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A35246 The Secret history of the four last monarchs of Great-Britain, viz. James I, Charles I, Charles II, James II to which is added an appendix containing the later reign of James the Second, from the time of his abdication of England, to this present Novemb. 1693 : being an account of his transactions in Ireland and France, with a more particular respect to the inhabitants of Great-Britain. R. B., 1632?-1725? 1693 (1693) Wing C7347; ESTC R31345 102,037 180

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Hereticks and that all good Christians were bound to Associate and Unite for their Extirpation Upon which Account it seems our King and the Duke thought fit to exchange the Appellation of of G●od Protestants for that of Good Christians However from hence it was plain what sort of Good Christians they were since it was evident that their Uniting with France in that War was to des●roy the P●otestant Dutch Hereticks These being the real Grounds and Motives that induced the King of England to begin that Impolitick War ag●inst the Dutch in the year 1665. whatever was openly and publickly pretended How strangely was the Parliament deluded and blinded by the King's Oaths and Protestations of his Zeal for the Protestant Religion What Sums of the Subjects Money they gave this Monarch to defray the Expences of that nnnecessary and baneful War is too well known and yet after all saving one brisk Engagement ill manag'd tho' with some los● to the Dutch at length no Fleet was set out and the choicest of their Royal Navy either Burnt or taken in Harbour to save Charges And though the French at leng●h joyn'd themselves in assistance with the Dutch against us yet by the Credit he had with the Queen-Mother he so far imposed upon that upon assurance which no M●n of Prudence and Foresight would have believed That the Dutch would have no Fleet at Sea that Year he forbore to make ready and so incurred that ignominious Disgrace at Chatham the like to which the English never suffered since they claim'd the Dominion of the Sea And now we come to the best Act that ever he did in his Life had he pursued it which shewed how happy a Prince he might have been had he been ever faithful to his own and the Interests of his People and that Religion which he outwardly profest For upon Conclusion of that Peace having leisure to look about him and to observe how the French had in the Year 1667. taken their opportunity and while we were embroyled and weakned by the late War had in Violation of all the most Sacred and Solemn Oaths and Treaties Invaded and Taken a great part of the Spanish Netherlands which had always been considered as the natural Frontier o● England the King then prompted more by his own Fears then out of any kindness he had for the Nation judg'd it necessary to interpose before the Flames that consumed next Neighbour should throw the Sparks over the Water Thereupon he sent Sir William Temple then his Resident at Brussels to propose a nearer Alliance with the Hollanders and to take joynt Measures against the French which Proposals of Sir William Temple's being entertained with all Compliance by the Dutch within Five days after Two several Treaties were concluded between the King and the States The one a Defensive and stricter Leag●e than before between the Two Nations and the other a joynt and reciprocal Engagement to oppose the Conquest of Fland●rs and ●o procure either by way of Meditation or by ●orce of Arms a speedy Peace between France and Spain upon the T●rms therein mentioned And because Sweeden came into the same Treaty within a very little while after ●rom the Three Parties concern'd and engag'd it was called the Tripple League In pursuance of which the Treaty of ●ix la Chapelle was also forc'd upon the French and in some measure upon the Spaniards who were unwilling to part with so great a part of their Country by a Solemn Treaty The King of France thus stopped in his Career by the Tripple League and by the Peace of Aix la Chapelle soon after concluded tho' for a while he dissembled his dissatisfaction yet resolved to untye the Tripple League whatsoever it cost him and therefore set his Counsels to work to try all the ways he could possibly think on in order to compass his sad Design To which purpose and as it 's generally thought that which a●●ected it the Dutchess of Orleance was sent over to Dover where if common Fame say true several Chamber Secrets were performed This Treaty was for a long time a work of Darkness and lay long concealed till the King of France to the end the King of England being truly set forth in his Colours out of a despair of ever being trusted or forgiven by his People hereafter might be push'd to go on bare faced and follow his steps in Government most Treacherously and Unking like cau●ed it to be printed at Paris though upon Complaint made at the French Court and the Author though he had his Instructions from Colbert to humour the King committed to the Bastile for a short time and then let out again However the Book being Printed some few Copies lit into safe Hands from whence take the Substance of the Mystery of Iniquity as followeth After that Monsieur de Croisy the French Embassador at London had laid before the Eyes of the King of England all the Grounds which his Majesty had of Complaint against Holland c. He told him That the time was come to revenge himself of a Nation that had so little Respect for Kings and that the occasion was never more favourable seeing many of the ●rinces of Germany were already entred into the League and that the King of France was powerful enough to be able to promise to his Allies in the Issue of that War for satisfaction both as to their Honour and Interests whereby he prevailed with that Prince to enter into Secret Alliance with France And for his greater Assurance and the more to confirm him Henrietta Dutchess of Orleance went for England and proposed to her Brother in the Name of the most Christian King that he would assure him an abs●lute Authority over his Parliament and ●ull power to establish the Catho●ick Religion in his Kingdoms o● England Scotland and Ireland But withal she told him that to compass this before all things else i● would b● necessary to abate the Pride and Power of the Dutch and to reduce them to the sole Province o● Holland and that by this means the King of England sh●●ld ha●e Zeal●nd ●or a Retreat in case of necessity and that the rest of the Law-Countries should remain to the King of France if he could render himself Master of it This is the Sum of that Famous Leage concluded at D●v●r framed and entred into on purpose for the Subjuga●ion of these Three Nations to Popery and Sl●very Soon ●fter this the Emperor o● Germany the Duke of L●rrain and several other G●rman Princes desired to be admitted into the Tripple League but it was absolutely refused them Nay So soon as the Two Cons●derate Monarc●s ha● thus made a shift to cut the Gordian Knot the now pitiful but formerly vaunted Tripp●e Leagu● was trampled under foot turned into Ridi●ni● and less valu●d than a Ballad Insomuch that to talk of admi●ting others into the Tripple League was appr●hended in Print as a kind of Fi●●● of Speech comm●nly called a
have lately called themselves a Common-wealth To meet with and prevent the infernal Endeavours of such Rebels our Agent most humbly offers to your Holiness the following Propositions 1. That your Holiness would make an annual Supply out of your own Treasury unto the said Charles the Second of considerable Sums of Money suitable to the maintaining the War against those Rebels against God the Church and Monarchy 2. That you would cause and compel the whole Beneficed Clergy in the World of whatsoever Dignity Degree State and Conditions soever to contribute the Third or the Fourth part of all their Fruits Rents Revenues or Emoluments to the said War as being Universal and Catholick And that the said Contribution may be paid every three Months or otherwise as shall seem most expedient to your Holyness 3. That by your Apostolick Nuncio's your Holyness would most ins●antly endeavour with all Princes Common-wealths and Catholick States that the said Princes Common-wealths and States may be admonished in the Bowels of Jesus Christ and induced to enter into and conclude an Universal Peace and that they will unitedly supply the said King And that they will by no means acknowledge the said Regicides and Tyrants for a Common-wealth or State nor enter into or have any Commerce with them 4. That by the said Nuncio's or any other way all and every the Monarchs of all Europe may be timely admonished and made sensible in this Cause wherein beside the detriment of the Faith their own proper Interest is concerned The foresaid Tyrants being Sworn Enemies to all Monarchy as they themselves do openly assert both by Word and Writing and to that end both in Germany Spain France Poland ● c. and in the very Dominions of the great Turk they have raised dangerous Insurrections being raised they foment them and to that purpose they supply the Charge and make large Contributions to it 5. That yo●r Holyness would Command under pain of Excommunication Ipso facto all and singular Catholicks that neither they nor an● of them directly nor indirectly by Land or by Sea do serve them in Arms or assist them by any Counsel or to help to favour or supply them any way under whatsoever pretext Holy Father the premised Remedies are timely to be applied by which the Catholick Faith now exposed to extream and eminent Hazzard may be conserved and infinite number of Catholicks may be preserved from Destruction Monarchy may be established and the most invincible King of Great Britain restor'd to his Rights All which things will bear your Holyness to Heaven with their Praises whom God long conserve in safety c. The Propositions and Motives abovesaid if occasion be our