of the Keepers of the great Seal as the President of the Court and said to this purpose Sir will it please you to hear me and if so by your favour thus All the priviledge for my part that I shall crave this day at your hands is no more but that which is properly and singly the Liberty of every Free-born English-man viz. the benefit of the Laws and Liberties thereof which by my Birth-right and Inheritance is due unto me the which I have fought for as well as others have done with a single and upright heart and if I cannot have and enjoy this I shall leave this Testimony behinde me that I died for the Laws and Liberties of this Nation and upon this score I stand and if I perish I perish And if the Fact that I have done cannot be justified by the Law of England let me perish I mention none of this for the gaining of mercy or by way of merit no I scorn it for mercy I crave from none but from the hands of my God alone with whom I hope and am assured one day to rest whom I have set before my eyes and so walked as believing I am alwayes in his presence in whose power my confidence is fixed whom I take and own to be my stay my staff my strength and support and in whom I rest as the life of my life and whom I hope to meet with joy when this fading and uncertain life shall have an end to live with him in glory and blessedness for evermore And because I would not willingly trouble you with many words to cause you to spend your time impertinently therefore Sir in reference to the Court I shall crave but so much liberty from you as was given to Paul when he pleaded for his life before the Heathen Roman Judges which was free liberty of speech to speak for himself the which I now humbly crave as my right not onely by the Law of God and Man but also by the law and light of Nature And I shall do it with that respect reason and judgement that doth become a man that knows what it is to plead for his life I hope Gode hath given me ability to be master of my own passion and endowed me with that reason that will dictate unto me what is for my own good and benefit I have several times been arraigned for my life already I was once arraigned before the House of Peers for sticking close to the Liberties and Priviledges of this Nation and those that stood for them being one of those two or three me that first drew their swords in Westminster Hall against Collonel Lunsford and some scores of his associates At that time it was supposed they intended to cut the throats of the chiefest men then sitting in the House of Commons I say for this and other things of the like nature I was arraigned by the Kings special Command and Order the first of May 1641. I mention it to this end that when I came before the House of Peers where was about three or fourscore Lords then sitting at the beginning of the parliament who then were supposed the most arbitrary of any power in England yet I had from them free liberty of speech to speak for my life at their Bar without check or controll in the best manner that all those abilities God had given me would enable me and when I was at Oxford I was again arraigned as a Traytor before the Lord Chief Justice Heath for levying War at the Command of the then Parliament against the person of the King and when I came before him in the Guild Hall of Oxford he told me there being present with him as his fellow Judge Master Gardiner sometimes Recorder of the City of London now Sir Thomas Gardiner and others that sate by a special Commission of Oyer and Terminer from the King the which Commission I did not so well then understand as I hope I do now And my Lord Chief Justice Heath stood up and in the face of all the Court and in the face of all the Countrey present there told me Captain Lilburne you are brought here before us for High Treason for leavying War in Oxfordshire against your Sovereign Lord and King and though you be now in a Garrison and were taken in Arms in open hostility against the King yea Sir and I must now tell you in such hostility that we were but about seven hundred men at Brandford that withstood the Kings whole Army in the field about five hours together and fought it out to the very swords point and to the butt end of the Musket and thereby hindered the King from his then possessing the Parliaments Train of Artillery and by consequence the City of London in which very act I was taken a Prisoner without Articles or Capitulation and was by the King and his Party then lookt upon as one of the activest men against them in the whole company yet said Judge Heath we will not take advantage of that to try you by the rules of Arbitrary Marshal Law or any other
for the fafety of my life I am forced to print an Apology and because you are named in it I judge it but man-like to send you a Copy of it And if I had not been travelling last post-day I had sent to you then And I have also by this post sent to a friend three sheets of paper in writing to communicate to your Lordship The which if you please to read them you will finde that you are deeply concerned in them I have no more to say to your Honour but to desire God for you if it be his pleasure to make you speedily as righteous in actions as you were some years ago in declarations and to take leave to say I am yet as much honest John Lilburne as ever I was in my life that neither loves flattery nor fears greatness or threatnings His Wife also sollicites the General for a pass which though not granted yet over he comes so confident he was that at Canterbury in his way to London he presently begins to boast of his own interest in England saying He had no need of a pass being as good a man as Cromwel and that he did not fear what he could do unto him Yet notwithstanding his monstrous confidence he was committed to prison and by order of Parliament tryed for his life at the Sessions House in the Old-Bailey August the 20. 1653. where he pleaded that the Act whereupon he was Indicted was a lie a falshood that it had no Law nor Reason in it That the Parliament could not make any Act of Parliament since the Kings head was cut off that by the same Law they voted him to death they might vote his honest twelve Jury men calling Jehovah to witness and protesting before God Angels and Men that he was not the John Lilburne intended in the Act whereupon this Jury following the example of the former satisfied with his answers and not questioning the validity of the Act found him not guilty Thus you see what endeavours were used to rid the Nation of him by tryals banishment and what not though in vain when as many a more heroick spirit and gallant heart far transcending him in birth and parts have fallen by the Sword of Justice in the twinkling of an eye truth it is he was a man of a restless and invincible spirit that could never be deterred with threats nor won with favours though as it is reported 3000. pounds was given out of the sale of Theobalds as a sop to stop his mouth he was questionless of a most implacable spirit working and restless as the Sea not to be appeased but with the blood of his adversaries nor can I deny but some of those things he aimed at were honest and useful for the people but he steered not the right course to attain those ends It may be admired at by some how such an illiterate person as Lilburne one whose breeding promised him more skill in his last trade of Sope then in Cook or to have had better judgement in rusticity in a Plow then in Plowden who from this low rise mounted no higher then to inferiour employments until in the late Wars he somewhat advantaged and preferred himself by his Sword I say it may seem strange to some how this person thus qualified should come to have so much knowledge and understanding in the Law for answer to which it is to be understood that Mr. Lilburne had formerly turned over some Statute Books in which he had made a small progress and that afterwards at such time as he was committed in the Tower there remained a prisoner there though for a different Cause that heart of Oak and a pillar of the Law Judge Jenkins who finding Lilburne of an accute Wit and one who dared to speak what some pusilanimous spirits were afraid to entrust their thoughts with he selected him as fit person to bandy against the present Government and by weakening their power to advance his Masters interest hereupon he helps him with tools wherewith to let up his trade so that in short space Magna Charta and Cooks Institutions were made his familiars by which means he quickly grew so cunning a gamester that like unto a cat throw him never so high he would be sure to pitch upon his feet Thus the old Judge and another reverend Divine in his learned volume of prophecying publisht to hook in the Independant party so strangely mistook themselves as that they could not have done their own cause a greater mischief But the Squib is now almost run to the end of the Rope we shall in the last place present our Proteus in the shape of a Quaker the