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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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Monster with two heads the misery of which Nation by occasion of these Wars is thus described by Polydor Virgil. While the English and French quoth he contend for Dominion Sovereignty and life if self mens goods in France were violently taken by the Licence of War Churches spoiled men every where murthered put to death or tortured Matrons ravished Maids forcibly drawn from out their Parents arms to be deflowred Towns daily taken defaced spoiled the riches of the Inhabitants carried whither the Conquerours thought good Houses and Villages round about set on fire no kinde of cruelty left unpractised upon the miserable French omitting many other kindes of other calamities which all at once oppressed them I shall onely adde that the Commonwealth being destitute of the help of Laws which for the most part are mute in times of War and Tumults floated up and down without any anchorage of right or justice Neither was England her self void of these mischiefs who by reason of her Civil Wars every day heard the news of her valiant Childrens Funerals slain in perpetual Skirmishes and Bickerings her general wealth continually decreasing so that their evils seemed almost equall and the whole Western World ecchoed the groans and sighs of either Nations quarrels being the common argument of the discourse and compassion of all Christendom The Regent having lately buried his Wife Sister to the Duke of Burgandy did now without his privity marry the Earl of St. Pauls Daughter no friend to the Burgundian which drave him into a discontentent and that discontent did King Charles so work upon that at length he seduced him from the English side though to effect the same he was fain to stoop so low as to send him a blank and bid him set down his own conditions which were both many and unreasonable saith Serres yet worth his cost For as Aemylius saith The end of that War did redeem the French from a Forreign Government as the first assuming thereof had made the English Lords over France The Regent out-lived this revolt not long but died at Paris with whom died all the English mens good fortune in France his body was with all Funeral Solemnities buried in the Cathedral Church of our Lady at Roan on the North side of the high Altar under a sumptuous and costly Monument which Tomb certain Courtiers would have perswaded King Lewis the Eleventh to have demolisht to whom he answered God forbid I should disturb him dead who living would have disturbed us all no let his bones rest in peace well worthy to have a more stately Monument How mighty a Prince he was this his stile sheweth Regent of France Duke of Bedford Alanzon and Anjon Earl of Main Richmond and Kendale and Constable of England But which excelleth his greatness as my Authour writes was that he was one of the best Patriots and Generals that ever blossomed out of the Royal Rosiar of England He died the 14. of September 1435. The Life of RICHARD NEVIL Earl of VVARWICK THis undaunted Heroe whose Life we now relate was he who in those times made and marr'd Kings and handled their Fortunes at his pleasure and was himself a great part of those famous Civil Wars between the Houses of York and Lancaster he was the eldest Son of Richard Nevill Earl of Salisbury and by Marriage with Anne the Sister and Heir of Henry Beauchampe Earl and after Duke of Warwick was in her right created Earl of Warwick His Grandfather was Ralph Nevill Earl of Westmerland whose Daughter the Duke of York had married which might be one cause of his adhering so much to that side and the effusion of so much bloud as ensued thereon For the Wars being now ended in France which we have declared unto you in the Lives of Edward the Third Edward the Black Prince Henry the Fifth and John Duke of Bedford those uncivil Civil Wars soon after brake forth betwixt the two Houses of York and Lancaster For though during our Forreign Wars these dissentions appeared not so much as in the Embrio both sides spending their stock of valour against the common enemy these Wars being ended these Martial mindes difused to peace would still be acting though against themselves The two chief Heads of these Factions was Richard Duke of York and Henry the Sixth King of England if we may call him a head who had so faint an heart and not rather the Queen who acted all though under his name The Duke of York claiming the Crown as Heir to the third Son of Edward the Third the Line of whose eldest Son Edward the Black Prince extinguisht in the deposition and paracide of Richard the second procured by Henry of Bullingbrooke the first King of the house of Lancaster Edward the Thirds second Son dying without issue Henry pleaded the advantage of a long Reign an interrupted descent in Majesty for threescore years a Sovereignty acknowledged abroad by by all Christian Princes and obeyed at home by all Englishmen without dispute a title