Agent will more largely set forth Viva voce This Letter as it seems to clear a great portion of Doubts and Suspitions of Charles the Second's Integrity to the Prot●stant Religion so it is a shrewd Argument that all that glistered in this King and his Father was not Gold But I must beg the Readers Pardon for this long digression The Lords Justices sent Sir H. Spotswood from Dublin to the King then in Scotland with an Account of all that happened He dispatched Sir I. Stuart with In●tructions to the Lords of the Privy Council in Ireland He applied himself to the Parliament of Scotland as being near for their Assistance And an Express was sent to the Parliament of England The King being returned out of Scotland December 2 d. Summoned both Houses together and tells them That he had staid in Scotland longer than he expected yet not fruitlessly for he had given full Satisfaction to the Nation but cannot chuse but take Notice of and wonder at the unexpected Distractions he finds at Home and then Commends to them the State of Ireland After which the Commons ordered a Select Committee to draw up a Petition and Remonstrance to the King The one was against Bishops and Oppressures in Church Government and for Punishing the Authors of it And the other contained all the Miscarriages and Misfortunes since the beginning of the King's Reign Not long after happened the Tumults of the London Apprentices at Whitehall and Westminster December 28. The King sends a Message to the Lords That he would raise Ten Thousand Voluntiers for Ireland provided the Commons would pay them Some time after the King upon Information that the Lord Kimbolton and five of the House of Commons viz. Hollis Sir A. Has●erig Mr. Pym Hambden and Stroud had Correspondence with the Scots and Countenanced the late City Tumults He thereupon ordered their Trunks Studies and Chambers to be Sealed up and their Persons seized the former of which was done but they having timely Notice they went aside Upon which the Commons the same day Voted high against these Actions of the King Hereupon the King Charges Kimbolton and the five Members with several Articles and ●cquaints both Houses That he did intend to Prosecute them for High Treason and required that their Persons might be secured And the next day the King attend●d with his Guard of Pensioners and some Hundreds of Gentleman went to the House of Commons and the Guard staying without the King with the Palsgrave entred the House at whose Entrance the Speaker rises out of the Chair a●d the King sitting down therein views the Houses●round and perceives the Birds he aimed at were flown whereupon He tells them That he came to look for those five Members whom he had Accused of High Treason and was r●solved to have them where ever He found them and expected to have them sent to Him as soon as they should come to the House but would not have them think that this Act of His was any Violation of Parliament This Act of the King was highly Resented by the House that the next day Ianuary 5. the Commons Voted it a Breach of Priviledge And it it was said in the City that the King intended Violence against the House of Commons and came thither with Force to Murther several Members and used threatning Speeches against the Parliament The next day the Londoners came thronging to Westminster with Petitions envying bitterly against some of the Peers but especially the Bishops as the Authors of all these Disturbances Upon which they were so affrighted that Twelve Bishops absented themselves from the House of Lords drawing up a Protestation against all Laws Orders Votes Resolutions and Determinations as in themselves Null and of none Effect which had Passed or should Pass during their Absence Presently after which at a Conference between both Houses it was agreed That this Protestation of the Twelve Bishops did extend to the deep intrenching on the Fundamental Priviledges and Being of Parliaments And in a short time they were Accused of High Treason Seised and brought on their Knees at the Lord's Bar Ten of whom were Comitted to the Tower and the other Two● in regard of their Age to the Black●Rod And now such Numbers of ordinary People daily gathered about Westminster
and the House of Commons Vote That the Kings Person should be d●manded of the Scots and that their whole Army return home upon Recei●● of part of th●ir Arrears the rest to be sent after them And a Committee is appointed to Treat with the Scotch Commissioners about drawing up Propositions to be sent to the King wherein much time was spent in wrangling whilst the English deny the Scots to have any Right in the Disposal of the King of England and the Scots as stifly alledged He was their King as much as of the English and they had as good Right to dispose of the King in England as the English could Challenge in Scotland But at last they agreed on Sixteen General Propositions which were presented to the King at New-Castle Iuly 27. 1646. But these Propositions were such that the King did not think fit to comply withal The Scots general Assembly sent a Remonstrance to the King desiring him to settle Matters in England according to the Covenants c. But all this did not do and therefore the Scots who had hi●herto so sharply disputed about the Disposal of the Kings Person are content upon the Receipt of Two Hundred Thousand Pounds to depart home and leave the King in the Power of the Parliament who Voted him to Holmby-House and sent their Commissioners to receive him from the Scots at New-Castle to whom Feb. 8. 1646. He was accordingly delivered and the Scots returned home Some Petitions from Essex and other Places are presented to the Parliament inveighing against the Proceedings of the Army which much vexed the Soldiers who sharply Apologize for themselves And now the Army to the great Terror of the Parliament march towards London and came as far as St. Alban's notwi●hstanding a Message from Both Houses not to come within Twenty Five Miles of the City which the General excused saying That he Army was come thither before they received the Parliaments Desire And here he obtains a Months Pay The Parliament then drew up Propositions of Peace to be sent to the King at Hampton-Court the same in substance with those offered at New Castle and had the like effect The Business of Episcopacy being always the main Objection which the Parliament were resolved to Abolish And the King preferring that before all other Respects would rather loose All than consent thereunto The Scots Commissioners send a Letter Novemb. 6. 1647. to the Speaker of the House of Commons a●d require That the King may be admitted to a Personal Treaty or at least That he should not be carried from Hampton-Court violently but that Commissioners of both Parliaments may ●reely pass to and from Him to Treat for the Settlement of the Kingdom After which divers Mes●ages past between the King and the Parliament and several Conferrences were set on Foot particularly that of Henderson's but they proving ●ruitless the Parliament with most of the Officers of the Army that joyned with them brought the King to a Tryal by a Judicature of their own setting up which proved his Ruine THE SECRET HISTORY OF King CHARLES II. WHEN Charles the Second was restored to the Thrones of England Scotland and Iroland never any Monarch in the World came to the Possession of so large a Dominion with more Advantages to have done good sor Himself to his Subjects at Home and to his Allies Abroad The People all experienced in Ma●tial Discipline as having but newly sheathed the Sword of Civil War and Foreign Conquest so that their Valour was dreaded abroad where-ever he should have menaced an Enlargement of his Territories Besides all this he had the Love of his Subjects Equal if not Superior to any Prince that ever Reigned before him And he had the Affection of his Parliament to the highest degree But after all this he was no sooner settled in his Throne but through the Influence of Evil Counsellors upon a Disposition naturally Vitious and easily corrupted with Esseminate Pleasures he abandoned himself to all manner of Softness and Voluptuous Enjoyments and harbouring in his ●osome the worst of Vices base ingratitude betra●ed Himself that he might betray his People for where the Constitution of a Nation is such That the Laws of the Land are the Measures both of the Soveraign's Commands and the Obedience of the Subjects whereby it is provided That as the one is not to invade what by Concessions and Stipul●tions is granted to the Ruler so the other is not to deprive them of their lawful and determined Rights and Liberties There the Prince who strives to Subvert the Fundamental Laws of the Society is the Traytor and the Rebel and not the People who endeavour to Preserve and Defend their own Nor must we ascribe the Miscarriages of his Reign altogether to the Remissness of his Nature but to a Principle of Revenge which his Mother had infused into him not so much for the loss of her H●sband but out of her inbred Malice to the Protestant Religion which no where flourished in that Splendor as in England fostered and cherished by the vow'd Enemy of this Nation his Brother the Duke of York who had been openly heard to declare in his Bed-Chamber at St. Iames's That he was resolved to be revenged upon the English Nation for the Death of his Father and what an Ascendant this Brother had over over him the whole Kingdom has felt by sad and woful Experience For indeed the King had all along an Affection for him so entire and baneful to the Nation that he could only be said to Reign while his Brother Ruled With all these Royal Vertues and imbred and fomented Animosisies to render him at his Return a Gracious Soveraign to this Kingdom let us trace him from his Cradle to find out those Princely Endowments which invisibly encreasing with him as he grew in Years dazzled in such a manner the Eyes of do●ing Politicians of that Age to recal him against that known and vulgar Maxim of Common Prudence Regnabit sanguine multo Ad Reg●um quisquis unit ●b eilio● When he was but very young he had a very strange and unaccountable Fondness to a Wooden Bi●let without which in his Arms he would never go abroad nor lie down in his Bed From which the more observing sort of People gathered that when he came to years of Maturity either Oppres●ors and Blockheads would be his greatest Favourites or else that when he came to Reign he would either be like Iupiter's Log for every Body to deride and contemn or that he would rather chuse to command his People with a Club than Rule them with a Scepter And indeed They that made the first and last conjectures found in due time they were not altogether in the wrong For the Throne was no sooner empty by the Death of his Father before he could be permitted to s●at himself in it but he gave the World a plain Discovery what sort of People they were who when he came to Reign were most
