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A36566 The history of Scotland, from the year 1423 until the year 1542 containing the lives and reigns of James the I, the II, the III, the IV, the V : with several memorials of state, during the reigns of James VI & Charls I / by William Drummond ... Drummond, William, 1585-1649. 1655 (1655) Wing D2196; ESTC R233176 275,311 320

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cause it may be thoright these men found out their new Poesie differing from the Matters Manners Rules of former ages either they did not see the way of Poesie or were affraid to enter it The verses of Camillus Quernus as they are imitated by Strada seem very plausible and to admiration to some but how far they are off right Poesie children may guess These mens new conceptions approach neerer his than to the Majesty and Statelinefs of the great Poets The contempt and undervaluing of verses hath made men spare their travel in adorning them but Poesie as it hath overcom ignorance at last will overcom envy and comtempt This I have been bold to write unto you not to give you any instruction but to manifest mine obedience to your request W. D. To the Right Honourable the Earl of Sterlin WHen the pittiful news came of so dear Funerals though I had an intention to have written to your Lordship I restrained my self both because your wound was flagrant and that I had not an argument of comfort which was not your own Nothing is now left me but to manifest that the sense of this loss could not but perplex him grievously who never made any difference between your fortunes and his own I hold my self Copartner of all your Griefs as I have been of your prosperities I know your Fatherly affiction I know too your constancy which being seasoned with piety will not suffer you to repine at that which is the determinate will of God Your erudition and experience instruct you that such accidents should be taken in a good part and chearfully which are not incident to us alone and which by our sighs tears plaints we may not evite and put far from us ye must not attend till time mitigate your languor for this do the vulgar sort of men with sola dies poterit tantum lenire dolorem A wise man should prevent and anticipate time over-run newborn Grief which is an ungrateful Guest thrusting out and ran sacking the Masters of their Inn. I who am conscious to your patience and wisdom am assured ye have performed all this already upon which confidence I will leave off to trouble you further or lay a heavier burthen and needless task upon my self W. Drummond To SHould ye think to escape this Enemy of Virtue Fortune when she never spareth the most Worthy who hath ever yet in many excellencies been eminent whom she hath not either after one fashion or other if not trampled yet tossed and make not a long search in the old ages of the world and through the Mists of Antiquity but look upon our own Times and our Fathers Ye have Sidney cropped in the vigour of his Youth by a murthering Bullet Rawleigh brought to a fatal Scaffold la Nove with the Marquess D' Urfee complaining in miserable Prisons Tasso famishing in the like Thraldom the two Counts of Mirandula Spectacles of Pitty and Cruelty the one by too soon a Death if death can be too soon the other by being assassinated by his neerhst kinsemen As if Excellencies were the only Object of Disasters and some secret influence laboured to make the bravest of men and the basest equal Or that the superiour powers thought Glory to belong only to them and no praise-worthy Actions should befal poor Mortals Yet should they not envy silly men a dusty honour which in some small moments of time vanisheth and reacheth no further than the narrow bounds of some few Climates of this small Globe of the Earth We may doubt whether Excellencies and Heroical Virtues were to be desired with so many dangers and miseries lackying them or a homebred untaught rude Plobeian life W. DRUMMOND To S. W. A. SIR MY silence this time past proceeded no waies of any forgetfulness of you but from my many new cares and sorrows The loss of so many friends this season hath estranged me from my self and turned my mirth into mourning what civil arms and discord have performed in other kingdomes of Europe a still mortality hath done in this So many Funerals these many years have not been seen as in this one There are few bands of kinred societies acquaintances friendship which by death are not broken here without respect of Age vigour ranck quality and justly this mortality might claim the name of Pestilence if the Dead were deprived of customary burial Well have some Astrological Divines guessed that this year should be the great Judgement What is recorded of the years 100. and 120. that Church yards were not ample enough to contain the dead bodies but that new ground was digged up is true in this and what of the year 1348. that the third of mankind was sweeped from the Earth we may say that though this Countrey hath not lost the third yet that the Almighty providence hath taken away the tenth part of the People This is perhaps a part of that Judgement which the late blazing lights of Heaven did signifie unto us the defects of the Sun besides the malignant influences of other Caelestial Bodies This one year is enought to make men hereafter if not altogether believe yet fear Astrological Predictions which though they fail in particulars yet strangely hold true in some generals Heavens I hope shall preserve you ad molliora et meliora tempora to be a witness and Recorder of their Just Proceedings on this Globe of the Earth for the Good of your self your Friends and all that love you 1623. W. Drummond The Oath of a KNIGHT I shall fortisie and defend the true holy Catholtque and Christian Religion presently possessed at all my power I shall be loyal and true to my Soveraign Lord the King his Majestie and do honour and reverence to all Orders of Chivalrie and to the noble office of Arms. I shall fortifie and defend justice to the uttermost of my power but feed or favour I shall never flie from the Kings Majesty my Lord and Master or his Lieutenant in time of battel or medly with dishonour I shall defend my native Countrey from all aliens and strangers at all my power I shall maintain and defend the honest Adoes and Quarrels of all Ladies of Honour Widows Orphans and Maids of good Fame I shall do diligence wherever I hear tell there is any Traytours Murtherers Rovers and Masterfull Theeves and Outlaws that suppress the Poor to bring them to the Law at all my Power I shall maintain and defend the Noble and gallant State of Chevalrie with Horses Harnesses and other Knightly Apparel to my Power I shall be diligent to enquire and seek to have the knowledge of all Articles and points touching or concerning my duty contained in the Book of Chevalrie All and sundry the Premisses I oblige me to keep and fulfil so help me God by my one hand and by God himself To his loving Cousin IF wishes could have place or prevail I wish ye could be moved to separate your self from the frequent conversation and
of moderation he threatneth still to let f●ll the blow in the mean time holding his hand Thus to give satisfaction to his Court he formed a Process against King Henry and a most severe sentence but abstained from the publication of it during his pleasure Secretly sending many copies of it to those Princes he thought could be useful to his Designs when occassion should serve and he proceed with a constant rumor of the Bull shortly to be put in execution and publisht Amongst many interested in wrongs by the King of England considering there was none comparable to the Nation and King of Scotland he directeth hither Iohn Antonio Come peggio This Legate findeth King Iames at Faulkland 22. February 1535. and here with many Ceremonies and Apostolical Benedictions delivereth him a Cap and a Sword consecrated the Night of Nativity of our Saviour which the fame of his valour and many Christian virtues had moved his Master to remunerate him with Also saith the Original that it might breed a terror in the heart of a wicked neighboring Prince against whom the Sword was sharpned The Popes Letter in most submissive stile contained A Complaint for the death of John Bishop and Cardinal of Rochester miserably taken away by the hand of an Hangeman The Calamities of England occasioned by the Kings Divorce from Katharine of Spain and his Marriage with Anne Bullen That since the Roman Church had received great disgrace and a deadly wound and by patience procured more and more wrongs from the King of England She was constrained to use a s●aring Iron For the application of which she had recourse to his Majesty a Prince ●or his Ancest●urs Piety and his own renowned His aid maintenance protection she implored Since King Henry was a Despiser a Scorner One who set at naught the censures of the Church an Heretick Shismatick a shameful and Shameless Adulterer a publick and profest homicide Murtherer a Sacrilegious Person a Church-Robber a Rebel guilty of ●ese-Majesty divine outragious many and in ●●merable waies a Fellon a Criminal By all Laws herefore 〈◊〉 to be turned out of his Throne The King of Scotland for the Defence of the Church would undertake something worthy a Christi●n King and himself he would endeavour to suppress Heresie defend the Catholick faith against those whom the justice of almighty God and judgments were now prepared and already ready to be denounced The King kindly entertaining the Legate answered the Pope with much regret for the estate and stubbornness of the King of England Who would not be struck with Pitty that a King who late amongst Christian Princes was honoured with the title of Defender of the Faith should be obnoxious to so many crimes that now amongst Princes he could scarce be reputed a Christian This compassion was common to him with others but he by a necessity of Nature and neerness of blood felt a more piercing sorrow he should leave no means untryed to recal his Uncle to the obedience of the Church and though by his Embassadours he had once or twice went about the same but in vain he would study a way how face to face he might give him his best counsel and remonstrate how much good he would do the Christian World and himself by returning again to the Chruch Mean while he requested him not to be heaady forward nor rash in executing the Sentence against his Uncle which would but obdure him in his seperation King Iames not having lost all hopes of Uncle directeth the Lord Arskin to England to acquaint him with the Emperours and Popes Embassages and to take his Counsel about a marriage with the Duke of Vandosms Daughter whom the Fre●ch King had offered to him his own Daughter being weak and sickly In this Embas●age there was a complaint against the Londoners who in their passage to the Island fishing spoyled the Coasts of Orknay and the adjacent Islands with a Request that King Henry would not succour the Lubeckers against the Duke of Hulstein The King of England not to prove inferiour to the Emperour the Pope in conferring honours upon his Nephew admitteth him to the Fraternity of the Garter which he delivered to the Lord Areskin his Embassadour And thereafter dispatched William Lord Howard brother to the Earl of Norfolk as if that name were a sufficient Scar-crow to the Popes Sword and the Emperours Golden-●leece to Scotland who made such hasty journeys that he prevented the News of his comming and at unawares found the King at Sterlin The Substance of his embassage was That the Kings of England and Scotland might have an interview at York at which meeting the King of Scotland should be declared Duke of York and General Lieutenant of the Kingdom of England That his Master having instructions of the Alliances offered him by neighbour Princes did offer to his own and his Counsels judgement if they could find a more fit than to contract a marriage with his Daughter which might be easily perfected if his Master and King Iames could condescend upon some few points When the King had taken these Propositions into deliberation the Church-men suspecting if this meeting and match had way the King would embrace the opinions of the new Reformers set all their wirs to overthrow it The neerest Successors to the Crown covering their claim and interest argued That to marry the Lady Mary of England who for many years would not be mariagable was not a right way to continue his race by procreation of children and that his impatience of living alone would not be much abated by marying a Child That King Henry projected this mariage to no other end than to hinder him from better Allyances or to facilitate an entry to the kingdom That when a Prince would take advantage of any neighbor Prince it was more safely done by alliance than open force That it was more safely King Henry being a wary Prince never meant to mary his Daughter at all as long as himself lived but to keep her at Home with him bearing many Princes in hand to save him from Dangers both at home and abroad which counsel was practised lately by the Duke of Burgundy Most oppose neither to the meeting of the two Kings nor to the Alliance but to the place of their meeting which seemed unto them of no small importance being in the heart of England and amidst the most martial people of that Nation They require the two Kings might have their interview at Newcastle this place when they meet being most commodious for furnishing all necessaries by Ships That the number of their Trayn should be agreed upon as one thousand which none of th two Kings should exceed That the time should be at the Feast of Saint Michael the Arch-Angel between the Harvest and the Winter which would hast the consummation of the Ceremonies and not suffer the Kings to prolong time but invite their return to their own chief and principal Cities When it was declared to
