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A33686 A detection of the court and state of England during the four last reigns and the inter-regnum consisting of private memoirs, &c., with observations and reflections, and an appendix, discovering the present state of the nation : wherein are many secrets never before made publick : as also, a more impartiall account of the civil wars in England, than has yet been given : in two volumes / by Roger Coke ... Coke, Roger, fl. 1696. 1697 (1697) Wing C4975; ESTC R12792 668,932 718

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of Contention and so it is taken in the Accord of the two Kingdoms Whether Lieutenant Gen. Cromwel be such an Incendiary between the two Kingdoms as is meant by this Word cannot be known but by Proofs of his particular Words and Actions tending to the kindling of this Fire of Contention between the two Nations and the raising of Difference between us If it do not appear by Proofs he has done this he is not an Incendiary but if it can be made out by Proofs that he hath done this then he is an Incendiary and to be proceeded against for it by the Parliament upon his being thus accused for those things This I take for a Ground That my Lord General and Lords Commissioners of Scotland being of so great Honour and Authority as you are must not appear in any Business especially of an Accusation but such as you shall see before-hand clearly will be made out and be brought to the Effect intended Otherwise for such Persons as you are to begin a Business of this Weight and not to have it so prepared before-hand as to be certain to carry it but to be put to a doubtful Trial in case it should not succeed as you expect but that you should be foiled in it it would reflect upon your great Honours and Wisdom Next As to the Person who is to be accused as an Incendiary it will be fit in my humble Opinion to consider his present Condition and Parts and Interest wherein Mr. Maynard and my self by our constant Attendance in the House of Commons are the more capable to give an Account to your Lordships and for his Interest in the Army some Honourable Persons here present his Excellency's Officers are best able to inform your Lordships I take Lieutenant General Cromwel to be a Gentleman of Quick and Subtile Parts and one who hath especially of late gained no small Interest in the House of Commons nor is he wanting of Friends in the House of Lords nor of Ability in himself to manage his own Part or Defence to the best Advantage If this be so my Lords it will be more requisite to be well prepared against him before he be brought upon the Stage lest the Issue of the Business be not answerable to your Expectations I have not yet heard any Particulars mentioned by his Excellency nor by my Lord Chancellor or any other nor do I know any in my private Observations which will amount to a clear Proof of such Matters as will satisfy the House of Commons in the Case of Lieut. Gen. Cromwel and according to our Law and the Course of Proceedings in our Parliament that he is an Incendiary and to be punished accordingly However I apprehend it to be doubtful and therefore cannot advise at this time he should be accused for an Incendiary but rather that Direction may be given to collect such particular Passages relating to him by which your Lordships may judg whether they will amount to prove him an Incendiary or not And this being done we may again wait on your Excellence if you please and upon View of those Proofs we shall be better able to advise and your Lordships to judg what will be fit to be done in this Matter Mr. Maynard agreed with Mr. Whitlock in every Particular and only varied that the Word Incendiary is not much conversant in our Law nor often met with in our Books but more a Term of Civil Law and of State and so to be considered in this Case Mr. Hollis and Sir Philip Stapleton and others spake smartly to the Business and mentioned some particular Passages and Words of Cromwel to prove him an Incendiary and that he had not that Interest in the House of Commons as was supposed and would willingly have been upon the Accusation of him but the Scots Commissioners were not so forward to join with them in it So Cromwel escaped But so did not Mr. Hollis and Sir Philip about two Years after upon Cromwel's Accusation of them If it be so strange that Cromwel so bred and having no Correspondence abroad or at home should in two Years time get such an Ascendant over the Parliament's Army in England so commanded and disciplin'd as aforesaid it will appear more admirable by what mean Persons he chiefly atchieved it as by Pride Whaley Hewson Harrison Goff Ven Barkstead Cobbet Okey c. broken Citizens and not before acquainted with any Military Discipline But while this Canker-Worm was breeding in the Bowels of the Parliament and Army the Winds of adverse Fortune blew almost constantly in the Face of the King's Affairs and to tell particularly of all the Battels Sieges and Rencounters which happened in England in these two next Years would swell this Story to a much greater Bulk than I design You may read them at large in Mr. Whitlock's Memoirs and Sir Baker's History of Charles the First And to say nothing of it would be a Gap in this Treatise which would