case he succeeded to the Crown And being told of the Terms that the King had offered to the Parliament of England tho` much harder and more dishonourable than any which they required he replied That the King never intended any such Limitations should pass nor did he offer them but when he knew they would not be accepted And farther to demonstrate his imbitter`d hatred of the Protes●ants and with what Rage and Fury he intended to prosecure them he told several Members of the Parliament when they were endeavouring to get some Bills to pass for the Security of their Religion in case of a Popish Successor That whatever they intended or prepared against the Papists should light upon others Which tho` it stopt him from taking the Advantage of any new Bills yet he was so just to his Word in behalf of the Papists that he pour`d all the Rigour of the Penal Laws against the Papists upon the Protestants in that Kingdom under the Name of Dissenters whom he Persecuted with that insatiable Violence as if according to his own Expression he had fully concluded That it would never be well with Scotland till all the South-side of Ferth were made a Hunting Field For indeed that was the true intent and drift of all his envenom`d Prosecutions of those People as well in England as in Scotland in hopes by so severe an Exasperation they would have broken out into open Rebellion and so have given him a fair opportunity to have rooted them from the Earth by the Sword Which was evident from another Saying of his for that having one day given his Opinion of sober Dissenters and setting them forth as he thought in their Colours he concluded That if he might have his VVish he would have them all turn Rebels and betake themselves to Arms. Which tho` it shewed his good Will yet whether it were so prudently spoken by a Person that had so little either of Courage or Conduct as himself is a question unless he thought he cou'd subdue them with the Spiritual Weapons of the Popes Excommunications and Curses Nor did he at the same time remember that the heavy Oppressions of the Spanish Inquisition tore from the Dominions of the Spaniard all the Seven United Provinces notwithstanding all that D` A●va Parma and Spinola could do tho●gh their Military Fame far exceeded his Thus we have seen the extent of his Christianity which we find cooped up within the narrow bounds of Popery Nów for his Morality which if it signalize it self in my Virtue that celebrates a Great and Glorious Prince it must be in those two of Justice and Mercy which God appropriates most nearly to himself as the brightest Ornaments of his Divinity But whether the Duke were either Just or Merciful to the E. of Argyle will be the Question● This Gentleman was one of the most Ancient and one of the most eminent Noble-men in Scotland and a Person of extraordinary Endowments and as such a one had ●erved the King with his Parts his Person and Estate beyond what most Men of any Degree in the Nation either had done or were able to p●rform but because he would not so far comply with and oblige the Duke as to fall in with his Councils for the Establishment of Popery and yield himself an Instrument to carry on his Designs of Popery and Arbitrary Power his Head must be brought to the Block the antient Honour of his Family must be attainted and his ample Fortunes be confiscated To which purpose a certain Test being fram`d for all the Nobility and Gentry of Scotland to take not excepting all others who were capable of any Office or Employment in the Kingdom easie enough for the Papists to swallow as being Calculated for their peculiar Advantage but difficult for the Protestants as being tha● which strangely confused and intangled their Consciences However the Earl was not so scrupulous neither to avoid all Occasions possible of incurring his Highness's Displeasure but offered to take it with this Proviso That he might declare in what sence he was willing to be Sworn Accordingly he did draw up an Explanation of his own meaning and tho` he were allow`d to take the Oath according to that Explanation which was also conformable to an Expl●nation which themselves were forced to make for the satisfaction of the greatest p●rt of the Ki●gdom that was dissatisfied in the Oath as well as the Earl nay tho` his Lordship did take it according to his own allowed Interpretation which was so far accepted that he was admitted to take his place in the Council yet upon a Caprico of the Duke`s Justice the matter was call`d in question again but then such a horrid Treasons were pick`d out of the Earl`s Interpretation that he was Arraign'd and Condemn'd to lose his Head and Execution had been certainly done had he not made his escape in his Sister 's Habi● but a ●ew hours before the Express Arrived from England ● with Orders for his immediate Execution● Nevertheless his whole Estate was seiz`d he was divested of all his Titles and Dignities and contrary to the Custom of the Kingdom his Coat of Arms was despitefully torn at the Publick Market Cross of E●inburgh and his Person hunted af●er in all places whether they thought he might be withdrawn even as far as Hamburgh And yet aft●r all the scrutinies which sober Men have made the chiefest of the Sc●ts Lawyers that were of unbiassed Principles could never find any thing in the Earl●s Interpretation but wha● his indispensible Duty obliged him to both as a Christian a Subject of Scotland and a Privy-Co●nsellor to the King But the D. was resolved to destroy him right or wrong And therefore being told wha● the E. of Argyle had said or done which could 〈◊〉 made a Crime by the ●aw of the Land his Highn●ss out of the gr●●t Aff●ction which he bo●e ●o so true a Protesta●t Peer was pleas'd to reply But may it not be wrested to Treason Which was such an Incouragement that when his Mind was once understood he wanted not Instruments that labour'd Day and Night to make the Question subservient to the D.'s impatient Thrist of Revenge and their own Advantage or else it might be to signalize his Resolution to over●rule the Lawyers in Scotland had they denied their Submission to his good Will and Pleasure By the same Justice it was that Blackwood was Condemn`d upon a pretence of having entertain'd upon his Ground certain Persons who were reported and said to have be●n at Bothwell-Bridge ● A●d this although there had been no notice given of their bei●g Criminals or any ways Offenders nor any Proclamations were issued out against them by which Blackwood could be obliged to take Cognizance of the Circumstances they lay und●r and that which aggravated the I●justice was this That the Gentleman suffered after a General Act of Indemnity granted and that it was after the Council themselves had for Four Years pass'd them by that
were generally indebted to the English and that this might be a fit season and a lucky opportunity to get their Debts easily and cheaply discharged A Proclamation was published enjoyning and requiring That Copper and Brass Money should p●s● as Current Money within the Realm of Ireland in the Payment of Bills Bonds● Deb●s by Record Mortgages and all other Payments whatsoever By which knack many a poor Protestant was fobb'd out of his Right and compelled to take an heap of Trash for Debt One of the most emine●t Silver● Smiths of Dublin having sold all his Plate to a Papist who promised to pay him his Price agreed upon in Silver and Gold but no Faith being to be kept with Hereticks the Goldsmith was compelled to take Brass and Copper And soon after this the late King put forth his Savoury and Fruitful Proclamation to make Brass Money pass in Satisfaction of all Debts Signed at Dublin-Castle Feb. 4 th 1689. But I challenge all Histories and Records of Nations to parallel the late shameful usage of the poor Protest●n●s Prisoners in G●llway upon whom was placed so odious a Cheat so unman-like a Sham th●t Posterity will hardly be induced to believe it and I must implore the Charity of the present Age nor to look it as a Fable but it is ●o certain and so sad a Truth that I defie the Subtility and Impudence of a Jusuite to gain say or contradict There was a Stipulation made some time ago between King Iames and the French Tyrant to exchange some Regiments of Auxillaries and about 5000 Men being accordingly sent from France and Landed in Ireland the late King ordered the like number of Irish to be forthwith Embarked and Transported into France among whom the Regiment of Collonel Rob. Fielding was appointed to be one but before he could get his Regiment on Board a great number of the Men run away according to their natural and usual Custom so that he became mightily puzzled what shift to make to recruit his Regiment whereupon this expedient was found out There was in Galloway about 120 English Prisoners who had endured the Misery of close Confinement Cold Hunger and daily Expectation of violent Death for above 14 Months for pretended Treason To them