according to the Law Salique undubitable and which had been confirmed at the first entry of his Grandfather Henry the Fourth into the Kingdom not onely by resignation of Richard the Second but even by approbation nay particular negotiation of Edmond Duke of York Edward Duke of Aumerle and Richard Earl of Cambridge Father Uncle and Grandfather to the said Duke of York This weighty business being not the work of one day the Duke of York draws to his side the Earls of Salisbury and Warwick and the better to prepare his way he practises all means to draw the King into the hatred of the people as one insufficient to supply the room which he held but Henry's piety having placed him so high in the affections of the people he seeks to undermine him in the downfall of his friends pretending not against the King but his evill Counsellours a pretence that hath been made use of in latter times The King at that present lying very sick he neglects no advantage but by the help of his friends wrought so effectually that the Duke of Somerset was sent to the Tower this man was exceedingly hated of the Commons conceiving him the chief cause that all Normandy was surrendered into the hands of the French of which their malice the Duke of York made good use though his intentions for the removing him out of the way was the hinderance he knew he would prove to his after claim of the Crown but when the King had recovered his strength again and resumed to him his Princely Government he caused the Duke of Somerset to be set at liberty and preferred him to be Captain of Calice wherewith not onely the Commons but many of the Nobility which favoured the Duke of York were greatly offended saying that he had lost Normandy already and would also lose Calice Hereupon the Duke of York with his adherents the Earls of Warwick Norfolk and Salisbury the Lords Cobham and Fawconbridge with many
and unseasonable storms come from above There is no tempest to the passionate indignation of a Prince nor yet at any time so unseasonable as when it lighteth on those that might expect an harvest of their painful and careful labours He that is once wounded must needs feel smart till his hurt be cured or the part hurt before senseless but cure I expect none her Majesties heart being obdurate and be without sense I cannot being of flesh and blood But you may say I may aim at the end I do more then aim for I see an end of all my fortunes I have set an end to all my desires in this course do I any thing for my enemies when I was present I found them absolute and therefore I had rather they should triumph alone then have me attendant upon their Chariots Or do I leave my friends when I was a Courtier I could tell them no fruit of my love and now that I am a Hermit they shall bear no envy for their love to me or do I forsake my self because I do not enjoy my self or do I overthrow my fortune because I build not a fortune of paper walls or do I ruinate my honour because I leave following the pursuit or wearing the false ones or shadow of honour do I give courage or comfort to the enemies because I neglect my self to encounter them or because I keep my heart from business though I cannot keep my fortune from declining No no I give every one of those considerations his due right and the more I weigh them the more I finde my self justified from offending in any one of them As for the two last objections that I forsook my Country when it hath most need of me fail in that dissolvable duty which I owe my Sovereign I answer that if at this time my Countrey had any need of my publick service her Majesty that governeth it would not have driven me to a private life I am tyed to my Countrey by two Bonds one publick to discharge carefully and industriously that trust which is committed to me the other private to sacrifice for it my life and carkass which hath been nourished in it Of the first I am free being dismissed by her Majesty of the other nothing can free me but death and therefore no occasion of performance shall sooner offer it self but I will meet it half way The indissolvable duty I owe to her Majesty the service of an Earl and of a Marshal of England and I have been content to do her the service of a Clerk but I can never serve her as a villain or a slave But you say I must give way to time so I do for now I have seen the storm come I have put my self into harbour Seneca saith we must give way to Fortune I know that Fortune is both blinde and strong and therefore I go as far as I can out of the way You say the remedy is not to strive I neither strive nor seek for remedy But you say I must yield and submit I can neither yield my self to be guilty nor this my Imprisonment to be just I owe so much to the Authour of Truth as I can never yield truth to be falshood nor falshood to be truth Have I given you cause you ask and yet take a scandal No I gave no cause so much as to take up Fimbria his complaint I did tutum telum corpore accipere I patiently bear and sensibly feel all that I then received when this