interrupt the Design of it Upon the 29th of March the King's Army commanded by Gen. Forth and Sir Ralph Hopton was totally routed near Winchester by Sir William Waller Sir William Balfour and Sir Arthur Haslerig and 't was observed that two Irish Regiments which served the King in this Fight were the first which broke and run away And soon after Captain Swanley secured Milford-Haven Haverford-West and all Pembrook-shire for the Parliament And upon the 11th of April my Lord Fairfax and his Son Sir Thomas took Selby in Yorkshire by Storm and in it Col. Bellasis Governour with most of the other Officers and 1600 Common Soldiers with all their Guns Arms and Ammunition To qualify these Losses in some measure the King about the latter End of June fights Waller at Cropredy-Bridg and routs him kills 300 of his Men and Weems General of the Ordnance was taken Prisoner with two Lieutenant-Colonels three Captains and several other Officers and 180 Common Soldiers with 14 pieces of Cannon This small Victory bore no Proportion to the irreparable Loss the King sustained in the North for York being besieged by the United Forces of Manchester both the Fairfaxes Father and Son and Leven or Lesley General of the Scots Prince Rupert with all the Powers he could raise marched to the Relief of it after he had relieved Latham-House in Lancashire bravely defended by the Countess of Darby The Parliament Forces hereupon raised their Siege and the Prince fetching a Compass about relieved York and joined with the Marquess of Newcastle so as the Prince's Army was 27000 strong with which he marched to Marston-Moor whither the Parliament's Army was marched before and upon the third of July both Armies fought and the Prince with the Left Wing charged the Parliament's Right Wing and routed and pursued them a great Way so did General Goring Sir Charles Lucas and Major General Porter rout the main Body of the Parliament's Army so that all the three Parliament Generals Fairfax Manchester and Lesley gave all for lost But the Prince as he did before at Edghill pursuing the Enemy too far gave an Opportunity to Sir Thomas Fairfax to rally his Men and joining with Cromwel's Regiment of Lobsters armed with Pot Back and Brest fell upon the Right Wing of
Successes Sir Marmaduke Langdale about the Beginning of March routed a great Body of the Parliamentarians in Yorkshire and defeated the Army commanded by my Lord Fairfax which besieg'd Pomfret-Castle and from thence marched into Leicestershire and defeated a great Body of the Parliament's Forces commanded by Colonel Rossiter Anno Reg. 21. Dom. 1645. We begin this Year with the Self-denying Ordinance tho Mr. Whitlock and Sir Richard Baker differ a little in point of time Sir Richard Baker says it was this Year Mr. Whitlock 1644. But the Lords refused to concur with the Commons herein so as this Ordinance began with a Rupture between the two Houses so you 'll see it shall be the Ruin of the Parliament's as well as the King's Designs Mr. Whitlock made a fine and learned Speech against this Ordinance which you may read at large fol. 114 115. of his Memoirs The pretended Reason for this Ordinance was the Thinness of the House which by Employment in the War would render them much thinner To which Mr. Whitlock answered It might be supplied by filling up the Commons by new Elections He objected against the Ordinance the Examples of the Grecians and Romans who had the greatest Offices both of War and Peace conferred upon their Senators because they having greater Interests than others were more capable to do them the greatest Services and that by passing this Ordinance they would lay aside the General Essex the Earls of Warwick Denbigh and Manchester the Lords Willoughby and Roberts and of their own Members the Lords Grey of Growby and Fairfax Sir William Waller Cromwel Mr. Hollis Sir Philip Stapleton Sir William Brereton and Sir John Meyrick Tho the Commons passed the Self-denying Ordinance yet they dispensed with it in reference to Cromwel Skippon and Ireton and Sir William Waller Hereupon the Earls of Essex Denbigh and Manchester lay down their Commissions Here it 's observable That the Earl of Essex as he was the first which headed an Army against the King and whose Authority was so great that 't was believed if he had not done it the Parliament could not have rais'd an Army is now the first discarded by the Commons without giving any Reason In this new Establishment of the English Army Sir Thomas Fairfax was made General Cromwel Lieutenant-General and Skippon Major-General The Royalists conceived Mountains of Advantages to follow and that not improbably from the Divisions in the Parliament's Army which succeeded quite contrary For upon the 3d of April Fairfax having gathered his Army together at Windsor sent Cromwel with a Brigade of Horse and Dragoons to intercept a Convoy of Horse which Prince Rupert had sent from Worcester to fetch off the King from Oxford with a Train of Artillery to take the Field which Cromwel met at Islip and routed them took divers Prisoners and 200 Horse and from thence Cromwel march'd and took Bletchingdon-House commanded by Colonel Windebank Sir Francis's own Son by Surrender upon the first Summons for which Windebank was sentenced by a Court-Martial and shot