Scotland was all the lands possessed by any former Queen the Earldoms of Strathern and Fyfe with the Palace of Faulkland and other lands of the best and most certain revenue Thus Anno in the Church of Nostre-Dame in Paris the King of Scotland maryed the Lady Magdalen in presence of her Father seaven Cardinals the King of Navarr many great Dukes and Barons King Francis after the Solemnities of this Marriage having Piccardy and Piedmont then over-run by the Imperialists and King Iames fearing he might suffer wrong in his absence from the King of England with assurance of mutual Amity part from other in the end of April and from New-haven the Queen with her husband the 29. of May arrives at the Port of Leith it is reported that after she put her foot on the Shore upon her knees she kissed the ground Praying for all happiness to the Countrey and people Never Queen in so Short a time was more beloved of her Husband nor sooner made conquest of the hearts of her Subjects Nor was their greater hopes conceived of any alliance than of this nor greater joy did ever arise for those hopes but as in the life of man there is ever remaining more of bitter than sweet so were these contentments but Shadows matched with the real Sorrow that the death of that young Lady brought forth For she lived not many weeks after her Arrivall in Scotland when of a Feaver which she contracted in Iune she departed this life in Iuly She was buried with the greatest mourning Scotland ever till that time was participant of in the Church of Holy-rood-house neer King Iames the Second These last honours to the dead Queen and funeral pomp finished the King desirous of Succession hath yet his thoughts wandring in France Mary of Burbon daughter to Charls Duke of Vandosm being frustrate of her Royal hopes had not onely turned religious but was dead of displeasure Whilst he disported himself at the Court of France he had been acquainted with a Lady rich in all excellencies who next Magdalen had the power of his affections Mary of Lorrain Sister to Francis Daughter to Rhene Duke of Guize and Widdow of the Duke of Longue●ille Her he thinketh for hir Stemm healthful complexion fertility for the had been a mother and other fortunes worthy of his love But to try her affection towards him he directeth David Bea●oun his late paranymph and the Lord Maxwell to France Whilst they traffique this Marriage many false accusations as Plots laid against his person are intended one after another at the Court amongst which two are remarkable for their notable calumny Iohn eldest Son to the Lord Forbess a young Gentleman chief of his name hardy and valorous but evi● brought up and therefore easily suspect to be capable of sin had for a Servant or companion and ordinary sharer of his pleasures one named Strachan a man come of the dreg of the people and perfectly wicked This man after much familiarity and some fecret service and attendance to sa●iate his insatiable desire desired earnestly something from the Master of Forbess which he passionately refused to give him upon which carryed away with rage and malice he not onely renounced his friendship and service but betook himself to the Service of his Enemy the Earl of Huntley by whose advice he forgeth a malitious Plot to overthrow him To compass their design they accuse the Master of Forbess to have had once an intention and Mind to kill the King that the Dowglasses might be restored to their wonted honors and antient possessions By price and prayers witnesses are procured to prove this against him and convict him or at the least to leave him suspected and taxed with this Treason Though this crime was not sufficiently and clearly proved yet was the Master of Forbess indicted and convicted by an Assize for having conspired the Kings death for the which he was beheaded and quarter'd and his Quarters set aloft upon the Gates of Edenburgh This Gentlemans death proveth how dangerous the Society and company of the wicked is to any for ascending the fatal scaffold he justifyed his innocency of what was laid to his Charge but confessed the guilt of the Laird of Drummes bloud by the justice of God brought him to that end His Father the Lord Forbess was upon suspi●ion kept long after in the Castle of Edenburgh The King when he could not amend what was past testifyed he was grieved at the death of this Nobleman for he banished Strachan because he had so long concealed the Treason of Forbess silence in a matter importing no less than the life of a Prince being reckoned equal to the Treason he made his second brother one of his Domesticks restoring him to the estate which was forfeited This thunderclap was immediately followed by another for the quality of the person and strangeness of the crime deplorable but more for the horrour and terrour of the punishment Iane Dawglas nister to Archembald Earl of Angus the Widdow of Iohn Lyon Lord Glammes with her Husband Archembald Campbell of Keepn●eth her young Son the Lord Glammes and an old Priest were brought to Edenburgh committed and accused that they should have poisoned the King Their accuser was William Lyon a kinsman of the late Lord Glammes This treason had no probability of truth among such who knew the accused being persons who lived far from the Court in their solitary mansions seldom or never almost seeing the King Nevertheless their accusations were believed and strict command given to the Judges to dispatch their process William Lyon aggravating the case represented to the King the an●●ent faults of the Family of the Dowglass●s committed against his ●redecessors the particular wrongs of Earl Archembald now stirring the English against him and ravaging his Borders That he should believe he not being able to be restored to his first estate by prayers and solicitations of Neighbour Princes nor by open force now set on work his last engines to come to his end though it were with the life of his soveraign That in so secret and dangerous a plot he could not use but his neerest kindred a Woman and his own Sister might attempt such a mischief her●ex and other qualities making her less suspect to have access to his person Suppose cleer proofs could not be found against her the whole race of the Dowglasses should be extirpate being a Linage onely ●ertile in bringing forth monsters of Rebellion That by sparing her life and suffering her to escape he should afford her time licence and power to execute what she but now perhaps had intended The King not knowing the mans particular hatred against this Lady for some write He did inform against her in revenge that she refused to marry him giving her self to another suffred the Process to be concluded Some of the Judges would have referred her to the Kings clemency till a farther tryall of the Witnesses might be had upon whose testimony
Gyants modelled for a sport of Snow which at the hoter looks of the Sun melt away and ly drowned in their own moisture such an impetuous vicissitude towseth the estates of this World Is it knowledge But we have not yet attained to a perfect understanding of the smallest Flower and why the Grasse should rather be green than read The Element of Fire is quite put out the Air is but water rarified the Earth move●h and is no more the Center of the Universe is turned into a Magnes Stars are not sixed but swim in the Etherial spaces Comets are mounted above the Planets some assirm there is another world of men and creatures with Cities and Towers in the Moon the Sun is lost for it is but a cleft in the lower heaven● through which the light of the high●st shines Thus Sciences by the diverse motions of this Globe of the brain of man are become opinions What is all we know compared with what we know not We have not yet agreed about the chief good and felicitye It is perhaps Artificial Cunning how many curiosities be framed by the least Creatures of Nature unto which the industry of the most curious Artizanes doth not again Is it Riches what are they but the cas●ing out of Friends the Snares of liberty bands to such as have them poss●ssing rather then possest metals which nature hath hid fore-seeing the great harm they should occasion and the onely opinion of man hath brought in estimation like Thornes which laid on an open hand may be blown away and on a closing and hard gripping wound it Prodigals mispend them wretches miskeep them when we have gathered the greatest abundance we our selves can enjoy no more thereof than so much as belongs to one man what great and rich men do by others the meaner sort do themselves Will some talk of our pleasures it is not though in the fables told out of purpose that pleasure in hast being called up to Heaven did here forget her apparel which Sorrow thereafter ●inding to deceive the world attired her self with And if we would say the truth of most of our joies we must confess that they are but disguised sorrows the drams of th●ir Honey are ●owred in pounds of G●ll remorse ever enseweath them nay in some they have no effect at all if some wakening grief hath not preceded and forewent them Will some Ladies vaunt of their beauty that is but skin-deep of two sen●●s onely known short even of Marble Statues and Pictures not the same to all eyes dangerous to the B●holder and hurtful to the Possessor an enemy to Chasti●ie a thing made to delight others more than those which have it a superficial lustre hiding bones and the brains things fearful to be looked upon growth in years doth blaste it or sickness or sorrow preventing them Our strength matched with that of the urneasonable Creatures is but weakness all we can set our eyes on in these intricate mazes of life is but vain perspective and deceiving shadows appearing far otherwise afar off than when injoied and gazed upon in a ne●r distance If death be good why should it be feared And if it be the wo●k of nature how should it not be good for nature is an Ordinance and Rule which God hath established in the creating this Vniverse as is the Law of a king which cannot err Sith in him there is no impotency and weak●esse by the which he might bring forth what is unperfect no perverseness of will of which might proceed any vicious action no ignorance by the which he might go wrong in working being most powerful most good most wise nay all-wise all-good all powerful He is the first Orderer and marshalleth every other Order the highest Ess●nce giving essence to all other things of all causes the cause he worketh powerfully bounteously wisely and maketh his Artificial Organ nature do the same How is not Death of Nature sith what is naturally generate is subject to corruption and such an harmony which is life rising from the mixture of the four Elements which are the Ingredients of our bodie can not ever endure the contrariety of their qualities as a consuming Rust in the bas●r Mettals being an inward cause of a necessary dissoution Again how is not Death good sith it is the thaw of all those vanities which the frost of life bindeth together If there be a saciety in life then must there be a sweetnesse in Death The Earth were not ample enough to contain her off-spring if none dyed in two or three Ages without death what an unpleasant and lamentable Spectacle were the most flourishing Cities for what should there be to be seen in them save bodies languishing and courbing again into the Earth pale disfigured faces Skelitons instead of men and what to be heard but the exclamations of the young complaints of the old with the pittiful cries of sick and pining persons there is almost no infirmity worse than age If there be any evil in death it would appear to be that pain and torment which we apprehend to aris● from the breaking of those strait bands which keep the Soul and body together which sith not without great struggling and motion seemes to prove it self vehement and most extreme The senses are the only cause of pain but before the last Trances of Death they are so brought under that they have no or very little strength and their strength lessening the strength of pain too must be lessened How should we doubt but the weakness of sense lesseneth pain sith we know that weakened and maimed parts which receive not nourishment are a great deal less sensible than the other parts of the body And see that old decrepit persons leave this world almost without pain as in a sleep If bodies of the most sound and wholesome constitution be these which most vehemently feel pain it must then follow that they of a distemperate and craisie constitution have least feeling of pain and by this reason all weak and sick bodies should not much feel pain for if they were not dist●mpered and evil complexioned they would not be sick That the Sight Hearing Taste Smelling leave us without pain and unawares we are undoubtedly assured and why should we not think the same of the Feeling That which is capable of feeling are the vital Spirits which in a man in a perfit health are spread and extended through the whole body and hence is it that the whole Body is cap●ble of pain but in dying bodies we see that by pauses and degrees the parts which are furthest removed from the heart become cold and being deprived of natural heat all the pain which they feel is that they do feel no pain Now even as before the sick are aware the vital spirits have withdrawn themselves from the whole extension of the body to succour the heart like distressed Citizens which finding their walls battered down fly to the defence of thei● ittadel
