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A14770 Tvvo histories of Ireland. The one written by Edmund Campion, the other by Meredith Hanmer Dr of Divinity Campion, Edmund, Saint, 1540-1581.; Hanmer, Meredith, 1543-1604. aut; Ware, James, Sir, 1594-1666.; Spenser, Edmund, 1552?-1599. aut 1633 (1633) STC 25067; ESTC S118078 462,376 530

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so much as we have received him unto our protection grace and favour whosoever within our Realmes subiects unto our command will ayde and helpe him whom wee have embraced as our trustie friend for the recovery of his land let him be assured of our favour and licence in that behalfe Dermot returned ioyfully with these letters and came to Bristoll where at that time Richard surnamed Strangbow Eare o● Penbroke and Chepstow lay hee shewed his letters caused them at severall times publikely to be read conferred with Earle Richard and concluded to give the Earle his sole daughter and heire in marriage and his whole interest in the kingdome of Leinster after his decease Richard undertooke of the other side to effect all his desire As Dermot wayted for a winde it came in his minde for the shorter cut into Ireland to goe by land into Saint Davids where he was refreshed and greatly pittied by the Bishop there and concluded in like sort as with the Earle before with Robert fitz Stephens and Moris Fitz Gerald by the mediation of the good Bishop there to restore him unto his kingdome upon condition that hee should give them and theirs for ever the towne of Wexford and two cantreds of land next adjoyning upon this hee tooke shipping secretly came to Fernes and lived privately among the Clergie all that winter expecting performance of promises out of England Anno 1170. Abbatia de Castro Dei was founded in the same yeere and the first day of May so writeth Stow Robert Fitz Stephens with David Barrie and Hervie de Monte Mariscospie of Strangbow his nephew according to his promise with thirty Knights threescore Esquires well mounted and three hundred foot being Archers well appointed of his owne kindred and trayning up in feates of armes and the choice souldiers of all Wales landed at the Bann not farre from Wexford hereupon the rime runneth At the Creeke of Bagganbun Ireland was lost and wonne Here some allude unto the blinde Prophecie of Merlin that hee should meane this noble Warrior and worthy Knight where he saith A Knight biparted shall first enter with force of Armes and breake the bounds of Ireland this they would have understood of Robert Fitz Stephens an English man borne in Normandie and of Nesta his mother daughter to R●es ap Tuyder Prince of South Wales so I finde in Cambrensis but if Merlin had foresight in this I had rather take his Prophecie verified in respect of his Armes and Ensignes which were biparted being of two sundry changes namely party par pale gules and ermine a saltier counterchanged for commonly all Prophecies have their allusions unto Armes and by them they are discovered though at the first not so apparant before the event thereof take place The next day after in the same place landed Morice Prendergast whom Stanihurst calleth Prendelgast de Rofensi Walliae Demetiae Provinciâ as Cambrensis writeth the which I take to be about Milford in South-Wales accompanied with ten Knights and a great number of Archers in most gallant sort in two ships Immediately Robert Fitz Stephens directeth his letters to Dermot who could scarce reade them for joy of their arrivall and sent forthwith his base sonne Donald with five hundred men to salute them and hasteneth after himselfe with all speed off goeth his poore mantle wherein hee obscurely shrowded himselfe on goeth his princely attire the Irish men follow him the fame thereof is spread over the whole land such as before in his distressed state flatly forsooke him now runne and flatter and fawne upon him to be short they meete they confirme the former leagues with oathes and ioyne forces together and they march towards Wexford to lay siege to the towne the townesmen a fierce wilfull people to the number of 2000. sally forth with full purpose to give them battaile in the field but when they heard the Trumpets sound the horses neyghing and beheld their glittering Armes the ratling of their furniture horse and men in compleat Armes and all most comely in battaile array the like of them not formerly seene neither heard of they alter their mindes they retire into the towne they make fast their gates and fire the suburbs Fitz Stephens came to the wals filled the trenches with armed men and appointed his Archers to levell at the wals and turrets if occasion were offered the townesmen manfully defended themselves threw over the wals great stones and pieces of timber hurt many and made them voyd the place among whom a couragious Knight called David Barrye adventured to scale the walles but with a great stone which fell upon his head-piece he was cast downe to the ditch and carried away by his fellowes with safeguard of his life upon this they goe to the sea strand and fired all the ships and vessels which they found there The next day after upon better advice and deliberation they approach unto the wals and gave a new assault the townesmen within beganne to distrust their state being upon this sudden arrivall of the strangers not sufficiently provided of men munition and victuals to encounter with them and remembring againe how most unnaturally they had rebelled against their Prince and Soveraigne they sent messengers to Dermot to intreate for peace alas it was farre from the heart the which was granted and tooke of them pledges and hostages for the performance thereof Lastly Mac Moragh according to his former promise gratified these first adventures hee gave unto Robert Fitz Stephens and Morrice Fitz Gerrald who was as yet in England the towne of Wexford and the territories thereunto adioyning and unto Hervie de Monte Morisco two cantreds on the sea side betwixt Wexford and Waterford Dermot Mac Moroch and his company now take heart they encrease their Army with Wexford men and become 3000. strong The next iourney they bend their course towards Ossory where one Donald or Mac Donell was Prince whom Dermot hated deadly and for this cause Donald suspected Dermots sonne and heire to have much familiaritie with his wife and therefore in his jealous humour apprehended him imprisoned him and pulled out both his eyes but say they though sight failed him his feeling did not for she loved him the more in so much that she satisfied his lust and ranne away after him When Robert Fitz Stephens and the Gallants of Britaine entred the country they found neither dastards nor cowards but valiant men with horse and foot they found the country fast with woods bogges and paces trenched and plashed yet the valour of the adventurers was such presuming upon former fortunes to have the like future successes with loose wings drove them out of the woods and bogges into the plaine and champion land where the horsemen with their speares overthrew them and the foote finding them groveling runne them thorow and ended their dayes the Gallowglasses followed and cut off their heads And here Dermot Mac Morogh is mightily condemned he being originally for exaction
Felcon over Ireland And all the West of the world and there followed immediatly a continuall untemperature of the ayre with a filthy skurfe the Winter stormy cold and wet which continued untill the 11. of Iuly and put the Gardeners Fruterers and Husbandmen void of all hope in so much they complained that Winter was turned to Summer and Summer to Winter and that they were like to lose all and bee undone Anno 1252. saith Dowling and Grace and the English Anonimus but Clyn and Florilegus write that it was 1254. King Henry gave to Prince Edward his sonne Gascoigne Ireland Wales Bristow Stanford and Grantham and sent him to Alphonsus King of Spaine to take Ellionor his sister to wife where hee was by the said King Knighted and returned together with his wife into England with great riches Anno 1255. Alanus de la Zouch was made Lord Iustice so I finde in the Booke of Houth after his departure out of Ireland hee being a Lord Baron and chiefe Iustice in England Florilegus Humfrey Loid and Stow doe write the Story how hee came to his end great strife rose in England betweene certaine of the Nobility about territories lands and titles whereto each side made claime the matters in controversie by direction from the King were decided in Westminster Hall the first Controversie was betweene Iohn Earle of Surrey and Warren and Hugh de Lacy Earle of Lincolne which went upon Lacy his side The second was betweene this Earle Warren and Allan de la Zouch this Zouch being Chiefe Iustice asked Earle Warren how he held his land Earle Warran drew foorth his sword and said by this mine Ancestors held the same and by this I presently hold it and with that ranne the Chiefe Iustice through in Westminster Hall and in his flight wounded also his sonne thence hee fled to his Castle at Risgate whome Prince Edward the Kings eldest sonne pursued with an Army to whom the Earle submitted himselfe and afterwards with friends and what with money pacified all Anno 1256. in the warres of Lewelin Prince of Wales so I find in the records of Conway Stratflur Copied by Gettine Owen Edward Earle of Chester fell to outrage one while against the King another while against the Welshmen his Army was 1500. foot and 500. horse Henry the third together with Richard Earle of Cornewall and King of Almane wrote unto him gently wishing him to returne to his Country and keepe the peace and not to provoke the Welshmen to Armes the which he refused to doe but sent to the Irishmen for succour and supplies Prince Edward the Kings eldest sonne understanding thereof rigged a Navy met with the Irish fleet killed their men and sunck their ships few onely remaining to returne and to make report of this hard successe in Ireland In a while after the King raised warres against Lewellin Prince of Wales and the Welshmen saith Paris Causa autem eorum etiam hostibus eorum justa videbatur and was brought to a narrow straight so that he sent to Ireland and to Gascoigne for succour the Irishmen not forgetting their late overthrow were loath to come being of all sides driven to serve in the end came and joyned with their Kings forces where no memorable act was performed for God saith Paris defended the poore people that put their whole confidence in him About this time to wit Anno 1256. Florished Iohannes De Sacro Bosco Bale out of Leland will have him to be a Yorkeshire man and terme him Iohn Holyfaxe Stanihurst writeth he was borne in Ireland at Holy Wood in Fingall some 12. miles from Dublin and therefore called Iohannes De Sacro Bosco which carried great likly-hood with it untill they are reconciled which side prevaileth I waigh not greatly I thought good to insert him for so much as his great learning graced him unto the posterity In his springing yeeres hee suckt the sweet milk of good learning in the famous Vniversity of Oxford afterwards he went to Paris where he professed the learned Sciences with singular commendations and there slumbreth in the dust of the earth whose exequies and funerals were there with great lamentations solemnized first hee followed Aristotle afterwards gave himselfe to the Mathematikes and addicted himselfe so much thereto that none of the posterity as is thought could follow him hee wrote De Spaera Mundi lib. 1. Tractatum de spaera quatuor De Algorismo lib. 1. Omnia quae a primeva rerum orig De Anni Ratione lib. 1. Cmoputus scientiam considerans Breviarium Iuris lib. 1. Verborum superficie penitus Vpon his Tombe together with the Mathematicall Astrolabe was insculped as followeth M. Christi bis C. quarto deno quater anno De Sacro Bosco discrevit tempora ramus Gratia cui nomen dederat divina Iohannes Anno 1258. Stepham Espee alias De longa spatha that is Stepham with the long skeine or two handed sword Earle of Salibury as I suppose was made Lord Iustice of Ireland this Stepham gave battell unto Oneile and the rebels of Vlster and Conaght and slue of them together with Oneile saith Clinne in one day three hundred fifty and two and departed this life saith Florilegus 1260. Anno 1260. William Denne was made Lord Iustice in whose time Greene Castle Arx Viridis was destroyed and the Carties plaied the Divells in Desmond where they burned spoiled preyed and slue many an innocent they became so strong and prevailed so mightily that for the space so it is reported of twelue yeeres the Desmonds durst not put plow in ground in his owne Country at length through the operation of Satan a bane of discord was throwen betweene the Carties and the Odriscoles Odonovaies Mac Donoch Mac Mahonna Mac Swines and the inhabittants of Muscrie in so much that by their cruell dissention they weakened themselves of all sides that the Desmond in the end overcame and overtopped them all but in the beginning of these garboils I find that the Carties slue of the Desmonds Iohn Fitz Thomas founder of the Monastery and Covent of Trally together with Maurice his sonne eight Barons 15. Knights beside infinite others at a place called Callan where they were buried Mine Authors are Iohn Clinne onely and the Booke of Houth In the end of these tumults dyed Sir William Denny Lord Iustice Anno 1261. Richardus de Capella otherwise called Rochell Clinne calleth him La Rochell de Capella became Lord Iustice of Ireland Anno 1262. There rose in Dublin a great stirre betweene the Prior and Covent of the blessed Trinity now called Christ-Church and the Communalty of the City about the tithe fish of the Liffy Anno 1264. Walter Bourke commonly called Walterus de Burgo spoken of before was made Earle of Vlster hee had married the daughter and heire of Sir Hugh Delacy the younger and in her right enjoyed the Earledome The Booke of Houth layeth downe the descent that this