scandal was given me nay when the vilest of all Indignities are done unto me doth God require it Is it impiety not to do it Why cannot Princes erre cannot Subjects receive wrong Is an earthly power infinite Pardon me pardon me my Lord I can never subscribe to these Principles Let Solomons fool laugh when he is stricken let those that mean to make their profit of Princes shew to have no sense of Princes injuries Let them acknowledge an infinite absolutnesse on earth that do not believe an absolute infinitenesse in heaven As for me I have received wrong I feel it my cause is good I know it and whatsoever comes all the powers on earth can never shew more strength or constancy in oppressing then I can shew in suffering whatsoever can or shall be imposed on me I must crave your Lordships patience to give him that hath a crabbed Fortune leave to use a crooked stile But whatsoever it is there is no heart more sensible or more affected towards your Lordship then that of Your Lordships poor Friend Essex The ninteenth of February following Essex and Southhamdton were arraigned in Westminster-hall their Indictment was for plotting to deprive the Queen of her life and Kingdom to surprize her in her very Palace and that they brake forth into open rebellion by imprisoning the Councellors of the kingdom by exciting the Londoners to rebellion with vain fictions by assaulting the Queens loyal Subjects in the City and by defending Essex-house against the Queens Forces Hereunto they pleaded not guilty but being found guilty by there Peers they had sentence of death pronounced against them by Buckhurst Lord Treasurer high steward of England for that time Six dayes after was the fatal day appointed to put a period to Essex his life the Queen notwithstanding her Motto Semper eadem yet in the case of life and death was oft times wavering willing she was to have remitted what was past if she might have been ascertained of his loyalty for the time to come nevertheless she gave command he should not be executed but being informed he should say He could not live but she must perish she countermanded her former word and gave order he should be executed In pursuance of which order he was brought forth to the place of execution where a Scaffold was erected sundry of the Nobility being present where having craved mercy of God and pardon of the Queen he had his head severed from his body The thirteenth of March following Merrick and Cuffe were drawn to Tyburn and there hanged and two dayes after Sir Charles Danvers and Sir Christopher Blunt were beheaded on Tower-hill for great men seldome fall alone but as the Poet hath it Windes with great fury on tall Cedars blow Whose fall doth ruine them that are below One of our modern writers observes that happened to the Countess of Essex she being fearful in her husbands behalf gave a Letter which she had received from him to the custody of one Rihove a Dutch woman that waited on her this Dutchwomans husband named Daniel lighted by chance upon the Letter and perceiving some passages in it which might bring the Earl of Essex into danger got a cunning fellow to draw a counterfeit coppy of the said letter with this he cometh to the fearful Lady who was newly brought to bed threatning to give the same to her husbands adversaries unless she would presently give him three thousand pounds She to
and so they are of more value The message sent you from Rochell of some dangerous intent upon Ireland from Spain hath more appearance for that we also hear it from Spain confirmed and it is the same that before I advertsed you concerning Stukelie I also smell some purpose of the Count Lodowicks coming with Ships towards the Low Countries to accompany the design for his brother the Prince of Orange whereof I would look for some better success if I had not understanding thereof so many wayes for the force of that enterprise should consist in suddenness and secresie which are not like to take place Thus much for your first Letter Now to the second brought by Wigmore The Queens Majesty liketh well of your proceedings with the Spanish Ambassador there and marvelleth that he should be so coy with you considering the reports of his former courtesies but by likelihood some other accident moved it which by your next speech will be better discovered The cause why that Ambassadour could not be answered sooner of the matter whereof he advertised her Majesty from the Duke of Alva was for that her Majesty could not sooner hear thereof from the Duke If you shall finde it convenient to impart matters to the said Ambassador you may let him know of these things following one Monsieur Senegew a Low Countreyman is coming to end the treaty for restitution on both sides of the Merchants goods There are lately come into the Ports of the West certain Hulks laden from Spain and Portugal driven by tempest and because they should be well used the Ambassador here for the King though in other things he be not used hath been dealt withall to name certain strangers Merchants