Guilielmus Drummond de Havthornden Hos Gloria Reddit Honores R Gaywood fecit 1654 THE HISTORY OF SCOTLAND From the year 1423. until the year 1542. CONTAINING The LIVES and REIGNS OF JAMES The I. the II. the III. the IV. the V. With several Memorials of State During the Reigns of Iames VI. Charls I. By WILLIAM DRUMMOND of Hauthornden LONDON Printed by Henry Hills for Rich. Tomlins and himself and are to be sold at their houses near Py-Corner THE PREFACE TO THE READER TO Speak in Commendation of History in general were so many waies superfluous that we shall rather leave it to the experience of sober and inquisitive minds than injure the High Elogiums given of both the greatest and wisest Antients and Moderns by a disadvantagious Repetition of them And for to say any thing concerning the Countrey which was the Scene of the actions here represented we conceive it needless and improper in regard we are immured by one Sea breath one air speak one Tongue and now closed together by an happy Coalition under one Government The proper work therefore is to offer what can be said of the History and the Author and so dismiss the Reader to the Entertainment of the Book it self For his manner of Writing though he treat of things that are rather many than great and trouble some than glorious yet he hath brought so much of the main together as it may be modestly said none of that Nation hath done before him And for his way of handling it he hath sufficiently made it appear how conversant he was with the Writings of Venerable Antiquity and how generously he hath emulated them by an happy imitation for the purity of his Language is much above that Dialect he writ in his Descriptions lively and full his Narrations clear and pertinent his Orations Eloquent and fit for the persons that sp●ak for that since Livys time was never accounted Crime in an Historian and his Reflections solid and mature so that it cannot be e●spected that these leaves can be turned over without a● much pleasure as profit especially frequently meeting with so many Glories and Trophies of our Ancestours yet because either of these may a little abate in respect the beginning seem● a little abrupt and precipitious the Author possibly dying before ●e could prepare an Apparatus or Introduction we have taken the pains out of other Records of that Nation to draw a brief Representation of some passages necessary to be foreknown The direct Royal Line of Scotland failing in Alexander III. Son of the II. of that name who when he a few years before had lost both his wife and all his hopeful and numerous issue nothing remaining of it saving a Girl to his Daughter brought to Hungonan King of Norway The Nobility hereupon meet at Scone and put the Kingdom into the hands of six Persons Edward of England sends to demand the Daughter Grandchild in marriage as next Heir of the Crown This was agreed unto Embassadours sent for her but the death of the Lady frustrated all that Negotiation The death of this Margarite so was she called was the firebrand that set England on fire and had almost destroyed Scotland For two Competitors declared themselves both powerful and of great Estates in Scotland and strongly supported with Forein Confederacies for Iohn Baliol had engaged the English Interest and Robert Bruce the French But to be a little clearer we must look back The line thus failing they were forced to run back to the line of David Earl of Huntington Brother to King William this David by his Wife Maud Daughter to the Earl of Chester had three Daughters Marg●●●t married to Allan of Galloway the second to Robert Bruce sirnamed the Noble the third to Henry Hastings Earl of Huntington who made no claim Now thus it stood Dornagil the wife of Baliol claim'd it as grandchild by the Eldest Daughter and Bruce as great Grandchild by the second saying It was not fit that Daughters should inherit when there were Sons to represent the Ancestor Baliol he was neerer as being in the second degree and the other but in the third The Controversie growing high and boysterous and the Power and Interests of both parties at home being equally formidable and dangerous they resolved to refer it to King Edward who comming to Berwick and calling Lawyers to his Assistance pretends all Equity but rais'd up eight other petty Competitors the better to weakon the claim of the other two and so handled the business whilst the Lawyers were slowly consulting that Bruce having refused to accept the Crown in Homage and Tribute from England he declared upon his acceptance of those conditions IOHN BALIOL to be King who was Crowned at Stone But soon after an appeal being made against him to King Edward by Macduff Earl of Fife and he refusing to ri●e from the Seat where he sate to answer but being inforced by the King so to do became so aliened in his affections from the English that a new quarrel breaking out between the French and the English and both by their Embassadours Courting the Scottish Amity it was resolved to adhere to the French and renounce the Homage to England as obtained by Fra●d and Force Edward enraged at this having obtained a Truce for some few Moneths with the French assails Berwick by Sea but with some loss which enflames him the more summons Baliol who refuses pro●ers it to Bruce takes Berwick by Stratagem enters Scotland masters the Countrey takes Edinburgh and Sterlin and forces Baliol to a surrender at Forfar and sends him Prisoner to London whither himself returns having made most of the Nobility do Homage and left the Earl of Surrey his Deputy Baliol soon after is sent into France leaving his Son Edward as Hostage for his fidelity Edward sets ●ail for France the Scots rise and make some little Incursions into the Borders But about this time Si● William Wallas arose who to his Honour did so Heroically de●end his Countrey in her weakest condition as made it easily appear if he had had as happy a fortune to advance as he had a miserable to relieve he might have been remembred for as great a man as ever was in any age for having upon a quarrel slain a young English Gentleman and enforced to lurk in the Hills for the safety of his life he became inured 〈◊〉 ●uch hardness that awaking his natural Courage he 〈◊〉 the Head of all the Male-contents and filled both the Kingdoms with his Reputation and Terror and behaving himself according to expectation glean'd up to a tumultuary Army and the Nobility being either sloathful or cowardly commanded as Baliols Vice-Roy Thus after some little skirmishes he reduced all beyond the Forth took Dundee Aberdeen and other places when there arrived rumour of an English Army which he was not willing to dispute with but upon his own Terms Edward that had fortified all the Considerable places and kept the
Parliamentary Authority can take away Iustice and the Law of God neither is an oath to be observed when as it tendeth to the Suppression of truth and right and though for a time such Acts and oaths have prevailed our designs having good Success we shall have a Parliament approving our right abolishing their pretensions and declaring them Vsurpers This one man and a child taken away if we can give the blow the Kingdome must obey the Lawfull Successor against whom what Subject will revolt or who dare take arms and here is more ●ear than danger But think there were the onely r●medie of emminent dangers is new dangers It was simplicity in him to think by small ben●fits that old injuries are abolished and forgot and that I should take patiently the title of Earl when I should have been King my self by his tyrannizing justice if he be not hated he is not beloved but become terrible to his people who now through their poverty and ●rievances affect a novation and obey him not out of any affection but through necessity and fear and now he also feareth that some do that to him which he hath deserved Let us resolve his doubts our ends are honour and revenge our wills against him all alike and one The Heavens seem to conspire with us having brought him to disband his Army and render himself in the wished place of our attempts and let us rather follow them and fortune which favours great actions than vertue that preacheth cowardly Patience Remembring how fair glosses of valour for the most part have been cast on the ●oulest deeds and the mightest Families have from them derived their honours shame seldom or never following Victory however it be atchieved and purchased That Soveraignty at the first was but a violent usurpation of the stronger over the weaker How great Enterprizes must begin with danger but end with rewards that death should rather be prevented than expected and that it is more honourable to dy than prolong a life in misery wandring in the scorn of other mens pride be resolute in our Plot put the enterprize in execution hast is the spirit of actions of danger the worst that can befall us is since we cannot subsist he being alive that he be taken away whilst we run a hazard of death which happeneth to all men alike with only the difference of Fame or Oblivion with the Posterity which ariseth of an evil action as well of a good if the action and attempt be great but let us not spend the time of execution in deliberation Not long after when they had ponderated and digested the Design Graham and Stuart with their accomplices guided by Resolution and guarded by the darkness of the Night came to the Black Fryers of Pearth and having the way made open unto them entered the Gallery before the Kings Chamber-door where they attended some of their confederates who should have stoln away the Barr by which means they might enter the Chamber but before their comming Fortune casteth the occasion in their hands For Walter Stratoun one of the Kings Cupbearers came forth of the Chamber and finding armed men rushing rudely to force their entrie terrifyed with the boldness of the fact with a high voice gave the Alarum of Treason to his Master While they are working his death a Maid of honour of the Name of Dowglass got to the door and es●aied to shut it but for that the Bar was now away which should have made it fast she thrust her arm in the place where it should have passed but that easily broken the Conspiratours rush in to the Chamber and slaying all such of the waiters as made defence amongst which was Patrick Dumbar Brother to George sometime Earl of March they at last stroke down the King whom whilst the Queen by interposing her body sought to save being hardly pulled from him she received two wounds and he with twenty eight most towards the heart was left dead Thus was King Iames the first who had so superabundantly deserved well of the Common-wealth Ann. Dom. 1436. murthered the 21. of February in the end of the year 1436 the 44. of his age when he had reigned 13. years This King was for the proportion and shape of his body of a middle stature thick and square rather somewhat mean than tall not such as is counted for dainty but for gracefulnesse and Majesty His hair was abourn a colour between white and red He was of so strong and vigorous a constitution that he was able to endure all extraordinary extremities both of travail and want and surpassed for agility and nimbleness in any exercise his companions He was of so sharp and pregnant a wit that there was nothing wherein the commendation of wit consisted or any shadow of the liberal arts did appear that he had not applied his mind unto seeming rather born to Letters than instructed He wrote Verses both Latine and English of which many yet are extant He exercised all Instruments of Musick and equalled the best Professours thereof He had studied all Philosophy but most that which concerns Government in which what a Master he was the order which he established in such a confusion as he found in the State doth witness and many old Laws commodiously renewed and amended others for the publick good established He was a great observer of religious forms easie for access fair in speech and countenance in behaviour kind using sleep and meat to live not for voluptuousness He had good command over his Passions his desires never being above his reason nor his hopes inferiour to his desires Though he was much obliged to the gifts of Nature yet was he more to his good education and training in England Scarce had he passed the nineth year of his age when he was committed to the Sea to shun the Treasons of his Uncle and was surprized at Flambrough-head in Holderness Windsor Castle kept him a Prisoner but by Commandment of King Henry he was so carefully instructed that no Prince could have been better bred in the Schools of Europe What his valour was the wa●s of France bear witness for accompanying the King of England there he layed siege to the Town of Direx and with such violence and valour saith the English History assaulted it for the space of six weeks that with main strength he compelled it to be rendred to his hands and gave it to King Henry That commendation which was given him by that same King of England being recorded by their writers proved prophetically true of him For the King remembring him of his benefits received and promising him greater with free liberty to return to his own Countrey if he could cause the Scots who were adherent to the Daulphin of France to return to their native soyl and leave him To this he answered He was a Prisoner had no possession of his Realm that he was neither sworn to his Subjects nor they by any Oath of