daughter in marriage and in the end when Leinster should bee quitly setled and reduced to the old Irish order Dermot should drive away the Brittans and strangers and procure no more into the Land all this was concluded vpon and solemnely undertaken by oathes on both sides yet all was but flat dissimulation In the nook of this landeth at Wexford Maurice Fitz Girald brother to Robert Fitz Stephens by the mothers side in two ships having in his company tenne Knights thirty horsemen archers and foot a hundred whereof Dermot was very glad and mightily encouraged on everie side And immediately tooke with him Morice Fitz Girald and bent his forces towards Dublin to be revenged on them for many wrongs and especially for the death of his father whom they murthered in their Councell house as formerly hath beene delivered and after for more despite buried him with a Dog They left Robert Fitz Stephens behind busily imployed in building of a Fort or a strong hold some two miles from Wexford in British and Irish called the Carricke As they drew neere Dublin they preyed they spoyled they burned all before them Dublin trembled for feare the townesmen intreated for peace the which was granted upon the delivery of certaine pledges and hostages In the meane while no small stirre arose betweene Roderic the Monarch and Donald Prince of Limerike for chiefery Whereupon there arose deadly hatred and martiall warres Roderic drew all his forces against him Dermot Mac Moroogh sent to Robert Fitz Stephens that in all haste he should draw forces to the ayde of Donald Prince of Limirike his sonne in law which was accordingly affected where Roderic was foyled lost his chiefery and with shame enough returned to his own country Now Dermot Mac Morogh is puffed up with these prosperous successes and whereas a while agoe he would have contented himselfe with Leynster alone now Connaght and all Ireland seeme little enough unto his aspiring minde Secretly hee acquainteth Robert Fitz Stephens and Maurice Fitz Gerald with his purpose and offereth any of them his daughter and heire with his inheritance after upon condition that they should send for supplies of their kindred and country men to effect his enterprises they modestly thanked him for his offers and refused his daughter for that they were both already married and withall wished him to write for Richard Strangbow with whom he had formerly concluded to that effect unto whom he addresseth his messenger and directeth his letters in this forme Dermot Mac Morogh Prince of Leinster to Richard Earle of Chepstow the sonne of Earle Gilbert sendeth greeting If you doe well consider the time of men and matters as we doe which are distressed then would you regard whether we have cause to complaine of men or to maligne and curse the infortunate time Even as the seely Storkes and Swallowes with their comming prognostic●te the summer season and with westerly windes are blowne away we have observed times and seasons fit for your arrivall and transportation if your affaires had correspondently accorded unto our expectations East and West no doubt would have fitted our purpose but hitherto being frustrated of your long desired presence and promises unlesse the most valiant Knights of your country birth whose valour and prowesse my penne is not able to paint unto the posterity had upheld our state and dignity We beseech you againe and againe in the league and amitie of Princes not to use further delayes our successe hitherto hath beene to our hearts desire Leynster is our owne your comming will inlarge our bounds the speedier it is the more gratefull the hastier the more joyfull the sooner the better welcome Richard Strangbow was pleased with these letters glad of the successe of Robert Fitz Stephens and cast with himselfe how hee might speedily passe for Ireland He repaired to King Henry 2. humbly beseeching him either to restore him to such possessions as by right of inheritance did belong unto him or to give him Passe to seek adventures in some forraigne country and among some strange nation Stanihurst excellently conceited layeth downe the Kings answer Henry smiling within himselfe saith Loe whether and where thou wilt goe and wander for me it shall be lawfull for thee take Dedalus wings and flye away Strangbow betweene ●east and earnest takes this for a sufficient licence and makes ready for Ireland and sends before him Reimond le Grosse nephew to Robert Fitz Stephens and Morice Fitz Gerald sonne to William Fitz Gerald the elder brother which land at Dundorogh commonly called Dundenold West of Wexford with tenne Knights forty Esquires and fourescore Archers and foot whereupon Omolaghlin Ophelin Lord of the Decies raised the country consulted with the townesmen of Waterford and concluded that it stood them upon with all expedition to set upon the strangers they made ready 3000. men by land they runne up and downe the shore they row their song was kill kill kill Reimond straight upon his arrivall had fortified himselfe the Waterfordians march against him in battaile array the Britaines being but sixscore and ten came forth to make good the field against 3000. Reymond perceiving in the skirmish that the enemy over-laid them retired to his Fort the Irish perswading themselves at that instant to give the Britaines an utter overthrow thicke and thinne with all haste pursued them and the formost entring at the foote of the last Britaine into the Fort had his head cloven in two with Reymonds sword immediately saith Reymond strike the drumme follow mee fellow souldiers the Irish being disordered and out of battaile array and discouraged with the death of one man flie away then they which in this doubtfull skirmish were like to be vanquished and quite overthrown became victors conquerours wan the field they chased the Waterfordians that were out of order at their wits ends slue of them saith Cambrensis above 500. persons and being weary of killing they cast a great number of those whom they had taken prisoners headlong from the rocks into the sea In this service Sir William Ferand a Knight deserved singular commendations and was the onely man of all the Britaines saith Stanihurst that was slaine Thus fel the pride and rash attempt of Waterford thus decayed their strength and force and thus became the ruine and overthrow of that Citie which as it bred a great hope and consolation to the Britaines so was it the cause of a great desperation and terrour to the enemy They tooke 70. of the best men in Waterford prisoners they enter into consultation and call a martiall court what was to be done with them Reymond full of pittie and compassion delivereth his opinion you my noble and valiant companions and fellow souldiers for the increase of whose honour vertue and fortune wee presently seeme to contend let us consider what is best to bee done with these our prisoners and captives for my part I doe not thinke it good nor yet allow that
the childe first into Scotland then into France and misdoubting the French into Italy vvhere Cardinall Pole his neere kinsman preserved him till the raigne of Edward the sixt vvith vvhom hee entred into high favour and obtayned of him his olde Inheritance of Meinothe Lastly by meanes of the said Cardinall and Sir Anthony Browne Lord Mountague whose sister hee marryed a woman worthy of such a brother Queene Mary Founder and restorer of many Noble houses repealed his attainder and set him in his fathers Earledome wherein since that time he hath shewed himselfe sundry wayes officious and serviceable towards his Common-wealth and the Crowne of England beside other good qualities of honour and curtesie they repute him heere for the best horseman in these parts of Christendome With this escape of yong Fitz Gerald the Lord Leonard Gray his Vncle on the mothers side was held suspect the same was one speciall article urged against him when hee lost his head Anno 1542. Sir VVilliam Skevington a vvorthy Governour and among all vertues very just of his vvord deceased Lord Deputy at Kilmaynam the Lord Leonard Gray succeeded him Oneale and Odonill colourably required a parley vvith the Deputy but in the vvay as they rode they burned the Navan and the tovvne of Ardee Wherefore the Deputy vvith the helpe of the Maior of Divelin Iames Fitz Symonds and the Maior of Droghedagh and the English pale met them flighted them slevv 400. of their trayne and there the Maior of Divelin for notable service in that journey vvas knighted Sir Anthony Seintleger Knight of the Garter Lord Deputy He summoned a Parliament vvherein the Geraldines vvere attainted Abbeyes suppressed the King named supreme head and King of Ireland because he recognized no longer to hold it of the Pope At this Parliament appeared Irish Lords Mac Gilpatricke Lord Barry Mac Cartimore O-Brene and diverse more vvhom follovved Con Oneale submitting himselfe to the Kings Deputy and after to the King himselfe vvho returned him richly plated created him Earle of Tyrone his base sonne Matthew Oneale Baron of Donganon As for Shane Oneale the onely sonne of his body mulier begotten hee vvas then little esteemed and of no proofe The same time Iames Earle of Desmond came to the King and vvas of him both Princely entertained and revvarded CAP. X. Edward the 6. Mary and Elizabeth BEfore the decease of Henry the 8. Seintleger was twice in England leaving at both times Sir VVilliam Brabason Lord Iustice. In his second returne An. 1546. Sir Edward Bellingham Captaine generall landed at Waterford and skowred the coast where Omore and Ocomore used to prey This yeare the city of Divelin obtained a Charter for two Sheriffes in stead of Bayliffes The Geraldines Out-lawes were taken and executed Bellingham appointed Lord Deputye erected a Mint within the Castle of Divelin which quickely wearyed them for want of fuell Andrew Brereton with 300. horsemen and 40. footemen inhabited the North as farre as Lecale where hee with 35. horsemen gave the charge upon 240. Scotts that from the out Islandes came to succour the Irish and wasted the Countrey In one yeare hee cleered those quarters that the Kings subiects might passe in peace Sir Frauncis Bryan the Kings Mynion was left Lord Iustice vvhile Bellingham repayred into England vvhere he dyed a man made up by service in the vvarres by continuall toyle therein diseased and feebled but of courage a lyon to his dying day true as steele as farre from flattery as from hearing flatterers an exceeding fervent Protestant very zealous and carefull in tendring the vvealth of Ireland vvherein the countrey giveth him the praise over all his predecessours and successours vvithin memory he spent his vvhole allovvance in hospitality calling the same his deare Masters meate none of his ovvne cost Letters commendatory offered him by the Councell vvhen Brian had vvrought his trouble before the nobility of England hee rejected as vaine and superfluous professing that if of his owne innocencie he could not uphold him hee would never seeke other shift then Credo resurrectionem mortuorum for quoth he well they may kill mee but they shall never conquer mee Sowre he was and thundering in words indeed very temperate applyed himselfe altogether to severity Lordlinesse and terrour Brian dyed within sixe weekes and Brabason became Lord Iustice till Saintleger the fourth time was sent over Deputye To him crept Mac Cartye that had lately roved and denyed his obedience with an halter about his necke and got his pardon Vpon Saintleger came Sir Iames Croftes of whose bounty and honourable dealing towards them they yeeld at this day a generall good report Crofts tarryed in office two yeares and left Sir Thomas Cusack who dyed five houres before the writing heereof and Gerald Ailmer while they both were coursing Oneale from Dundalke Queene Mary established in her Crowne committed her government once more to Saintleger whom sundry Noblemen pelted and lifted at till they shouldered him quite out of all credite He to be counted forward and plyable to the taste of King Edward the sixt his raigne rymed against the Reall Presence for his pastime and let the papers fall where Courtiers might light thereon vvho greatly magnified the pith and conveyance of that noble sonnet But the originall of his own hand-vvriting had the same firmely though contrary to his ovvne Iudgement vvandering in so many hands that his adversary caught it and tripped it in his vvay the spot vvhereof he could never vvipe out Thus vvas he removed a discreete Gentleman very studious of the State of Ireland enriched stout enough vvithout gall While the Deputy staggered uncertaine of continuance the Tooles and the Cavenaghes vvaxed cockish in the Countie of Divelin rangeing in flockes of seven or eight score on vvhom set forth the Marshall and the Sheriffes of Divelin Buckley and Gygen vvith the citties helpe and over-layde them in sudden skirmishes of which threescore were executed for example Thomas Earle of Sussex Lord Deputy with whom came his Brother in law Sir Henry Sidney Treasurer This Deputy to the inestimable benefite of the Realme brought under obedience the disordered countreyes of Leix Slewmarge Ofalie Irrye and Glinmalire then late possessed by the Oconnore Omores Odempsyes and other Irish rebels Hee molested Iames Mac Conell the Scottish Islander that in those dayes joyned with the Irish and disquieted Vlster In which voyage Divelin assisted the Governour with a faire company conducted by Iohn Vsher Sheriffe and Patrick Buckley He held a Parliament wherein it was made high Treason to retaine Scots for souldiours and fellony to contract with them matrimony At his returne from England in which time Sir Henry Sidney vvas Lord Iustice hee pursued the Scots to their Ilands and there entred did them much skathe vvanne himselfe full great commendation of hardinesse sayled backe vvith the glory of that adventure vvherein I trovv tvvo more
of English but of Scottish Antiquities varying among themselues great obscurity is brought among doubtfull things Some bring their originall from Ireland others from Dania Cimbrica Chersonesus and the Ilands of Gothland and Norwey neither wanted there some which were of opinion they came from Spaine deriving the name of Scottishmen from Moses himselfe and the Aegyptians as Hector Boëtius the Scottish Chronicler yet Hector himselfe preventing as it were the like objection confesseth that in the third yeere of Adrian the Emperor which was after the birth of Christ about 122 yeeres the name of Scots was not knowne unto the Romans In short time after the retinue of Gathelus searched the North-east and North-west Ilands and entred the Land which now is called Scotland so also called as the Scotish will have it of Scota But many grave writers have stumbled at the certainty of this story yet I finde for certaine that Ireland was called Scotia maior and the other Scotia minor and oftentimes confusedly the one taken for the other and the words to be of no great antiquity Capgrave in the life of Saint Columbanus saith Ireland of old was called Scotland from whence the Scottish nation inhabiting Albania next vnto great Britaine now called Scotland tooke their originall Fiacrius an Hermite being asked of a Bishop in France what hee was among other things answered Ireland the Iland of Scots is the native soile of mee and my parents It also appeareth by Orosius Claudian Isidore Hubaldus Beda the English Legend the Martyrologe secundum usum Sarum Marianus Ionas in vita Sancti Columbani Aimoinus Caesarius c. that Ireland and Scotland were usually taken one for the other But before I goe any further I thinke it not amisse to say som what to this word Scotus or Scottus the which Hector Boëtius carrieth away as derived of Scota and as thing granted There came to this Countrey of Ireland at three severall times before Gathelus great Commanders of Scythia as I have said before of the posterity of Iaphet planted themselues divided the land with great troubles and when they were at the worst alwayes they left a remnant of their nation behinde them Beda every where calleth them not Scotos but Scottos so that I finde in the word a double alteration y turned into o and th into tt Also in low Germany they call the Scythians and Scottish Schotten Nennius the Britain writeth Scythae Hiberniam obtinuerunt the Scythians gat Ireland King Alfredus translating the history of Orosius into the Saxon tongue termeth the Scots Scyttan The borderers upon Scotland cal them to this day Skyttes and Skets Walsingham writeth Of the country called Sicia alias Scythia wee haue Scita Sciticus Scoticus Scotus and Scotia Ranulphus Monke of Chester writeth as Sir Iohn Trevisa the Priest in old English laid it downe Scotts bene called as it were Scytes for they came out of Scytia Matthew Monk of Westminster saith Ex Pictis Hibernensibus Scoti originem habuerunt quasi ex diversis nationibus compacti Scot enim illud dicitur quòd ex diversis rebus in unum acervum congregatur deinde verò terra illa quae prius Albania dicebatur à Scotis Scotia nuncupatur anno gratiae 77. Of Pictes and Irish the Scots had their originall as it were compacted of divers nations for that is called Scot which of divers things is gathered into one heap afterwards that Land which was first called Albania of the Scots is called Scotia And Beda writeth that the Country now called Scotland was inhabited by Pictes that were Scythians againe In processe of time saith he Britaine besides Britaines and Pictes receiued a third nation that is of Scots upon the side of the Pictes Of the same opinion is Volateran and Iohannes Major Scotus although Hector Boëtius dissemble it Richard Stanihurst the great Philosopher and Antiquary of Ireland writeth A quo primum initio Scotiae nomen fit tractum nondum plane perspectum video c. Of what first originall the word Scotia is drawne I haue not yet found out And touching the truth of the History of Gathelus and Scota hee saith To the end the worthinesse of so great a mariage delivered unto the posterity should florish all these Grecians call themselues Scots and Ireland where they first seated themselues Scotiam But all this as a vaine fable George Buchanan and before him Humfrey Lloide have quite reiected and if Hector Boëtius bee not the chiefe forger of this history or rather vaine fable yet he hath besprinckled after his manner the whole discourse with lies With great ambition hath that silly writer labored to advance the glory of his nation in the which endeauour hee hath little regarded the honour of his Country and his owne credit For he hath purchased this amongst the learned that where as he would seeme to write all for the loue of the truth they will beleeue in a manner nothing to be true which he wrote For to what purpose should he commend to the posterity the acts of his ancestors with such maiesty of words that they have quailed the Spaniard vanquished the Irish with their only austere countenance triumphed as often as pleased themselves over the bordering Britaines where they pitched foot subiected all as furious victors that thou maist think the Scottish not so much to have invaded forraigne Countryes as to have removed to their proper possessions These fabulous dreames happely may move admiration to some old wives applause to some Abderas and laughter to the discreete reader The Scotish had as other nations tofore though now famous base beginning dusked and obscured with some barbarous rudenesse and this had beene more discretion to confesse then to vaunt or crake among the ignorant with boast of their fained doings Thus farre Stanihurst And now with Hector Boëtius his leave as the followers of Gathelus and his wife Scota in Egypt Greece Barbary Portugall Galitia and over all Spaine were not called Scoti as before is remembred no more were they termed in Ireland and Scotland but corruptly of Scytae Scoti comming originlly out of Scythia And it were more honour in mine opinion for these nations to derive their originall from Scythia then from Egypt for two causes first for that the Scythians are more ancient then the Egyptians as Trogus Volateran and Marianus Scotus do write secondly for that the Scythians come of Iaphet that was blessed and the Egyptians of Cham that was accursed but in this case leaving every man to his owne choice I will returne the History In the antiquities of Ireland it is generally receiued that Gathelus of whom I spake before gave the Irishmen the language which of him they call Gaodhealgh in British Gwidhealaec that is a language compounded of many tongues and so it may well be for by reason of his great trauell he had skill in many tongues Although as they say he were a Grecian borne yet I finde no