person that converted him was a single-hearted Shoe-maker as he terms him in his Letter to his Wife which he writ to her from Dover Castle whither he was committed by the Parliament part whereof for your further satisfaction I have transcribed though curtail'd you have Mr. Johns own words to his Wife It is not much material what part of it I begin with such Quaking Cantings being to be read backwards like the Hebrew The contents follow And so in much mercy and endeared loving kindness as God did in my great straits in the Bishops time provide and send unto me a poor despised yet understanding Priscilla to instruct me in or expound unto me his wayes more fully and perfectly whom I am compelled now to tell thee I shall love and respect therefore the longest day I live upon the earth let her continue by whomsoever to be judged never so rigid or contemptible so here at this place he hath also provided for me an Aquila being a contemptible yet understanding spiritually knowing and single-hearted Shoe-maker to do the same now to my spiritual and no small advantage refreshment and benefit by means of all which I am at present become dead to my former bustling actings in the world and now stand ready with the devout Centurion spoken of Acts 10. To hear and obey all things that the lively voice of God speaking in my soul shall require of me upon the further manifestation of whose glorious presence my heart with a watching fear and care desires to wait and to walk faithfully and tenderly and humbly in that measure of light already received c. In another place he thus insinuates with his Wife to gain her to his opinion And now my dear love for whom my soul travels with God for thy eternal good with the same sincere heartedness as for my own hoping that thy late out-fall and mine was but for a set season that so as Divine Paul in another sense speaks Philem. 15. thy reconciliation and mine again might now remain firme in love for ever And a little after I therefore earnestly entreat thee not to cumber thy self in thy many turmoylings and journeyings for my outward liberty but sit down a little and behold the great salvation of the Lord. Subscribing his Letter thus Thine in the strength of
upon the Coast of France as they were returning homewards from the Venetian service richly laden being all men of War of considerable burthens Soon after so great their feud was that the Navies engaged in another Fight at a place called the Kentish Knock wherein the Dutch were again defeated eleven of their men of War set upon four of the English in the Straights took the Phenix Frigot and much damaged the other In a short space after another Sea Engagement ensued on the Back-side of Goodwin Sands wherein the English were worsted four ships taken and a considerable loss of men The greatest fight of all was near the Isle of Wight and Portland wherein the Dutch received a great overthrow fifty Merchants being taken nine men of War above two thousand slain and fifteen hundred taken Prisoners But this great Victory soon after received a check the English Fleet in the Levant Seas being again worsted by the Dutch with the loss of divers ships and men But leaving off these Sea Affairs for a time let us come to General Cromwel from whom I have already been enforced to digress who pretending for the better accomplishing of his own designs the dilatory proceedings pernicious and arbitrary actings in the Parliament to perpetuate their Session to be very dangerous and enthrall the Nation this train of his he knew would take well with the people who were great adorers of the name of liberty and desirous of change he therefore resolved to put a period to the Parliament and accordingly accompanied by the chief Officers of the Army he entered the House and having declared his intentions some by force some through fear and others not without a great deal of reluctancy and murmuring departed the House To set a fair gloss upon what he had done and to give some satisfaction to the people he publishes a Declaration the substance whereof followeth That after God was pleased marvellously to appear for his people in reducing Ireland and Scotland to so great a peace and England to perfect quiet whereby the Parliament had opportunity to give the people the harvest of all their labour blood and treasure and to settle a due liberty in reference to Civil and Spiritual things whereunto they were obliged by their duty engagements and those great and wonderful things God hath wrought for them But they made so little progress therein that it was matter of much grief to the good people of the Land who thereupon applied themselves to the Army expecting redress by their means who though unwilling to meddle with the Civil Authority agreed that such Officers as were Members of Parliament should move them to proceed vigorously in reforming what was amiss in the Common-wealth and in settling it upon a foundation of Justice and Righteousness which being done it was hoped the Parliament would have answered their expectations But finding the contrary they renewed their desires by an humble Petition in August 1652. which produced no considerable effects nor was any such progress made therein as might imply their real Intentions to accomplish what was petitioned for but rather an averseness to the things themselves with much bitterness and opposition to the people of God and his spirit acting in them insomuch that the godly party in Parliament were rendred of no further use then to countenance the ends of a corrupt party for effecting their desires of perpetuating themselves in the supream Government For obviating these evils the Officers of the Army obtained several meetings with some of the Parliament to consider what remedy might be applied to prevent the same but such endeavours proving ineffectual it became evident that this Parliament through the corruption of some the jealousie of others the non-attendance of many would never answer those ends which God his people and the whole Nation expected from them But that this cause which God had so greatly blessed must needs languish under their hands and by degrees be lost and the lives liberties and comforts of his people be delivered into their enemies hands All which being sadly and seriously considered by the honest people of the Nation as well as by the Army it seemed a duty incumbent upon us who had seen so much of the power and presence of God to consider of some effectual means whereby to establish righteousness and Peace in these Nations And after much debate it was judged necessary that the Supream Government should be by the Parliament devolved upon known persons fearing God and of approved integrity for a time as the most hopeful way to countenance all Gods people reform the Law and administer Justice impartially hoping thereby the people might forget Monarchy and understand their true interest in the election of successive Parliaments that so the Government might be settled upon a right Basis without hazard to this glorious cause or necessitating to keep up Armies for the defence of the same And being still resolved to use all means possibly to avoid extraordinary courses we prevailed with about twenty Members of Parliament to give us a conference with whom we plainly debated the necessity and justness of our Proposals The which found no acceptance but instead thereof it was offered that the way was to continue still this Parliament as being that from which we might probably expect all good things This being vehemently insisted on did much confirm us in our apprehensions That not any love to a Representative but the making use thereof to recruit and so to perpetuate themselves was their aim in the Act they had then under consideration For preventing the consummating whereof and all the sad and evil consequences which upon the grounds aforesaid must have ensued and whereby at one blow the interest of all honest men and of this glorious Cause had been endangered to be laid in the dust and these Nations embroyled in new troubles at a time when our enemies abroad are watching all advantages against and some of them actually engaged in War with us we have been necessitated though with much reluctancy to put an end to this Parliament This Declaration was seconded by another for settling a Councel of State to give some satisfaction to the people what Government they intended which Declaration for the Readers further satisfaction take as followeth Whereas the Parliament being dissolved persons of approved fidelity and honesty are according to the late Declaration of the 22. of April last to be called from the several parts of this Commonwealth to the Supream Authority and although effectual proceedings are and have been had for perfecting those Resolutions yet some convenient time being required for the assembling of those persons it hath been found necessary for preventing the mischiefs and inconveniences which may arise in the mean while to the publick Affairs that a Councel of State be constituted to take care of and intend the peace safety and present mannagement of the Affairs of this Commonwealth which being settled accordingly the same is hereby