to Death But Cromwel had not so good Success at Faringdon which he assaulted and was beaten off with the loss of 200 of his Men. The King understanding that Fairfax had a Design to besiege Oxford sent to Prince Rupert and General Goring to fetch him off which they did about the beginning of May and the King marched towards the Relief of Chester then besieged by the Parliament's Forces and Fairfax lays close Siege to Oxford The King relieved Chester and in his Return takes Leicester by Storm This put Fairfax to his Trumps so that if he continued the Siege of Oxford he would leave all the mid-land parts of England to the Mercy of the King So he raises his Siege and marches to fight the King's Army My Lord Astley was Lieutenant-General of the King's Foot whose Nephew was Sir Isaac Astley my Lord's eldest Brother's eldest Son who married a Cousin-German of mine and after the War was over my Lord Astley being at his Nephew 's in Discourse of the Wars my Lord told him That upon the Approach of the Parliament's Army the King called a Council of War where by the Advice of my Lord Astley it was resolved to march Northwards and destroy the Country Provisions and leave the Parliament's Army at their Election whether they would follow the King or besiege Leicester But next Morning quite contrary to the Order of Council Orders were given to prepare to fight the Parliament's Army when there was little time to draw up the Army so inconstant and irresolute was the King in this as of almost all his other Actions and so forward was the King herein that he marched to meet Fairfax's Army near Naseby in Northamptonshire This was upon Saturday June the 14th And if the Resolution to fight was inconsiderate and rash so was the Fight for Prince Rupert who commanded the right Wing of the King's Horse charged the left Wing of the Parliament's commanded by Ireton and routed them and wounded Ireton in the Thigh and as before at Edg-hill and Marston-Moor he pursued the Enemy so far that he left the rest of the Army exposed to the Assaults of the Enemy so here he followed the Chase almost to Naseby leaving the left Wing of the King's Army commanded by Sir Marmaduke Langdale open to be charged by Cromwel That which compleated the Parliament's Victory and the King 's utter Overthrow in this Fight was the not observing the Orders the Day before of the King's Retreat for Yorkshire being opprest by the Parliament's Forces Sir Marmaduke had Expectation of relieving the King's Party there which being cross'd by the Resolution of this Day 's Fight his Brigade as well as himself grew discontented so as he no ways answered the Gallant Actions which before he had atchieved And Cromwel having forced Sir Marmaduke to retreat joining with Fairfax charged the King's Foot who had beaten the Parliament's and got Possession of their Ordnance and thought themselves certain of the Victory but being in Confusion and out of Order and having no Horse to support them were easily over-born by Fairfax and Cromwel and so Fairfax's Army obtain'd a most absolute Victory over the King 's We hear no more of Prince Rupert in this Fight who 't was believed was the first Mover of it till of his Arrival at Bristol In this Fight the Earl of Lindsey the Lord Astley and Colonel Russel were wounded and 20 Colonels Knights and Officers of Note and 600 common Soldiers were slain on the King's side and 6 Colonels and Lieutenant-Colonels 18 Majors 70 Captains 80 Lieutenants 200 Ensigns and other Officers and 4500 common Soldiers were taken Prisoners 12 Pieces of Cannon 8000 Arms 40 Barrels of Powder 200 Carriages with all their Bag and Baggage with store of rich Pillage 3000 Horse one of the King's Coaches with his Cabinets of Letters and Papers And the King fled towards Wales If the King were unfortunate in the
former Propositions Hereupon D'Efsiat to have further Instructions from the Duke entred into a new Treaty with the Merchants and like a French Merchant got Letters to be sent into England that the Peace was concluded with those of the Religion in France and that within 14 Days the War should break out in Italy with a Design upon Genoua a matter of great Importance against the Spaniard Hereupon the Duke procured the King to write a Letter to Pennington dated July 28. to this effect HIS Majesty did thereby charge and command Captain Pennington without delay to put his Highness's former Command in Execution for consigning the Vaunt-Guard into the hands of the Marquiss D'Efsiat for the French with all her Furniture assuring her Officers his Majesty would provide for their Indemnity And to require the other seven Ships in his Majesty's Name to put themselves into the Service of the French King according to the Promise his Majesty had made to him And in case of Backwardness or Refusal commanding him to use all forcible means to compel them even to sinking with a Charge not to fail and this Letter to be his Warrant This Letter was deliver'd to Pennington in the Beginning of August by Captain Wilbraham Hereupon Pennington went back out of the Downs carrying with him the said Letters and certain Instructions in Writing from the Duke to his Secretary Nicholas And about the time Pennington returned to Diep Nicholas threatned the Captains of the Ships and told them