to resort to the Ports and they have special Authority from us to put the same in all good safety and that no dealing shall be by any to the impairing of the said goods and this special favour is shewed because the time of restitution is at hand And therefore we mean not to give any cause of quarreling There were also certain other Ships of War that came from Spain being of the company which conducted the Queen of Spain into Spain which being furnished with Souldiers were favourably entertained and permitted to depart at their pleasure of these things you may give him knowledge to make him have a better taste in his mouth he may perchance contrariwise complain of spoil of his Masters Subjects by pyrats haunting the Narrow Seas and especially about the Isle of Weight and I cannot deny the spoils but surely they are committed by one Lubrest and others belonging to the Prince of Orange which we cannot remedy and yet Mr. Horsey is presently dispatched with Authority to set forth certain Ships either to take them or drive them from our Coast I confess to you privately they are too much favoured Lucri Causa but you may know truly that the Queens Majesty doth in no wise favour them Thus much to the second Letter Now to some credit given by Mr. Beal concerning a few words shall suffice it I cannot judge any thing in a 2 3 4 6 8. the matter is much liked and all furtherers thereof allowed and all disswaders not liked I am commanded thus to write that if any mention should be made to you thereof you should show your self willing to advertise and so you shall do well The retardation used herein by H. is not liked by A. and the good will of L. in the furtherance is allowed by this you may perceive how to order your self and surely this principle I hold that no one thing shall warrant more surety and quietness to the Queens Majesty the 3 5 7 in but the manner and circumstance are of the substance of my principals and not accidents herein I deal boldly with you I finde nothing in your writing or doing but allowable if otherwise I did I would advertise you for friendship to your self and for good will to the Office you bear Although I cannot advertise you certainly as I would of the Grant of your Leases yet I am in the forwardness as I trust by next writing to send you knowledge thereof You must hereby be acquainted with the delayes of the Court. From Greenwich the third of May 1570 Sir Thomas Smith I trust shall be admitted to the Councel to morrow and shortly after to be Secretary I pray you Sir commend me to Mr. Cavalcant Yours assuredly William Burleigh I have the rather word for word inserted the familiar passages of these two Letters that the vigilancy of this great Statesman might be the more clearly and plainly discovered To proceed he had not to do with the Sword more then as the great Pay-master and Contriver of War which shortly followed wherein he acomplished much thorow his theoricall knowledge at home and intelligence abroad by unlocking the Counsels of the Queens enemies he being withall so careful a Steward of her Treasure that her Exchequer had money or credit when the King of Spain wanted both In that great Faction betwixt Leicester and Sussex he meddled not openly with though it is easie to tell whom he wished best too the Earl of Leicester gave him several rubs and he some neat State trips but still in the dark they would not take notice of what one acted against another We must now take and that of truth into observation that until the tenth year of her Reigh her times were calm and serene though sometimes a little overcast as the most glorious sun-risings are subject to shaddowings and droppings for the clouds of Spain and vapors of the Holy League began then to disperse and threaten her Serenity moreover she was then to provide against some intestine storms which began to gather in the very heart of her Kingdom all which had a relation and correspondency each with other to dethrone her and disturb the publique tranquility and therewithal as a principal work the established Religion for the name of Recusant began then and first to be known to the world and till then the Catholiques were no more then Church Papists but were commanded by the Popes expresse Letters to appear and forbear Church-going as they tender their Holy Father and the Holy Catholique Church their Mother So that it seems the Pope had then his aim to take a true muster of his Children but the Queen had the greater advantage for she likewise took tale of her Apostate Subjects their strength and how many they were that had given up their names He then by the hands of some of his Proselytes fixed his Bulls on the gates of Pauls which discharged her Subjects of all fidelity and laid siege to the received Faith and so under the vail of the next Successour to replant the Catholique Religion so that then the Queen had a new task and work in hand that might well awake her best providence and required a Muster of Men and Arms as well as Courtships and Councels for