having past his Laurels he had a minde to reach at the Crown they were somewhat mistaken it had too many thorns in it which of themselves are sharp enough to fetch blood if we should not otherwise accept of the interpretation of the Fifth Monarchy Gentleman who means by them the displeased Souldiery to whom such lustres could never have been acceptable as some other of our late Pamphletters have libell'd him to be another Henry the Fifth that he would have stoln the more then protested against Diadem off from the Pillow if he had a minde to it it is more then they know the worst they could have said of him had been that he entertained somewhat more then self-denying thoughts or rather as the Poet hath it Magnis tamen excedit ausis Indeed outwardly he seemed to have little of vain glory in him or else he turned his dark Lanthorn to himself his closeness being alwayes such that this great Politician walkt invisible others stood in the light to him but he in the dark to all onely for his most grand Transaction there was no vizzard could disguise it that he should after so many selfish refusals a word lately put into the new canting Dictionary of the Enthusiasts that he should after the slighting as it were of so many tendred forfeited and sequestred Estates presented to him by the Parliament for his remarkable services after that in parts and piecemeals he had denied the pomps and vanities of this wicked world he made it his master-design to take in all at once as he knew well enough how to cog a die he had thrown for all won all and swept all at once rendering his Motto Pax quaeritur Bello into that English which pleased him best the Protectorship To reflect briefly on his Domestical Affairs he was not uxorious but respectful to his Wife to his Children he had a paternal affection careful of their educations and of their aspirings to advancement he endeavoured to cast a lustre on them which did not take with the people though as to his Son Richard there was a more then ordinary consent For his pleasures there is no extraordinary news of them some Frolicks I have heard of with those he was most familiar the truth is he had too little leasure for trivial repasts he did with them as great persons do with Banquets come and look upon them and so turn away As he begun from a private fortune as I have already intimated that fortune quickened in him all seeds of observation being alwayes more prosperous in himself then confirmed from the affections of others For the imputations against him of moneys in his Treasury certainly if he had been such a hoarder the urgency of his pressing Affairs would never suffer him to be so poor as to stand still and admire his riches Before I end I cannot chuse but remark his hard dealings with Parliaments which he formerly so vindicated against the late King for his breach of priviledge about the five Members whatsoever fine thred he did twist for himself in all his religious speeches those that are right Englishmen will never clear him from his violations though he mannaged those actings as that they were to him but short tempests or small over-castings as whatsoever injury the Nations endured he had one pretence or other to shift it off from his own shoulders extreamly mistaking himself as the people look less on the failings of those who have been their own choice then on those who have taken on them to be earvers for themselves he thought himself crafty enough for Parliaments and from his death-bed he determined himself cock sure as he was flesht with his former fortunes he could never have imagined his posterity should ever have been lean 'T is true we may be so political as on this earth to endeavour to grasp these humane Affairs to our own Interests but we must lay down our greatest wisedoms when we come to sleep in the silent grave as after death there is no providing against the cross blows of fortune To conclude as far as we can conjecture his Confederates continuing alike victorious and fortunate with him he might if he had lived to it extended his victories to some other parts of the world if he did no more it was either through the disturbances of the times or long of himself for what he minded he compassed Certain it is that he so husbanded his successes that he did not live to see himself unfortunate who having assumed or rather snatcht his honours shewed himself to be one of the strangest sort of wonders that our late times have produced One writ a strange Epitaph on him Here lies Oliver Cromwel who that he might be Protector himself first brought the English Monarchy on its knees FINIS Courteous Reader These Books following are printed for Nathanael Brooke and are to be sold at his Shop at the Angel in Cornhill Excellent Tracts in Divinity Controversie Sermons Devotions THe Catholick History collected and gathered out of Scripture Councils and Ancient Fathers in Answer to Dr. Vane's lost Sheep returned home by Edward Chesensale Esq Octavo 2. Bishop Morton on the Sacrament in Folio 3. The Grand Sacriledge of the Church of Rome in tataking away the sacred Cup from the Laity at the Lords Table by D. Featley D. D. Quarto 4. The Quakers Cause at second hearing being a full Answer to their Tenets 5. Re-assertion of Grace Vindiciae Evangelii or the Vindication of the Gospel a Reply to Mr. Anthony Burghess Vindiciae Legis and to Mr. Ruthford by Robert Town 6. Anabaptists anatomized and silenced or a Dispute with Mr. Tombs by Mr. J. Crag where all may receive clear satisfaction in that Controversie The best extant Octavo 7. A Glimpse of Divine Light being an explication of some passages exhibited to the Commissioners at White Hall for approbation of Publick Preachers against J. Harrison of Land Chappel Lancashire 8. The zealous Magistrate a Sermon by T. Threscos Quarto 9. New Jerusalem in a Sermon for the Society of Astrologers Quarto in the year 1651. 10. Divinity no enemy to Astrology A Sermon for the Society of Astrologers in the Year 1643. by Dr. Thomas Swadling 11. Britannia Rediviva A Sermon before the Judges August 1648. by J. Shaw Minister of Hull 12. The Princess Royal in a Sermon before the Judges March 24. by J. Shaw 13. Judgement set and Books opened Religion tryed whether it be of God or Man in several Sermons by J. Webster Quarto 14. Israels Redemption or the Prophetical History of our Saviours Kingdom on Earth by K. Matton 15. The Cause and Cure of Ignorance Errour and Prophaneness or a more hopeful way to Grace and Salvation by K Young Octavo 16. A Bridle for the Times tending to still the murmuring to settle the wavering to stay the wandring and to strengthen the fainting by J. Brinsley of Yarmouth 17. Comforts against the fear of death wherein are discovered several
Nations to enter which they afterwards soon did to the great prejudice of the Empire so that Zosimus though in other of his writings concerning this Emperour discovers his malice yet he truly calleth him the first subverter of that flourishing Monarchy Concerning the time when he was baptized Authors onely agree in disagreeing Eusebius writes that he was baptized in the City of Nicomedia Sozomenus and Theodoritus that it was a little before his death others think he was baptized with Crispus his Son to which opinion accords Platina and Sabellicus who affirm the Font wherein they were baptized to have remained unto their times In this diversity of Writers the Reader must not expect I should satisfie him seeing I cannot herein satisfie my self But of more certainty is the place of his death wherein they all accord that it was in Nicomedia a City of Bythinia where he died of a natural disease a thing to be taken notice of since of 40. Emperours that reigned before him above 30. of them came to untimely ends most of them being blood-thirsty Tyrants and Persecutours of Gods holy Saints whose ends were answerable to their lives their bloody actions having bloody deaths So true is that of the Poet Juvenal Few Tyrants do to Pluto's Court descend Without fierce slaughter and a bloody end At his death he divided his Empire betwixt his three sons Constantine Constantius and Constance To Constantine the eldest he allotted the Countreys of Brittain France Spain and part of Germany Constantius his second son had Italy Africa Sclavonia Dalmatia and Greece and Constance the youngest possessed the Countreys of Thracia Syria Mesopotamia and Egypt The Life of King ARTHUR BOth Poets and Historians out of the most famous Warriours that have lived in the world have extracted nine of the chiefest whom they termed Worthies of these this famous Prince whose life we now intend to relate was accounted one Questionless he was a Prince of a matchless prowess and pitty it is the naked truth of his