Gillemore O Connor Dunnes sonne of Connaght one that had stood out in rebellion against the Kings untill that time had in the Voward the leading of the light footmen whereof they made least account he therby to winne their favours and they to hazard him first Dermotte Lamhdhearg King of Leinster had the charge of the horsemen their bonnys were double armed well appointed active and venturous souldiers Dermot being well mounted got him to an advantage of ground and turned him to the armie with this speech My friends and fellowes in Armes whose great valour hath been oft tryed understand I beseech you the cause of this battaile Whereas heretofore we have sought out these and hired them in our warres for our defence and good of our country against our forraine enemies to be at our service and command they have committed all manner of outrage against vs and extortion upon the people of this land they abused our wives ravished our widowes defloured our daughters and maidens their meat their drinke their bedding will not content them but they must have money for eating drinking and sleeping Where they should have beene our true and dutifull seruitors they disdained the Princes of the land and made the people their villaines By maintaining of them wee made our country men idle and unapt for the warres by inriching of them we have beggered our selves and now see the villany of these verlates our provision our furniture our Armes and forces of our native soile they bend against us and not onely this but they have drawn to their present aide afresh both Danes and Norwegians Wherefore plucke up your hearts quitte your selues like men our cause is good wee fight for our selves our wives and children and the libertie of our country if we lose we are lost for euer and our children become bondslaues and our country subiect to these bloudy rascall strangers He had no sooner ended his speech but they all kissed the ground and gave a terrible shout that the woods about them rang thereat On the other side one Osker Mac Oshen experienced in the warres and bold of speech craved of the Danes and Norweyes libertie to speake and began as followeth My masters and fellowes the cause of this our assemblie is knowne unto you it is to maintaine that which we honourably wonne in the field and was granted our ancestors and their posteritie the which we have in writing to shew under the hands and seales of the ancestors of these faithlesse Kings and Princes that be in Armes against us There is no haven creeke or port in Ireland but that our predecessors and we tooke the charge of them since our first arrivall here out of Denmarke and valiantly defended the● maugre the beards of all forraigne enemies We fought many a battaile for them wee wanne them tributes and procured them discharge of tributes the which forraigne champions in combats had obtained of them and now for recompence they endevour eyther to banish us the land or put us to the sword Will yee understand what they are surely a people that keepe no promise with us therefore we doubt not but the better to speed and excepting a few of their Princes and Gentlemen that are valiant men indeed and daily exercised in feats of Armes the rest are but pesants poore and needy slaues bare arst bare legd and bare footed and of small strength For Armes they weare a skull a sword by their side hanging in a Wyth that compasseth their middle and a Target other some have darts the best thing in them is they are swift of foot I hope we shal speedily have the experience of that when we see them run away Their good meate best drink we took and made them fast their treasure we tooke to furnish us in apparell and Armes and left them unfurnished and bare their bedding wee had and made them lye on the ground their wives widdowes and maides were at our command to keepe us warme in the night and we gave them leave to lye among their swine The best soile we tooke to our selves and gave them mountaines and bogges alas poore sillie fellowes these be they that now take Armes against us Wherefore faint not be of good courage and we shall prevaile let us winne vantage of ground and get the side of the hill and bogge against them that their horses prevaile not and once master them we shall quickly over-runne the pesants now last kisse one another in token that you will live and die one with another His words being ended they marched forward with Pipes Cornets and Trumpets sounding Their chiefe armes were Skeynes Speares Darts Slings and Sparthes which we call Galloglas Axes they sent their boyes and varlets as they had formerly determined to the top of the hill The King of Leinster that had the leading of the horsemen no sooner espied them but contrary to the plot laid downe upon the hill of Trase put spurres to his horse and with a loud voyce said follow me they were straight upon their backes that fled so that the Danes had no leisure to receive them for their safegard but were driven to kill their owne before as the Irish did behinde Immediately came the light foot under the leading of Gillemore and together with the horse charged the voward of the Danes so that the rascals of the Danes and the light footmen of the Irish were slaine with the death and hurt of many a Dane Then came the great battaile of the Kings of Ireland in rescue of the horse with a great and terrible noise and gave a stout charge upon the enemie that kept the ground I meane the side of the hill and fiercely bare them downe to the bottome where they fought a cruell battell with equall fortune almost the whole day untill the King of Denmarkes sonne was slaine by the King of Leinster whereupon the Danes fled the Irish followed and had the killing of them without resistance till horse and man were weary and the Danes in a manner all destroyed Of the Irish were slaine as I finde in the antiquities of the land foure Kings twenty five Kings sonnes and of others nineteene thousand seven hundred and threescore though others extenuate the matter They say the horses went to their bellies in bloud also the ayre with the stinke was infected and thereof shortly after rose a grievous plague which cut off the wives children and servants of the Danes and of many of the Irish that were slaine There was at this field one Ferreis a Dane a valiant souldier in the fight but escaping with life for very sorrow of the overthrow and losse of his friends fell madde and kept company with wilde beasts to his dying day Fin Mac Coile one of the principall Captaines of the Danish sept was in Rome at the time of this field many things are reported of him worthy remembrance His chiefe house was
is that say they the stones of your two foster brethren with that she cast up a wilde look and never beheld him cheerefully againe Ororic her Lord and husband being in pursuit of kerne theeves and outlawes that had mightily annoyed his people in the furthest part of his country she with all celerity supposing it a fit time sent for her lover Dermotte the message was no sooner delivered but hee was a horse backe posting to the Harlot to be short he tooke her away with him at which time O false heart she strugled she cryed as though she were unwilling and that hee forced her Ororic immediately heard of it gathered his forces together mustred his people craved ayde and among others wrote unto Roderick Monarch of Ireland as followeth Though I am not ignorant most renowned Prince that humane causes are to be weighed in the balance of patience and that a man endued with vertue will not effeminate himselfe by reason of the unconstant and mutable minde of a Harlot yet in so much this horrible crime whereof I am fully perswaded came to your eares before my messenger could deliver his letters a thing heretofore not heard of as farre as I remember not practised against any King of Ireland severity causeth me to call for justice when charity admonisheth me not to seeke revengement If thou behold the shame I confesse it redoundeth to me alone if you weigh the cause it is common to us both what confidence shall we repose in our subjects that are bound unto us in regard of our Princely command if this effeminate adulterer or rather queller of chastity shall escape unpunished for so abhominable a fact for the unchastised offences of Princes notoriously committed in the sight of al men breed a most pernitious imitation as precedents unto the people in summe you have sufficient experience of my good will and affection towards you you see mee wounded with the cruell darts of fortune vexed with infinite discommodities and now extremely driven to my utter shifts It remaines seeing I am wholly yours that not onely with counsell being requested but with armes being urged you revenge my quarrell this when you will and as you will not onely I aske but require at your hands Farewell The Monarch for some former quarrell against Dermot was all on fire and joyning forces with Ororic entred Leinster with fire and sword the people cry woe and alacke O bone in Irish now are wee punished for the lewdnesse of our Prince Dermot lulling himselfe in his lovers armes heareth the newes starteth upon a sodaine beholdeth his Lady hath no power to speake runneth forth calleth his men cryeth for aid throughout his country none gave ●are unto him the country thought now whereas they could not that God will be revenged on him for his exactions cruelty tyranny and all other villanies practised upon his subjects and especially for deflouring another mans wife when he saw himselfe quite forsaken voyd and destitute of all ayde he betooke himselfe to the sea and fled for England but what became of the Harlot I cannot learne belike shee hanged her selfe when she had set all the country in uprore Anno 1169. Iohn Clin and Iohn Stow are mine Authors now that Dermot is fled I am to insert a story out of the British Chronicles of Conwey and Strotflur Abbeyes afore I discourse of him which was in the same yeere that he tooke the sea how that Owen Gwyneth Prince of North-Wales had a sonne called Ryryd who in the right of his wife as it seemeth was Lord of Clochran in Ireland and another sonne begotten vpon an Irish woman called Howell and a third sonne called Madoc This Madoc finding his country in great contention and his brethren at civill warres prepared certaine ships with men and munition out of Wales and Ireland and sought adventures by seas he sailed west from the coast of Ireland so farre north that hee came to a land unknowne where he saw many strange things This land in the opinion of Humphrey Lloyde the great Antiquary of Britaine must needs be some part of that country of which the Spaniards affirme themselves to be the first discoverers since Hannos time For by reason and order of cosmographie this land to the which Madoc came must needs be sonne part of Nova-hispania or Florida whereupon it is manifest that the same country was long before discovered by Britaines and Irish men afore either Columbus or Americus Vespatius led any Spaniards thither Of the voyage and returne of this Madoc there be many fables the which I will not report He prepared ships for a second voyage and tooke with him men and women to inhabit that land therefore it is to be presupposed that he and his people inhabited part of those countries for it appeareth by Francis Loves that in Acusanus and other places the people honoured the Crosse whereby it may be gathered that Christians had been there before the comming of the Spaniards but because this people were not many they followed the manners of the land and used their language I am of opinion with others that the land whereunto Madoc came was some part of Mexico first of all for that the inhabitants of that land report their Rulers to have descended from a strange nation that came from a far country which thing is confessed by Mutesuma King of that country in his orations made for quieting of his people at his submission to the King of Castile Hernando Curtecius being then present which is laid downe in the Spanish Chronicles of the conquest of the West-Indies secondly the british words and names of places used in that country to this day doe argue the same as when they talke together they say Gwrando which is hearken or listen in British Also if you peruse Sir Humphrey Gilberts discovery they have a Bird which they call Pengwin in Brittish and Cornish a white-head but the Iland of Corroeso the Cape of Britaine the river of Gwyndoor and the white rocke of Pengwyn be British or Welch words whereby it appeareth that it was that country which Madoc and his people inhabited now remembring my selfe that my pen hath not carryed me so far unto forraigne countries by sea but that I expect Dermots returne by sea and by land into Ireland Dermot Mac Morogh came to Henry 2. in Normandie made his moane as formerly in substance is delivered craved aide for his restitution into his country being a King exiled although distressed and void of comfort unlesse hee might obtaine it at his Majesties hands the Kings hands being full of warres he granted him his favourable letters as followeth Henry King of England Duke of Normandie and Aquitaine Earle of Anjow c. unto all his subiects English Normans Welch and Scots and to all nations and people being his subiects greeting whereas Dermot Prince of Leinster most wrongfully as he enformeth banished out of his owne country hath craved our ayde therefore for