natural wit and a better judgement with a bold and plausible tongue whereby he could set out his parts to the best advantage and to these he had the adjuncts of some general learning which by diligence he enforced to a great augmentation and perfection for he was an undefatigable reader whether by Sea or Land and none of the least observers both of men and the times And I am confident that among the second causes of his growth that variance between him and the Lord Grey in his descent into Ireland was a principall for it drew them both before the Councel Table there to plead for themselves where what advantage he had in the cause I know not but he had much the better in the telling of his tale and so much that the Queen and the Lords entertained no ordinary considerations of his person and his parts for from thence he came to be known and to have access to the Queen and to the Lords and then we are not to doubt how such a man might rise by his compliance the most expeditious way of progression Whether Leicester had then cast in a good word for him to the Queen I cannot determine but true it is he had gotten Queen Elizabeths ear at a trice and she began to be taken with his elocution and loved to hear his reasons to her demands and the truth is she took him for a kinde of Oracle which nettled them all yea those that he relyed on began to take his sudden favour for an allarum and to be sensible of their own supplantation and to project his which made him shortly after sing Fortune my foe c. So that finding his favour declining and falling into a recess he undertook a new peregrination to leave that Terra infirma of the Court for that of the Wars and by declining himself and by absence to expell his and the passion of his enemies which in Court was a strange device of recovery but that he knew there was some ill office done him that he durst not attempt to minde any other wayes then by going aside thereby to teach envy a new way of forgetfulness and not so much as to think of him Howsoever he had it alwayes in minde never to forget himself and his device took so well that at his return he came in as Romans do by going backwards with the greater strength and so continued to her last great in her grace and Captain of the Guard One observation more may not be omitted namely that though he gained much at the Court yet he took it not out of the Exchequer or meerly out of the Queens Purse but by his Wit and the help of the Prerogative for the Queen was never profuse in the delivering out of her Treasure but payed many and most of her servants part in money and the rest with grace which as the case stood was taken for good payment leaving the arrear of recompence due to their merit to her great successour who payed them all with advantage our Rawleigh excepted who fortunately in the very first beginning of his Reign fell into his displeasure by combining with the Lords Cobham and Gray Sir Griffin Markham George Brook Esquire and several others to destroy the King raise sedition commit slaughter move rebellion alter Religion subvert the State to procure Invasion leavy War and to set up the Lady Arabella Steward c. of all which crimes being arraigned he was found guilty and condemned But King James being a Prince of peace unwilling to stain the beginning of his Reign with blood contented himself with onely his Imprisonment this following Letter to his Favorite having saved his life Sir Walter Raleigh to the Duke of Buckingham If I presume too much I humbly beseech your Lordship to pardon me especially in presuming to write to so great and so worthy a Person who hath been told that I have done him wrong I heard it but of late but most happy had I been if I might have disproved that villany against me when there had been no suspicion that the desire to save my life had presented my excuse But my worthy Lord it is not to excuse my self that I now write I cannot for I have now offended my Sovereign Lord for all past even all the World and my very Enemies have lamented my loss whom now if his Majesties mercy alone do not lament I am lost Howsoever that which doth comfort up my soul in this offence is that even in the offence it self I had no other intent then his Majesties service and to make his Majesty know that my late enterprize was grounded upon a truth and which with one ship speedily set out I meant to have aspired or have died being resolved as it is well known to have done it from Plimouth had I not been restrained Hereby I hoped not onely to recover his Majesties gracious Opinion but to have destroyed all those Malignant Reports that had been raised of me That this is true that Gentleman whom I so much trusted my Keeper and to whom I opened my heart cannot but testifie and wherein I cannot be believed living my death shall witness yea that Gentleman cannot but avow it that when we came back to London I desired no other treasure then an exact description of those places in the Indies That I meant to go hence as a discontented man God I trust and my own actions will