actions hath not been delivered to posterity without the intermixture of ridiculous falshoods for Geffery of Monmouth is said to have feigned many things for the encrease of his fame though he hath thereby much impaired his own and although for the same he was bitterly inveighed at by William of Newberry and divers others yet was his follies followed by several Authours still adding to what he first had feign'd according to that of the old Poet. The thing at first invented great doth grow And every one doth something adde thereto Thus their over-lavish pens in seeking to make him more then he was have made many suspect he was not at all But besides the testimonies of William of Malmesbury Joseph of Excester Ninius Leiland and divers others for the truth of this Prince a Charter exemplified under the seal of King Edward the Third doth sufficiently testifie wherein mention is made of King Arthur to have been a great Benefactour to the Abbey of Glastenbury and to this day his Arms being an Escochen whereon a Cross with the Virgin Mary having Christ in her arms cut in stone standeth over the first gate of entrance into the Abbey and is said to be the Arms belonging to the same Of his person we shall not need to doubt though we may justly suspect the verity of many things said to be atchieved by him This by way of introduction I thought fit to insert I shall now pursue his History with truth and brevity He was base Son to Vter sirnamed Pendragon begotten of Igren Dutchess of Cornwall her husband yet living this Lady had often withstood his unlawful desires at last by the help of Merline a renowned Welch Enchanter as some Authours write he was brought to her bed in the likenesse of Gorlois her husband of whom that night he begat this Worthy whom at his death he appointed to be King of Brittain notwithstanding he had two Daughters lawfully begotten and as honourably married the one to Lotho King of Picts the other to Gouran King of Scotland But scarcely was the Crown settled on his head when the Saxons sought to strike it off who being called in by Vortigerne for an aid against the Scots and Picts like unmannerly guests sought to turn their hoast out of doors To the aid of these Saxons joyned Lotho King of Picts out of envy to the Brittains for that they had denied him to be their King and although Arthur was his Kinsman and professed Christianity the other strangers and enemies to true Religion yet neither Christianity nor Consanguinity could keep him from joyning with them in amity not caring who won so Arthur did but lose The first battel they fought was in the Countrey of Northumberland where Arthur dyed his Sword in the Saxons blood chasing them from thence to the City of York which notwithstanding he did straitly besiege yet their Captain named Colgerne escaped from thence and got into Germany where he obtained aid of one Cherdike a King of that Countrey who came himself in person with 70 sail of ships and having a prosperous Winde arrived in Scotland which when Arthur understood he raised his siege and marched towards London And that the multitude of his enemies might not daunt the courage of his Souldiers he sent for aid to his Nephew Howel King of little Brittain in France who came himself likewise in person to the aid of his uncle doing as old Authors write acts worthy to be eternized with a golden pen. Their forces thus augmented with undaunted resolutions they march to the City of Lincoln which Cherdike did then besiege whom they forced from thence to flee into a wood but there being likewise compassed about with Arthurs victorious Army they yielded themselves with condition to depart the Land leaving the Brittains their horse armour and other furniture but see what faith is to be expected from faithless people for having their markets spoiled at Lincoln they thought to make them good in the West ariving at Totnes and destroying all the Countrey till they came to Bathe but the price of their lives paid for their perjury being encountred by Arthur their Army was overthrown their three Captains Colgrine Cherdike and Bladulf being slain Howel King Arthurs Nephew was not at this last battel being besieged at that present in the Marches of Scotland to whose rescue hasted Arthur with the flower of his Souldiers and notwithstanding the Scots were aided by one Guillomer King of Ireland yet obtained he of them a glorious victory chasing Guillomer into Ireland and bringing Scotland into subjection like another Caesar it might be writ of him veni vidi vici as one of our poets sings of him Thus wheresoever he his course did bend Still victory did ox his sword attend Returning to Yorke he instituted the celebration of the Nativity of our Lord with such feasts and sports as are commonly now used an institution which the Scottish writers do altogether condemn comparing them to
might enjoy her as his Wife for these and other notorious offences being boldly reprehended by Dunstan he banished him the Realm at whose departure the devil is said to rejoyce and to laugh aloud at the West end of the Church to whom Dunstan as it were by way of Prophecy said Well thou adversary do not so greatly rejoyce at the matter for thou doest not now so much rejoyce at my departure but by Gods grace thou shalt be as sorrowful for my return All the time of King Edwy's reign which was but short for Tyrants seldome are long lived he remained at the Monastery of Gaunt in Flanders where he received much friendship from the Governour of that Countrey but Edwy dying his brother Edgar succeeded in the Kingdome who unraveling the web his brother had weaved recalled Dunstan out of banishment making him first Bishop of Worcester after of London and last of all bestowed the Archbishoprick of Canterbury upon him This Edgar had Dunstan in high estimation by whose advice the English being given to excessive quaffing he put down many Ale-houses and would suffer but one to be in a Town and the more to deterr them from this swinish vice he ordained certain cups with pins or nails and made a law that whosoever drunk past that mark at one draught should undergo a certain penalty No doubt this was an act acceptable unto God and great need hath these times of another Edgar or Dunstan to deterr people from this beastly sin and to put down the multiplicity of Alehouses which now abound in every corner of which one of our modern Poets as followeth The way to Churches is o'regrown with grass But to the Alehouse fair and plain to pass And what is it think you doth cause it so But more to th' Alehouse then to Church do go Then what may we expect of this same evil Some may to God but most will to the devil Edgar dying great troubles ensued about the election of one of his sons to succeed him most of the Nobles combining for young Ethelred Dunstan and the Monks standing as stiffly for Prince Edward at last a Council being assembled to argue the matter the Archbishop came in with his Banner and Cross and not staying for further debating presented Prince Edward for their lawful King and the assembly consisting most of Clergy-men drew the approbation of the rest and so he was Crowned King at Kingstone by Archbishop Dunstan the year of our Lord 975. These troubles thus quieted about the Crown far greater arose concerning the Church for Alferus Duke of Mercia favouring married Priests would suffer no Monks to live in his Province on the other side Edelwyn Duke of East-Anglia and Brightnoth Earl of Essex favouring the Monks expulsed the married Priests out of their jurisdictions These sparks at last increast to such a flame that it was deemed nought but the blood of one side would quench the same but upon better advice they laid arms aside and referred the matter to be debated in a Council at Winchester where the Monks cause as being worsted had undoubtedly had the foyl had they not referred the matter to be decided by the Rood where the Council sate to this Oracle Saint Dunstan desired them to pray and to give diligent ear to what it should speak for the juggling Monks had placed a Man behinde a Wall who through a trunck delivered these words to the beguiled Priests God forbid it should be so God forbid it should be so you judged well once but ye may not change well again But this deceit of the Monks being discerned by the Priests another assembly was held at Cleve in Wiltshire where whilst they were arguing with bitter invectives against each other the joysts of the loft wherein they sat suddenly brake and down fell the floar with the people thereon many were mained and some slain onely Archbishop Dunstan remained unhurt for the posts whereon his chair was set as it were by miracle remained untouched By this fall of the Floar fell the cause of the Priests and Dunstan deemed a demy God To this wooden miracle of his popish writers add another of the same nature namely how a huge beam of a house being sunk out of the frame and like to ruinate the whole building with onely