never trust his life to the mercy of those who ●nder colour of friendship and banqueting had first made away his two Kinsmen and after his own Brother for if they being Innocents were thus handled what might he expect who had been the occasion of such distraction in the State He that once had broken his faith except by a surety is unable again in Law to contract and enter in Bond with any Who will be surety between a King and his Subjects That Treaties Agreements Covenants Bargains of a Prince with Rebellious Subjects engage him no farther no longer then the Term-time or day which pleaseth him to accept observe and keep them as they turn or may turn to his utility and advantage that as in Nature there is no regress found from privation to an habit so neither in State men once disgraced do return to their former Honors That Princes mortally hated all Subjects who had either attempted to over-rule them by power or had cast any terror upon them and howsoever by constraint they bear sail for a time in the end they were sure pay●masters That there was nothing more contrary to a good Agreement then to appear to be too earnest and busie to seek to obtain it he would sue for none That all his days he had loved sincerity constancy and fidelity and could not unsay and recant what he had promised and practised nor do against his heart His friends and his own standing was by their Swords which should either advance their enterprizes and turn them Victors or they would die Honorably like themselves and men and not ignobly be murthered like Beasts This free and dangerous resolution of the Earl moved many who heard to provide for their own safety and resolve not to suffer long misery for other mens folly finding this war was not like to have any end and that danger and death would be the only reward of their Rebellion Amongst others the Earl of Crawford after great adversity when he could not move the Earl of Dowglass to submit himself to the Kings clemency with many tears and protestations of his sincere love and counsel to him left him and some weeks after as the King was in progress in Anguss in a sad penitential manner accompanied with his best friends coming in his way with much humility and sorrow He acknowledged his fault pleading rather for pity to his house which had so long flourished then to his person The King knowing his Example would be no small occasion to weaken the power of the Earl of Dowglass and that of all the Rebels he was the greatest object of his Clemency was content to receive him but he would have it done by the mediation of lames Kennedie Bishop of St. Andrews and the Lord Creightoun once his greatest Enemies which he refused not to embrace Thus freely remitted with those who accompanyed him he returned to his own house of Phanheaven where within few moneths he died of a burning Ague The three Estates after assembled at Edinburgh where Iames Earl of Dowglass the Countess Beatrix whom he kept by way of a pretended Marriage Archembold Dowglass Earl of Murrey George Earl of Ormond Iohn Dowglass Lord of Balveny with others their adherents friends and followers are Attainted of High Treason and their Lands and Goods are Confiscate and discerned to be seized on to the Kings use The Earldom of Murrey is given to Iames Creighton who had married the eldest Daughter of the Earl of Murrey but he perceiving he could not possess it in peace turned it back again to the King At this time George Creightoun was created Earl of Caithness William Hay Constable Earl of Arrole Darly Halles Boyd Lyle and Lorn Lords of Parliament the King maketh a rode into Galloway reducing every strong hold and Castle of the Countrey to his Power Dowglass-dale he abandoned to the spoil of the Souldier Matters at home turning desperate the Earl of Dowglass being brought to that pass that he knew not to what to wish or fear Iames Hammilton of Cadyow is sent to England to invite the ancient enemy of the kingdom to take a part of her spoil and help to trouble the King But the English had greater business amongst themselves then could permit them to Wedd the Quarrels of the Earl After Sir Iames Hamiltoun was returned with an excuse and regret that some of the English Lords could not supply their Confusion but only by their Counsel he advised the Earl of Dowglass to trust to his own Power and Forces which were sufficient measuring their Courage and not counting their heads to hold good against the King There was no humane affairs where men were not necessitated to run some danger nor any business taken in hand with such a certainty which by unknown causes and even light ones might not run a hazard of some mishap That he should study to embrace and accept of what was most honorable and least dangerous it was better once to try the worst then ever to be in fear of it it was fit for him to commit something to fortune and wisdom could counsel nothing but to shun the greatest evil This lingring war would not only tire but over-come and vanquish them when one fair day of battel either by death or victory would Crown their desires Others advised him not to hazard upon a Battel except upon seen and approved advantage and to time it out a while in this lingring war a Truce might be agreed upon which ere long might turn in a Peace in which every thing passed might be forgotten and pardoned That Wars were managed more by occasions and times then by arms That the King could not be now but tyred since he had learned that by essaying by arms to overcome them he had gained nothing but trained up his Subjects whom he called Rebels in all warlike Discipline and had his Countrey spoiled and the Policy defaced Should they once enter in blood all hopes were gone of any conditions of peace At this time the King besieging the Castle of Abercorn to relieve the besieged hither marcheth with all his Forces the Earl of Dowglass being come within view of the Kings Army he observeth their march slow the countenances of his Souldiers altered much whispering and their spirits in a manner dejected Countrymen were to fight against Countreymen friends against friends and all against their Prince Interpreting this rather to proceed from their weariedness then want of good will to enter the Lists as well to refresh and cherish them to be more prompt and lusty of courage the next morning as to take counsel what course to follow and how to dispose of their Game he stayeth that afternoon and pitcheth his Tents To men unfortunate every thing turneth an Enemy Whether Sir Iames Hamilton gave way to this or not uncertain but after it is said that in a chase he told the Earl he had neglected the opportunity of Fight and should never see so fair
he supported the banished Scots in England and after they had much enlarged their discourse with reasons of a just War against King Henry if King Iames will arise in arms against him and assist them They promise to restore and render all the Forts and Places of importance taken in the old Wars from the Kingdom of Scotland to him and his Successors King Iames answered the English Ambassadors that he was not ignorant of the State of their Kingdom neither to whom their Crown did appertain but that he would not take upon him to be umpire of their strife for the raising an Army he would think upon it though he had small assurance for the performance of their promised conditions he had long projected the recovering of the lost Fortresses of Scotland in their hands and now he would try whom he might trust The Embassadors dismissed the King raised an Army but left to the Divination of the posterity which of the Parties he was to side The English and French Writers affirm he was to aid King Henry and revenge the death of the Duke of Somerset his Mothers Brother the Scottish to assist the Duke of York and that by a counterfeit Legate from the Pope after he had been upon his March he was moved to return It seemeth perswaded by the French King the ancient Confederate of Scotland and who for that end had sent his Ambassador to keep the English within their own Countrey and disable them in their Conquest of France he intended upon the advantage of this Civil discord to make a rode in England as the French made an Algarad by Sea upon Kent The Kings Army being gathered that it should not loyter in idleness attending greater intelligence from the event of the English Factions having passed the Tweed invadeth the Town of Roxburgh which with little travel is taken and equalled with the Ground the Castle a strong Fortress is besieged Whilst the King here passeth the time inviting it more by courtesies and blandishments then Ammunition and Warlike Engines to be rendred to him Commissioners come from the Duke of York requiring him to leave his Siege and contain himself within his own kingdom unless he would run the hazard to engage himself in a War against the whole Body of the kingdom of England they give him thanks for his forwardness to their supply all things succeeding after their desires now and as they could have wished they request him to return home when their necessity required his aid they would implore it and not prove forgetful for what he should do towards him King Iames asked the Commissioners if the Duke of York and his Associates had sent any direction concerning the keeping of their promises to him when he should appear with an Army They assuring him they had no such Commission I answered the King before their Embassie came had resolved to take in and throw down this Castle builded upon my bounds and being by no benefit obliged to any of your Factions will not for words leave off what I am about by arms to perform The Commissioners departing the King caused apply his Battery against the Castle which couragiously defended it self and holding good beyond expectation bred an opinion that famine would be the only Engine to make it render The Kings Army daily at this Siege increased and amongst all the Companies none were more forward and prompt to discharge their duties in this Service then those of the late League with the Earl of Douglass above others the Earl of Ross to testifie his remembrance of the Kings clemency in his behalf with a great company of his Irish came to the Camp men onely fit for tumultuous fights and spoil Alexander Earl of Huntley coming the King with the Earl of Auguss would take a view of the Trenches and as to welcome a man whose presence seemed to presage good Fortune caused discharge a pale of Ordinance together but his coming to this place was as fatal as at Sterlin prosperous For at this Salve by the slices of an over-charged piece or wedge the King his Thigh-bone broken was stricken immediately dead and the Earl of Auguss was ●ore bruised This mis●fortune happened the third of August the 29 or as others the 30 of the Kings life of his Raign 24. the year 1460. Who will take a fair view of this Prince shall finde him to have been endowed with what conditions and qualities are to be desired or wished in a Monarch both for minde and body of an excellent feature and pleasant aspect a strong vigorous complexion given to all Knightly exercises He is said to have had a broad red spot upon one of his cheeks from which by his Country-men he was named Iames with the fiery face which would make Physiognomists conceive he was of an hot active violent disposition and one who had more need of restraint then encouragement in all difficulties yet in his actions we finde him temperate stayed and of a well setled humor proceeding upon sound grounds and after mature deliberation being much given to follow the advice and counsel of grave men about him He was upright sincere affable courteous loving to his Domesticks humane towards his Enemies gracious and benign to all men a lover of Justice liberal but without oppression of his loyal Subjects wise in adve●sity industrious and diligent politick in Affairs of State having always raised up one Faction to relieve him from the hazard and burthen of another and expose the Faction he most feared to the nearest hazard He was wisely diffident and put on a judicial distrust often to be governed as occasions should vary and could dissimulate according to the fashions and changes of the time He seemeth to have been indifferent in keeping his Favorites and that he could ever as well transfer his fancy as he had setled his affection For like the Sun he would make a round and not always shine upon one Horizon The death of the two Earls of Douglass were fatal to him and though he was innocent of the first the second chanced deservedly in his hand Couragious Princes are not to be provoked by any Subject how great soever Confederations and Leagues are fearful attempts against Soveraignty and for the most part end with the ruine of their Authors The extirpation of the Earls of Douglass in the person of Iames a Church●man proceeded rather from his own stubbornness then any male-talent the King had against him In all Nations it is observed That there are some Families fatal to the ruine of their Common wealths and some persons fatal to the ruine of the Houses and Race of which they are descended Since in Kingdoms some have no compassion of their Prince nor the loss of his Honor a Prince should not much regret their loss nor the ruine of their persons and Estates His great clemency appeared in this That the heads taken away of that long Rebellion he followed no particular revenge upon their