disswade his Majesty whom neither the loss of my Estate thirteen years Imprisonment and the denial of my pardon could beat from his service or the opinion of being accounted a fool or rather a distract by returning as I did ballanced with my love to his Majesties person and estate had no other place in my heart It was the last severe Letter from my Lords for the speedy bringing of me up and the impatience of dishonour that first put me in fear of my life or enjoying it in a perpetual Imprisonment never to recover my Reputation lost which strengthened me in my late and too late lamented resolution If his Majesties Mercy doth not abound if his Majesty do not pitty my old age and scorn to take the extreamest and utmost advantage of my errours if his Majesty in his great charity do not make a difference betwixt offences proceeding from a life saving naturall impulsion without all ill intent and those of an ill heart and that your Lordship remarkable in the world for the nobleness of your disposition do not vouchsafe to become my successour whereby your Lordship shall binde a hundred Gentlemen of my Kindred to honour your Memory and bind me for all that time my life which your Lordship shall beg for me to pray to God that you may ever prosper and ever binde me to remain Your most humble Servant W. Raleigh He remained prisoner in the Tower above thirteen years during which time he writ that Elabourate Work entituled the History of the World which Book for
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
and successful an enemy as followed them at the heels June 12 1648. they settled themselves a Garrison the Parliament Horse coming up and quartering within Canon shot of the Town Touching these proceedings I have further inlarged my self in the Life of Sir Charles Lucas But the greatest of all dangers which threatned the Parliament was from the North from the Kingdom of Scotland Duke Hamilton with an Army of five and twenty thousand entered England for the King with whom joyned Sir Marmaduke Langdale divers of the chief Ships of the Royal Fleet likewise much about the same time revolted from the Parliament and set their Vice-Admiral Rainsborow ashore affirming they were for the King and would serve Prince Charles sailing towards Holland where the Prince the was and with him his Brother the Duke of York who not long before fled privately out of London The Earl of Holland also with they young Duke of Buckingham having five hundred Horse appeared in Arms for the King by Kingston so that all things considered we may conclude that the Kings party since the beginning of the Wars was not in a likelier condition at least more formidible then at this present but God had otherwise decreed and all these fair hopes in a few dayes vanished into nothing as the following ill successes will declare The Earl of Holland soon after his rising was put to flight by Sir Michael Levesey and others The Lord Francis Villers Brother to the Duke of Bucking ham was slain and Sir Kenelm Digby's eldest Son who as he was fighting with four at once was cowardly thrust through his Back Holland flying with the remainder of his Horse was within few dayes after at the Town of Saint Needs by Collonel Scroop whom the General Fairfax had sent from Colchester for that purpose altogether subdued Holland himself taken and by the Parliament committed prisoner to Warwick Castle Langhorn and Powel were totally routed between the two Towns of Fagans and Peterstone and having lost all their Army escaped by flight to Colonel Poyer into Pembroke Castle which after a strait Siege was surrendred to Cromwell the three Collonels rendring themselves Prisoners at mercy Poyer onely suffered death who in hopes of a Reprieve dissembled a reluctancy when he was ready to dye Cromwel from thence marched against the Scots who were now come as far as Preston in Lancashire and with the addition of Lamberts strength gave Battel to Hamilton pursuing them as far as Warington about twenty miles and killing many in the Chase took Lieutenant General Bailey Prisoner with a great part of the Scottish Army granting them onely quarter for their lives In this Battle were slain three thousand Scots and taken Prisoners about nine thousand Duke Hamilton himself within few dayes after having fled with a good party of Horse to Vttoxeter was there taken prisoner by the Lord Gray and Collonel Wait. With Hamilton were taken about three thousand Horse Langdale also not long after was taken prisoner in a little Village by Widmerpole a Parliament Captain this was the success of Hamiltons invading England The Trophies of this Victory were placed in Westminster Hall Soon after was the strong Town of Colchester surrendred to General Fairfax which for three moneths together with much Resolution and Gallantry was defended by Sir Charles Lucas Norwich Capel c. until all hopes they had of relief were utterly blasted and all their provisions quite spent not so much as a Dog or a Cat left them to satisfie the necessity of Nature Sir