making the sign of the Cross thereon with his fingers he made it return to his former place All the time of King Edwards reign was Dunstan had in high esteem but he being too good a Prince to live in so bad an age was bereft of his life by the cruelty of his step-mother that her own son might succeed in the kingdome Dunstan disallowing this act of the Queens refused to Crown her son King at length against his will he was compelled to solemnize his rights at Kingston on Thames the 14. of Aprill 979. This Ethelred favoured not greatly the Monks and therefore he was as little respected of them in their writings who report him to be sloathful person neither forward in action nor fortunate in proceedings at the time of his Baptism he is said to defile the Fount with his ordure whereupon Dunstan being troubled in his minde By the Lord saith he and his blessed Mother this childe shall prove to be a slothful person But the greatest matter laid to his charge was his making War upon the Bishop of Rochester whose peace being it would not be procured without the payment of a hundred pound in Gold Dunstan sent him word that since he made more account of Gold then of God more of money then of Saint Andrew Patron of the Church of Rochester and more of covetousness then of him being the Archbishop the mischiefs which the Lord had threatned should shortly come to pass but the same should not chance whilst he was alive he is likewise said to have foreseen the invasions of the Danes and to have foretold the miseries that soon after fell upon the English Nation as that they should not be free from Blood and the Sword till there came a people of an unknown tongue that should bring them to thraldome which predictions of his soon after his death came to passe as appears in the following Life of King Edmund this Clergy-man now waxing old the thread of his life being spun out to the last he was forced to yield to that from which none are exempted to the tyranny of death having tasted liberally in his time of the favours of Fortune which notwithstanding could not keep him from dying so true is that of the ancient Poet. Each living Corps must yield at last to death And every life must lose his vital breath The soul of man that onely lives on high And is an image of eternity He dyed on a Saturday the 25. of May the Year of our Lord 989. Happy in this that he lived not to see the miseries of his Countrey which happened presently after his death The Life of EDMUND IRONSIDE THe learned
England where being instructed in the Christian Religion and baptized in the Church of St. Paul by the Bishop of London with great Solemnity in the presence of six Prelates she was married to the aforesaid Gilbert of whom he had Issue this Thomas whose Life we now relate who as his Legend recites was first brought up in a Religious House of Merton afterwards was instructed in the Liberal Sciences and then sent to study in the University of Paris from whence returning home he was by Theobald Archbishop of Canterbury made his Archdeacon a place in those dayes of high degree in the English Cleargy next unto Lord Abbots and Bishops Much about that time Henry Duke of Aquitain and Normandy succeeded King Stephen in the Crown of England who in the very first year of his Reign advanced Becket to be Lord Chancellour of England in which high honour he carried himself like another King His retinue was great his Followers men of good account his House keeping such as might compare with if not surpass the greatest Earls of the Kingdom his Clothes very costly full of bravery his Furniture mighty rich his very Bridles of beaten silver Yea Fortune did seem to have made him her Darling and all things so flowed according to his desire that one would have judged him to have laid clean aside the very thought of a Clergy-man King Henry having Wars in France he served him with a Band of 700. Souldiers of his own Family besides many others with which and some additional Forces after the Kings departure he obtained a great victory At another time he himself in person unhorssed a Frenchman called Enguerranus de Creya a most hardy Souldier renowned for deeds of Arms and Chevalry for these valiant acts in reward and in further hope of his faithful service upon the death of Theobald the King made him Archbishop of Canterbury though the Monks objected against him that neither a Courtier nor a Soundier as he was both were fit to succeed in so high and sacred a Function But Thomas having obtained this dignity forgot the King who had raised him to the same For as the Poet hath it A swelling spirit hates him by whom he climes As Ivy kills the tree whereon it twines So rising men when they are mounted high Spurn at the means that first they mounted by For not long after began that great controversie between Regnum Sacerdotium the Crown and the Mytre the occasion whereof was the King being credibly informed that some Clergy-men had committed above an hundred murthers under his Reign would have them tried and adjudged in his Temporal Courts as Lay-men were but this as being contrary to the priviledges of the Church the Archbishop withstood This affront of a subject the King could not endure finding himself hereby to be but a demy-King Wherefore having drawn to his side most of the Bishops in an Assembly at VVestminster he propoundeth these Articles peremptorily urging Becket to assent to them 1. That none should appeal to the See of Rome for any cause whatsoever without the Kings licence 2. That it should not be lawful for any Archbishop or Bishop to depart the Realm and repair to the Pope upon his summons without licence from the King 3. That it should not be lawfull for any Bishop to excommunite any person that holdeth in Capite of the King without licence of the King nor grant any interdict against his Lands nor the Lands of any his officers 4. That it should not be lawfull for any Bishop to punish perjured nor false witnesses 5. That Clarks crimonous should be tried before secular Judges 6. That the King and his secular Justices should be Judges in matters of Tythes and other like causes Ecclesiastical There points so nearly touched the Papal Sovereignty that Becket resolutely denied to signe them but by the importunity of many Lords and Prelates at last he yields subscribes the Ordinance and sets his hand unto it The King hereupon supposing all contradiction ended and that Thomas would not waver in his faith called an assembly of the States at Clarendon in VViltshire to collect and enact these Laws where John of Oxenford sitting President Becket relapsed saying He had grievously sinned in that he had done and that he would not sin therein any more The King herewith vehemently incensed threatens banishment and destruction to him and his whereupon Becket once again perswaded swears in verbo Sacerdotali in the word of a Priest sincerely that he would observe the Laws which the King entituled Avitae and all the Bishops Abbots Priors and whole Clergy with all the Earls Barons and Nobility did promise and swear the same faithfully and truly to observe and performe to the King and to his Heirs for ever But the King desiring him to affix his seal to an Instrument wherein those Laws being sixteen were contained he refused saying He did promise it onely to do the King some honour verbo tenus in word onely Nor could the example of his fellow Bishops nor the perswasions of Rotrod the Popes messenger move him at all to compose these differences It may be thought a fable yet is related by divers superstitious Authors that one time during this contention certain fellows cut off the Archbishops horses tail after which fact all their children were born with Tails like Horses and that this continued long in their Posterity For may own part though I confess God is able to do this and much more yet I reckon this amongst other ridiculous miracles mentioned of him by those writers as that of Ailwardus who for stealing a great whetstone which the Author that writes it best deserved being deprived of his eyes and virilities by sentence of Law upon prayer to Saint Thomas he had all restored again Yea even a Bird having been taught to speak flying out of her cage and ready to be seized on by a Sparrow Hawk said onely St. Thomas help me and her enemy fell presently dead and she escaped But slighting these follies to return to our History the King summoning a Parliament at Northhampton Becket was cited to appear before his Majesty which he refusing upon his contempt the Peers and Prelates judged his goods confiscated to the Kings mercy He making his appearance the Parliament demanded of him an account of 30000 pounds which he received when he was Lord Chancellour to which he answered that when he was chosen to be Archbishop he was by the Kings authority freed and acquitted of all Debts and Obligations of Court and Exchequer and so delivered over to the Church of England and that therefore at that time he would not answer as a Lay-man having before had a sufficient discharge This answer of the Archbishop was like Oyl cast on fire which instead of quenching increast the Kings anger and the Prelates perceiving the Kings displeasure to tend yet to some further severity premonished him to submit himself for that otherwise the Kings Court