party was forced to give place and yield to the will of the greater Thus the Faction of the Boyds prevailed After this the Kennedies full of indignation and breathing Revenge leave the Court cares grief and age about this time brought Iames Kennedie Bishop of St. Andrews to his Tomb which in great magnificence he had raised in a Church builded by himself in the City of St. Andrews where also he founded a Colledge of Philosophy and indued it with many Priviledges and sufficient Endowments to entertain Professors By the Death of this Prelate venerable for his Wisdom singular for his Justice and the tranquillity following his Government and magnificent in all his actions the Glory of the Court and Country suffered a great Eclipse For he taken away the Boyds laying Foundations for their power and greatness began to turn all to their own advantage The first mark of their envy was Patrick Graham the Brother of Bishop Iames Kennedie by the Mother who was Sister to ' King Iames the first after this man had been chosen Bishop of St. Andrews as the Custom then was by the Chapter appointed for that Election he was barred from his Place and violently repulsed by the Faction at Court To repair which indignity he made a journey to Rome where being a Man noble by birth above others for his Learning and many Virtues in a little time by Pope Sixtus the fourth he was re-established and confirmed in his Place During his abode at Rome the old Question concerning the liberty of the Church of Scotland began to be exagitated The Archbishop of York contested that he was Metropolitan of Scotland and that the twelve Bishops of that Kingdom were subject to his Jurisdiction Patrick Graham remonstrated how the Archbishop of York considering the usual Wars between the two Kingdoms was often unaccessable to the Church-men of Scotland especially in Causes of appellation The Pope after the hearing of both Parties erected the See ofs St. Andrews to the dignity of an Archbishops See and Patrick Graham not only was made Primate and Metropolitan of Scotland ordained to have the other Bishops under him but for the space of three years designed Legate for the Pope with full power to Correct and Restore the Ecclesiastical Discipline and examine the Manners and Conversation of the Clergy Notwithstanding these favors of the Bishop of Rome and the worth and excellencies of the man himself he dared not return home to his own Country before the declining of the Fortunes of the Boyds This Family seemed now in the Zenith and Vertical point of its greatness no imputation could be laid to the Boyds in the time of their Government except that they brought the young King by their private working without the consent and approbation of the other Regents to Edinburgh for the assuming the Government in his Minority In approbation of their innocency and to warrant them from this danger the King in a Parliament declareth publickly that the Boyds were not the Authors nor Projectors of that business but only the Assisters of him and his followers being not formal but instrumentary causes of his coming to the Helm of the State himself That they were so far from being obnoxious to any blame or reproach for this deed that they deserved immortal thanks and an honorable Guerdon in all time to come having obeyed him in that which was most just honest and expedient for the well of the Kingdom Upon this Declaration of the King the Lord Boyd required the present action might be registrated amongst the Acts of Parliament and he obtained what was desired but not with that success was hoped for In this Parliament the other Regents are rid of their charge the Lord Boyd being made only Governor of the Kingdom and the object of all mens respects having the whole power and authority to minister justice of all kinds to the Subjects during the Kings non-age and ●ill he had fully compleat one and twenty years the defence of the Kings Person of his brothers the keeping of the two Ladies his Sisters are trusted unto him He hath all the Towns Castles Fortresses Sea-ports Places of Importance at his Command These proceedings of the Parliament seemed to some very strange in advancing Men already great enough and bestowing upon them all offices of State and adding power to such who wanted only will to do mischief except that they knew well how to abase and pull them down again making their fall the more sudden Robert Lord Boyd having the Reins of Government in his hands and the custody of the Kings Sisters dazelld with the golden Sun of honour to lay more sure the foundation of his greatness joyneth in Marriage Thomas his eldest Son a youth of extraordinary endowments both of minde and body with Margaret the Kings eldest Siste● Not long before designed by her Mother to have been given in Marriage to Edward Prince of Wales and he is created Earl of Arran The Father knowing how easily the conversation of young persons breedeth a liking had brought them up together which turning in a love and delight of others company concluded last in mariage This match though royal great and rich instead of supporting the Fortunes of the Boyds much weakened them turning them the objects of envy The Nobles repined at it and the common people lighter than the wind and more variable than the Rain-bow made it the subject of their foolish discourses Now said they the Boyds aspire to the Crown for the King with his Brothers removed it appertaineth to them a Kingdom being the Dowry often of a Wife of the blood Royal. The Kennedies and such who disliked the present Government take the occasion of the discontentment of the Nobility and the rumors of the people to shake the Kings minde towards the Governor and change the brawl of State To this end they give way to great and universal oppressions most of which were hatched and occasioned by themselves By these in a short time the Commons turn licentious and dissolute contemning all Government every man doing what seemed best in his own eyes and the Gentry divide in Factions Such who wont to live upon Rapine and Theft return to their wonted Trades honest men are spoiled of their goods the seditious and wicked are maintained and defended against all Laws and Justice by their Parties The State thus troubled and all order confounded by slie and crafty men who at first pretended great friendship and interest towards the Boyds the Kings affection towards them is assailed and resolutions tryed Many times having been plausibly listened unto at last pulling off their masks they lay imputations against them They remonstrate to him what great disparagement was between the King of Scotlands eldest Sister and the Son of the Lord Boyd that by this match he was robbed of one of the fairest jewels of his Crown the Boyds should not have appropriated that to themselves of wich they had only the keeping
thighs and legs did appertain They had differing passions and diverse wills often chiding others for disorder in their behaviour and actions after much deliberation embracing that unto which they both consented By the Kings direction they were carefully brought up and instructed in Musick and Foreign Languages This Monster lived twenty and eight years and dyed when Iohn Duke of Albany Governed Claud Gruget maketh mention of the like Monster born in Paris before the marriage of Henry the fourth the French King with Margarite of Valois but the birth and death of it were neer together The King by his great Liberality unto Strangers abroad and his lavi●h spending at home for religious Places were founded Castles repaired Ships builded three of an extraordinary greatness finding himself needy of Treasure to support the dayly expences at Court engaged to many and sunck deep in debt and that Subsidies he could not levy except by the Suffrages of his Parliament by whose power they were imposed and rated setteth the most learned Counsellors at Law and men experienced in foreign Policy to find out new means and waies to acquire and gather him monies by Laws already made and Ordained which was in effect to pole the people by executing the rigour of Justice the Fortunes of wise men arising often on the expences of Fools after the example of King Henry the seventh of England his Father-in law who taking the advantage of the breach of his penal Statues gave power to Sir Richard Empson and Edmond Dudley by Informers and Promoters to oppress and ruin the estates of many of his best Subjects whom King Henry the eight to satisfy his wronged people after his decease caused execute Old customes are by these men pryed into and forgotten absolet Statutes quickned Amongst the titles of possessing of Lands in Scotland there is one which in process of time of an ungodly custom grew strong and is kept for a Law being fetched by imitation from the Lawes of the neighbouring States That if the possessour of Lands dy and leave a Minor to succeed to him his Tutelage belongeth to the King and the profit of the Lands until the Minor be of the age of one and twenty years This is of those lands which are termed Wards The King causeth bring up his Wards but bestoweth no more of their Rents upon them than is useful to such of that age By another Law they have not any thing better than this which they call Recognition that if the evidences of any possessour of Ward-lands be not in all points formal and above exceptions of Law the lands the possessours put from them shall return to the Lord Superiour and like to this That if a Possessour of Ward Lands without the consent of the Superiour sell and put away the half or above the half of his land and Farm the whole land and Farm returneth to the Superiour or Lord Paramount They have lands held with clauses which they call irritant that if two terms of a few duty run unpaid into the third the Land falleth unto the Superiour When those lawes and other like them by reason of the Neighbourin cursions and troubles with England and the civil broyls at home had been long out of use amongst the Subjects and the execution of them as it were in a manner forgot these Projectors and new Tol-masters the king giving way to enrich his Exchequer awakned them Many of the Subjects by these inquirles were obnoxious to the king and smarted but most the most honest who were constrained either to buy their own lands and inheritance from the Exchequer or quit and freely give some portion of them to those Caterpillars of the State The King was so dearly beloved of his people that in the height of those Grievances which reached near the exorbitant avarice of his Father none refused or made difficultie to give all that the laws ordained The King seeing their willingness to perform and knowing their great disability thereunto out of his singular Grace and Goodness remitteth not onely the rigour but even the equity almost of his lawes insomuch that thereafter none of his Subjects were damnified in their persons or estates by his proceedings which gain'd him the hearts of all And to put away all suspitions and jealousies from their minds an Ordinary practice amongst Princes acts that fill Princes coffers ever being the ruin of their first Projectors of any wrong intended He suffered the Promoters and Projectors of this polling with others of the most active to be thrown into Prisons where some miserably ended their daies The year 1507. Iames Prince of Scotland and Isles was born at Holy-rood-House the 21. of Ianuary the Queen in her throwes of birth being brought neer the last agony of death the King overcome with affection and religious vows taketh a Pilgrimage for her recovery on foot to Saint Ninian in Galloway a place in those credulous times famous for the burial of St. Ninian the Apostle of the Britains and notorious by the many Processions and Visits of the neighbour Countreys of Ireland and England at his return he findeth his Queen recovered the child after dyed at Sterlin with the Bishop of Galloway who was appointed to attend him The year following the Queen brought forth another son named Arthur at Holy-rood-House but he died also in the Castle of Edenburgh and Henry the seventh his Grandfather accompanyed him to the other world King Iames to the Coronation of the young King his Brother-in-law sendeth Embassadours After the death of his two Sons and his Father-in-Law as if he had been warned from above to think upon his own mortality whether he had resolute intention so to do or that for reasons known to himself he would have it so appear he giveth out That out of remorse for bearing arms in the Field where his Father was slain he had a resolution to leave his kingdom and visit the holy Sepulchre Then to prepare his way Robert Blacka-Towre Abbot of Dumfermling is directed but the Abbot in his journey is arrested by death and the King findeth other hinderances to keep him at Home Amidst these deliberations his Queen is delivered in the Pallace of Linlithgow of her third Son in the Moneth of April 1512. who succeeded to the Crown and was named Iames. About this same time Bernard Stuart that famous Warrior under Charls the eight of France who commanded the French in Bosworth Field came to Scotland followed by Andrew Forman then Arch-Bishop of Burges and Bishop of Murray with Alexander Stuart the Kings natural son after promoted to be Arch-Bishop of St. Andrews The cause which was given out to the rumours of the people of their comming was That the French King having no male children crav'd the advice and counsel of the King of Scotland his Confederate concerning the marriage of his Eldest Daughter whether he should bestow her upon Francis of Valois the Daulphine and Duke of Augulesm or upon Charles King of