Charles Lucas and Sir George Lisel were shot to death the same day the Town was surrendred the Earl of Norwich Lord Capel and Master Hasting Brother to the Earl of Huntington were sent Prisoners to London The Lord Capel some few weeks after together with Duke Hamilton and the Earl of Holland were all three beheaded The Parliament during these Broils to give some seeming satisfaction to the Kingdom annulled their former votes of making no further addresses to the King and restored again to their seats eleven of their Members who had formerly been impeached by the Army a Treaty was voted to be with the King in the Isle of Wight the Earl of Middlesex with two of the House of Commons were sent to the King who made answer that he was very ready to treat of peace and named Newport in that Island to be the place Five of the House of Peers and ten of the House of Commons were appointed Commissioners and the Treaty went on with a great deal of seeming satisfaction on both sides But whiles they were intent upon the business a Petition was exhibited to the Parliament wherein they desired that the King might be tried by the Laws and brought to justice and all further Treaties with him to be laid aside which when the Parliament denied the Army not being satisfied they march some of them towards Newport others to the King who was now a Prisoner as large In the mean time the General sends his Letters to Collonel Hammond to render up his Command to Collonel Ewers who is to take the charge of the King but the Parliament vote him hereupon to stay there of which the General having notice 27. November The Army fast and pray and receive according to the still continued fashion Petitions from several Counties in order to what they intend to resolve and therefore Hammond submits and delivers up the King to Ewers and comes towards the Army The Parliament are angry and vote a Letter to the General that his orders and instructions for securing of the Kings person are contrary to their resolutions and instructions to Collonel Hammond and that it is the pleasure of the House that his Excellency recal his orders and that Colonel Hammond be free to take his charge to the Isle of Wight the Treaty being ended but instead of obedience hereto he salutes them with a sharp Letter for money to pay Arrears for the Army hereupon the Army marches to London and the King had his removes by Ewers till he came to the Block After that the House had past their Vote for no address to the King he being in a sad condition by his stricter condition in Hurst Castle hearing of these Votes prepares his soliloquies for his assured comfort in death as we finde his meditations in those golden Leaves of his Book As I have leasure sayes he so I have cause more then enough to meditate on and prepare for my death for I know that there are but a few steps betwixt the Prisons and the Graves of Princes Now the Ax was laid to the root of the Tree the House of Commons vote that by the Fundamental Laws of the Realm it is Treason for the time to come to Levy War against the Parliament and Kingdom the Ordinance for the Kings Trial was refused by the Lords January 2. After this a Proclamation was from the House of Commons for any one to accuse the King the Ordinance of
this while having the subtlety not to acknowledge his own hand which occasioned Master Atturney Prideaux to say you may see the valiantness of the Champion for the peoples Liberties he will not own his own hand Master Lilburne said he denied nothing but would have them to prove it For his other Book an Impeachment of High Treason against Oliver and his Son-in-law Henry Ireton late Members of the late forcibly dissolved House of Commons presented to the publick view by Lieutenant Collonel John Lilburne close Prisoner in the Tower of London Mr. Atturney said My Lord I doubt he will not own it Mr. Lilburne said again he should deny nothing he had done but he had read the Petition of Right which taught him to answer no questions against himself he said that he had read that it was practised by our Saviour Christ and his Apostles our Saviour answering Pilate with onely Thou sayest it For as to his Preparative to the hue and cry after Sir Arthur Haselrig the Lieutenant of the Tower said it was true that Lieutenant Collonel Lilburne gave him such a Book in the Tower but he could not say whether that was the same Book he delivered him Mr. Nutleigh and Mr. Radny two Witnesses put Mr. John shroudly to his shifts He was come to St. Francis his equivocation when one askt him that was newly robbed which way the thief went he stretching out his arm said not this way meaning through his sleeve For his Book called The Legal Fundamental Liberties of England the Atturney General did not put much weight upon that as also of his Book De salva libertate but he proceeded to produce an Act of Parliament of the fourteenth of May 1649. declaring what offences should be adjudged High Treason which were read over The chief clauses that Master Atturney insisted upon against