Coll. Fielding applyed himself promising that for every one that would raise ●ight Men and deliver them to him to recruit his Regiment such should not only have their immediate Liberty but an absolute Pardon and to that purpose he produced the l●te King's Warrant ●or a General Pardon The poor Gen●lemen overjoyed wi●h the security of their Lives and the Prospect of their Liberties consented readily and in a short time about 14 of the Prisoners with extraordinary Pains and Charge● brought in the number demanded and delivered them to the Conduct of the Collonel whom with his Men● was no sooner Shipp'd off but an Order was sent from the late King to seize upon those deluded Gentlemen and to recommit them to their former Prison on pretence that Fielding`s Contract with them was not done with his Allowance The Great Turk would blush to be charged with such an Action and the very Heath●n would abhor it An Action fit only for the Monsieur of France and such Princes as are influenced by his Ex●mple The French had not been Two Days in Dublin when they murdered Two or Three Protestant Clo●thiers in a part of the City called Comb for that ●reat Crime of protecting their Wives from being made Prostitutes to the French of which Inhumane Act no Notice was ever taken by the late King or his Government more than if Two Dogs had been shot About the same time some of them took a Country-Maid that came to Market with her Father and defloured her in the open Street at Noon-day A motion was made in Council that the City of Dublin should be fired the Protestants being first shut up in the Churches and Ho●pitals and then if they lost the Day at the Boyne ● to set Fire to all Whereupon the Irish Papists Traders in the City and those of the Army that either themselves Relations or Friends own'd Houses in it apply'd themselves to their King and told him They should suffer in that Expedition as well as the Protestants and that they would not draw a Sword in his Defence unless all Thoughts of Burning the City were set aside and declared That as soon as they saw or heard of any Appearance of Fire they would fly from his Service and submit to King William's Mercy of which now they had a good Experiment The World is very sensible that `t is the common Ambition o● degraded Princes how just soever Dethroned to endeavour their own Restauration There is a Chance in a Crown and `t is an extraordinary Resignation that can quit the P●etences to Titles so great though never so deservingly forfie●ed We do not therefore at all wonder at the Irish and French Army prepared for King Iames`s intended Descent and Invasion of England last Year nor the early Naval Preparations of the French on that Occasion Such Expedition on so important an Attempt carried some little Face of Glory in it His very Enemies could not deny but such an Enterprize had been an Ambition well push'd and had he suceeded he mighty fairly have written himself Iames the Conqueror But as bold and gallant Atchievements in the U●iversal Standard of Honour carry a great Name and which true Greatness possibly has no occasion to be ashamed ●f Nevertheless there may be those poorer Designs that instead of being either Great or Glorious perhaps may carry the Vilest and most abject Face that a much less Character then King Iames ought to blush at As for Example the followi●g Commission Iames By the Grace of God of England Scotland and Ireland King● Defender of the Fai●h c. To Our Trusty and Well-Belovd Capt. Patrick Lambe●t KNow Ye That we Reposing special Trust in the Approv`d Fidelity and Va●our hav● Asn●●ed Constituted and Appointed you Commander of the Good Frigate called the Providence and further We give you full Power and Authority to enter into any Port or River of the Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland or any Territories thereunto belonging and either there or at Sea to Take and Apprehend and in case of any Opposition or Resistance to Sink Burn or otherways Destroy all Ships and Vessels together with their Goods Loading and Merchandises belonging to the Inhabitants of England Scotland and Ireland or either of them together with the Ships Goods and Merchandizes of the States of the United Provinces or Their Subjects and to bring and send up all such Ships and Goods as they shall take in some Port of France and to procure the same to be Adjudged Lawful Prize in the next Court of Admiralty Established by our Dear Brother the most Christian King And the Tenths and other Dues a●ising out of the said Prizes are to be paid to Thomas Stratford or in his Absence
quae ut reliqua habet omnia Siveritatem non habet obtinere nomen non Potest THE SECRET HISTORY OF King IAMES I. TIme which puts a period to all things under the Sun began now to shea●● the Sword of War that had been long disputing the Controversie which Religion and Policy that Princes mix together had for many Years so fiercely maintained The w●●ring out of that old but glorious and most happy Piece of Soveraignty Queen Elizabeth bating the Spa●ish Violence and ending with the Irish Rebellion and Submission of the great Earl of Tyrone as if the old Genius of Iron-handed War and a new one Crowned with a Palm of Peace had taken Possession of the English Nation Iames the Sixth King of Scotland was Proclaimed King of England For though Princes that find here a Mortal Felicity love not the noise of a Successor in their Life time yet they are willing for the Peace of their People to have one when they can hear no more of it That which this Blessed Queen could not endure from others She was pleased to express her self and bequeath in her last Will as a Legacy to this then happy Na●ion He was Thirty Years of Age when he came to the Crown How dangerous the passage had been from his v●ry Infancy to his middle Age is not only written in may Histories but the untam●d and untractable Spirits of many of that Nation are a sufficient Witness and Record The wise Queen found many petty Titles but none of that Power any other Hand that should have reacht for the Crown might have caught a Cloud of Confusion and those Support●rs and Props that held up Her Greatness loth to submit to Equals made Scaffolds to his Triumphs In the prosecution of w●at I shall remark relating to this King● I shall avoid all unnecessary Severity and observe mo●e Duty and Respect than may possibly be thought due by Posterity to the Person of a Prince that after so exact a Pattern as Queen Elizabeth left him did by debauching Parliaments and so often breaking his Word so far irritate no less than impoverish the Subject as his Son was forced to give Concession to one rend●red indissolvable but by their own Will A mischief never could have befallen England had King Iames left them in the same blessed Serene temper he found them at the Death of the Queen The News of which was brought him first by Cary after Earl of Monmouth who not able to satisfie such a concourse of Doub●s and Questions● as far more resolute Natures than His do o●ten muster up on less occas●ons the King stood as in a maze being more affected through the fear of Opposition than pleased with the present Report till by a lamer Post He was adver●ised of His being joy●ully Proclaimed in London by the Lord Mayor and Aldermen and of the unquestioned Recep●ion His Title in all Places met with no less than that the Hopes of some and Fe●rs of the major part assisted by the prudent Carriage of the Treasurer and ranting Protestations of the Earl of Northumberland that in all Places vapoured he would bring Him in by the Sword had stopped their Mouths that desired he might be obliged to Articles Amongst these truly Noble Heroick and Publick Spirits was Sir Walter Rawleigh the Lord Cobham Sir Iohn Fortescue c. Who were all af●erwards ruined by the King and the Noble Sir Walter most Barbarously c●t o●f This Prince held his Thoughts so intent upon Ease and Pleasure that to a●oid any interruption likely to impede any part of the Felicity he had possessed his imagination with from the Union of these Crowns and to fit an Example for his Neighbours imitation whom he desired to bring into the like Resolution he cast himself as it were blindfold into a Peace with Spain far more destructive to England than a War King Iames throughout his whole Reign contenting himself with the humble thought of being a Terror to his own People not valluing that himself or Nation should make any considerable Figure among Forreign Princes At his first coming he was long detained from Westminster by a Plague looked upon as the greatest till exceeded in that which broke out after his Death taken by the ill boding English for a presage of worse Days than they had already seen The good Government of Queen Elizabeth not being in probability likely to bear the Charges without falling into some destructive commotion of Two such Expensive Princes Succession without having one more popular to intervene After the Peace of too much concernment to his Catholick Majesty to afford him leisure to imagine much less to insert so rugged an Article as the performance of any Promise our King had ●ade ●efore his Reception in case the Papists did not oppose which I have found Registred by many and so high as amounted to a Toleration at least if not an Establishing of Popery he then observed in prudence it could not be conceded by this new King having so many of his Subjects Protestants for one of the Romish Profession and being b●sides no more Zealous than other Princes that make use of a Religion only for a Fence to immure their Persons and Prerogatives but ●steem it a meer accident where reason of State drives on a Bargain without it These neglects of the Kings of Spain and England the first remaining as careless of his Faith as the other did of the performance of his Word put the Roman C●tholicks for the present into so great a Despair● that led them into that damned Conspira●y called the Gun powder Treason the account of which in general is so well known that I need not here ●nlarge only give some hints concerning it which is not common to be met with The French Ambassador then resident at Court affirming to some Persons of Quality his Intimates That the first Intimation of the Powder T●eason came from his Master who received it from the Jesui●s of his Faction to the end he might share in our Ruines The Kingdom of England being in the Pope's own Judgment at that time too great an addition to that of Spain where though it was first coined some say during the days of Queen Elizabeth ● yet the Priests that undertook the promoting of it sought to render it the most beneficial they could to their respective Patrons And here I cannot omit that after this happy Discovery his Majesty sent an Agent on purpose to Cougratulate King Iames's great Preservation A Flattery so palpable as the Pope could not refrain laughing in the Face of Cardinal D' Ossat when he first told it him nor he forbear to inform his King of it as may be found in his Printed Letters it being notorious that at King Iames's first assumption to the Throne of England none sought his Destruction more cordi●lly than the Spaniard till a continued Tract of Experience had fully acquai●ted him with his Temper Nor was our King himself backward in ●omenting