extortion cruelty tyranny and other damnable offences iustly exiled now sheweth no Princely stomacke but a base Wolvish minde for when 300. of the Ossory mens heads were throwne at his feete alas they had not offended hee viewed them all and finding one whom he knew and mortally hated he held him by the head and eares and most brutishly with his teeth bit the nose and lips of the dead whom without the ayde of the Britaines hee durst not behold in the face In this bloudy course Dermot directed these worthy warriours they more affecting the prey for their present maintenance then the bloud of any person to spoyle burne waste the country and murther the poore and seely people which God wot meant no harme whereupon Donald Prince of Ossory despising Dermot Mac Morogh by the advice of his Councell and friends sent to Robert Fitz Stephens in writing as followeth Sir Knight of Noble race renowned for martiall prowesse Donald Prince of Ossory sendeth greeting Dermot that damnable adulterer in his owne person with the King of Meths wife and in his sonnes person with my wife have drawne thee and those Gallants most worthy Knights into this poore country and naked people I will yeeld my selfe it is for the good of my poore followers into thy hands peace I crave and peace let me have Robert Fitz Stephens acquainted Dermot Mac Morogh with the premises of all sides the Irish dissembled as hereafter shall further appeare peace they granted and they acknowledged Dermot for their Lord and Soveraigne In all this service I may not conceale what Cambrensis delivereth David Barry and Meilerius effected singular exployts and deserved no lesse commendations As soone as the good successe of Dermot and the strangers lately arrived was spread abroad Rory Oconochor alias Rodericke King of Connaught Monarch of Ireland called the Princes and Nobles of the land together and layeth before them the dangerous estate and imminent perill of the whole land how Dermot guilefully had trayned in strangers how hee and the strangers were like to ouer-runne all unlesse with all expedition this mischiefe were prevented in summe they concluded that every man shall to his Armes and make ready horse and foot and set upon these invaders Dermot Mac Morogh having certaine knowledge of this great separation and mischiefe intended and his false harted subjects that lately fawned vpon him were fled to the enemies fearing the puisance of the Monarch and the forces of the whole land called Robert Fits Stephens and said vnto him Fortune is fickle our state is an ague that commeth by fits my friends fleet away and argue false hearts no marvaile though I bee disquieted if you stick not to mee I am undone Robert Fitz Stephens replied Wee have left behind us our deare friends and our native soyle wee have fired all our shippes not upon intent to runne away wee haue already in armes ingaged our lives fall out as fall out may wee will live and dye together bee you true to us wee will not bee false to you Dermot hereupon gathering his spirits together got him and his followers to a certaine fastenesse not farre from Fernes where hee intrenched and plashed himselfe being invironed with woods hils rockes bogges and waters a place to mans seeming inaccessible and invincible to endure for a while wandring clowds and threatning stormes of his adversaries to vanish and bee caried away with waving winds of fortune and unfortunate warres Whose foresight and ready wit Robert Fitz Stephens highly commended Immediatly there came a Messenger from Roderic the Monarch unto Robert Fitz Stephens with this message The Britans may not by the Lawes of Armes display their Banners and Ensignes in forreine possessions and dispose the lawfull heires of their inheritance but they are with licence of the Irish to pack home whence they came It is a blemish for the Brittish nation iniuriously to giue aide to a shamefull fact neither may the lechery of Dermot be mantled under British cloaks wherefore depart and forsake him that is forsaken of God and man And here by my messenger receive to defray your charges and transport you to your native soyle Robert Fitz Stephens answereth your present I will not accept faith and troth I have pawned to my friend Dermot I will not breake hee forsakes not me I will not forsake him neither leave him distressed you speake of lechery what is that among martiall men I heare you have Bastards your selfe to what end is your embassie If Roderick give councell we need it not if he Prophecie we credit not his oracle if he command as a Prince we obey not his autority if hee threaten as an enemie a figge for his Monarchy The messenger returned with small welcome going and comming Roderic bethought himselfe againe and sent letters to Dermot perswading him to be at peace with his country people and to banish the strangers out of the Land he rejected his councell and despiseth the messenger Roderic seeing that his private practises tooke small effect put himselfe in armes assembleth his forces and delivereth unto them these speeches You right worthy and valiant defenders of your Country and liberty Consider with what people and for what cause wee are now to fight and wage battell the enemy of his owne Country the tyrant over his owne people the exile fugitive behold hee is returned backed with strangers and purposeth to destroy us and the whole Nation hee being an enemy hath brought in those enemies which have beene ever hatefull unto us all and are most greedy to have the Soveraignty and Dominion over us all protesting openly and firmely avouching that by fatall destiny they are to bee Commanders over this land And so farre hath he poured out his venome that there is no favour nor mercy to be looked for at his hands O cruell beast yea more cruell then ever was beast who lately bit with his owne teeth the nose and lips of the dead he to satisfie his insatiable malice and bloudy minde spareth neither man woman nor childe he deserveth well to be hated of all that opposeth himselfe an enemy to all wherefore my loving and deere country men be well advised looke about you and consider advisedly how by the like meanes I meane civill warres all Realmes and nations for the most part have beene overthrowne and brought to utter ruine Iulius Caesar attempted the invasion of Britaine was twice foyled and indured the repulse but when Androgeus Duke of London fell at variance with the King to be revenged sent for Iulius who thereupon returning subdued the land The Britaines being at discord and hating their vicious King Careticus the Saxons finding opportunitie to over-runne all sent for Gurmundus the arch-Pirate and terror of the Ocean seas who ioyning forces together foyled the Britaines and banished their King not long after Isembert aspiring to the Crowne of France procured the said Gurmund to his ayde behold the end Gurmund was slaine Isembert overthrowne
and his whole practise came to nought Wherefore let us with one minde like those valiant Frenchmen in our rightfull cause in the defence of our country and safeguard of the lives of our wives and children couragiously give the onset upon our enemies And whiles these strangers are but few in number let us stoutly issue out upon them The fire while it is but in embers and sparkles may easily be covered with ashes but if it breake into flames it is hard to be quenched wherefore it is expedient we stoppe beginnings and prevent sicknesse when it creepeth least when it takes roote it will hardly be cured wherefore cheere my hearts wee fight for our country and liberty let us leave unto our posterity an immortall fame let us march on and lustily assault them that the overthrow of a few may be a terrour to many and that it may be a president unto all forraigne Potentates never to attempt the like againe Dermot Mac Morogh and his men receive intelligence of this march and the approach of the enemy and beholding his men somewhat dismaid turned him to them with loving countenance yee men of Leynster my naturall subjects of my flesh and bloud whom loyalty truth and kindred hath hitherto lincked together let us live together and dye together in the defence of our persons and country you see how that wicked and ambitious minded Rodericke the Author of many mischiefes not contented with his owne country and kingdome seeketh now the soveraignty and dominion over the whole land the which I hope God will not permit You see his glory his pride and audacious attempts how he lifteth up his head and looketh aloft he trusteth to his multitude doubt you not but that God is on our side and the rightfull cause ours though wee of country birth to you Leinster men I speake bee not so many as they are neither so well appointed it forceth not for victory is not measured by multitude but by valour and courage and oftentimes wee know that a few stout and hardy men have foiled troupes of sluggards dastards and white liverd Souldiers If you mistrust any defect in your selves behold a present supply at your back and elbow Doe not you see these Worthy Knights these Valiant Warriers these Noble gallants the flowre of Brittaine their valour in part you have sufficiently tryed their furniture excelleth their order and aray is most comely they have forsaken their native soyle their friends and kindred and all for our sakes will they fly no they have burned their Ships the Land will yeeld them neither succour nor refuge neither will the bloody tyrant Roderic shew any mercy wee are sworne the one to the other while breath lasteth and life endureth If the enemy pretend with the sword to chastise us for our sinnes as it appeareth by their slaunderous shamelesse reports alas what have you done God knoweth your consciences are cleare your cause honest to take Armes in defence of your Prince and Countrey Why doe they not behold the blemishes nay the hainous enormities and villanies that raigne among them Their carrows their kerne their theeves their murders their swearing their lying their drunkennesse their whordome and bloody minds who reformeth The Tyrant Roderic hath murdered his owne naturall brother hee hath three wives alive he hath eleven bastards by severall women O villaine to behold a mote in our eye and cannot see a beame in his owne If the tyrant make challenge and pretend title to Leinster because the same hath sometimes beene tributarie to some one King of Connoght by the same reason also may wee demand and challenge all Connoght for our ancestors have beene sole Governours of both and Monarchs of all Ireland The Lawes of all Nations doe permit and allow to resist and withstand force and injury with force and strength Let us be of good courage wee stand vpon a good ground our seat is naturally very strong of it selfe now by our industry made more defensive feare nothing quit your selves like men When Dermot had made an end of his Irish Oration Robert Fitz Stephens in the Brittish tongue turneth him to the Brittaines You my companions in martiall affaires you lusty young gallants that have endured with me many perils yet still retaine your noble and valiant courage consider whence wee came what wee are and the cause we have in hand we are lineally descended from Troy whose fame hath filled the whole earth and now lately some of us out of Normandy have seated our selves in Brittaine and have to our wives children and kindred of the ancient and noble Brittish race of the one we cary our valiant and noble mind of the other wee learned the experience in feates of Armes wee are not come hither as pirats and theeves to robbe and spoile as it is well knowne unto you wee had our native soile to inhabit wee had our kindred about us and the countenance of great persons wee came after the course of the World as Marshall men but in an honest cause to take our adventures Heere wee are our friends are with us our foes are in armes against us wee are well appointed the enemy is but a wilde naked ras●all and savage people feare nothing our cause is good Dermot sought us we sought not him hee loveth our nation and our friends in former times have found friendship in his Countrey hee is a Prince lately exiled whose fall is more to be pittied then envied we are to comfort him to aide him and to restore him to his Kingdome It is more honorable to make then to be a King and to restore then to exile he is a Prince of a bountifull mind hee hath promised large for us and our heires after us hee hath in part already most faithfully performed his yeeres are many and his daies are but few after him wee shall enjoie his and if we overcome the enemy wee shall possesse all feare not death it is but a short delay betweene transitory and eternall life it is but a short passage from vaine and temporall delights to certaine and perpetuall joies if we conquer here wee shall inherit here and purchase unto us immortall fame if we misse here we are sure of a Kingdome in another world Roderic considering with himselfe the events of warres how doubtfull and uncertaine they are wrought all meanes to intreat for peace being timerous to adventure battaile with strangers whose force hee mightily feared and whose puissance and valour being renowned he was loth to encounter withall he sent messengers unto Dermot Mac Morogh promising him that hee and his heires should in peace and quietnesse enjoy all Leinster and acknowledge him for his chiefe King and Monarch and to yeeld unto him the service and homage that to that belonged and that he should deliver him his sonne Cunthurus Cnothurinus saith Stanyhurst for pledge and hostage And if the peace were truly kept and performed Roderic promised to give him his
would forthwith take our own armour and weapons against us well well the Mouse is in the cubbord the Fire is in the lappe and the Serpent is in the bosome the enemie is at hand ready to oppresse his adversarie and the guest is in place with small curtesie to requite his host If our enemies when they come in good array and well appointed to give the onset and to wage battel against us if they should happen to have the victorie the vpperhand over us would they deale in pitty and mercy would they grant us our lives would they put us to ransome Tush what needs many words when the deeds are apparent our victory is to bee used that the destruction of these few may bee a terror to many whereby all others and this wild and rebellious nation may take example and bewar how they meddle and encounter with us of two things we are to make choice of one for either we must valiantly and couragiously stand to performe what we have taken in hand and all fond pitty set aside boldly and stoutly to overthrowe and vanquish this rebellious and stubborne people or if we shall after the mind and opinion of Reimond altogether be pittiful and full of mercy we must hoise up our sailes and returne home leaving both the Country and all that we have already gotten to this miserable and wretched people When Herveie had made an end of his speech they put it to voyces and the voyces went on Herveis side whereupon the Captaines as men condemned were brought to the Rockes and after their Limbs were broken they were cast head long into the Seas and drowned every mothers sonne Vpon the 23. of August being Saint Bartholomewes Eeve and yeere aforesaid to wit Anno 1170. Richard surnamed Strangbow Earle of Strigulia whose original and of-spring in another place herafter if God permit shall bee laid downe landed in the Haven of Waterford where Dermos Mac Morogh Robert Fitz Stephens and Maurice Fitz Gerauld and Reimond le Grosse met him and joyned their forces together Reimond le Grosse was made generall of the field they tooke small rest after their arrivall for upon Bartholomew day being tuesday with Banners displayed in good aray they assaulted the City by water and by land the townesmen manfully defended themselves and gave them two repulses Reimond having compassed the towne espied without adjoyning unto the towne wall where now standeth a strong Bulwarke an old Cabban propped with old timber and entred into the old wall the which proppes they sawed asunder then downe falleth the cabban and withall a great part of the wall the breach thus made the Brittains doe enter and in the streets kill man woman and child and there left them in heapes In Reignald tower upon the wall of the tower they found one Reignald I take it the tower beareth the name of him and Omalaghlin Ophelim Lord of the Decies whose lives Dermot Mac Morogh saved they found there other two whom