Ships he had crost the Seas from Portsmouth into Normandy But King Richard made not so much haste to succour but the French King made as much haste to be gone here Earl John submits himself to his Brother who upon his submission restores his possessions unto him saying onely I wish you may as well remember your fault as I shall forget it King Richard following the French King overtakes him at Vendome who affrighted at his approach the second time flies without striking a stroak leaving behinde him all his bag and baggage Munition Tents and Treasure to a marvellous value together with the Indentures of such as had left King Richard to serve King Philip. Much about that time one Philip Bishop of Bevois a Martial man and who much annoyed the English borders was fortunately taken in a Skirmish by King Richards side who put him in prison the Bishop hereupon complained to the Pope who wrote in the behalf of his son as an ecclesiastical person and a Shepherd of the Lords The King sent unto the Pope the Armour he was taken in and engraved thereon the words which Jacobs sons used when they sold their Brother Joseph and presented their Father with his Coat Vide utrum filii tui tunica sit vel non See whether it be thy Sons Coat or no. Whereupon the Pope replyed That he was neither his Son nor the Son of the Church and therefore should be ransomed at the Kings will because he was rather judged to be a Servitor of Mars then a Souldier of Christ I am now come to the last act of this Kings Life which drew the black cloud of death over this triumphal and bright shining star of Chevalry one Widomare Vicount of Limoges having found a great hord of Gold and Silver sent part thereof to King Richard as chief Lord but he over covetous would not be contented without all pretending that treasure was wholly his by vertue of his Prerogative Royal. Thereupon marches with a great power to a Castle of the Vicounts called Chaluz where he supposed the riches were the Garrison of which place offered to yield the same and all therein if onely their lives and limbs might be saved but he would not accept of any conditions bidding them defend themselves as they could for he would enter by the Sword and hang them all but in the assault he was slain by a shot from an Arbalist the use of which warlike engine he first shewed unto the French Whereupon a French Poet made these verses in the person of Atropos Hoc volo non aliâ Richardum morte perire Vt qui Francigenis Balista primitùs usum Tradidit ipse sui rem primitùs experiatur Quamque aliis docuit in se vim sentiat artis It is decreed thus must great Richard dye As he that first did teach the French to dart An Arbalist 't is just he first should try The strength and taste the fruits of his own art The man which shot him was named Bertram de Gurdon who being brought before the King who neglecting his wound gave not over the assault till he had mastered the place boldly justified his action as done in defence of his Countrey and to revenge the death of his Father and Brother whom this King had slain with his own hand Which said the King caused him to be set at liberty and gave him an hundred shillings sterling but after the King was dead one Markadey a Captain of Rutters took him flead him quick and hanged him up Concerning his issue some report him to have none at all others two but illegitimate a Priest in Normandy is reported to have told him he had three daughters which he wished to bestow in marriage or else Gods wrath would attend him the King denying he had any daughter Yes said the Priest you have three Pride Covetousness and Leachery The King apprehensive of the Priests meaning called his Lords there attending and said My Lords this Hypocrite hath found that I have three daughters viz. Pride Covetousness and Leachery which he would have me bestow in marriage and therefore if any such I have I have found out most fit husbands for them all My Pride I bequeath to to thee haughty Templers and Hospitallers who are as proud as Lucifer himself My Covetousness I give to the white Monks of the Cisteaux Order for they covet the Devil and all But for my Leachery I can bestow it no where better then on the Priests and Prelates of our times for therein have they their most felicity Doubtless saith Speed these marriages proved so fruitful that their issue hath now overflowed all Kingdoms of the earth In this Kings dayes lived that famous Out-law Robin Hood accompanied with one called little John and a hundred stout fellows more who as Sir Richard Baker saith molested all Passengers upon the High way of whom it is reported that he was of Noble Blood at least made Noble no less then an Earl for some deserving services but having wasted his Estate in Riotous courses very penury forced him to take this course in which yet it may be said he was honestly dishonest for he seldome hurt any man never any woman spared the poor and onely made prey of the rich till the King setting forth a Proclamation to have him apprehened it happened he fell sick at a certain Nunnery called Brickleys in York shire and desiring there to be let blood was betrayed and made bleed to death Of all Thieves saith Major this same was the Prince and the most gentle Thief The Life of King EDWARD the Third HAving already as it were in a Land-scape discovered some part of the holy War I shall now with a careful brevity pass through the transactions of our Wars with France as they were managed with victorious success in the Reigns of Edward the Third and Henry the Fifth to which to compleat the History I have added the Life of John Earl of Bedford with whose Life the Honour of our English Gallantry in France expired Edward the Third sirnamed of Windsor his Birth-place was eldest son to King Edward the Second who for some misgovernments during the time of his Reign was by the factious Nobility deposed from the Crown and not long after deprived of his life by the procurement as it is said of his Wife Queen Isabel Lord Mortimer and some others and young Edward Crowned King Anno. 1327. Who though he thus rise by Fathers ruine yet may in some sort be excused of the same First in regard of his adolescency for though he were then married yet had he not attained to 15. years of age nor could he be induced to accept of the Crown until he was certified by some of his Lords that his Father had voluntary resigned it unto him besides the exemplary punishment he took on the Lord Mortimer a chief actor in his Fathers Tragedy may in part assure as of his Innocency therein In the mean time to divert
hath this worthy Princes fame been blasted by malicious traducers who like Shakespear in his Play of him render him dreadfully black in his actions a monster of nature rather then a man of admirable parts whose slanders having been examined by wise and moderate men they have onely found malice and ignorance to have been his greatest accusers persons who can onely lay suspition to his charge and suspition in Law is no more guilt then imagination as the divine Father Chrysostom faith A good man hardly suspecteth another to be evill but an evill man scarcely supposeth any to be good King Richard had three great Favourites as Princes are seldome without some and those according to the constant custom of the World must be envied Catesby Ratcliffe and Lovel King Richards own Arms being the Bore upon which one Collingborne of the West fancied this Libel which in those times was received for excellent Wit The Cat the Rat and Lovel the Dog Rule all England under a Hog But leaving such trifles to return to King Richard Henry Earl of Richmond ambitious of Sovereignty envying his prosperity practises with forreign Princes and confederates with the English Nobles for Assistance and Forces against King Richard The chief abettor in England he had on his side was the Duke of Buckingham one who had formerly constantly adhered to King Richards side but being by him denyed the Earldome of Hereford and Constableship of England grew discontented took up Arms was defeated and afterwards by Marshall Law put to death Yet did not this break the neck of Henries design but having by his fair deportment gained Force from the Duke of Brittain and some other Princes envious of the prosperity of the House of York Richmond puts forth to Sea and lands at Milford-Haven in Wales after some refreshing he marches to a Town called Haverford-West where the people who flocked to him in great number welcomed him as a Prince descended from their ancient Princes of Wales the people generally being very noble and loving to their Brittish Kindred Hither came to him with great Forces the