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A93942 The last speeches of Thomas Wentworth, late Earle of Strafford, and deputy of Ireland The one in the Tovver, the other on the scaffold on Tower-Hill, May the twelfth. 1641. Together with his deportment before and at the end of his execution. Strafford, Thomas Wentworth, Earl of, 1593-1641. 1641 (1641) Wing S5785B; ESTC R231586 7,448 12

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THE LAST SPEECHES OF Thomas Wentworth Late Earle of Strafford and Deputy of IRELAND The one in the Tower the other on the SCAFFOLD on Tower-Hill May the twelfth 1641. Together with his deportment before and at the end of his Execution London printed 1641. His Speech in the Tower to the Lords before he went to Execution RIght Honourable and the rest you are now come to convey me to my death I am willing to die which is a thing no more than all our Predecessors have done and a debt that our Posterity must in their due time discharge which since it can be no way avoyded it ought the lesse to be feared for that which is common to all ought not to be intollerable to any It is the Law of Nature the tribute of the flesh remedy from all worldly cares and troubles and to the truly penitent a perfect path to blessednesse And there is but one death though severall wayes unto it mine is not naturall but enforced by the Law and Iustice It hath been said that the Lawes vex onely the meaner sort of people but the mighty are able to defend them it is not so with me for to the Law I submit my selfe and confesse that I receive nothing but Iustice for he that politikly intendeth good to a Common-weale may be called a just man but he that practiseth either for his owne profit or any other sinister ends may be well tearmed a delinquent person neither is delay in punishment any priviledge for pardon And moreover I ingenuously confesse with Cicero That the death of the bad is the safety of the good that be alive Let no man trust either in the favour of his Prince the friendship and consanguinity of his Peeres much lesse in his owne wisedome and knowledge of which I ingenuously confesse I have been too confident Kings as they are men before God so they are Gods before men and I may say with a great man once in this Kingdome Had I strived to obey my God as faithfully as I sought to honour my King diligently I had stood and not fallen Most happy and fortunate is that Prince who is as much for his justice feared as for his goodnesse beloved For the greater that Princes are in power above other the more they ought in vertue to excell other and such is the Royall Soveraigne whom I late served For my Peeres the correspondence that I had with them during my prosperity was to me very delightfull and pleasing and here they have commiserated my ruine I have plentifully found who for the most generous of them I may boldly say though they have detested the fact yet they have pittied the person delinquent the first in their loyalty the last in their Charity ingenuously confessing that never any subject or Peere of my rank had ever that helpe of Counsell that benefit of time or a more free and legall tryall than I have had in the like whereof none of my predecessors hath had so much favour from his Prince so much sufferance from the people in which I comprehend the understanding Commons not the many headed Monster Multitude But I have offended am sentenced and must now suffer And for my too much confidence in my supposed wisdom knowledge therein have bin the most deceived for he is wise to himself that knowes by others faults to correct his owne offences to be truely wise is to be Secretaries to our selves for it is meere folly to reveale our intimate thoughts to strangers wisdom is the most precious Gem with which the mind can be adorned and learning the most famous thing for which a man ought to be esteemed and true wisdome teacheth us to doe well as to speake well in the first I have failed for the wisdome of man is foolishnesse with God For knowledge it is a thing indifferent both to good and evill but the best knowledge is for a man to know himselfe hee that doth so shall esteeme of himselfe but little for he considereth from whence hee came and whereto he must goe he regardeth not the vaine pleasures of this life he exalteth God and strives to live in his feare but hee that knoweth not himselfe is wilfull in his own wayes unprofitable in his life unfortunate in his death and so am I. But the reason why I sought to attaine unto it was this I have read that he that knoweth not that which he ought to know is a bruit beast among men hee that knoweth more than he ought to know is a man amongst beasts but hee that knoweth all that may be known is a God amongst men To this I much aspired in this I much failed Vanity of vanities all is but vanity I have heard the people clamour and cry out saying That through my occasion the times are bad I wish that when I am dead they may prove better most true it is that there is at this time a great storme impending God in his mercy avert it And since it is my particular lot like Ionah to be cast into the sea I shall thinke my life well spent to appease Gods wrath and satisfie the peoples malice O what is eloquence more than ayre fashioned with an articulate and distinct sound when it is a speciall vertue to speake little and well and silence is oft the best Oratory for fools in their dumbnesse may be accounted wise It hath power to make a good matter seeme bad and a bad cause appeare good but mine was to me unprofitable and like the Cypresse trees which are great and tall but altogether without fruit What is honour but the first step to disquietnesse and power is still waited on by envy neither hath it any priviledge against infamy It is held to be the chiefe part of honour for a man to joyne to his office and calling curtesie and affability commiseration and pitty for thereby he draweth to him with a kind of compulsion the hearts of the multitude But that was the least part of my study which now makes me call to minde that the greater the persons are in authority the sooner they are catcht in any delinquency and their smallest crimes are thought to be Capitall the smallest spot seems great in the finest linen and the least flaw is soonest found in the richest Diamond But high and Noble spirits finding themselves wounded grieve not so much at their owne paine and perplexity as at the derision and scoffes of their enemy but for mine own part though I might have many in my life I hope to find none in my death Amongst other things which pollute and contaminate the minds of great spirits there is none more hainous then Ambition which is seldome unacompanied with Avarice Such to possesse their ends care not to violate the Lawes of Religion and Reason and to breake the bonds of Modesty and Equity with the nearest tyes of Consanguinity and Amity of which as I have beene guilty so I crave at Gods hands