they put to the sword they rifled the houses they ransacked the City they made havock of all lastly they left there a strong ward Then according to precedent covenants Dermot gave his daughter Eva in marriage to Richard Strangbow and after solemnity thereof they all marched with their forces towards Dublin For Dermot bare them a deadly hatred and hitherto winked at them untill further oportunity served for the villany and cruelty they shewed to his father the townsmen of Dublin foreseeing his revenging mind procured to their aid as many as they could throughout the land they trenched they plashed in paces streets and narrow places all the wayes along to Waterford to hinder their march Dermot was not ignorant thereof whereupon he led the army from out the common and beaten way through the Mountaines of Glandelogh and came safe to the walles of Dublin There the Citizens sent messengers to intreat for peace and amongst others Laurence O Toole Arcbishop of Dublin while they parled without for peace Sir Remond le grosse and Sir Miles Cogan scaled the wals for saith Cambrensis they were more desirous to fight under Mars in the field then in the Senate to sit with Iupiter in Councell they made a breach they enter the Citie they put all to the sword in the meane while Hastulphus the Commander of the City with a great many of the better sort with their Riches and Iewels escaped and fled by the Sea to the North Ilands When the Earle had spent a few daies in the towne he left Miles Cogan Governour therof and by the perswasion of Dermot Mac Morogh he drew his forces into Meth to be avenged of Ororicke whom some call Morice some Murdich who was the cause of his exile and whose wife Dermot had formerly taken away The Earle no sooner entred the Countrey but the Army was given wholly to the spoile they robbed they spoiled they burned and wasted all before them Roderic King of Conoght and Monarch of Ireland seeing his neighbours house set one fire thought it high time to looke to his owne and wrotte to Dermot Mac Morogh contrary to the order of Peace formerly concluded thou hast procured and allured a swarme and multitude of strangers to invade this land all the while thou didst containe thy selfe within compasse of thine owne territories we winked at thy proceedings but forasmuch as now thou not caring for thy oath nor regarding the safety of thy hostages hast so fondly and falsly passed thy bounds I require thee that thou wouldest retire and withdraw these excourses and inrodes of strangers or else to begin I will not faile to cut off thy sonnes head and send it to thee with speed Dermot despised the messenger and would scarce vouchsafe to reade his letter upon the messengers returne Roderic was mad and in his rage caused his pledges head the sonne of Dermot Mac Morogh to be cut off In this troublesome time the Primate of Armagh called the Prelates and Clergie to a Synod at Armagh assembled a Councell where according to their wisedomes they endeavoured to finde out the cause of these miseries that fell upon the land they inquired not whether the Bishops had bought their Bishoprickes for money whether their Parsons did pray whether their Ministers were lettered what whoredome symony or lechery with other enormities raigned among the Clergie but simply like themselves posted over all to the Laytie and concluded insipienter that the iust plague fell upon the people for merchandizing of the English nation for then they bought and sold of the English birth such as they found and made them bondslaves so they served Saint Patricke called the Apostle of Ireland who was a bondman sixe yeeres in Ireland but Patricke preached Christ and the English nation reformed the land Here the sacred letters reconcile all the stone which the builders refused is become the corner stone and why so the answer followeth it is the Lords doing and it is marvellous in our eyes
take possession of the Kings graunt given him in those parts As they came to the walles of Lymerick the Citizens of spight in sight of them all to the end that no Englishman should roost there set the Town on fire Philippe de Bruse was therewithal discouraged and his Company in so much that when Robert Fitz Stephens and Miles Cogan offred to adventure their lives in the recovery of the Kingdome of Lymerik with all their aide and assistance he refused it and returned with them to Corke esteeming it farre better to lose Lymric and with safetie to dwell among his lovers and friends then to lose life and kingdome by dwelling among such Iewes as will fire their owne houses and cut all English throats In a while after Miles Cogan and Raffe the sonne of Robert Fitz Stephens who had lately married Miles daughter went towards Lismore to parlee with Waterford men and determined that night to lodge with one Mac Tyrid who had solemnly invited them As they waited in the field expecting the comming of the Waterfordians this Mac Tyrid unawares stealing upon them most traiterously slue them and five of their company whereupon the whole country was in uproare insomuch that Dermot Mac Carty and all the Irish in those parts together with Mac Tyrid that most perfidious traitor were in armes determining thenceforth to be no longer the Kings loyall subjects when they had gathered their forces together they laid siege to Corke meaning to cut off Robert Fitz Stephens and all the English men there Robert Fitz Stephens being distressed in Corke fearing the open enemy without and mistrusting the secret enemy within sent post to Wexford to his nephew Reimond le Grosse praying him to come to his aide Reimund forthwith with twenty knights and one hundred foot and bowmen entred the Lee landed at Corke encountred with the enemies killed some drove other to flye and compelled the rest to submit themselves and sue for peace When the King understood of this he sent Richard Cogan brother unto Miles to supply his brothers roome in the kingdome of Corke a man no way inferiour to his brother for valour and martiall prowesse in his companie came Philip Barry and Girald Barry his brother otherwise called Silvester Giraldus Cambrensis the famous learned man nephewes of Robert Fitz Stephens with a jolly troupe of horse and foot chosen and picked men Robert Fitz Stephens and Richard Cogan enjoyed this kingdome of Corke peaceably for certaine yeeres and in processe of time for want of heires male of them it came to two daughters the one of them was married to Robert de Carew the other to Patricke de Courcy and they in right of their wives enjoyed the same during their lives and after them their heires untill such time as by a division growne as I take it in England betweene the two houses of Yorke and Lancaster the Irish men expelled them and recovered the country unto themselues Anno 1178. The Monasterie Beatae Mariae Roseae vallis called Rosgl●s was founded Yet others thinke it was in Anno 1189. I may not forget Harvey de monte Marisco of whom often mention is made before who after many spitefull parts treacheries and false accusations exhibited by him unto the King against most noble servitors became a Monke the man was sore troubled in conscience and in his course he made the common saying true desperatio facit Monachum Hee had founded saith Felcon the Monastery of our blessed Lady de Portu Donbrodthi he gaue unto the Monasterie Saint Trinitatis of Canterbury his territories advousons along the sea coast between Waterford and Wexford and there cloystred himselfe I would saith Cambrensis he had changed his conditions with his habit The same yeere saith Holinshed there came from Pope Alexander 3. into England two Cardinals Alberto desuma and Petro de sancta Agatha whose commission was to summon the Bishops of England Ireland Scotland with the Isles and Normandie to the generall Councell of Lateran in Rome after they had obtained licence to passe through his dominions the King swore them upon the holy Evangelist that in their Legateship they should not attempt any thing that might be hurtfull to the King or his dominions and that upon their returne they should visite him homewards whereupon out of Ireland there went thither Laurence Archbishop of Dublin and Catholicus Archbishop of Tuam with some other five or sixe Irish Bishops whom the King likewise swore that they should not procure any damage to his Realmes and dominions The Realme of Ireland at this time was singular well governed by Hugh de Lacy a good man and a wise Magistrate who for the good of the land and the people established many good orders he made Bridges and builded Townes Castles and Forts throughout Leinster as Sir Iohn de Courcy did in Vlster in his time the Priest kept his Church the Souldier his Garrison and the Plow-man followed his Plough yet cankred envy quieted not her selfe practised mischiefe against him so that he was charged before the King to attempt the Crowne of Ireland and make himselfe absolute Lord of the land and that he had married the King of Connaghts daughter saith Holinshed contrary to the Kings pleasure The King immediately as Princes are jealous of great men called him into England appointed governours Iohn Constable and Richard Peche This Lacy behaved himselfe so discreetly and dutifully in England that he cleered himselfe of all suspition that the King was resolved of his truth and fidelity and sent him backe againe into Ireland with further credit then formerly he had done and that within three moneths and gave him the absolute command and Lievetenantship of the land and joyned as assistant unto him Robert Salisbury calling home the former governours It was not long but he was upon malitious occasion the second time sent for into England and one Philip of Worcester Cambrensis is mine Author a valiant souldier a bountifull and a liberall man with a most brave troupe of horse and foot arrived in Ireland with command to send over Hugh de Lacy and he to remaine there as Governour of the land until Iohn his sonne came over Stanihurst is of opinion that he went over into England and cleering himselfe speedily returned againe which cannot well stand with the course of the history for when Philip of Worcester tooke upon him the governement Lacy hastened the building and finishing of the Castle of Derwath whereof my penne immediately shall make report and there ended his dayes And now to Philip of Worcester and his companion Hugh Tirell Cambrensis and Stanihurst especially write most bitter of them of Philip how that first of all he resumed and seized unto the Kings use the lands of Ocathesie and divers other parcels which Hugh de Lacy had sold away and these he appointed to serve for the Kings provision and the Governours diet And after the winter was past he assembled and mustred
and that it stood him upon as farre as the honour of his Crowne and kingdome did reach to make good the combat Courcy answered very frowardly the which was taken in good part in regard of the urgent necessitie that he would never fight for him neither for any such as he was that he was not worthy to have one drop of bloud spilt for him that he was not able to requite him the wrongs he had done him neither to restore him the hearts ease he had bereaved him of yet notwithstanding all the premises he was willing and would with all expedition be ready to venture his life in defence of the Crowne and his country Whereupon it was agreed that he should be dyeted apparrelled and armed to his content and that his owne sword should be brought him out of Ireland The day came the place appointed the Liste provided the scaffolds set up the Princes with their nobilitie of each side with thousands in expectation Forth comes the French Champion gave a turne and rests him in his tent They sent for Courcy who all this while was trussing of himselfe about with strong poynts and answered the messengers if any of their company were to goe to such a banquet I thinke he would make no great haste Forth he comes gave a turne and went into his Tent. When the Trumpets sounded to battaile forth come the combatants and viewed each other Courcy beheld him with a wonderfull sterne countenance and passed by The French man not liking his grimme looke the strong proportion and feature of his person stalked still along and when the Trumpets sounded the last charge Courcy drew out his sword and the French man ranne away and conveyed him to Spaine Whereupon they sounded victory the people clapt their hands and cast up their cappes King Philip desired King Iohn that Courcy might bee called before them to shew some part of his strength and manhood by a blow upon on a Helmet it was agreed a stake was set in the ground and a shirt of maile and a Helmet thereon Courcy drew his sword looked wonderfull sternely upon the Princes cleft the helmet the shirt of maile and the stake so farre in that none could pull it out but himselfe Then the Princes demanded of him what hee meant to looke so sowrely upon them his answer was if hee had missed his blow upon the blocke he would have cut off both the Kings heads All that hee said was taken in good part King Iohn discharged him out of all his troubles gave him great gifts and restored him to his former possessions in Ireland It is written further that hereupon hee sailed into England came to Westchester offered himselfe to the sea and was put backe againe fifteene times by contrary windes which rose upon a sodaine to the English shore And in the booke of Houth it is delivered that upon every repulse the night following he was admonished in a vision not to attempt the seas for to saile into Ireland and that he should never set foot upon any land there and withall that the reason was yeelded thus Courcy thou hast done very ill for thou hast pulled downe the master and set up the servant for he had translated the Cathedrall Church and the Prebendaries of the blessed Trinitie in Dune into an Abbey of blacke Monkes brought thither from Chester and consecrated the same to the honour of Saint Patricke Whereupon remembring himselfe that he had done very ill in taking the name from God to a creature gave sentence upon himself that he was worthily punished Immediately hee altered his course went into France and there died now forwards with the history according to the due course of time in the raigne of King Iohn so the booke of Houth reporteth Anno 1202. Meler Fitz Henry whose father was the base sonne of King Henry the first founded the Abbey of Cownall hee came into Ireland with the first Conquerours being a young stripling and is highly commended by Cambrensis for his great valour and worthinesse in martiall prowesse he left this world Anno 1220. his Epitaph I finde in Iohn Clynne Conduntur tumulo Meyleri nobilis ossa Indomitus domitor totius gentis Hibernae Intombed are the bones of him they Noble Meler call Who was the tamelesse tamer of the Irish nation all Anno 1205. in the seventeenth yeere of the raigne of King Iohn Theobald Fitz Walter Fitz Gilbert Becket the first Lord Butler of Ireland founded the Monastery of Wethencia alias Wethran alias Wethenoya alias Voghney in the county of Limeric this difference I finde in Dowling Grace and others Anno 1206. Saint Monon an Irish man and a Martyr Molanus layeth him downe among the Saints in Flanders flourished he is reputed the Patron of Nassonia under the command of the Abbot of Saint Hubert in the Lordship of Audiamum he was the Disciple of Saint Remulch and Saint Iohn Agnus Bishop of Trajectum and of Irish birth this Monon was murthered at Ardevenna saith Molanus by some bloudy massacres lyeth buried at Nassonia in the Church which he there had founded Anno 1208. I finde it in Dowlinge and Grace Sir Hugh de Lacy the younger being Lord Iustice entred into Thurles where the country being in rebellion offered him battaile he laid siege to Castle Meiler wanne it brake it downe and made it even with the ground but he lost there more men say the Irish then he tooke away with him the chiefe Rebell was Ieffery Mac Moris alias Morich Anno 1209. the occasion of blacke Munday and the originall remembrance thereof rose at Dublin The Citie of Dublin by reason of some great mortality being wasted and desolate the inhabitants of Bristoll flocked thither to inhabit who after their country manner upon Holy dayes some for love of the fresh ayre some to avoyd idlenesse some other for pastime pleasure and gaming 's sake flocked out of the towne towards Cullen wood upon Munday in Easter weeke The Birnues and Tooles the mountaine enemies like Wolves lay in ambush for them and upon espiall finding them unarmed fell upon thē slue some 300. persons besides women children which they led in their hands although shortly after the towne was upon the report thereof eftsoones peopled againe by Bristolians yet that dismall day is yeerely remembred and solemnly observed by the Maior Sheriffes and Citizens with feast and banquet and pitching up of tents in that place in most brave sort daring the enemy upon his perill not to bee so hardy as once to approach neere their feasting campe and whereas the Irish heretofore accounted Tuesday their fatall and infortunate day for Lymric was twice wonne Wexford yeelded up Waterford was besieged and Dublin was sacked upon a Tuesday now they have Munday in memory making difference of dayes not fitting the minde of the Apostle which forbade the superstitions or vaine observations of daies c. Gal. 4. Anno 1211 or somewhat before the