Marches in Revenge of accumulated injuries with three thousand men invadeth the English Borders burneth some Villages and forrageth the Fields about But having divided his forces and sent a part of them loaden with spoils towards Scotland he falleth in an ambush of the English where Sir William Bulmure with a thousand Archers put him to flight and took his Brother George During these border incursions the Lord Dacres and Doctor West came as in an Embassy from England not so much for establishing a Peace and settling those tumults begun by the meeting of Commissioners who assembled and concluded nothing as to give their Master certain and true Intelligence of the Proceedings of the Scots with the French and what they attempted Monsieur de la Motte was come with Letters from the French to stir King Iames to take arms against the English and had in his voyage drowned three English Ships bringing seven with him as Prizes to the Harbour of Leyth Robert Bartoun in revenge of Andrew Bartouns death at that same time returned with thirteon Vessels all Prizes King Lovys had sent a great ship loaden with Artillery Powder and Wines in whicd Mr. Iames Oguylbuy Abbot of Drybrough arrived with earnest request for the renuing of the antient League between France and Scotland and Letters froom Queen Anne for the invasion of England In which she regretted he had not one Friend nor maintainer of his Honour at the Court of France after the late delay of the sending his Ships except her self and her Ladies that her request was He would for her sake whom he had honoured with the name of his Mistress in his Martial sports in time of peace march but one mile upon the English bounds now in time of an appearing war against her Lord and Countrey The King thinking himself already engaged and interested in his fame drawn away by the promises eloquence and other perswasions of the French assembleth the three Estates of his Kingdom to deliberate about a war with England Many oppose it but in vain for at last for fear of the Kings displeasure it is concluded uncertain whether by a worse Counsel or event But before any hostility against the English they determine and decree that King Henry shall by an Herauld be fairly advertised and desired to desist from any further invasion of the Territories of the French King or Duke of Guilders who was General of the French Army the King of Scotlands Confederates and Kinsemen which not being yielded unto the Warre as lawfull and just shall be denounced Henry the eight then besieging Therovenne answered the Herauld who delivered his Commission That he heard no thing from him but what he had expected from a King a Despiser of Gods and Mans Law for himself he would not give over a War so happily began for any threats Neither did he care much for that Mans friendship of whose unconstancy he had so often had experience nor for the power of his Kingdom and ambitious poverty After this answer of the King of England A Declaration by the King of Scotland was published almost to this sense Though Princes should direct their Actions more to conscience than Fame and are not bound to give an account of them to any but to God alone and when Armies are prepared for Battel they look not so much to what may be said as to what ought to be done th● 〈◊〉 being over thought to have had reason upon their side and the justest cause yet to manifest our sincerity and the uprightness of our proceedings as well to these present times as to posterity who may hereafter enquire after our deportments that all may take a full view of our intentions and courses we have been mov'd to lay down the justness and equity of our Arms before the Tribunal of the World The Laws of Nations and of Nature which are grounded upon the Reason by which Man is distinguished from other Creatures oblige every one to defend ●imself and to seek means for ones own preseration is a thing unblamable bnt the Laws of Soveraignty lay greater Obligations upon us and above all men Monarchs and they to whom God hath given the Governments of States and Kingdomes are not only bound to maintain and defend their own Kingdomes Estates and Persons but to relieve from unjust Oppression so far as is in their power being required their Friends Neighbours and Confederates and not to suffer the weak to be overthrown by the stronger The many Innovations and troubles raised upon all sides about us the wrongs our Subjects have suffered by the insolencies and arrogancy of the Counsellors of Henry King of England our Brother-in-Law are not onely known to our Neighbour but blazed amonst remotest Countreys Roads and Incursions have been made upon our Borders Sundry of our Leiges have been taken and as in a just warr turned Prisoners the Warden of our Marches under Assurance hath been miserably kelled our Merchants at Sea invaded spoiled of their goods liberties lives above others the chief captain of our Ships put to Death and all by the kings own Commission upon which breaches between the two kingdomes disorders and manifest wrongs committed upon our Subjects when by our Embassadours we had divers times required satisfaction and Reparation we received no justice or answer worthy of him or us our Complaints being rejected and we disdainfully contemned that longer to suffer such Insolencies and not by just force to resist unjust violence and by dangers to seek a remedy against greater or more imminent dangers Not to stand to the defence of our Lieges and take upon us their protection were to invite others to offer the like affronts and injuries to us hereafter Besides these Breaches of Duty Outrages Wrongs done unto us his Brother Henry king of England without any just cause or violence offered to him or any of his by the king of France hath levyed a mighty Army against him invaded his Territories using all hostility Continuing to assault and force his Towns make his Subjects Prisoners kill and ransom them impose Subsidies and lift moneys from the quieter sort which wrongs dammage and injustice we cannot but repute done unto us in respect of our earnest intercessions unto him and many requests rejected and that antient League between the two kingdomes of France and Scotland in which these two Nations are obliged respectively and mutually bound to assist others against all Invaders whatsoever that the Enemy of the one shall be the Enemy of the other and the Friends of the one the Friends of the other As all motions tend unto rest the end of a just war being Peace that our Brother who hath no such Enemy as the too great Riches and abundance in which he swimmeth may entertain Peace with his Brother Princes and moderate that boundless ambition which maketh him usurp Dominion over his equals we have been compelled to take us to defensive arms for our Brother hath now declared himself and
delivering of Perkin Warbeck he trusted much and had great confidence in his Nobility and governed by love not by fear his people It is no wonder amidst so much worth that some humane frailty and some according discord be found There is no day so bright and fair which one moment or other looketh not pale and remaineth not with some dampish shadow of discoloured Clouds He was somwhat wedded to his own humours opiniative and rash Actions of rashness and timerity even although they may have an happy event being never praise worthy in a Prince He was so infected with that illustrious crime which the Ambitious take for virtue desire of Fame that be preferred it to his own life and the peace of his Subjects He so affected popularity and endeavoured to purchase the love of his people by Largesses Banquetting and other Magnificence diving in debt that by those Subsidies and exc●ssive exacti●ns which of necessity he should have been constrained to have levied and squeized from the people longer life had made him lose all that favor and love he had so painfully purchased that death seemed to have come to him wishedly and in good time The wedding of others Quarrels especially of the French seemeth in him inexcusable a wise Prince should be slow and loath to engage himself in a war although he hath suffered some wrong He should consider that of all humane actions and hazards there is not one of which the precipitation is so dangerous as that of beginning and undertaking a war Neither in humane affairs should there more depths be founded nor hidden passages searched and pryed into than in this He should remember that besides the sad necessity which is inseparable from the most innocent war the wasting and destroying of the goods and lives of much people there is nothing of which the Revolutions and Changes are more inconstant and the conclusions and ends more uncertain The Sea is not more treacherous false and deceiving nor changeth not more swiftly her calms into storms than wars and the fortune of arms do the event and success belying the beginning It is not enough that a Prince know a war which he undertaketh to be just but he should consider also if it be necessary and if it be profitable and conduce to the State which he governeth As men of strong and healthful bodies follow ordinarily delight in their youth he was amourously carryed away He confined the Earl of Anguss in the Isle of Arran for taking Iane Kennedy a Daughter of the Earl of Cassilles out of Galloway a fair and noble Lady of whom he became enamoured as he went in his pilgrimage to St. Ninians In his last expedition the Lady Foord was thought to have hindered the progress of his arms and hasten'd the success of the battel Though virtue be sometimes unfortunate yet is it ever in an high esteem in the memories of men such a desire remained of him in the hearts of his people after his loss that the like was not of any King before him Princes who are out of this life being onely the Delights and Darlings of a people Anne the French Queen not many dayes out-lived the rumour of his death He serves for an example of the frailty of great men on the Theatre of this world and of the inconstancy of all Sub-Lunary things He had children Iames and Arthur who dyed Infants Iames who succeeded him Alexander born after his death who dyed young Alexander a natural son Arch-Bishop of Saint Andrews so much admired and courted by Erasmus Margarite of a Daughter of the Lord Drummonds maried to the Earl of Huntley whose mother had been contracted to the King and taken away to his great regret by those who governed the State that he should not follow the example of King Robert his Predecessour who maryed a Lady of that Family Iames earl of Murray Iams V King of Scotes Ano. 1514 THE HISTORY OF THE LIFE REIGN OF Iames the Fift King of Scotland THe fatal accident nd over throw of the King and Flower of the Nobility of Scotland at Flowden filled the remnant of the State with great sorrow but with greater amazement and perplexity for by this great change they expected no less than the progress and advancement of the Victors Arms and Fortune and feared the conquest se●virude and d●solation of the whole Kingdom The rigorous season of the year being spent in mourning and performing of last duties to the dead for their lost kinsmen and friends and the gatheing together the floating Ribbs and dispersed plancks of this Ship-wrack the Peers assembled at Sterlin where being applying themselves to set their confuons in order and determine on the Remedies of their present evils the lively pourtraict of their Calamities did represent it self to the full view The head and fairest parts which Majesty Authority Direction Wisdom had made emin●nt were cut away some turbulent Church-men Orphan Noblemen and timorous Citizens fill their vacant places and many who needed directions themselves were placed to direct and guide the Helm of State such miseries being alwaies incident to a people where the Father of the Countrey is taken away and the Successor is of under age In this Maze of perplexity to di●oblige themselves of their greatest duty and give satisfaction to the most and best the lawful Successour and Heir IAMES the Prince is set on the Throne and Crowned being at that time one year five moneths and ten daies of age and the hundreth and fifth King of Scotland The Last Will and Testament which the late King had left before his expedition being publickly seem and approved the Queen challenges the Protection of the Realm and Tutelage of her Son as disposed unto her so long as she continued a Widdow and followed the Counsel and advise of the Chancellour of the Realm and some other grave Counsellours and she obtained it as well out of a Religion they had to fulfill the will of their deceased Soveraign as to shun and be freed of the imminent arms and imminent danger of her Brother the King of England Being established in the Government and having from all that respect reverence and observance which belong to such a Princess she sent Letters to the King of England that having compassion upon the tears and prayers of a Widdow of his sister of an Orphan of his Nephew he would not only cease from following the Warre upon Scotland then at war with it self and many waies divided but ennobled by courage and goodness be a defence unto her the infant her Son against all injuries to be offered them by Forrainers abroad or any of the factious Nobility who would oppose themselves a gainst her at home To which King Henry answered That with the Peaceable he would entertain Peace and with the froward and turbulent war if the Scots would live in Peace they should have it for his part but if they would rather fight he was not to refuse