Subverted and altered the Fundamental Constitution in making English Men liable to be turned at the Arbitrary Pleasure of the King And as an addi●ion to this those Mercinary Members by the Orders and Directions of their most Pious and Protestant Pay-Master the King past another Law which was styled The Act for Corporations by which Men of Principles and Integrity were debarred all Offices of Magistracy in Cities and Corporate Towns the woful effects of which the Kingdom not long after both saw and felt in the Surrender of Charters and Betraying of Franchises by Persons upon whom the Government of ●he Corporations came to be delivered by Vertue of that Act which excluded so many Honest Able and Vertuous Men the Persons whom the King for his by-ends nominated for fit and Loyal Men would never have risen above the Offices of Scavengers Headboroughs or Constables at the highest To this as mainly contributed to the King's Design of Enslaving us we may subjoyn their passing an Act whereby they did bo●h limit and confine those that were to present Petitions to the King not to exceed Ten Persons Let the Matter to be represented be ne're so Important or the Grievance to be redress'd never so Illegal or Oppressive yet it was made no less than a Riot if above Ten Persons Address'd themselves to the King to crave the b●nefit of the Law A Trouble which the King c●re●ully provided against knowing how many La●s he had to break and how Burthensome and Oppressive he must be to the People b●fore ●e could compleat the Fabrick of Slavery and ●●p●ry which he was Erecting Nor was this all For the King being Conscious ●f his own sa●●ing and finding that through his own 〈◊〉 and the Importunities of his consuming Mis●es he could not depend on any defini●e Su●m for accomplishing his Promises to his Holy Father the Pope and his Trusty Confederate the French King got Two Bills prepared and carried into the House the passing of which had compleated the Nations Misery and made him Absolute The one was To Empower His Majesty upon extraordinary Occasions of which he would not have failed to have been the Judge as often as he pleased to raise Money without a Parliament And the other was For settling an Vniversal Excise upon the Crown The Passing either of which the King well knew would have been soon enabled him to have Govern'd by Basha's and Ianizaries and redeem'd him from having any further need of Parliaments But what the King had so finely projected to enslave the Nation and obtain whatever he had a mind to prov'd the Ground of their Disappointment and the occasion o● the Nations escape from the snare that was laid for it For the Mercenary Members fore-seeing That the passing these Bills would have put an end to these Pensions by rendring them useless for the time to come consulting their Gain and preferring it above what the Court called their Loyalty fell in with the honest Party and so became assistant in throwing out the Bills However Piou● AEneas finding the Nation grew sensible of his covert Intentions and Encroachments upon their Laws and Liberties and desparing of getting any more Acts passed in Parliament toward the promoting his Desings resolved to Husband the Laws he had already obtain'd as much as he could to the Ruin of the N●tion and where they failed of being Serviceable to his Ends to betake himself to other Methods and Means And therefore besides the daily Impoverishing Confining and destroying of infinite numbers of Honest and Peaceable People Under pretence of Executing the Laws he made it his business to invent new Projects to tear up the Rights and Liberties of the People by ways and means which had not the least shadow of a Law to countenance them Having made this fair Progress towards the enslaving both the Souls and Bodies of his own Subjects at home let us take a view of his Zeal to the Protestant Religion abroad And first for the Protestants of France When Monsieur Rohan came into England to acquaint his Pious Majesty with the Resolutions taken at Paris to persecute and if possible to root out the Reformed in France and proposed Overtures to the King as would have been greatly for his Glory and Interest yet no way contrary to the Allegiance of that poor People he remitted the Monsieur to his Brother the D. of York who not only inform'd the French Ambassador of the Gentleman's Errand but placed him behind the Hangings to hear what Monsieur Rohan had to represent and propose to him Which although the Ambassador to could not but abhor in the Two ●rothers and was asham'd of in himself yet he could do no less than inform his Master of what he had seen and heard Upon which the poor Gentleman on his Return out of England was so narrowly watched that being Apprehended upon the Borders of Switzerland he was carried back to Paris and there broken upon the Wheel Nor did it satisfie ●he King and his dear Brother the Duke to have thus Betray'd as well as Abandoned the Protestants in France but with the utmost Malice that Popery could inspire into them they sought the Destruction of the Seven Uni●ed Provinces upon no other Account but their being Protestant States and for giving Shelter to those who being Persecuted by himself and his Confederate the French Tyrant for their Religion fled thither for Protection and Safety For knowing what in due time they intended to bring upon the Protestants at home they thought it most requisite to destroy those Protestant States in the first place that there might remain no Sanctuary for their Persecuted Sub●ects And indeed abaring this and one more Ground of their Quarrel with those State● never was a War undertaken upon more ●rivilous Pretences than those Two which the King engaged in against the Seven Provinces in the Year 1667. and 1672. Nor can any thing justifie the Discretion and Wisdom of the Wars had they not been undertaken meerly in Subserviency to the promoting Popery and Slavery seeing that upon all other Grounds that Reason and Prudence can suggest it was the Interest of England as still it is to preserve the Government of Holland entire Nor can we have a true Account of the Grounds upon which the Two Monarchs of England and France agreed the War against Holland in the Year 1672. than by the Representation which the French Ambassador made of it both at Rome and Vienna For tho' his Publick Declaration pretended no more but that it was to seek Reparation for the Diminution of his Glory yet the Account he gave to the Pope of his Masters and consequently of our Protestant Mon●rch his first Confederate undertaking that War was That he did it in order to the extirpation of Heresie And in the same manner they sought to justifie the Piety of that Enterprize to his Imperial Majesty by alledging That the Hollanders were a People that had forsaken God ● and were
Bull. And this i● is plain Th●t the T●i●ple Lea●ue was 〈…〉 to the Ends of the French King to ruine the Dutch and to bring the Three Kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland under the Yokes of Ar●itrary Power and Roman Catholick Idolatry after a Total Abolition of the Name of Parliaments and Subversion of the Fundamental Laws Gratias tibi piissime atque invictissime Rex Carole Secunde And that he might not as much as in him lay meet with after rubs Mr. H. C. was dispatched into Sweeden to dissolve the Tripple League in that Kingdom which he did so effectually by co-operating with the French Ministers in that Court that the Swede a●ter it came to Rupture never assis●ed to any purpose ●r prosecuted the ●nds of the said Alliance only by Arming hims●lf at the expence of the League first under a disguised Mediation acted the French Interest and at last threw off his Vizard and drew his Sword on the French side in the Quarre● And at home when the Project repined and grew hopeful the Lord-Keeper was discharged from his Office and both he the Duke of Orm●nd Prin●e Rupert and Secretary Trevor were discarded out of the Committee for Forreign Affairs as being too honest to comply with the Intreagues th●n on Foot The Exchequer for some Years b●fore by the B●it of more than ordinary Gain h●d de●●y'd in the greatest part of the most Wea●thy Goldsmiths and they the rest of the Money'd Pe●ple of the N●tion by the due Payment of Interest till the King was run in Debt upon what Account no Bod● knew above Two Millions St●rling which served for one of the Pretences in the Lord-Keep●rs Speech at the opening of t●e Parliamen● to demand and obtain a Grant of the fore-men●ioned Supplies and might plentifully have sufficed to dis-engage the King with Peace and any tolerable good