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B17222 The arraignment, tryal, and condemnation of Sir William Parkins Knt. for the most horrid and barbarous conspiracy to assassinate His Most Sacred Majesty King William, and for raising of forces in order to a rebellion, and encouraging a French invasion into this kingdom: who was found guilty of high-treason, March 24 1695/6 at the Sessions-House in the Old-Baily: together with a true copy of the papers delivered by Sir William Parkins, and Sir John Friend to he sheriffs of London and Middlesex, at the time of their execution. Parkyns, William, Sir, 1649?-1696.; Friend, John, Sir, d. 1696.; England and Wales. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Middlesex) 1696 (1696) Wing A3760; ESTC R11595 77,090 51

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it was insinuated to my Disadvantage I forgive such as were therein instrumental And I do also from the very bottom of my Soul freely forgive and beg of God to do so too such as were any ways accessary towards the taking away my Life which I really look upon to be their Misfortune more than mine I profess my self and I thank God I am so a Member of the Church of England though God knows a most unworthy and unprofitable part of it of that Church which suffers so much at present for a strict Adherence to Loyalty the Laws and Christian Principles For this I Suffer and for this I Dye Though I have a perfect Charity for People of all Professions and do heartily wish well and would endeavour so to do to all my Fellow-Subjects of what Persuasions soever And indeed I have met with a great deal of Uprightness and Sincerity among some People of very different Opinions in Religious Matters And I hope and desire it may not be taken as an uncharitable Censure or undue Reflection that I objected to the Legality of Popish Evidence being advised so to do for my better Security upon the Foundation of a Statute-Law Having own'd my self a Member of the Church of England I must take this opportunity and I do it for God's Glory to apply my self to you that are Royalists of that Church and of the same Faith and Principles with my self And I beg of you for God's sake and the love of your Souls to be very constant and serious in all Religious Offices and holy Duties of Divine Worship and Service which I have too much neglected as I own to my great Sorrow Let no Excuse no Dangers prevent or hinder you in these most necessary and serious Matters and be I beseech you very careful and circumspect in all your Actions Behaviour and Conversation as I earnestly exhorted all that came to me I have I thank God a great deal of Satisfaction in my present Sufferings and have found it so ever since I have been under them And blessed be God it doth continually encrease upon me And I do now lay down my Life with all Chearfulness and Resignation in sure and certain Hope of a Resurrection to Eternal Life through our Lord Jesus Christ through whose Merits alone I hope for the Pardon of my Sins and the Salvation of my Soul And so O Lord into thy Hands I commend my Spirit for thou hast redeemed me O Lord thou God of Truth And I do heartily and humbly beseech Thee Almighty God and my most Gracious Father to forgive and bless this Sinful Nation deliver it from the Guilt of Rebellion Blood and Perjury that is now on all sides more than ever and from all those other heinous Sins which cry aloud Preserve and bless this Church Comfort our distressed King Restore him to his Right and his Misled Subjects to their Allegiance Bless also his Royal Consort our Gracious Queen Mary his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales that he may grow in Stature and in Favour with God and Man Support and strengthen all those that suffer in any kind for a good Cause Give them Patience under all their Afflictions and a happy Deliverance out of them Forgive all mine Enemies Pardon my former Neglect and Remissness in Religious Worship and Holy Duties and all the Sins I have been Guilty of to this very Moment Consider my Contrition Accept my Tears and now Thou art pleased to take me hence take me into thy Favour and Grant that my Soul may be without Spot presented unto Thee through the Merits of thy most dearly beloved Son Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen John Freind Sir WILLIAM PARKYNSs Paper IT hath not been my custom to use many Words and I shall not be long upon this Occasion having Business of much greater Consequence to employ my Thoughts upon I thank God I am now in a full Disposition to Charity and therefore shall make no Complaints either of the Hardships of my Trial or any other Rigours put upon me However one Circumstance I think my self oblig'd to mention it was sworn against me by Mr. Porter That I had own'd to him that I had Seen and Read a Commission from the King to Levy War upon the Person of the Prince of Orange Now I must declare That the Tenour of the King's Commission which I saw was general and directed to all His Loving Subjects to Raise and Levy War against the Prince of Orange and his Adherents and to Seize all Forts Castles c. Which I suppose may be a customary Form of giving Authority to make War but I must confess I am not much acquainted with Matters of that Nature But as for any Commission particularly levelled against the Person of the Prince of Orange I neither saw nor heard of any such It 's true I was privy to the Design upon the Prince but was not to act in it and am fully satisfied that very few or none knew of it but those who undertook to do it I freely acknowledge and think it for my Honour to say That I was entirely in the Interest of the King being always firmly persuaded of the Justice of his Cause and lookt upon it as my Duty both as a Subject and an Englishman to assist him in the Recovery of his Throne which I believed him to be deprived of contrary to all Right and Justice taking the Laws and Constitution of my Countrey for my Guide As for my Religion I dye in the Communion of the Church of England in which I was Educated And as I freely forgive all the World so whoever I may any ways have injured I heartily ask them Pardon Apr. 3. 1696. William Parkyns And on Friday the Third of April the said Sir William Parkins and Sir John Friend were Executed at Tyburn according to the Sentence FINIS The Tryals of Charnock King and Keys and of Sir John Friend for High Treason are Published by the Order of the Lord Chief Justice Holt and Printed for Samuel Heyrick at Grays-Inn-Gate in Holbourn and Isaac Cleave at the Star next to Serjeants-Inn in Chancery-Lane