Earl of Salop Sir Rice ap Thomas Sir Walter Herbert Sir John Savage Sir Gilbert Talbot and many others His Army thus strong and united he passes the Severne and marches to Leichfield King Richard hearing of his arrivall prepareth against him but though he thought the Nobility generally cemented to his side yet found he a general defluxion from them to the other side the Earl of Surrey the Earl of Westmerland Viscount Lovel and John Duke of Norfolk being the principall that stuck to him which last was much importuned to have fallen off from him the night before the Battel one writing this Rime upon his Gate Jack of Norfolk be not too bold For Dicken thy master is bought and sold But he regarding more his fidelity then any danger that could befall him doubles his care and diligence on the behalf of his Sovereign The Earl of Northumberland who had received great favours from the King and who had in his Name raised vaste Forces being sent for by him refused to come pretending for his disobedience certain dreams wherein he was forewarned by his Father for to fight on King Richards side But the greatest defection was in the Lord Stanley who notwithstanding he had left his Sonne George Stanley as a Pledge of his faith with the King yet revolted to the other side King Richard notwithstanding all these disadvantages having encouraged his Army gives Richmond a Battle where valiantly fighting after he had with his own hands slain Sir Charls Brandon the Earls Standard-bearer and unhorsed Sir John Cheny and shewed himself a most Heroick Person being over-powered with multitude he was slain on the place With him died the Duke of Norfolk the Earl of Surrey was taken Prisoner and the whole Army quite defeated This Battle was fought at a Village called Bosworth near to Leicester The Victor was crowned in the Field by Sir VVilliam Stanley with King Richards Crown which he as a valiant and confident Master of his right had worn that day King Richards dead body after it was most barbarously mangled and wounded was thrown behinde one upon a lean Jade and so conveyed to Leicester where at last it obtained a bed of earth honourably appointed by the order of King Henry the Seventh in the chief Church of Leicester called Saint Maries belonging to the Order and Society of Grey Friers the King in short time after causing a fair Tomb of mingled colour'd Marble adorned with his Statue to be erected thereupon And notwithstanding the times were such when this great Prince lived that he had scarcely time to sheath his sword yet left he behinde him many Monuments of his Piety He founded a Collegiate Church of Priests in Middleham in Yorkshire another Colledge of Priests in London in Tower-street near to the Church called our Lady Barking he built a Church or Chappel in Towton in Glocestershire he founded a Colledge in York convenient for the entertainment of an hundred Priests he built the high stone Tower at Westminster and when he had repaired and fortified the Castle of Carlile he founded and built the Castle of Perrith in Cumberland He began many other good Works which his sudden fatt prevented as Polidor Virgil witnesseth which Works and Monuments of Piety shew not the Acts of a Tyrant I shall end all with this Eulogy which a learned Writer gives him King Richard was a stout valiant person ever indulgent to his People careful to have their Laws duly observed his making so many good ones if they signified not some goodness in himself were evident arguments of his more then ordinary love to Law and Justice The Life of THOMAS HOWARD Earl of SURREY THomas Howard Earl of Surrey in his time the Ornament of Mars and the Muses was Son to Sir John Howard Knight first made Barron by King Edward the Fourth and afterwards Duke of Norfolk by King Richard the Third in whose quarrel he was slain This noble Earl his Son having been well educated and afterwards trained up in Court his Martial minde hating those silken pleasures admired of Courtiers he with divers other young Gentlemen went over to Charles Duke of Burgundy who then had Wars with Lewis King of France in whose quarrel he behaved himself so gallantly that he won the honour and reputation of a most expert Commander At his return King Edward for his valour bestowed on him the Order of Knighthood to whose side he constantly adhered in that great difference betwixt him and the House of Lancaster That quarrel being ended by the overthrow of VVarwick he afterwards did excellent service in the Wars betwixt him and Lewis the French King King Edward being dead and the Crown by joynt consent both of Peers and People placed on King Richards head and after confirmed by Act of Parliament he with his Father the Duke of Norfolk held firm to his side notwithstanding the many
the times began to be very quick and active and fitter for stronger motions then those of the Carpet And it will be a true note of her magnanimity that she loved a Souldier and had a propension in her nature to regard and alwayes to grace them which the Courtiers taking into observation took it as an invitation to win Honour together with her Majesties favour by exposing themselves to the Wars especially when the Queens and the Affairs of the Kingdom stood in some necessity of a Souldier For we have many instances of the Sallies of the Nobility and Gentry yea and out of the Court and her privy Favorites that had any touch or tincture of Mars in their Inclinations and to steal away without licence and the Queens privity which had like to have cost some of them dear So predominant were their thoughts and hopes of honour growing in them as we may truly observe in the dispositions of Sir Philip Sidney Essex Mountjoy and divers others whose absence and the manner of their eruptions was very distasteful to her Whereof I can adde a true and no impertinent story and that of the last Mountjoy who having twice or thrice stoln away into Brittain where under Sir John Norris he had then a Company without the Queens leave and privity she sent a messenger unto him with a strict charge to the General to see him sent home When he came into the Queens presence she fell into a kinde of reviling demanding how he durst go over without her leave Serve me so quoth she once more and I will lay you fast enough for running you will never leave it until you are knockt on the head as that inconsiderate fellow Sidney was you shall go when I send you in the mean time see that you lodge in the Court which was then at White-hall where you may follow your Book read and discourse of the Wars But to our purpose it fell out happily to these and as I may say to those times that the Queen during the calm of her Reign was not idle nor rockt asleep with security for she had been very provident in the reparation and augmentation of her Shipping and Ammunition and I know not whether by a fore-sight of Policy or an instinct it came about or whether it was an act of her Compassion but it is most certain that she sent Levies and no small troops to the assistance of the revolted States of Holland before she had received any affront from the King of Spain that might deserve or tend to a Breach in Hostility which the Papists this day maintain was the provocation and cause of the after Wars Which act of hers though some applaud as done in defence of those poor afflicted Protestants yet she did not onely therein countenance Rebellion by consequence since disable her successours but also drew on her self a chargeable and dangerous War with the Spaniard But omitting what might be said to this point these Netherland Wars were the Queens Seminaries and the Nurseries of many brave Souldiers and so were likewise the Civil Wars of France whither she sent five several Armies the Fence Schools that inured the youth and gallantry of the Kingdom and it was a Militia wherein they were daily in acquaintance with the discipline of the Spaniards who were then turned the Queens inveterate enemies In the management of which politicial Affairs our Burleigh was a great assistant The Sword-men of those times complain that he was too much addicted to peace indeed he would never ingage the State in a War except necessity or her Majesties Honour required it To conclude he was the Column or rather Atlas of the State who after he had served his Royal Mistress forty years dyed at London in the seventy seventh yaar of his age 1598. His body was butied with his Ancestours in Stanford-Church A monument for his perpetual honour being erected for him in Westminster Abbey which bears this following inscription Si quaeratur quis sit hic vir senex genua flectens canitie venerabilis toga Parliamentaria amictus est Honoratissimus clarissimus Dominus Guilielmus Cecilius Baro de Burghley summus Angliae Thesaurarius Serenissimae Reginae Elisabethae à consillijs sanctioribus Ordinis Georgiani Eques Auratus c. qui hoc monumentum uxori filiae posuit placidè ex his terris in coelestem patriam anno salutis 1598. 