to create as many out of the Gentry in whom being his own Creatures he might have great confidence than any made by his Predecessours After this he turned so retired sullen and melancholly that every thing displeased him and he became even insupportable to himself not suffering his Domestick Servants to use their ordinary disport and recreations neer him And as all day he proj●cted and figured to himself new cares to perplex himself some of which might fall forth others could never come to pass So in the night time the objects of his dayly projects working upon his fantasie limmed their dark shadows of displeasures which gave him terrib●e affright in his sleep Amongst many of which two are recorded as notable one in the History of the Church the other common both seem to have been forged by the Men of those times who thought fictions as powerful to breed an opinion in discontented minds as verities and they may challenge a place in the poetical part of History As he lay in the Pallace of Lithgow about the midst of the night he leaped out of his Bed calleth for Lights commandeth his Servants to search Thomas Scot his Justice Clark who he said stood by his Bed-side accompanied with hideous weights cursing the time that ever he had served him for by too great obedience to him he was by the justice of God condemned to everlasting torments Whilst they about him labour to cure his wounded Imagination news came that Thomas Scot about that same hour of the Night was departed to the other World at Edenburgh and with no better Devotion than he was represented to the King After Sir Iames Hamiltoun had ended his part of this Trage-comedy of life he seemed to the King to have returned on the Stage and in a ghastly manner with a naked Sword in his hands he thought he parted both his arms from him advertising him he would come again shortly and be more fully revenged till which occasion he should suffer these wounds The next day after this vision which is recorded to have been the seaventh of August word came that both his Sonns were deceased and that almost in one hour Iames the Prince then one year old at St. Andrews Arthur one moneth old at Sterlin The King of England finding himself disappointed by his Nephew of their meeting and understanding it to have been occasiond by the Rhetorick and liberality of the Churchmen having many of the Nobility of Scotland of his faction whose innocency interpreted his Religion to be the reformed though indeed it was of his own stamp for he abolished the Pope but not Popacy by making prizes of Scottish Ships upon the Seas with his Fleet and incursions of his garrison'd Souldiers upon land beginneth the prologue of an unnecessary war King Iames to stop the English incursions placeth George Gordoun Earl of Huntley with his full power and authority at the Borders and directeth Iames Lermound of Darcey towards his Uncle to give sufficient reasons of his not meeting him at Newcastle withall to seek restitution of his Ships sith taken before any lawful War was proclaimed and to expostulate the hostility of the Borderers King Henry not only refuseth render the Ships or give a reason for the breaking forth of the Garrisons on the Borders but delaying the answer of the Scottish Embassadour upon advantage of time s●ndeth Sir Robert Bowes seconded with the Earl of Angus and Sir George Dowglas in hostile manner to invade Scotland These to the number of three thousand burn spoil small villages and ravage the Countrey neer the debatable bounds The Earl of Huntley omitteth no occasion to resist them places garrisons in Kelsoo and Iedburgh assembling all the hardy Bordrers and invadeth the English and Scottish forces at a Place named Hall-den rig here it is soundly skirmished till the Lord Hume by the advancing of four hundred fresh Launces turned the fortune of the Day for the English were put to flight the Warden Sir Robert Bowes Captain of Norham Sir William Mowbray Iames Dowglas of Parkhead with a natural Son of the Earl of Angus were taken Prisoners the Ear● by the advantage of his horse escaping with others to the number of six hundred The Warden staied in Scotland till the Kings death This Road happened prosperously to the Scots the 24. of August 1541. being a Dise-mall St. Bartholomew to the English The War continuing till Midsommer King Henry sent the Earl of Norfolk whom he named the Rod of the Scots with great power towards Scotland with him the Earls of Shrewsbury Derby Cumberland Surrey Hereford Angus Rutland and the Lords of the North parts of England with an Army of fourty thousand men as they were esteemed With them he directeth Iames Lermound of Darcey the Scotish Embassadour to keep an equal march till they came to B●rwick and there to stay that he should not give advertisement to his Master of any of his proceedings the Earl of Huntley upon advantages of places resisting the adventuring Routs who essayed to cross the Tweed But King Iames hearing the old Duke of Norfolk was their Leader raiseth from all the parts of his Kingdom Companies and assembling them upon S●wtery● edge mustered thirty thousand men They encamped on Fallow-Moor the King having advertisement that the Duke would march towards Edenburgh Ten thousand strong the Lords Hume Seatoun Areskin to make up the Earl of Huntleys forces are sent towards the borders The King himself expecting the Artillery and other furniture of War staieth with the body of the Army in the Camp Durin this time it is reported the Lords plotteth a Reformation of the Court according to the example practised at Lawder-Bridge especially against such who were named Pensioners of the Priests but because they could not agree among themselves about those who should stretch the ropes every one striving to save his kinsman or friend they escaped all the danger That this attempt being revealed to the King he dismist some of his favourites in great fear to Edenburgh So malitious is faction armed with power Thomas Duke of Norfolk by such in the Scotish Camp who favoured King Henry having understood the preparation and mind of King Iames to meet him in an open field well knowing that Fortune had that much of a woman to favour young men more than old and that honourable ●etreits are no waies inferiour to brave Charges retireth off the Scottish ground and keeps his forces on their own marches For the valour and resolution of this young Prince might perhaps spoil and divest him of his former purchased Lawrels and Palms to the applause of King Henry who some thought being wearie of his service to this effect sent him to Scotland A great number of the Lancastrian● and North-Humbrians who upon hopes of spoil had followed him pretending want of Victuals and the rigorous season of the year with arms and baggage leave this Army Having done little harm to the Scots and suffered much
education acquaintance familiarity conversation out of all which they collect many apparences possibilities likely hoods and their prophecies are refer'd ad Sort●em ad Pacta ad Prudentiam consultorum stultitiam Consulentium the sagacity of the Astrologer the blokishnes of the Consulter Of Contingencies no certain knowledge can be obtained by Art But all those events which Astrologers aver to come are fortuital and casual contingents then they cannot be learned or known by any precepts of Art How can a Caldean by that short minute instant moment of time in which a man is born set down the div●rse changes mutations accidents of his life if we were to consider of those things it would appear we should not be solicitous so much and take notice how the air is affected at the infants coming in this world as we should observe and respect the matter and disposition of the whole body in whi●h a greater virtue is infused or of the time of the conception Then how unlikely is it and without any s●mblance of truth that the many almost numberles conjunction of Stars which occur and present themselvs in the progress of a Mans life should match and countervail that one Horoscope or Conjunction which is found at his birth Moreover to find out and know the actions of the free will of a man of what importance should we hold nourishment education age the place his conversation every one of which after their own manner contributing to the constitution and complexion of the person how great effects must all these together produce If that moment of the time of birth be of such moment whence proceeederh the great differences of the constitutions of Twins which though together born have strange divers and contrary ●ortunes in the progress of their lives all that knowledge if there be any such of things contingent to which we attain by the aspects of Stars is uncertain frivolous and changeable This the Devils themselves consessed when upon consultations of things to come for the most part they gave doubtful and ambiguous answers The Stars are not malignant mischeivous spitefull nor by their aspects malicious if they were such that should be either by election or nature They are not by Election for then th●y should have senses and fouls and as Animals be troubled with perturbations and tossed like unto us which followe●h election They are not malitious by nature sith God created them and God is not a Creator of what is evil nor is the framer wh●ts not good the Heavens are all good and in every degree and figure the divine bounty shineth Why do not Astrologers at their pleasure procreate Kings for they have no great labour but to choose out opportun●m ho●rnt and ask counsel of the fatal Stars Had Giges who of a servant became a King a kingly aspect or Servius Tullus or that Tartar Tamerlane royal Images and figures Vain should all Laws be all sentences and doom of Judges vain the Rewards of virtue and good men vain the punishments of vices and evils if the great beginnings and Originals of them were compelled driven and forced and if what is just or wrong were not in a man himself The Thief should not be a Thief the Murtherer a Murtherer wicked and unjust they should not be the one being necessitated to steel the other to shed bloud by the Stars Trust in the first cause God Almighty and scorn vain Predictions That infinit eternal essence though the Stars should incline yea necessitate and be averse can countermand and turn them propitious All things turn unto the best unto such as rely on his Eternal goodness W. Drummond A CYPRESSE GROVE THough it hath bin doubted if there be in the soul such imperious and super-excellent power as that it can by the vehement and earnest working of it deliver knowledge to another without bodily Organs and by the onely conceptions and Ideas of it produce real Effects yet it hath bin ever and of all held as infallible and most cretain that it often either by out ward inspiration or some secret motion in it self is augure of its own misfortunes and hath shadows of approaching dangers presented unto it before they fall ●orth Hence so many strange apparitions and signs true visions uncouth heaviness and causeless uncomfortable languishings of which to seek a reason unless from the sparkling of God in the Soul or from the God-like sparkles of the Soul were to make unreasonable by reasoning of things transcending her reach Having often and diverse times when I had given my self to rest in the quiet solitariness of the Night found my imagination troubled with a confused fear no sorrow or horror which interrupting sleep did astonish my senses and rowse me all appalled and transported in a suddain agony and amazedness of such an unaccustomed perturbation not knowing nor being able to dive into any apparent cause carried away with the stream of my then doubting thoughts I began to ascribe it to that secret fore-knowledge and presaging power of the prophetick mind and to interpret such an Agony to be to the Spirit as a faintness and universal weariness useth to be to the body a sign of following sickness or as winter Lightnings or Earth quakes are to Common wealths and great Cities Harbingers of more wretched events Hereupon not thinking it strange if whatsoever is human should befall me knowing how providence overcoms grief and discountenances Crosses and that as we should not despair of evils which may happen to us we should not be too confident nor lean much to those Goods we enjoy I began to turn over in my remembrance all that could afflict miserable Mortality and to fore-cast every thing that with a Mask of horror could shew it self to humane eyes till in the end as by unities and points Mathematicians are brought to great numbers and huge greatne●s after many fantastical glances of the woes of mankind and those incumbrances which follow upon life I was brought to think and with amazement on the last of humane terrors or as one termed it the last of all dreadful and terrible Evils Death For to ea●ie censure it would appear that the Soul if it fore see that divorcement which it is to have from the body should not without great reason be thus over-grieved and plunged in inconsolable and unaccustom'd sorrow considering their near union long famil●arity and love with the great change pain unliness which are apprehended to be the in separable attendents of Death They had their being together parts they are of one reasonable Creature the ha●ming of the one is the weakning of the working of the other what sweet contentments doth the soul enjoy by the senses They are the Gates and Windows of its knowledge the Organs o● its Delight If it be ●edious to an excellent player on the Lute to abide but a few Moneths the want of one how much more the being without such noble Tools and Engines be plainful to