Husbandry But as if it had been perfidious to have applied them to any of the Purp●ses declared instead of Payment it was privately resolv●d upon to shat up the Exchequer lest any p●rt of the Money should have been legally exp●nded but that all might be appropriated to the Holy War in prospect and those f●r more Pious uses to which the ●ing had Dedicated it This Affair was carried on with ●●l the Secresie imaginable lest the unseasonble venting of it should ●ave spoiled the Wit and M●lice of the Design So that all on a sudden u●● the first of Ia●uary 1671. to the great Astonishment Ruin and Despair of so many Interest Pe●sons and to the Terror of the whole Nation by so Arbitrary a Fact the Proclamation Issued forth in the midst of the Confluence of so many vast Aids and so great a Revenue whereby the Crown published it self Bankrupt made Prize of the Subject and broke all Faith and Contract at Home in order to the breaking of both Abroad with more Advantage What was this but a Robbery committed upon the People under the Bond and Security of the Royal Faith By which many Hundreds were as really impoverished and undone as if he had violently broken into their Houses and taken their Money out of their Coffers Nay that would have look●d Generous and Great whereas the other was Base and Sneaking Only it seem'd more agreeable to His Majesty's Temper to Rob his Subjects by a T●ick than to Plunder them by direct and open Force There remained nothing now but that the King after this Famous ●xploit upon his own Subj●cts should manifest his Impartiality to Foreig●ers and assert the Justice of his intended Quarrel with the H●llanders Thereupon the Dispute about the Flag upon occasion of the Fansan Yatch was started a fresh and a great noise was made of Infamous Libels horrid Pictures Pillars set up and Medals Coined to the infinite dishonour of his Majesty's Pe●son his Crown and Dignity though not one of the Libels or Pictures could be produced and as for the Pillars they never had any Being but in the imagination of those that made it their business to raise Jealousies between the Two Nations 'T is true there was a Medal coin'd which might have been spared but so soon as it was known in Holland that Exceptions were tak●● as it the Stamp was broken to p●eces Some time after the French King seeing the English after the Affair of Sir R. H. on the Smirna Fleet engaged past all Retrea● comes in with his Fleet not to Fight but only to sound our Seas to spy our Ports to learn our Building to learn our way of Fighting and to consume ours ●and preserve his own Navy For no sooner had the Duke of York as the Design was laid su●●ered himself to be shamefully surprized but the Vice-Admiral ● the Earl o● Sandwich was Sacrificed and the rest of the E●glish Fleet so torn ●nd mangled that the English Honour was laid not in the Dust bu● in the Mud while his Royal Highness did all that was expect●d from him and Monsieur D' Estre●s who Commanded the French did all that he was sent for There was Three other several Engagem●nts o● ours with the Dutch the next Summer But while nothing was tenable at Land against the F●ench so it seem'd that to the English every thing was impregnable at Sea which was not to be ar●ri●●ted to the want of Courage or Conduct o● the then Commanders but rather to the unlucky Conju●ction of the Engi●sh to the French like the Disasters that happen to Men by being in ●ll Company In the mean time the hopes of the Spanish and Sm●rna Fleet being vanished the slender Allowance from the French not sufficing to defray farther Charges and the ordinary Revenue of His Majesty with all the former Aids being in less than one Years time exhausted the Parliament with the King 's most Gracious leave was permitted to Si● again at the time appointed At what time at the King 's and the Lord-Keepers usual daubing way the War was first Communicated to them and the Causes the Necessity and Danger so well pointed out that upon the King 's earnest Suit the Commons though in a War begun without their Advice readily Vo●ed no less than One Million Two Hundred and Fifty Thousand Pounds Steoling though they would not say it was ●or the War but for the King 's extraordinary Occasions And now the King having got the Money into his H●nds a new Project was set on ●oo● to set up an Army in ●ngland for the introducing of Slavery and Poper● under the pretence of Landing in Holland which was raised with all the expedition imaginable over which was Coll. Fitz Ge●ald an Irish Papist made Major-General so were the greatest number of the Captains and ot●er Officers of the same stamp And because that pretence was soon blown over it was afterwards still continued on foot und●r the more plausible Colour of a War wi●h France But after all these cunning Contrivances to do with them what he pleased whereas before the● h●d Power to A●semble every Three Years
to his old Shifts of Proroguing which was done by Proclamation to gain a little time for the acquitting of Sir Ge●rge Wakeman So kind was his Protestant Majesty to help out his desponding Friends at a dead lift in order to the Sha● Plot which he was afterwards designing For now the Parliament being cut off He was at leisure to advise with his Popish Instruments who were no less sedulous to give their Advice to the utmost that their active Brains● could reach By this sedulity it was That the Meal Tub Anti-Plot was contrived and hatched Only Tools were wan●ing to manage and carry on the Treach●rous Design Therefore not knowing where else to find Miscrea●ts fit for such Diabolical Enterprises all the Goals about the Town were raked for needy Profligates It will be needless to give H●stery of that which has been so sufficiently discovered for an abominable Imposture The Miscarriage of this Blessed Design caused a second Prorogation of the Parliament upon hopes of 200000 l. from France which was dexterously prevented by the Duke of Buckingham which the King so ill resented That his Attorney General had Orders in Council to Indict him of Buggery with a design to have taken away his Life and repair the French Disapointment by the Confiscation of his Estate had the Project taken Never so much Villany in Contrivance never so much Money ill spent and never worse luck The like Success happened in that damned Sham Plot Intrigue between Fitz Harris Nell Wall with the French Dutchess c. Nor must it be omitted a● an Argument of His Ma●esties great Zeal for the Protest●●● Re●igion That when one S●rgeant a Priest● made a Discovery of the Popish Plot from H●lland w●ich he caused to be transmitted to the Court with an Intention to have discovered s●veral others● he was first bribed off and then sent fór into England slightly and slily examined had his Pardon given him and sent back with Five pound a Week to say no more● Nor was it a thing less astonishing to the Nation to see the Parliament prorogued from time to time to less than seven time● before permitted to Si● on purpose to get time for the Popish Duke to settle the Protestant Religion in Scotland and to the end the Conspirators might get heart and footing again and retrieve their Losses in England and in this Interval it was That Mess●ngers were sent to their Friends at Rome and others their Associates for Money to strike while the Iron was hot in regard that Scotland by this time was secured and all things in such a forwardness that now or never was the time but the Pope had such an ill Opinion of our Sovereigns Fidelity that he slipt his Neck out of the Collar● and in imitation of him the rest excused themselves upon the Score of their poverty Thus missi●g Money from Rome and the rest of their Popish Associates and the King of France refusing to part with any more Cash there was no way but one at a forc'd put which was to let ●he Parliament Sit and to make them more willing to give Money to undo the Nation The King in a framed Speech told them of the wonderful advantagious Alliances for the Kingdoms good he had made with Foreign Princes and particularly with Holland and how necessary it was to preserve Tang●er which had already run him in Debt Upon which Considerations the Burthen of his Song was● M●re Money But the Parliament Incensed at the frequent pr●r●gations fell upon Considerations more profi●able for the Kingdom such as were the bringing to condign punishment the Obstructers of their Sitting The Impeachment of North for drawing the Proclamation against petitioning and Three of the Judges for dismissing the Grand Jury before whom the Duke was Indicted of Recusancy before they could make their presen●ments the prosecution of the Popish Plot and the Examination of the Meal Tub Sham all which they looked upon to be of greater Moment than the Kings Arguments for his Want For it was well known That by his per●idious Dealings abroad he had so impared his Credit with all the Foreign Princes to whom he sent that they slighted his Applications as one upon whose Word they could never Rely And as for the preservation of Tangier there was nothing less in his Thoughts A fine Credit for a Prince and an excellent Character to recommend him to po●terity That he had no other than his own sinister Ends upon the Grand Council of his Kingdom nor no other way to work them to those Ends unless by forging Untruths to make him accessary to the betraying of the people that had entrusted them The Parliament therefore bent all their Cares to secure the Kingdom from Popery concluding that the D●kes Aposta●izing from his Religion was the sole Evil under which the Nations in a more particular manner gro●med● and consequently that he was to be Disinherited But the King being resolved not to forsake his Brother whatever became of the Kingdom took such a high Resentment against these honest and just proc●edings of the Houses that after he had Sacrificed the Lord Stafford to his hopes of obtaining Money upon the Dukes u●dertaking to furnish