it was as much as their Lives were worth if they deliver'd not up their Ships to the French whereupon some of them would have come away and left their Ships and fled into Holland Upon Pennington's coming to Diep he delivered the Van-Guard absolutely into the French Power to be employed as they pleased and acquainted the rest of the Captains with the King's Command that they should likewise put their Ships into the French Power which they all refused to do unless they might have good Security for the Delivery of their Ships or Satisfaction for them Hereupon Pennington went on Shore and spoke with D'Efsiat and upon his Return told the Captains they must rely upon the Security peraffetted in England whereupon the Captains weighed Anchor and prepared to be gone upon which Captain Pennington shot at them and forced them all to come to an Anchor again except the brave Sir Ferdinando Gorge in the Neptune more brave in running away from this abominable Action than charging into the midst of an Enemy When the Captains came a-shore they spoke with Mr. Nicholas who enforced them to come to a new Agreement which you may read in Rushworth fol. 335. and to deliver up their Ships into the French Power but not one of them would take the French Pay in the Expedition but one Gunner who was at his Return kill'd in charging of a Cannon not well spunged by him and the Duke's Secretary Nicholas had a Diamond Ring and a Hat-band set with Diamond-Sparks given him by the French Ambassador for his pains taken in this noble Employment This was the second noble Design of this grand Minister of State Buckingham whilst King James lay unburied we will now proceed to the third wherein you 'll see how well Richlieu requited Buckingham's Service in accommodating the French with a Fleet to subdue the Rochellers Tho the Duke did not personally manage the Treaty of the French Marriage at Paris as he did the Spanish at Madrid for the Reasons aforesaid yet none but he now the whole Treaty was consummate and so firmly performed on the English part must fetch the Queen to the King and when all the mighty Preparations for the Magnificence of this mighty Duke were compleated away he hies to Paris where he arrived the 24th of May and there he staid the full term of seven Days wherein he performed more wonderful Exploits than he had done in so many Months before at Madrid And these we will take from the noble Nani who was out of the Reach of Buckingham's Envy or Flattery of the English Court and as near as I can in his own Words Anno 1625. fol. 221 222. Buckingham being in France to carry back Charles's Bride it seemed that in the free Conversations of that Court he had taken the Boldness to discover something of his Inclination to the Queen whilst the Cardinal was inflamed with the same Passion or rather feigned to be so with Aversion in her who with Vertue equal to the Nobleness of Blood equally despised the Vanity of the one and abhorred the Artifices of the other I think Nani herein was mistaken as will soon appear Whereupon the Factions arising among the Ladies of the Court were not so secret but the King was obliged to make a Noise and banish some but the Contention between the two Favourites was for Power and Richlieu who by reason of the Favour of the King in his own Kingdom prevailed in Authority procured Buckingham many Mortifications and Disgusts The other was no sooner arrived at London with the Bride but to make a shew of Power not inferiour by ill using her thought to revenge himself The Catholick Religion served for a Pretext whilst the Family brought out of France according to Contract of Marriage practised it whence Disgusts brake forth to such a degree that the Minds of the Spouses being alienated and Affections between the Crowns themselves disturbed it looked as if Discord had been the Bride-maid at that Wedding You 'll hear more of this hereafter It 's observable when Humour not Counsel governs Actions how it runs into the contrary Extreams King James in Confidence of being supplied of all his Wants by the Spanish Match in great Displeasure broke up the Parliament in the 18th Year of his Reign and imprisoned many of the Members for presuming to advise him against it and this King expected the Parliament should make good all the Duke's Extravagancies for the Tale which the Duke told in Parliament the 21 Jac. for breaking off the Spanish Match when he kept back the Earl of Bristol as you heard before from making his Defence and proving the contrary of what Buckingham had told And so confidently was the King possessed that that Parliament continued in the same Mood that I have heard one of Sir Coke's Sons say that tho when King Charles came to the Crown Sir Edward would have waited upon him in Testimony of his Duty and Service the King would not admit him into his Presence yet the King sent to know of him whether he might continue this Parliament notwithstanding the King's Death which Sir Edward said could not be for that upon the King's Death the Dissolution followed yet upon the Election not ten of the old surviving Members but were chosen again This Parliament met upon the 18th of June 1625. where the King laid open to them that the Business he called them for was that whereas they had advised him to break off the