Mr. Lilburne were these That if any person shall maliciously or advisedly publish by writing printing or openly declaring that the said Government is usurped tyrannical or unlawful or that the Commons assembled in Parliament are not the Supream Authority of this Nation These sayes Mr. Atturney we shall joyn together with Mr. Lilburnes books to which making particular application he inferred that Mr. Lilburns Books were accordingly trayterous to which purpose he caused the Clerk to make particular references to several pages of his Books Master Prideaux causing these words to be read out of one of Master Lilburns Books That the Parliament are usurping Tyrants and their new thing called their Councel of State undoubtedly the most if not all of them must go to Tyburn or Tower-hill there by the Halter or Ax to receive their just deserts to which he affixed Amen There is an Amen pronounced to us sayes Mr. Atturney let him have it that deserves it and according to the Atturneyes direction several pages of his Books were still quoted and read on then Mr. Atturney exprest himself to the Court to this purpose sayes he My Lords if I should say nothing more to the Iury but what hath been instanced and said there is pregnant proof already but yet my Lord further to prove the malice of Mr. Lilburnes heart and that he did intend to subvert and destroy the Parliament he caused the Clerk to read some other passages of his Books out of which he proved that he had blown a Trumpet for all his friends to take up Arms against the Parliament to which purpose he went about to seduce the Army which he calls his fellow Countrey-men Thus I have already exprest the particular advantages that might be for the Atturneys Plea to Master Lilburns detriment to the proving of no less then High Treason through several pages being quoted successively throughout every Book to that determined purpose Mr. Lilburne after he had compared the Judges to the Scribes and Pharisees and their usage of himself to Christ closing to his former expression Thou sayest Mr. Prideaux they are my Books he bid him prove it Mr. Prideaux speaking to the Jury said Gentlemen there are proofs enough and too many that he had no more to say to them but that if they respected the government of the Parliament the honour of the Councel of State the honour of the Nation or of the Army or the preservation of the Law they could not but say that the prisoner was guilty of such crimes and treasons as he was lawfully accused of and accordingly they could not but finde him so He ended that he desired the Act of Treason might be made use of Master Lilburne again pretended himself to be tired and oppressed but at the present not being understood he desired that he might refresh his body with the air which could not be obtained All this while he struggled out a little respite at last after these lingerings the Judge resolvingto be no longer delayed commanded the Chair to be taken away for it grew late Now it was time for Master Lilburne to show himself a right Collonel Iohn after his so long baffling and fooling of the Judges he was Counsel to himself he pleaded his own Cause with such subtilty with such a perfect recollection of all the former transactions of his Tryal and withal indisputably confident of his Jury he knew he could not tread awry he being left invulnerable except in the heel which was onely in his own most necessary inscrutable reservations he closed his long speech of clearing himself with some necessary insinuations to the Jury where the strength of this Sampson did chiefly lie To them he declared the integrity of his life his merits and the hard usage he had received from the present Government being interrupted he earnestly desired the Jury to take notice of the blood-thirsty cruelty and malice of his enemies all the while soundly clawing of his Jury with such words that he was happy in the care and conscience of his honest Jury fellow Citizens and Freemen of England who were to be the Conservators and Judges of his life having in themselves the Judicial power of the Land the Judges that sit there being no more if they pleased but as Ciphers to pronounce the sentence of their Clerks to say Amen They being at the best in their originals but the Norman Conquerers Obtruders He called his Jury the keepers of his life at whose hands if they did not do him justice the Lord would require his blood he desired the Lord God omnipotent to direct then the Governour of heaven and earth and all things therein contained to go along with them and give them counsel to do that which is just for his glory the people with one voice crying Amen Amen Which made the Judges look untowardly about them and caused Major Gen. Skippon to send for three fresh Companies more of Foot Souldiers After which Mr. Atturney General told the Jury that they had heard the evidence in the behalf of State laying the business to their conscience that they should be careful to do justice
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