him he Dissolved this Parliament too with promise of another at Oxford to sweeten the bitter pill which he had made the Nation to swallow In the mean time all the Care imaginable wa● taken to bring the Protestant Plot to perfection preparative to which Judges were selected with Dispositions Thoughts and Minds as Scarlet as their Gowns And the choice of Sheriffs was wrested by force from the people that they might pick out Juries without Conscience or Honesty A Plot contrived by perfidiousness and treachery beyo●d the parallel of History A Plot with Parisian Massacre in the Belly of it designing no less an Innundation of Innocent Protestant Blood under the colour and forms of Justice and yet who but he who in his last wheedling Speech to pick the Nations pocket had promised to consent to any Laws against Popery And the better to carry on this damned Design What a Crew of Devils in the Shape of Men a Regiment of Miscre●nts in whom all the Transgressions of the Law and Morality were mustered together I say what a Band of such Ca●tiffs were Rendezvouzed and with that Money which Parliaments give to promote the Security of the Kingdom caressed and pampered even to Excess for the destruction of the Innocent And all this at the Expence of him that bore the Stile and Character of our Gracious Sovereign For full proofs of which there needs no more than to look into the Tryal of Fitz Harris himself therefore to recite the particulars of a Design already so well known and publickly exposed to all the World would be a repetition altogether needless This however was observable That we were come to the height of Tyberius's Reign when informers and false Accusers a sort of Men found out for the Ruine of the publick And
two Nations so well matched it was the Dukes Contrivance to Suborn and Bribe two indigen● and desperate Vil●ains to go over and Fire the 〈◊〉 Ship● as they lay in their ●arbours ●nd when he had done that● it was the same Treachery that with a sham story lulled his ●rother ●●l●ep and pr●cured the Firing of our Ships at ●●●●ham The burning of London was such a mar●hless piece as could not have entered into the Breast of any but a bejesuited Herostratus in hopes to purchase the infamous immortality of a Popish Saintship by reducing to Ashes the graetest Bulwark and Magazine of the Protestant Religion in Europe Rome was set on Fire by Nero to have re-built it again more Glorious● and that he might have space enough for one of the most sumptuous Pallaces so designed under the Sun thereby to have made the Mistress of the Earth the Wonder of the World But London was Fired not only to destroy the Wealth and Habitations of the City never to have risen more but with an intention to extirpate the Inhabitants themselves to boot and to have turned the Venerable and Spacious Pile into a depopulated Wilderness by a general Massacre of the People under the Consternation of the spreading Flames The standing S●reets provided and furnished with Incendiaries with fresh Materials to revive and restore the weary Con●●●gration and when taken in the Act res●ued out of the Hands of those that seized them and sent to St. Iames's to be there secured from the Rage of the Mul●itude and then dismissed without Persecution An excellent way to have made all sure by mixing the Blood of the Inhabitants with the Ashes of their Dwellings the only Cement which the Papists believed would fasten and bind the Fabrick of the Romish Church and what greater piece of Persidy could there be than while the Duke was riding about the Streets under Pretence of Assisting to quench the Fire that his Guards were at the same time employed to prevent the People from rem●ving their Goods and his Palace made the Refu●e of such as were taken in the very ●act of cheris●ing and fomenting the Flames This the Committee of Parliament trac'd so far that it cost the Life of the poor Gentleman that gave the Information of these Things to the Chair man of the Committee to prevent any further Discovery and secure the D. from the Danger of his Life Coleman's crying out There was no Faith in Man was a most undeniable Testimony of the Treachery of his Master notwithstanding all the faithful Service he had done him and was it not a Magnanimous and generous Act of a Prince to betray as he did to the Gallows not only his most trusty Servant but his Fellow Partner in the Conspiracy More Inhumane still was the barbarous Murder actually contriv'd and brought to perfection by the encourag'd Instruments of the Duke For he it was that sent word to Coleman to bid him ●ake no care for that Sir Edmundbury Godfrey should be remov'd out of the way and at the same time took the like care that his Servant Coleman should follow him For it was Detection that he feared and the D●ke well knew that the Dead could never tell Tales The Particulars of the Murder and how far the Circumstances of it reached the D●ke are too fresh in Memory ●o be here inserted and Dis●ensation for Deeds of the blackest hew were so easily obtai●ed that it was no wonder the Duke so little boggled at a single Murder to conceal the Designs of general Mas●acres wherein he was engag'd In pursuance of which he was no les● industrious to bring the Presbyterians and all the Dissenting Protestants within the Snare of his Sham-Plot in order to the Destruction of Thousands of innocent Persons This Dangerfield discovered to the World and his Information taken upon Oath before Sir William Roberts and Sir William Poultney are extant wherein he gives an Accoun● of his being introduced several times into the Duke of York's Prefence Partic●larly that being once among the rest admitted to the Duke of York ' Closet at White-Hall he kissed his Hand upon his Knees A●d then being taken up by the Duke he gave him a little Book containing the whole Scheme of the Presbyterian Plot for which the Duke thank'd him as also for his diligence to the Catholick Cause and wishing good Success to his Undertakings added these words That the Presbyterian Plot was a thing of most mighty Consequence and I do not question but the Effects of it will answer our Expectation especially in the Northern Parts where I am well assured the Major part of the Gentry a●e my Friends and have given sufficient Demonstrations to me as also of their Intentions to prosecute this Prescyterian Plot for they are no Strangers to the Design At the same time he ordered Dangerfield to be very careful of what he communicated to the Persons who were to be Witnesses in that new Plot lest he should be caught in the Subordination and so bring a terrible Odium upon the Catholicks and make himself uncapable of any further Service Then for Encouragement in the Prosecution of the Sham Plot the Duke promised that he would take Care that Money should not be wanting and ordered him with all the Expedition the Thing would allow to make a Discovery to the King At the same time the Duke also made divers Vows and bitte● Execrations to stand by him in the Thing and engaged upon his Honour to be his Rewarder and in earnest give him Twenty Guineas with his own Hand and telling him withal what a great Reputation he had gained among the Catholicks and that in a short time he should see the Catholick Religion flourish in these Kingdoms with a great deal more to the same purpose Of the truth of which among many others there could not be a more convincing Proof than the bitter Enmity which the Duke bore to Dangerfield after his Discovery and the severe Usage which he received from Iefferies the Duke`s Creature and the Rhadamantine Dispenser of his Revenges In Scotland he Rul`d or rather Reign`d though in his Brother's Life-time with a more Arbitrary and Lawless Controul And there it was that he breath`d for●h his Venome against the Protestants utter●d his Tyrannous Maximes with more ●reedom and exercised his Tyranny with a more boundle●s and exorbi●ant Extravagance For there it was that he first undertook to exercise the power of Soveraign Rule re●using to take the Oath of High Commissioner which the Law of the Coun●r● required as here he had d●nied to take the ●est and to shew how he intended to Govern England when it came to his turn there it was that in the hearing of Persons of great Credit he had this worthy Apothegm That tho` in England the Lawyers ruled the Court yet in Scotland he would rule the Lawyers There is was that he positively denied to give the Parliament any security for the Preservation of their Religion in