Monastery of Grenard was founded by Richard Tute who shortly after miscarried at Athlone by the fall of a Turret and was buried in the same Monastery About the same time in the yeere 1209. the Monastery of Forte was founded by Walter Lacy Lord of Meth. Anno 1210. and the twelfth yeere of his raigne King Iohn came into Ireland and landed at Waterford with an huge army marvellous well appointed to pacifie that rebellious people that were universally revolted burning spoyling preying and massacring the English Fabian and Graffton alleage the cause that moved the Irishmen to this rebellion to have been for that the King endevord to lay grievous taxes upon them towards his aide in the warres against the French King which they could not brooke and therefore rose in armes against their Soveraigne When hee came to Dublin the whole Countrey fearing his puissance craved peace and flocked unto him along the sea cost the Champian Countries and remote places receiving an oath to bee true and faithfull unto him There were 20. Reguli of the chiefest rulers within Ireland which came to the King to Dublin and there did him homage and fealty as appertained Harding nameth them Lord O Neale and many more Walsingham remembreth Catelus King of Conaght it forceth it not though they misse the right names of place and person it is a fault in manner common to all foraigne writers After this hee marched forwards into the land and tooke into his hands divers Fortresses and strong Holds of his enemies that fled before him for feare to be apprehended as William le Bruse Mathilda his wife William their sonne with their traine of whom I spake before also Walter de Lacy Lord of Meath and Hugh de Lacy Earle of Vlster and Lord Iustice of Ireland fearing his presence fled into France their exaction oppression and tyranny was intolerable Likewise they doubted how to answer the death of Sir Iohn de Courcy Lord of Ratheny and Kilbarrock within 5. miles of Dublin whom they had murthered of especiall malice and deadly hatred First for that he was of the house of Sir Iohn de Courcy Earle of Vlster whom the Lacies alwaies maligned Secondly for that he had made grievous complaints of them in England to King Iohn the tryall whereof they could not abide Vpon the sight of the Lacies King Iohn made Iohn Gray Bishop of Norwich his deputy Of these Lacies it is further remembred in the Booke of Houth and other antiquities how that in France they obscured themselves in the Abbey of S. Taurin and gave themselves to manuall labour as digging delving gardening planting and greffing for daily wages the space of 2. or 3. yeares the Abbot was well pleased with their service and upon a day whether it were by reason of some inkling or secret intelligence given him or otherwise demaunded of them of what birth and parentage they were and what Country they came from when they had acquainted him with the whole hee bemoned their case and undertooke to become a suiter unto the King for them in a word hee obtained the Kings favour for them thus farre that they were put to their fyne and restored to their fromer possessions so that Walter de Lacy paid for the Lordship of Meath 2500. Markes and Hugh his brother for Vlster and Conaght a greater summe Hugh de Lacy in remembrance of this kindnesse which the Abbot shewed them tooke his nephew his brothers sonne with them into Ireland one Alured whom he Knighted and made Lord of the Dengle The Monkes also which out of that Monastery hee had brought with him into Ireland hee honoured greatly and gave them entertainment in Four the which Walter De Lacy had formerly builded King Iohn having pacified the land ordained that the English Lawes should bee used in Ireland appointed 12. English shires with Sheriffes and other Officers to rule the same according unto the English Ordinances hee reformed the Coine and made it uniforme some say it was Gray his Deputy of like weight and finenes and made it currant as well in England as in Ireland When hee had disposed of his affaires and ordred all things at his pleasure he tooke the sea againe with much triumph and landed in England the 30. day of August Anno 1213. When the French King by instigation of Innocentius 3. Bishop of Rome prepared to invade England King Iohn eftsoone understanding thereof made provision accordingly to answer his enterprise and among others the cause why the story is here inserted Holinshed writeth how that to his aid the Bishop of Norwich the Kings Deputy of Ireland levied an Army of 300. foot well appointed beside horsemen which arrived in England to the encouragement of the whole Campe. And as the French was frustrate of his purpose so they shortly returned with great joy to their native Country In the same yeere Viz. 1213. Iohn Comin Archbishop of Dublin departed this life and was buried in the Quire of Christ-Church whom Henry Loudres succeeded in the dayes of this King Iohn This Henry builded the Castle of Dublin and was made Lord Iustice of Ireland His tenants nic-named him Schorchbill or Schorcvillen upon this occasion Hee being peaceably stalled in his Bishopprike summoned all his tennants and farmers at a certain day appointed to make their personall appearance before him and to bring with them such evidences and writings as they enjoyed their holds by the tenants of the day appointed appeared shewed their evidences to their Landlord mistrusting nothing hee had no sooner received them but afore their faces upon a suddain cast them all into a fire secretly provided for the purpose this fact amazed some that they became silent moved others to a stirring choller and furious rage that they regarded neither place nor person but brake into irreverent speeches Thou an Archbishop nay thou art a Schorcvillen an other drew his weapon and said as good for me kill as be killed for when my evidences are burned and my living taken away from me I am killed The Bishop being thus tumult and the imminent danger whipt out at a backe doore His Chaplains Registers and Summoners were well knockt and some of them left for dead They threatned to fire the house over the Bishops head some meane was made for the present time to pacifie their outrage with faire promises that all hereafter should be to their owne content upon this they departed the intent of the promises I cannot learne othersome inveigh against it but in fine complaint thereof being made to Henry 3. the King thought so hardly of the course that he removed him from his Iusticeship and placed in his roome Maurice Fitz Girald of whom hereafter This Loudreds was buried in Christ Church In the same yeere also King Iohn being mightily distressed through the practises of hir Archbishops Bishops Abbots Monkes Priests of his dominions and the Barons of his Kingdome revolting and the inward hatred of the
of the Lord deceased but the next to him of blood that is the eldest worthiest as commonly the next brother unto him if he have any or the next cousin or so forth as any is elder in that kinred or sept and then next to him doe they choose the next of the blood to be Tanist who shall next succeed him in the said Captainry if he live therunto Eudox. Doe they not use any ceremony in this election for all barbarous nations are commonly great observers of ceremonies and superstitious rites Iren. They vse to place him that shal be their Captaine upon a stone alwayes reserved for that purpose placed commonly upon a hill In some of which I have seen formed ingraven a foot which they say was the measure of their first Captaines foot whereon hee standing receive an oath to preserve all the auncient former customes of the Countrey inviolable and to deliver up the succession peaceably to his Tanist and then hath a wand delivered unto him by some whose proper office that is after which descending from the stone he turneth himselfe round thrice forward thrice backward Eudox. But how is the Tanist chosen Iren. They say he setteth but one foot upon the stone and receiveth the like oath that the Captaine did Eudox. Have you ever heard what was the occasion and first beginning of this custome for it is good to know the same and may perhaps discover some secret meaning and intent therein very materiall to the state of that government Iren. I have heard that the beginning cause of this ordinance amongst the Irish was specially for the defence and maintenance of their Lands in their posteritie and for excluding all innovation or alienation thereof unto strangers and specially to the English For when their Captaine dieth if the Signiorie should descend to his child he perhaps an Infant another peradventure step in between or thrust him out by strong hand being then unable to defend his right or to withstand the force of a forreiner and therfore they doe appoint the eldest of the kinne to have the Signiorie for that he commonly is a man of stronger yeares and better experience to maintain the inheritance and to defend the Countrey either against the next bordering Lords which use commonly to incroach one upon another as each one is stronger or against the English which they thinke lye still in waite to wype them out of their Lands and Territoryes And to this end the Tanist is alwayes ready knowne if it should happen the Captaine suddenly to dye or to be slaine in battell or to be out of the Countrey to defend and keepe it from all such doubts and dangers For which cause the Tanist hath also a share of the Country allotted unto him and certaine cuttings and spendings upon all the inhabitants under the Lord. Eudox. When I heard this word Tanist it bringeth to my remembrance what I have read of Tania that it should signifie a Province or Seigniorie as Aquitania Lusitania and Britania the which some thinke to be derived of Dania that is from the Danes but I thinke amisse But sure it seemeth that it came anciently from those barbarous nations that over-ranne the world which possessed those Dominions whereof they are now so called And so it may well be that from thence the first originall of this word Tanist and Tanistry came and the custome thereof hath sithence as many others els beene continued But to that generall subjection of the Land whereof wee formerly spake me seemes that this custome or tenure can be no barre nor impeachment seeing that in open Parliament by their said acknowledgment they waved the benefite thereof and submitted themselves to the benefite of their new Soveraigne Iren. Yea but they say as I earst tolde you that they reserved their titles tenures and Seigniories whole and sound to themselves and for proofe alledge that they have ever sithence remained to them untouched so as now to alter them should say they be a great wrong Eudox. What remedie is there then or meanes to avoide this inconvenience for without first cutting of this dangerous custome it seemeth hard to plant any sound ordenance or reduce them to a civill government since all their ill customes are permitted unto them Iren. Surely nothing hard for by this Act of Parliament whereof wee speake nothing was given to K. Henry which he had not before from his Auncestors but onely the bare name of a King for all other absolute power of principality he had in himselfe before derived from many former Kings his famous Progenitours and worthy Conquerors of that Land The which sithence they first conquered and by force subdued unto them what needed afterwards to enter into any such idle termes with them to be called their King when it is in the power of the Conqueror to take upon himself what title he will over his Dominions conquered For all is the Conquerours as Tully to Brutus faith Therefore me seemes instead of so great and meritorious a service as they boast they performed to the King in bringing all the Irish to acknowledge him for their Liege they did great hurt unto his Title and have left a perpetuall gall in the minde of the people who before being absolutely bound to his obedience are now tyed but with termes whereas else both their lives their lands and their liberties were in his free power to appoint what tenures what lawes what conditions hee would over them which were all his against which there could be no rightfull resistance or if there were he might when he would establish them with a stronger hand Eudox. Yea but perhaps it seemed better unto that noble King to bring them by their owne accord to his obedience and to plant a peaceable government amongst them then by such violent means to pluck them under Neither yet hath he therby lost any thing that he formerly had for having all before absolutely in his owne power it remaineth so still unto him he having thereby neither forgiven nor forgone any thing thereby unto them but having received somthing from them that is a more voluntary and loyall subjection So as her Majesty may yet when it shall please her alter any thing of those former ordinances or appoint other lawes that may be more both for her owne behoofe and for the good of that people Iren. Not so for it is not so easie now that things are growne unto an habit and have their certaine course to change the channell turne their streames another way for they may have now a colorable pretence to withstand such innovations having accepted of other lawes and rules already Eudox. But you say they do not accept of them but delight rather to leane to their old customes Brehon lawes though they be more unjust and also more inconvenient for the common people as by your late relation of them I have gathered As for the lawes of England