4. die Augusti demigravit Cujus Exequiae magno apparatu tanto viro dignissimae hîc sunt celebratae die 29. ejusdem mensis Corpusque quod in hac Ecclesia sex dies requievit Stanfordiam in Ecclesiam Sancti Martini translatum fuit ubi secundum Christi adventum expectat Cor unum via una Epigramma De Gulielmo Cecilio nuper Angliae Thesaur Anno 1596. Per parvi sunt Arma foris strataegemata parvi Sit nisi consilium Caeciliusque domi Caecilius velut alter Atlas divinitùs ortus Hic humeris Coelum sustinet ille statum The Life of Sir FRANCIS DRAKE Quem timuit soevis etiam Neptunus in undis Et rediit toto victor ab Oceano Faedifragos bellens pelago prostravit Iberos Drakius huic tumulus aequoris unda fuit THis famous Sea Captain Sir Francis Drake one of the first that put a Sea Girdle about the world was born nigh South Davestock in the County of Devonshire and received his name Francis from Sir Francis Russel afterwards Earl of Bedford being his Godfather he was brought up in Kent his Father was a Minister who for fear of six Articles in the time of King Henry the Eighth fled into Kent where he lived privately till the death of the King He got a place to read Prayers amongst the Marriners of the Queens Navy and bound his Son Francis Apprentice to a Shipmaster who traded with Commodities into France and Zealand with whom he underwent a hard service by which means he was trained up to pains and skill at Sea his Master dying bequeathed him his Bark with which he a while followed his Masters profession But the Narrow Seas being too narrow for his spacious spirit he sold his Bark venturing himself and most of his estate with Captain John Hawkins into the West-indies but his journey proved unfortunate for at St. John de Vlva his goods were taken by the Spaniards himself hardly escaping with life This loss so exasperated the spirit of Drake that he vowed the Spaniards should repay him with advantage and to make his word good after two or three several voyages into the West-Indies to gain intelligence at last he effectually set forward from Plimouth with two ships and seventy three men and boyes sailing with all speed and secresie to Nombre de Dios the Granary of the West-Indies where the Spanish Treasure lay intending to surprize it being an unwalled Town but in the assault being dangerously wounded he was forced to retire again to his Ships when he had well near conquered the Town
French would advance no nearer until spying their advantage the English being to go over a narrow passage having salt-pits on either side they then came on amain powring great vollies of shot upon the English and having routed the Lord Montjoyes Troops and taken him prisoner they fell upon Sir William Coninghams but they most bravely fought it out even to the last man had the Lord Montjoyes Troops done the like a quarter so many had not perished but cowards are foes to their own lives and gain onely this by running away to be killed more basely and further off from their fellows The rear being thus routed they fall on upon the main Battel but Sir Edward Conways who commanded the van facing about made them retreat and having left a select company of musquetiers to guard the pass until night they burnt the Bridge lodging that night in a place called the Loose and the next day went on board Thus returned home the English with extream loss whereof the Duke as in Command the chief so did he share chiefly in the disgrace the French scoffingly saying Though the Duke could not take the Cittidal of St. Martins yet it was odds but he would take the Tower of London Doctor Moor also a Prebend of Winchester took occasion in his Sermon to cite that of Augustus in Cornelius Tacitus Quintili Vare redde Legiones which saith the Historian perished propter inscitiam temeritatem Ducis giving him a quaint wipe the Amphibology of the word Dux thus as the Poet hath it When we do think puft up with hope that we do fly aloft Then soonest clipped are our wings by angry stars full oft But the King was not so daunted at this disaster but that he resolved to give one pluck more for the relief of Rochell which the Earl of Denbigh attempting with ill success a third Fleet was made ready then which there never before appeared a more gallant Armado formed by our Nation The Duke desirous to recover his reputation much blemished by his discomfiture at the Isle of Rhee was by the King made Commander in chief but before his setting forth being at breakfast at Portsmouth with Subize and others of principal quality one John Felton sometimes a Lieutenant to a Foot Company in the Regiment of Sir John Ramsey watching his opportunity as the Duke was passing through an Entry with Sir Thomas Frier to whom he declined his ear in the posture of attention in the very instant of Sir Thomas his retiring from the Duke Felton with a knife stab'd him on the left side into the very heart saying as he struck him The Lord have mercy upon thy soul a Speech which the Duke had scarce time to say for himself such effusion of blood flowing from the wound after the knife was pulled out that he presently expired being onely heard to say some report with an oath The Villain hath killed me The motives that induced Felton to this execrable murther are said to be these he had long and in vain waited for his arrears of pay due for former service again he was twice repulsed upon his Petition for a Captains place and others super-inducted over his head But least private malice should be thought his onely motive to the fact he declared it to be the late Remonstrance of the House of Commons sticking a paper to the lining of his hat wherein he had written as followeth I would have no man commend me for doing it but rather discommend themselves for if God had not taken away their hearts for their sins he had not gone so long unpunished John Felton The man is cowardly base in mine opinion and deserves neither the name of a Gentleman or Souldier that is unwilling to sacrifice his life for the honour of God his King and Countrey John Felton Felton for this fact suffered at Tyburne very penitent and sorry for what he had done his body was from thence conveyed to Portsmouth and there hung in Chains Of this fact of Feltons a modern Wit thus writes Some say the Duke was vertuous gracious good And Felton basely did to spill his blood If it be so what did he then amiss In sending him the sooner to his Bliss All deaths seem pleasant to a good mans eye And bad men onely are affraid to dye Chang'd he this Kingdom to possess a better Then is the Duke become John Feltons debtor Many are said to be the warnings the Duke had of his end some two moneths before one Doctor Lamb a creature of the Dukes was by the rude multitude slain in the Streets they telling him as they were belabouring him with stones and cudgels That were his Master the Duke there they would give him as much This time also was common in many mens mouths Let Charles and Mary do what they can The Duke shall dye like Doctor Lamb. The same day that Lamb was slain the Dukes Picture fell down in the High Commission Chamber at Lambeth These with other the like accidents fore-bodeing something of present fatality to the Duke being spoken of in the Lady Davis her hearing she for certain reply'd No his time is not come till August The same Lady also as I was informed by a Gentleman of near relation unto me did by her servant certifie the Duke that at such time as a Mole which he had upon his Shoulder should go away the Duke should dye which accordingly came to pass But the most strange if true is that related by Lilly in his Observations on the Life and Death of King Charles namely that a Daemon appeared to one Parker in the likeness of Sir George Villers the Dukes Father bidding him go and tell his Son that unless he refrained such and such company he should ere long be killed and withal shewed him a knife appointed for the act Parker told the Duke of these things but being an old man was judged to doat not long after the Daemon appeared to him again telling him that the Duke should not long survive and also bid him set his own house in order for he should shortly dye Both which things accordingly came to pass He died the thirty sixth year of his age a time which by the course of Nature he might have doubled Never did so great a man fall so much unlamented though causeless as by the success of Affairs wise men have since determined The Life of Sir HENRY VVOTTON TO survey him at one single prospect Sir Henry Wotton was born at Bocton-Hall in the County of Kent in the year of our Redemption 1568. descended of an ancient and honourable Family great cherishers of Learning as appears by that excellent Antiquary Master William Lambert in his Perambulation of Kent He had three elder Brothers all Knights men eminent for Wisdom and Piety by all which it appears that Sir Henry Wotton was a branch of such a Kindred as left a stock of reputation to their posterity His Childehood being spent under the