Lord hear what they can say L. C. J. H. They cannot say any thing no Councel in the World that understand themselves can Argue any thing against what has been so often Settled and always Practised Friend My Lord if it be to be granted I beseech your Lordship to grant it L. C. J. H. It cannot be granted besides the matter you now move upon is improper it was all considered upon your Tryal It was told you we did all agree that a Conspiracy to Levy War to Depose the King is Treason or to Invade the Realm is Treason All this was consider'd at your Tryal and that is now over Parkyns My Lord if your Lordship pleases I desire I may have the Liberty of some Friends and Relations and a Minister to come to me L. C. J. H. Yes yes by all means Parkyns If your Lordship pleases that they may come and be private with me and pray let me have a Rule of Court for it otherwise I shall not have any benefit of it L. C. J. H. Yes yes it is very fit you should have it there shall be an Order of Court for it see that the Keeper take care it be done with safety Friend My Lord I desire the same Liberty of a Minister and my Relations and Friends to come to me that for what time I have to Live I may make the best use I can of it for my Soul which I hope God will enable me to do Then the Court was Adjourned until 5 a Clock in the Afternoon and about 6 the Justices returned and the Court was Resumed Cl. of Arr. Set Sir John Friend to the Bar which was done Sir John Friend hold up thy Hand which he did Thou standest Convicted of High Treason for Trayterously Compassing and Imagining the Death of our Sovereign Lord King William the Third What canst thou say for thy self why the Court should not give the Judgment according to the Law Then being made to Kneel he afterwards stood up Friend I have said already what I have to say in Arrest of Judgment Mr. Com. Serj. Sir you have heard the Judgment of the Court as to what you have said if you have nothing else to offer the Court must proceed to Judgment Cl. of Arr. for Mid. Sir William Perkins hold up thy Hand which he did Thou standest Convicted of High Treason in Compassing and Imagining the Death of the King and Adhering to the King's Enemies What canst thou say for thy self why the Court should not give thee Judgment to die according to the Law He was made to Kneel and rise up again Parkyns I have nothing more to offer Cl. of Arr. Then Cryer make Proclamation Cryer O yes all manner of Persons are Commanded to keep Silence while Judgment is in giving upon pain of Imprisonment Which Proclamation was made on both sides the Court and then Mr. Common Serjeant sitting with the rest of the Court upon the Bench Pronounced the Sentence Mr. Com. Ser. You the Prisoners at the Bar Sir John Friend and Sir William Parkyns you have been Indicted for High Treason in Compassing the Death and Destruction of the King For your Tryal you have put your selves upon the Country which Country has found you Guilty The Offence is the greatest in the Judgment of the Law that a Man can commit and it is Justly and Reasonably so For Robbery and Murder are Injuries to private Persons but Compassing the Death of the King is Compassing the Destruction of the Father of your Countrey and letting in Rapine Death and Desolation upon Thousands of People And even this the Hainousest of Offences is capable of Aggravation for there have been always Excuses and sometimes Justifications for Rebellion and as to Murder and private Revenge there may be somewhat said in Mitigation from the Violence of Men's Passions But to Sit and Conspire and Consult and Debate the Destruction of a Prince no Man yet ever had the Confidence to make an Excuse for it I would not add to your Affliction I am sensible of the severe Judgment that is to follow and which you have brought upon your selves and cannot but Pity you for the great burden of Guilt that you have laid your seves under I only say this to offer it to your serious Consideration in the few Moments you have to prepare for another World and another Judgment All that remains for me is to Pronounce the Judgment of the Law in these Cases and the Court does Award it That you and each of you go back to the place from whence you came and from thence be drawn on a Hurdle to the place of Execution where you shall be severally Hang'd up by the Neck and Cut down Alive your Bodies shall be Ript open your Privy Members Cut off your Bowels taken out and burnt before your Faces your Heads shall be Severed from your Bodies your Bodies respectively to be Divided into Four Quarters and your Heads and Quarters are to be at the Disposal of the King and the Lord have Mercy upon your Souls Then the Prisoners were carryed back to Newgate A true Copy of the Papers delivered by Sir John Freind and Sir William Parkyns to the Sheriffs of London and Middlesex at TYBURN the place of Execution April 3. 1696. Sir JOHN FREIND's Paper KNowing that I must immediately give Account to God of all my Actions and that I ought to be especially careful of what I say in these Last Hours I do solemnly profess That what I here deliver is from my very Soul with all the Heartiness and Sincerity of a dying Christian The Cause I am brought hither to suffer for I do firmly believe to be the Cause of God and True Religion and to the best and utmost of my Knowledge and Information agreeable to the Laws of the Land which I have evermore heard to require a firm Duty and Allegiance to our Sovereign and that as no Foreign so neither any Domestick Power can alienate our Allegiance For it is altogether new and unintelligible to me That the King's Subjects can depose and dethrone him on any account or constitute any that have not an immediate Right in his place We ought I think not to do this and surely when it is done to assist him in the Recovery of his Right is justifiable and our Duty And however things may seem at present I do believe I am sure I heartily pray That he shall be one day Restored to his Rightful Throne and Dominions As for any sudden Descent of His Majesty upon these His Dominions in order to the Recovery of them I declare I had no certain Knowledge of it nor can I tell what grounds there was to believe it so little Reason had I to be in a present Preparation for it I suppose it is not expected I should here endeavour to clear my self of the Assassination which was not the thing alledg'd against me however it was mentioned through what means I know not As