that having beene once so low brought and thoroughly subjected they afterwards lifted up themselves so strongly againe and sithence doe stand so stiffely against all rule and government Iren. They say that they continued in that lowlinesse untill the time that the division between the two houses of Lancaster and Yorke arose for the Crowne of England at which time all the great English Lords and Gentlemen which had great possessions in Ireland repaired over hither into England some to succour their Friends here and to strengthen their partie for to obtaine the Crowne others to defend their lands and possessions here against such as hovered after the same upon hope of the alteration of the kingdome and successe of that side which they favoured and affected Then the Irish whom before they had banished into the mountaines where they lived onely upon whitt meates as it is recorded seeing now their lands so dispeopled and weakened came downe into all the plaines adjoyning and thence expelling those few English that remained repossessed them againe since which they have remained in them and growing greater have brought under them many of the English which were before their Lords This was one of the occasions by which all those Countreyes which lying neere unto any Mountaines or Irish desarts had beene planted with English were shortly displanted and lost As namely in Mounster all the lands adjoyning unto Slewlogher Arlo and the bog of Allon In Connaght all the Countries bordering upon the Curlues Mointerolis and Orourkes Countrey In Leinster all the lands bordering unto the Mountaines of Glanmalour unto Shillelah unto the Brackenah and Polmonte In Vlster all the Countreyes neere unto Tirconnel Tyrone and the Scottes Eudox. Surely this was a great violence but yet by your speach it seemeth that onely the Countreyes and valleyes neere adjoyning unto those mountaines and desarts were thus recovered by the Irish but how comes it now that we see almost all that Realme repossessed of them was there any more such evill occasions growing by the troubles of England Or did the Irish out of those places so by them gotten breake further and stretch themselves out thorough the whole land for now for ought that I can understand there is no part but the bare English Pale in which the Irish have not the greatest footing Iren. But out of these small beginings by them gotten neare to the mountaines did they spread themselves into the Inland and also to their further advantage there did other like unhappy accidents happen out of England which gave heart and good opportunity to them to regaine their old possessions For in the raigne of King Edward the fourth things remained yet in the same state that they were after the late breaking out of the Irish which I spake of and that noble Prince began to cast an Eye unto Ireland and to minde the reformation of things there runne amisse for he sent over his brother the worthy Duke of Clarence who having married the heire of the Earle of Vlster and by her having all the Earledome of Vlster and much in Meath and in Mounster very carefully went about the redressing of all those late evills and though he could not beate out the Irish againe by reason of his short continuance yet hee did shut them up within those narrow corners and glynnes under the mountaines foote in which they lurked and so kept them from breaking any further by building strong holdes upon every border and fortifying all passages Amongst the which hee repaired the Castle of Clare in Thomond of which Countrey he had the inheritance and of Mortimers lands adjoyning which is now by the Irish called Killaloe But the times of that good King growing also troublesome did lett the thorough reformation of all things And thereunto soone after was added another fatall mischeife which wrought a greater calamity then all the former For the said Duke of Clarence then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland was by practise of evill persons about the King his brother called thence away and soone after by sinister meanes was cleane made away Presently after whose death all the North revolting did set up Oneale for their Captaine being before that of small power and regard and there arose in that part of Thomond one of the O-Briens called Murrogh en-Ranagh that is Morrice of the Ferne or wast wilde places who gathering unto him all the reliques of the discontented Irish eftsoones surprised the said Castle of Clare burnt and spoyled all the English there dwelling and in short space possessed all that countrey beyond the River of Shanan and neere adjoyning Whence shortly breaking forth like a suddaine tempest he over-ran all Mounster and Connaght breaking downe all the holds and fortresses of the English defacing and utterly subverting all corporate Townes that were not strongly walled for those he had no meanes nor Engines to overthrow neither indeed would hee stay at all about them but speedily ran forward counting his suddennesse his most advantage that he might overtake the English before they could fortifie or gather themselves together So in short space hee cleane wyped out many great Townes as first Inchequin then Killalow before called Clariford also Thurles Mourne Buttevant and many others whose names I cannot remember and of some of which there is now no memory nor signe remaining Vpon report whereof there flocked unto him all the scumme of the Irish out of all places that ere long he had a mighty Army and thence marched foorth into Leinster where he wrought great out-rages wasting all the Countrey where he went for it was his policie to leave no hold behinde him but to make all plaine and waste In the which he soone after created himselfe King and was called King of all Ireland which before him I doe not reade that any did so generally but onely Edward le Bruce Eudox. What was there ever any generall King of all Ireland I never heard it before but that it was alwayes whilst it was under the Irish divided into foure and sometimes into five kingdomes or dominions But this Edward le Bruce what was hee that could make himselfe King of all Ireland Iren. I would tell you in case you would not challenge me anon for forgetting the matter which I had in hand that is the inconvenience and unfitnesse which I supposed to be in the lawes of the Land Eudox. No surely I have no cause for neither is this impertinent thereunto for sithence you did set your course as I remember in your first part to treate of the evils which hindered the peace and good ordering of that Land amongst which that of the inconvenience in the lawes was the first which you had in hand this discourse of the over-running wasting of the Realme is very materiall thereunto for that it was the begining of al the other evils which sithence have afflicted that land opened a way unto the Irish to recover their possession to beat out the English which
which I am right sorry that you make so short an end and covet to passe over to your former purposes for there be many other parts of Ireland which I have heard have bin no lesse vexed with the like stormes then these which you have treated of as the Countries of the Birnes Tooles neere Dublin with the insolent out-rages and spoyles of Feagh mac Hugh the Countreyes of Catherlagh Wexford and Waterford by the Cavenaghes The Countreyes of Leix Kilkenny and Kildare by the O Moores The Countreyes of Ofaly and Longford by the Connors The Countreyes of Westmeath Cavan and Lowth by the O Relyes the Kellyes and many others so as the discoursing of them besides the pleasure which would redound out of their History be also very profitable for matters of policy Iren. All this which you have named and many more besides often times have I right well knowne and yet often doe kindle great fires of tumultuous broyles in the Countreyes bordering upon them All which to rehearse should rather bee to Chronicle times then to search into reformation of abuses in that Realme and yet very needfull it will bee to consider them and the evills which they have often stirred up that some redresse thereof and prevention of the evills to come may thereby rather be devised But I suppose wee shall have a fitter opportunity for the same when wee shall speake of the particular abuses and enormities of the government which will bee next after these generall defects and inconveniences which I saide were in the Lawes Customes and Religion Eudox. Goe to them a Gods name and follow the course which you have promised to your selfe for it fitteth best I must confesse with the purpose of our discourse Declare your opinion as you began about the Lawes of the Realme what incommoditie you have conceived to bee in them chiefly in the common Law which I would have thought most free from all such dislike Iren. The Common Law is as I saide before of it selfe most rightfull and very convenient I suppose for the Kingdome for which it was first devised for this I thinke as it seeemes reasonable that out of your manners of your people and abuses of your Countrey for which they were invented they take their first beginning or else they should bee most unjust for no Lawes of man according to the straight rule of right are just but as in regard of the evills which they prevent and the safety of the Common-weale which they provide for As for example in your true ballancing of Iustice it is a flat wrong to punish the thought or purpose of any before it bee enacted for true Iustice punisheth nothing but the evill act or wicked word that by the Lawes of all Kingdomes it is a capitall cryme to devise or purpose the death of your King The reason is for that when such a purpose is effected it should then bee too late to devise thereof and should turne the Common-wealth to more losse by the death of their Prince then such punishment of the malefactors And therefore the Law in that case punisheth the thought for better is a mischiefe then an inconvenience So that Ius politicum though it bee not of it selfe just yet by application or rather necessity it is made just and this onely respect maketh all Lawes just Now then if these Lawes of Ireland bee not likewise applyed and fitted for that Realme they are sure very inconvenient Eudox. You reason strongly but what unfitnesse doe you finde in them for that Realme shew us some particulars Iren. The Common Law appointeth that all tryalls as well of Crimes as Titles and Rights shall bee made by verdict of a Iury chosen out of the honest and most substantiall Free-holders Now most of the Free-holders of that Realme are Irish which when the cause shall fall betwixt an Englishman and an Irish or betweene the Queene and any Free-houlder of that Countrey they make no more scruple to passe against an Englishman and the Queene though it bee to strayne their oathes then to drinke milke unstrayned So that before the Iury goe together it is all to nothing what the verdict shall be The tryall have I so often seene that I dare confidently avouch the abuse thereof Yet is the Law of it selfe as I said good and the first institution thereof being given to all Englishmen very rightfully but now that the Irish have stepped into the very roomes of your English wee are now to become heedfull and provident in Iuryes Eudox. In sooth Iren. you have discoversed a point worthy the consideration for heereby not onely the English subject findeth no indifferencie in deciding of his cause bee it never so just but the Queene aswell in all pleas of the Crowne as also in inquiries for Escheates Lands attainted Wardshipps Concealements and all such like is abused and exceedingly dammaged Iren. You say very true for I dare undertake that at this day there are more attainted Lands concealed from her Majestie then shee hath now possessions in all Ireland and it is no small inconvenience for besides that shee looseth so much Land as should turne to her great profite shee besides looseth so many good subjects which might bee assured unto her as those Landes would yeelde Inhabitants and living unto Eudox. But doth many of that people say you make no more conscience to perjure themselves in their verdicts and damne their soules Iren. Not onely so in their verdicts but also in all other their dealings especially with the English they are most willfully bent for though they will not seeme manifestly to doe it yet will some one or other subtle-headed fellow amongst them put some quirke or devise some evasion whereof the rest will likely take hold and suffer themselves easily to be led by him to that themselves desired For in the most apparant matter that may bee the least question or doubt that may bee mooved will make a stoppe unto them and put them quite out of the way Besides that of themselves for the most part they are so cautelous and wylie-headed especially being men of so small experience and practice in law matters that you would wonder whence they borrow such subtiltyes and slye shifts Eudox. But mee thinkes this inconvenience might bee much helped in the Iudges and chiefe Magistrates which have the choosing and nominating of those Iurors if they would have dared to appoint either most Englishmen and such Irishmen as were of the soundest judgment and disposition for no doubt but some there bee incorruptible Iren. Some there bee indeede as you say but then would the Irish partie crye out of partialitie and complaine hee hath no Iustice hee is not used as a subject hee is not suffered to have the free benefite of the Law and these out-cryes the Magistrates there doe much shunne as they have cause since they are readily hearkened unto heere neither can it bee indeede although the Irish party would bee so
charge most gladfully and willingly and surely the charge in effect is nothing to the infinite great good which should come thereby both to the Queene and all this Realme generally as when time serveth shall be shewed Eudox. How many men would you require to the furnishing of this which yee take in hand and how long space would you have them entertained Iren. Verily not above 10000. footemen and a 1000. horse and all these not above the space of a yeare and a halfe for I would still as the heate of the service abateth abate the number in pay and make other provision for them as I will shew Eudox. Surely it seemeth not much which you require nor no long time but how would you have them used would you leade forth your Army against the Enemy and seeke him where he is to fight Iren. No Eudoxus That would not be for it is well knowne that he is a flying enemie hiding himselfe in woodes and bogges from whence he will not drawe forth but into some straight passage or perillous foord where he knowes the Army must needes passe There will he lye in waite and if hee finde advantage fit will dangerously hazard the troubled Souldiour Therefore to seeke him out that still flitteth and follow him that can hardly bee found were vaine and bootelesse but I would devide my men in garrison upon his Countrey in such places as I should thinke might most annoy him Eudox. But how can that be Irenaeus with so few men for the enemie as you now see is not all in one Country but some in Vlster some in Connaght and others in Leinster So as to plant strong garrisons in all those places should neede many more men then you speake of or to plant all in one and to leave the rest naked should be but to leave them to the spoyle Iren. I would wish the cheife power of the Army to be garrisond in one Countrey that is strongest and the other upon the rest that is weakest As for example the Earle of Tyrone is now accompted the strongest upon him would I lay 8000. men in garrison 1000. upon Pheagh Mac Hugh and the Cavanaghes and 1000. upon some parts of Connaght to be at the direction of the Governour Eudox. I see now all your men bestowed but what places would you set their garrison that they might rise out most conveniently to service and though perhaps I am ignorant of the places yet I will take the Mappe of Ireland and lay it before me and make mine eyes in the meane time my Schoole-masters to guide my understanding to judge of your plot Iren. Those eight thousand in Vlster I would devide likewise into foure parts so as there should be 2000. Footemen in every garrison The which I would thus place Vpon the Blacke water in some convenient place as high upon the River as might be I would lay one garrison Another would I put at Castle-liffer or there-abouts so as they should have all the passages upon the River to Logh-foyle The third I would place about Fermanagh or Bundroise so as they might lye betweene Connaght and Vlster to serve upon both sides as occasion shall be offered and this therefore would I have stronger then any of the rest because it should be most inforced and most imployed and that they might put wardes at Balli-shanon and Belick and all those passages The last would I set about Monoghan or Balturbut so as it should fronte both upon the Enemie that way and also keepe the Countyes of Cavan and Meath in awe from passage of straglers from those parts whence they use to come forth and oftentimes use to worke much mischeife And to every of these garrisons of 2000. Footemen I would have 200. horsemen added for the one without the other can doe but little service The 4. Garrisons thus being placed I would have to bee victualled before hand for halfe a yeare which you will say to be hard considering the corruption and usuall waste of victualls But why should not they be aswell victualled for so long time as