so do they abandon the heart without any sensible touch As the flame the oyl failing leaveth the wick or as light the Air which it doth invest As to the shrinking motions and convulsions of sinews and members which appear to witness great pain let one represent to himself the strings of an high tuned Lute which breaking retire to their natural windings or a piece of Ice that without any outward violence cracketh at a Thaw No otherwise do the finews of the body ●inding themselves ●lack and unbended from the brain and their wonted labours and motions cease struggle and seem to stir themselves but without either pain or sense Swoning is a true Pourtrait of Death or rather it is the same being a cessation from all action and function of sense and life but in Swoning there is no pain but a ●ilent rest and so deep an● 〈◊〉 a sl●ep that the natural is nothing in compar●●on of it wh●t great pain then can there be in death which is but a continued Swowning and a never again returning to the works and dolorous felicity of life Now although Dea●h were an extream pain sith it is in an inst●nt what'can it be why should we fear it for while we a●e it commeth not and it being come we are no more Nay though it were most painful long continuing and terrible ugly why should we ●ear it Sith fear is a foolish passion but where it may preserve but it cannot preserve us from Death yea rather the fear of it banishing the comforts of present con●entments makes death to advance and approach the more near unto us That is ever terrible w●ich is unknown so do littl● children fear to go in the dark and their fear is increased with tales But that perhaps which anguisheth thee most is to have this glorious pageant of the World removed from thee in the Spring and most delicious season of thy life for though to dy be usual to dy young may appear extraordinary If the present fruition of these things be unprofitable and vain what can a long continuance of them bee Stranger and new Halcyon why would thou longer nestle admidst these unconstant and stormy Waves Hast thou not already suffered enough of this world but thou must yet endu●e more To live long is it not to be long troubled But number thy years which are now and thou shalt find that whereas ten have overlived thee thousands have not attained this age One ye●r is sufficient to behold all the magnificence of Nature nay even one day and night for more is but the same brought again This Sun that Moon these Stars the varying dance of the Spring Summer Autumn winter is that very same which the golden age did see They which have the longest time lent them to live in have almost no part of it at all measuring it either by the space of time which is past when they were not or by that which is to come why shouldst thou then care whether thy daies be many or few which when prolonged to the uttermost prove paralel'd with eternity as a Tear is to the Ocean To dy young is to do that soon and in some fewer daies which once thou must do it is the ●●ving over of a Game that after never so many hazards must be lost VVhen thou hast lived to that age thou desirest 〈◊〉 one of Plato's years so soon as the last of thy daies riseth ●bove thy Horizon thou wilt then as now demand longer respit and exspect more to come It is Hope of long life that maketh life seem short VVho will behold and with the eye of advice behold the many changes attending on humane affairs with the after-claps of Fortune shall n●v●r lament to dy young Who knows what alterations and sudden disasters in outward estate or inward contentments in this wildernefs of the world might have befallen him who dyeth young if he had lived to be old Heaven fore-knowing imminent harms taketh those which it loves to it self before they fall forth Pure and if we may so say Virgin Souls carry their bodies with no smal agonys and delight not to remain long in the dregs of humane corruption stil burning with a desire to turn back to the place of their rest for this world is their Inn and not their Home That which may fall forth every hour cannot fal out of time Life is a Journey in a dusty way the furthest Rest is Death in this some go more heavily burdened than others swift and active Pilgrims come to the end of it in the morning or at Noon which Tortoise●paced Wretches clogged with the fragmentary rubbidge of this world s●arce with great travel cr●wl unto at Midnight Dai●s are not to be esteemed after the number of them but after the goodness more co●passe maketh not a Sphear more compleat but as round is a little as a large Ring nor is that Musitian most praise-worthy who hath longest played but he in measured accents who hath made sweetest melody to live long ●ath often been a let to live well Muse not how many years thou mightest have enjoyed life but now sooner thou mightst have lossed it neither grudge so much that is no better as comfort thy self that it hath been no worse let it suffice that thou hast lived till this day and after the course of this world not for nought thou hast had some smiles of fortune favors of t●e worthiest some friends and thou hast never been disfavoured of the Heaven Though not for Life it self yet that to after-worlds thou mightst leave some monument that once thou wast happilie in the clear light of Reason it would appear that life were earnestly to be desired for sith it is denyed us to live ever said one let us leave some worthy Remembrance of our once here being and draw out this Spanne of life to the greatest length and so far as is possible O poor ambi●ion to what I pray thee maiest thou concreded ●t Arches and stately Temples which one age doth raise doth not another raze Tombs and adopted Pillars ly buried with those which were in them buried Hath not Avarice defaced what Religion did make glorious all that the hand of man can uprear is either overturned by the hand of man or at length by standing and continuing consumed as if there were a secret opposition in fate the unevitable decr●e of the Eternal to controul our indust●y and contercheck all our devices and proposing P●ssessions are not enduring Children loose their names Families glorying like Marigolds in the Sunne on the highest top of Wealth and Honour no better than they which are not yet born leaving off to be So doth Heaven confound what we endeavour by labour and art to destinguish That renown by Papers which is thought to make men immortal and which nearest doth approach the life of these eternal bodies above how slender it is the very word of paper doth import and what is it when obtained but a
many expiations sacrific●s prayers solemnities and mystical Ceremonies To what such sumptuous T●mples and care of the Dead to what all Religion If not to shew that they expected a more excellent m●nner of being after the navigation of this life did take a● end And who doth deny it must deny that there is a Providence a God confess that his worship and all study and reason of virtue are vain and not believ that there is a world are creatures and that He himself is not what He is As those Images were pourtraicted in my mind the morning Star now almost arising in the East I found my thoughts mild and quiet calm and not long after my fenses one by one forgetting their uses began to give themselves over to rest l●aving mein a still and peaceable sleep if sleep it may be called where the mind awaking is carryed with free wings from ou● fl●shly bondage For heavy lids had not long cov●red their lights when I thought nay sure I was wher● I might difcern all in this great All the large compass of the rolling Circles the brightness and continual motion of those Rubies of the Night which by their distance he●e below cannot be perceived the silver countenance of the wandring Moon shining by anothers light the hanging of the Earth as environed with a girdle of Chrystal the Sun enthronized in the midst of the Planets eye of the Heavens Gem of this precious Ring the World But whilst with wonder and amazement I gazed on those Celestial splendors and the beaming Lamps of that glorious Temple there was presented to my sight a Man as in the Spring of his years with that self● same grace comely feature Majestick look which the late was wont to have on whom I had no sooner set mine eyes when like one Planet-stroken I become amazed But hee with a milde demeanour and voice surpassing all humane sweetnesse appeared me thought to say What is it doth thus anguish and trouble thee Is it the remembrance of Death the last Period of Wretchedness and entry to these happy places the Lantern which lightneth men to see the mystery of the blessednesse of Spirits and that glory which transcendeth the Courtain of things visible Is thy Fortune below on that dark Globe which scarce by the smalnesse of it appeareth h●re so great that thou art heart broken and dejected to leave it What if thou wert to leave behind thee a so glorious in the eye of the World yet but a Mote of Dust encircled with a Pond as that of mine so loving such great hopes these had been apparent occasions of lamenting and but apparent Dost thou think thou leavest Life too soon death is best young things fair and ●xcellent are not of long endurance upon Earth Who ●iveth well liveth long Souls most beloved of their Maker are soonest relieved from the bleeding cares of Life and most swift●y wafted through the Surges of Humane miseries Opinion that Great Enchantresse and peiser of ●hings not as they are but as they seem hath not in any ●hing more than in the conceit of Death abused man Who must not measure himself and esteem his estate after his earthly being which is but as a dream For though he ●e borne on the Earth he is not born for the Earth more than the Embryon for the Mothers Womb. It Plaineth to be delivered of its bands and to come to the light of thi● World and Man waileth to be loosed from the Chaines with which he is fettered in that valley of vanities It nothing knoweth whither it is to go nor ought of the beauty of the visible works of God neither doth man of the magnificence of the Intellectual World above unto whic● as by a Mid-wife he is directed by Death Fools which think that this fair and admirable Frame so variously disposed so rightly marshalled so strongly maintained enriched with so many excellencies not only for necessity but for ornament and delight was by that Supreme wisdom brought forth that all things in a circulary course should be and not be arise and dissolve and thus continue as if they were so many Shadowes cast out and caused by the encountring of these Superiour Celestial bodies cha●ging onely their fashion and shape or Fantastical Imageries or prints of faces into Chrystal No no the Eternal Wisdome hath made man an excellent creature though he fain would unmake himself and return to nothing And though he seek his ●elicity among the reasonless Wights he hath fixed it above Look how some Prince or great King on the Earth when he hath raised any Stately City the work being atchieved is wont to set his Image in the midst of it to be admired and gazed upon No otherwise did the Soveraign of this All the Fabrick of it perfected place man a great Miracle formed to his own pattern in the midst of this spacious and admirable City God containeth all in him as the beginning of all man containeth all in him as the midst of all inferiour things be in man more noble than they exist superiour things more meanly Celestial things favour him earthly things are vassalled unto him he is the band of both neither is it possible but that both of them have peace with him who made the Covenant between them and him He was made that he might in the Glasse of the world behold the infinite Goodnesse Power and glory of his Maker and beholding know and knowing Love and loving enjoy and to hold the Earth of him as of his Lord Paramount never ceasing to remember and praise Him It exceedeth the compasse of conceit to thi●k that that wisdome which made every thing so orderly in the parts should make a confusion in the whole and the chief Master-piece how bringing forth so many ●xcellencies for man it should bring forth man for baseness and miserie And no less strange were it that so long life should be given to Trees Beasts and the Birds of the Air Creatures inferiour to Man which have less use of it and which cannot judge of this goodly Fabrick and that it should not be denyed to Man unless there were another manner of living prepared for him in a place more noble and excellent But alas said I had it not been better that for the good of his native Countrey a endued with so many peerlesse gifts had yet lived How long will yee replyed hee like the Ants think there are no fairer Palaces than their Hills or like to purblind Moles no greater light than that little which they shun As if the Master o● a Camp knew when to remove a Sentinel and he who placeth Man on the Earth knew not how long he had need of him Every one commeth there to act his part of this Tragi-Comedie called life which done the Courtain is drawn and ●e removing is said to dy That Providence which prescribeth Causes to every event hath not onely determined a definite and certain number of daies but of