the ships are usually for a yeare and sometimes two seeing it is easier to keepe victuall on land then water Their bread I would have in flower so as it might be baked still to serve their necessary want Their Beere there also brewed within them from time to time and their Beefe before hand barelled the which may bee used but as it is needed For I make no doubt but fresh victualls they will sometimes purvay for themselves amongst their Enemies Hereunto likewise would I have them have a store of hose and shooes with such other necessaries as may be needefull for Souldiours so as they should have no occasion to looke for releife from abroad or occasion of such trouble for their continuall supply as I see and have often proved in Ireland to bee more cumberous to the Deputy and dangerous to them that releive them then halfe the leading of an Army for the Enemy knowing the ordinary wayes thorough the which their releife must be brought them useth commonly to draw himselfe into the straight passages thither-ward and oftentimes doth dangerously distresse them besides the pay of such force as should be sent for their convoy the charge of the carriages the exactions of the Countrey shall be spared But onely every halfe yeare the supply brought by the Deputy himselfe and his power who shall then visite and overlooke all those Garrisons to see what is needefull to change what is expedient and to direct what hee shall best advise And those 4. Garrisons issuing forth at such convenient times as they shall have intelligence or espiall upon the enemy will so drive him from one side to another and Tennis him amongst them that he shall finde no where safe to keepe his Creete in nor hide himselfe but flying from the fire shall fall into the water and out of one danger into another that in short space his Creete which is his cheife sustenance shall be wasted with preying or killed with driving or starved for want of pasture in the woods and he himselfe brought so lowe that he shall have no heart nor ability to indure his wretchednesse the which will surely come to passe in very short time for one Winter well followed upon him will so plucke him on his knees that he will never be able to stand up againe Eudox. Doe you then thinke the Winter time fittest for the services of Ireland how falls it then that our most imployments bee in Summer and the Armies then led commonly forth Iren. It is surely misconceived for it is not with Ireland as it is with other Countryes where the warres flame most in Summer and the Helmets glister brightest in the fairest Sunshine But in Ireland the Winter yeeldeth best services for then the trees are bare and naked which use both to cloath and house the Kerne the ground is cold and wet which useth to be his bedding the
aire is sharpe and bitter to blowe thorough his naked sides and legges the kyne are barren and without milke which useth to be his onely foode neither if hee kill them will they yeeld him flesh nor if he keepe them will they give him foode besides being all with Calfe for the most part they will thorough much chasing and driving cast all their Calves and loose their milke which should releive him the next Summer Eudox. I doe well understand your reason but by your leave I have heard it otherwise said of some that were Outlawes That in Summer they kept themselves quiet but in Winter they would play their parts and when the nights were longest then burne and spoyle most so that they might safely returne before day Iren. I have likewise heard and also seene proofe thereof true But that was of such Outlawes as were either abiding in well inhabited Countryes as in Mounster or bordering on the English pale as Feagh Mac Hugh the Cavanaghes the Moores the Dempsies or such like For for them the winter indeede is the fittest time for spoyling and robbing because the nights are then as you said longest and darkest and also the Countryes round about are then most full of Corne and good provision to be gotten every where by them but it is farre otherwise with a strong peopled enemy that possesse a whole countrey for the other being but a few and indeede privily lodged and kept in out villages and corners nigh to the woodes and mountaines by some of their privy friends to whom they bring their spoyles and stealthes and of whom they continually receive secret releife But the open enemy having all his Countrey wasted what by himselfe and what by the Souldiours findeth then succour in no place Townes there are none of which hee may get spoyle they are all burnt bread he hath none he ploweth not in Summer Flesh he hath but if he kill it in Winter he shall want milke in Summer and shortly want life Therefore if they bee well followed but one Winter you shall have little worke with them the next Summer Eudox. I doe now well perceive the difference and doe verily thinke that the Winter time is there fittest for service withall I conceive the manner of your handling of the service by drawing suddaine draughts upon the Enemy when he looketh not for you and to watch advantages upon him as hee doth upon you By which straight keeping of them in and not suffering them at any time long to rest I must needes thinke that they will soone bee brought lowe and driven to great extreamities All which when you have performed and brought them to the very last cast suppose that they will offer either to come to you and submit themselves or that some of them will seeke to withdraw themselves what is your advice to doe will you have them received Iren. No but at the beginning of those warres and when the Garrisons are well planted and fortified I would wish a Proclamation were made generally to come to their knowledge That what persons soever would within twenty dayes absolutely submit themselves excepting onely the very Principalls and Ring-leaders should finde grace I doubt not but upon the settling of these Garrisons such a terrour and neere consideration of their perillous state would be strucken into most of them that they will covet to drawe away from their Leaders And againe I well know that the Rebells themselves as I saw by proofe in Desmonds warres will turne away all their rascall people whom they thinke unserviceable as old men women children and hyndes which they call Churles which would onely waste their victualls and yeeld them no ayde but their Cattle they will surely keepe away These therefore though policy would turne them backe againe that they might the rather consume and afflict the other Rebells yet in a pittyfull commiseration I would wish them to be received The rather for that this sort of base people doth not for the most part rebell of themselves having no heart thereunto but are by force drawne by the grand Rebells into their action and carryed away with the violence of the streame else they should be sure to loose all that they have and perhaps their lives too The which they now carry unto them in hope to enjoy them there but they are there by the strong Rebells themselves soone turned out of all so that the constrainte hereof may in them deserve pardon Likewise if any of their able men or Gentlemen shall then offer to come away and to bring their Cattle with them as some no doubt may steale them away privily I wish them also to be received for the disabling of the enemy but withall that good assurance may be taken for their true behaviour and absolute submission and that then they be not suffered to remaine any longer in those parts no nor about the Garrisons but sent away into the inner parts of the Realme and dispersed in such sort as they may not come together nor easily returne if they would For if they might bee suffered to remaine about the Garrisons and there inhabite as they will offer to tille the ground and yeeld a great part of the profit thereof and of their Cattle to the Coronell wherewith they have heretofore tempted many they would as I have by experience knowne bee ever after such a gaule and inconvenience to them as that their profit shall not recompence their hurt for they will privily releive their friends that are forth they will send the Enemy secret advertizements of all their purposes and journeyes which they meane to make upon them they will not also sticke to drawe the enemy privily upon them yea and to betray the fort it selfe by discovery of all her defects and disadvantages if any be to the cutting of all their throates For avoiding whereof and many other inconveniences I wish that they should be carried farre from thence into some other parts so that as I say they come in and submit themselves upon the first summons But afterwards I would have none received but left to their fortune and miserable end my reason is for that those which will afterwards remaine without are stout and obstinate Rebells such as will never be made dutifull and obedient nor brought to labour or civill conversation having once tasted that licentious life and being acquainted with spoyle and out-rages will ever after be ready for the like occasions so as there is no hope of their amendment or recovery and therefore needefull to be cut off Eudox. Surely of such desperate persons as will follow the course of their owne folly there is no compassion to bee had and for others you have proposed a mercifull meanes much more then they have deserved but what then shall be the conclusion of this warre For you have prefixed a short time of its continuance Iren. The end will I assure me bee very short and much sooner then can be
against all that state and now lately through the boldnes and late good successe of of this Feagh Mac Hugh they are so farre imboldened that they threaten perill even to Dublin over whose necke they continually hang. But touching your demand of this Feaghes right unto that Countrey which he claimes or the seigniory therein it is most vaine and arrogant For this you cannot be ignorant that it was part of that which was given in inheritance by Dermot Mac Morrough King of Leinster unto Strongbowe with his daughter and which Strongbowe gave over unto the King and his heires so as the right is absolutely now in her Majesty and if it were not yet could it not be in this Feagh but in O Brin which is the ancient Lord of all that Countrey for he and his auncestours were but followers unto O-Brin and his grandfather Shane Mac Terlagh was a man of meanest regard amongst them neither having wealth nor power But his Sonne Hugh Mac Shane the father of this Feagh first began to lift up his head and through the strength and great fastnes of Glan-Malor which adjoyneth unto his house of Ballinecor drew unto him many theeves and out-lawes which fled unto the succour of that glynne as to a sanctuary and brought unto him part of the spoyle of all the Countrey through which he grew strong and in short space got unto himselfe a great name thereby amongst the Irish in whose footing this his sonne continuing hath through many unhappy occasions increased his said name and the opinion of his greatnes insomuch that now he is become a dangerous Enemy to deale withall Eudox. Surely I can commend him that being of himselfe of so meane condition hath through his owne hardinesse lifted himselfe up to the height that he dare now front Princes and make tearmes with great potentates the which as it is to him honourable so it is to them most disgracefull to be bearded of such a base varlet that being but of late growne out of the dunghill beginneth now to overcrow so high mountaines and make himselfe great protectour of all Outlawes and Rebells that will repaire unto him But doe you thinke he is now so dangerous an enemy as he is counted or that it is so hard to take him downe as some suppose Iren. No verily there is no great reckoning to bee made of him for had he ever beene taken in hand when the rest of the Realme or at least the parts adjoyning had been quiet as the honourable Gent. that now governeth there I meane Sir William Russell gave a notable attempt thereunto and had worthily performed it if his course had not beene crossed unhappily he could not have stood 3. moneths nor ever have looked up against a very meane power but now all the parts about him being up in a madding moode as the Moores in Leix the Cavenaghes in the county of Wexford and some of the Butlers in the county of Kilkenny they all flocke unto him and drawe into his country as to a strong hould where they thinke to be safe from all that prosecute them And from thence they doe at their pleasures breake out into all the borders adjoyning which are well peopled countryes as the counties of Dublin of Kildare of Catherlagh of Kilkenny of Wexford with the spoiles whereof they victuall and strengthen themselves which otherwise should in short time be starved and sore pyned so that what he is of himselfe you may hereby perceive Eudox. Then by so much as I gather out of your speech the next way to end the warres with him and to roote him out quite should be to keepe him from invading of those countryes adjoyning which as I suppose is to be done either by drawing all the inhabitants of those next borders away and leaving them utterly waste or by planting garrisons upon all those frontiers about him that when he shall breake forth may set upon him and shorten his returne Iren. You conceive very rightly Eudoxus but for that the dispeopling and driving away all the inhabitants from the countrey about him which you speake of should bee a great confusion and trouble aswell for the unwillingnesse of them to leave their possessions as also for placing and providing for them in other Countryes me thinkes the better course should be by planting of Garrisons about him which whensoever he shall looke forth or be drawne out with the desire of the spoyle of those borders or for necessity of victuall shall be alwayes ready to intercept his going or comming Eudox. Where then doe you wish those Garrisons to be planted that they may serve best against him and how many in every Garrison Iren. I my selfe by reason that as I told you I am no martiall man will not take upon me to direct so dangerous affaires but onely as I understood by the purposes and plots which the Lord Gray who was well experienced in that service against him did lay downe To the performance whereof he onely required 1000. men to be laid in 6. garrisons that is at Ballinecor 200. footemen and 50. horsemen which should shut him out of his great glynne whereto he so much trusteth at Knockelough 200. footemen and 50. horsemen to answere the county of Catherlagh at Arclo or Wicklow 200. footemen and 50. horsemen to defend all that side towards the Sea In Shillelagh 100. footemen which should cut him from the Cavanaghes and the county of Wexford and about the three Castles 50. horsemen which should defend all the county of Dublin and 100. footemen at Talbots towne which should keepe him from breaking out into the County of Kildare and be alwayes on his necke on that side The which Garrisons so laide will so busie him that he shall never rest at home nor stirre forth abroad but he shall be had as for his Creete they cannot be above ground but they must needes fall into their hands or starve for he hath no fastnes nor refuge for them And as for his partakers of the Moores Butlers and Cavanaghes they will soone leave him when they see his fastnes and strong places thus taken from him Eudox. Surely this seemeth a plot of great reason and small difficulty which promiseth hope of a short end But what speciall directions will you set downe for the services and risings out of these Garrisons Iren. None other then the present occasions shall minister unto them and as by good espialls whereof there they cannot want store they shall be drawne continually upon him so as one of them shall be still upon him and sometimes all at one instant bayting him And this I assure my selfe will demaund no long time but will be all finished in the space of one yeare which how small a thing it is unto the eternall quietnesse which shall thereby be purchased to that Realme and the great good which should growe to her Majesty should me thinkes readily drawe on her Highnesse to the undertaking of the