either ●he Pe●sons whom he had reliev'd came to be accus'd or he to be prosecuted upon this account And by the same Justice it was that Mr. Robert Bailzie of Ierismond was Hanged and Quartered for a Crime of which he had been Impeached and Tryed bef●re the Council and fined Six Thousand Pounds Sterling And all this his Highness did by over-ruling the Lawyers of Scotland by which means he had made the Judges and Jury as malicious against the Protestants and is Revengeful against the Asserters of the Liber●ies of Seotland as himself Such Exorbitancies of Injustice and Arbitrary Power that his Brother could never have e●dured in a Subject had they not been a●●ed all along with his Knowledge and Consent Otherwise had not the King been strangely infatuated to beli●ve that whatever his Brother d●d was for the Advancemen● of that Cause to which he was so well effected himself he could never have been so un-apprehensive of the Danger he was in from a Brother so actually in a Conspiracy against his Life For which Reason he was by the E. of Shaftsbury said to be a Prince n●t to be paralell`d in Hist●ry For certainly b●sides the early Tryal which the King had of his Ambition beyond Sea he h●d a fair warning of the hasty Advances which he made to his Throne in a s●ort time after his Marriage to the Queen For no sooner was it discovered the Queen was unlikely ●o have any Issue by the King but he and his Part● made Proclam●tion of it to the World and that he was the certain Heir He takes his Seat in Parliament as Prince of Wales with his Guards about him He assumes the Princes Lodgings at White-Hall his Guards upon the same place without any intermission between him and the King so that the King was in his Hands and Power every Night All Offices and Preferments are bestowed upon him and at his Disposition not a Bishop made without him After this he changes his Religion to make a Party and such a Party that his Brother must besure to die and be made away` to make room for him And for the undeniable Proof of all this a● length the Plot breaks out headed by the Duke his Interest vnd Design Plain it was that where-ever he came he endeavour'd to remove all Obstacles to his intended Designs out of the way And therefore some there are who attribute the Extremity of the Duke`s rigour towards the Earl of Argyle to the great Authority which the Earl had in some part of the High-Lands and the Awe which he had over the Papi●ts as being Lord Justiciary in those parts and his being able upon any occ●sion to check and bridle the Marq. of Huntly now Duke of Gourdon f●●m attempting the Dist●rbance of the Publick Peace or the prejudice of the Protestants However this is observable That notwitstanding the height of severity which was extended to him there was as much favour shewn the Lord Macdonald whose invading the Shire of Argyle with an Armed Force meerly because he was required by the said Earl as being given him for what he did though when the Council sent a Herald to him to require him to di●band his Forces he caused his Coat to be torn from his Back and sent him back to Edinburgh with all the Marks both of Contempt of themselves and Disgrace to the Publick Officer But his Religion was sufficient to attone at that time for his Treason And now the Duke having a standing Army of Five Thousand Foot and Five Hundred Horse in Scotland at his Devotion as well as in England and the Parliament the main Object of his Hatred and his Fear being dissolved back he returns into England where under the shelter of his Brother`s Authority he began in a short time to exert his Tyrannous Disposition and play the same unjust and Arbitrary Pranks as he had done in Scotland and because it was not seasonable yet to make use of Armed Forces he set his Westminster-Hall Red-Coats like Pioneers before a Marching Army to level the way for Popery and Arbitrary Controul to march in over the ruined Estates and murder'd Bodies of their Opposers The Iudges were his Slaves the Iuries at his be●k nothing could withstand him the Law it self grows lawless and Iefferies ridden pl●ys the Debaushee like himself Justice or something in her likeness Swaggers Hectors Whips Imprisons Fines Draws Hangs and Qu●rters● and Beheads all that come near her under the Duke's displeasure Alderman Pilkington the Late Honourable Lord Mayor for standing up for the Rights and Liberties of the City and for refusing to pack a Jury to take away the Earl of Shaftsbury's Life is Prosecuted upon a Scandalu● Magnatum at the Sui● of the Duke Convicted and Condemned in a Verdict of an Hundred Thousand Pounds And Sir Patience Wa●d for offering to confront the ●uborn'd Witnesses is Indicted of Perjury for which he w●s forced to fly to Vtretcht to avoid the Infamy of the Pillory though in all his Dealings so well known to be a Person of that Justice and Integrity that for all the hopes of the Duke he would not have told an untruth Sir Samuel Bernardiston for two or three treacherously intercepted Letters to his Friends in the Countrey fin'd ten thousand pounds which he was not suffer●d to discharge by Quarterly Payments but the Esta●e seized by the Duke's Sollicitors to the end he might have an opportunity to be the more prodigal in the wake o● it But this hunting after the Lives as well as the Estates of others was more intollerable and that be the prostituted Testimony of sub●rn'd I●ish ● Rogues and Vagabonds and when that would not take the desired Effect by the ●orced Evidence of Persons ensnared and shackled under the Terrors of Death till the drudgery of Swearing was over Men so fond of Life that they bought the uncertain prolongation of a wicked Mortality at the unhollowed price of certain and immortal Infamy And therefore not knowing how to die when they knew not how to live accounted it a more gainful Happiness to quit the Pardon of Heaven's Tribunal for the Broad Seal of England By this means fell the Vertuous Lord Russell a Sacrifice to the Bill of ●xclusion and the Duke's Reveege and yet of that Integri●y to his Country and untainted course of Life of whom never any spoke evil but those that knew no evil in him only because he was one of those who sought to exclude the Duke from the hopes of Tyranny and Oppression the Duke was resolv'd to exclude him from the Earth But then comes the Murther of the Earl of Essex for that it was a most Barbarous and Inhumane Murther committed by Bravo`s and bloody Ruffians set on hired and encouraged by potent Malice and Cruelty the preguant Circumstances no less corroborated by Testimonies wanting only the confirmation of Legal Judicature has been already so clearly made out that there is no place left for a hesitating belief
to Iean Nimport of Brest or to such other Persons as shall have Authority from Us to receive the same Signed Melsort Given at Our Court at the Castle of St. Germans Feb. 22. 1691 2. Here you find instead of a more warrantable Ambition of recovering Three Kingdoms he poorly descends to grant his Commissions to Privateers to Rifle and Spoil all the Subjects of England Scotland and Ireland indifferently to Burn Sink and Fire their Vessels c. and all this without respect of Persons Interests or Religion The severest Ro●anists or most violent Iacobi●e without exception is to be swept in the common Doom So that instead of pretending all his former promised Impurity and Tenderness to the People of England or instead of Bravely grappling at his Royal Rival in the Imperial Seat he vilely assumes little less than a common Pyrat Authorizes the Depredations of the E●glish Merchants even by the very Hands of English Men. This last poor Spirited Meanness must either plainly tell us that he has utterly renounced all Hopes of Recovery of his Kingdoms and so under that Despair he resolves to play at a small Game rather than stand out which indeed is the best Title I can give it and consequently like the famous Dyonisius sumed Pedagogue when he can scourge Kingdoms no longer he prepares his lesser Rods for a more Tyrannick Lash or else that forgetting that he ever was a Monarch and therefore blushing at nothing though never so Unprincely he contents himself with being under-Secretary to the French King whilest the little Iames is b●t a Subscription to the Great Lewis The French King deputes him as his Emanuensis to Copy Commissions for him and the contented Receiver of that high Favour is paid to officiate in the Trust. It was Remarkt of him that at his first Departure from England upon his Transport from Feversham he uttered this Expression That he had rather be a Captain of Light Horse under the French King than Reign King of England udder the L●sh and Countroul of Parliaments A Captain of a Troop of Horse is no over-high Post But truly of the two 't is much the more Honourable than the Granting of such Commissions But indeed all these tend to the aggradizing of the French King the Poorer the Subjects of England the stronger the Grand Lewis his inviolable Zeal and Fidelity therefore to the most Christinn so titled Nero supercedes all other Considerations and fas aut nesas Right or Wrong Honourably or Infamous nothing comes amiss that carries the least Shadow of Service to that darling Idol One thing is very remarkable in the Ianus Faces of King Iames's Pre●ences This very Commission found on Board a Prize taken on the West of England the last Summer was dated at St. Germans the 22 th of Febr. 1691 2 which pray observe bearing date before his intended Invasion impowers this Privateer to enter into any Port or River of England Scotland or Ireland and commit all those Hostilities of Fireing Sinking Burning ● A●l Tr●ders Vessels whatever at the same time that this Declaration prepared for his Reception in England intimated all the Affection and Tenderness imaginable to the Interests Property and what not of his Subjects of England viz. That he was coming only to recover his own Right Establish and Restore their Laws and Liberties and yet at the same time he gave out Commissions to Wast●e Ruin and Destroy the most innocent Traders of the Kingdom possibly no way● interested in the Titles and Disputes of Princes in Parties or Causes but on the contrary only endeavouring a peaceable Acquisition of their Bread by their honest Commerce and Industry To conclude From all this Prince's Actions in the whole Series of his Life it is no difficult matter to make a Judgment of what we may justly expect from him if ever Divine Judgment as the Reward of our Ingratitude for so great a Deliverance should permit us to fall again under the heavy Yoke of a Popish Prince whom we have so justly and happily thrown off King Iames is of a Religion that has infamous Council decreed That no Faith is to be kept with Hereticks much less with Subjects that he looks upon us as so many and will not miss to treat them as such when-ever they give him the Opportunity of doing it For his greatest Admirers do not run to the heighth of Idolatry to imagine him so much Angel as nor● to take all Methods to revenge such an Affront and secure himself at our Cost from such Treatment for the future The Apprehensions of which Resentment● would strike such a Terror in Mens Mind that nothing would be capable to divert them offering up All for an Attonement and Popery and Slavery will be thought a good Bargain if they can but save the●r Lives Then we might lament our Miseries when it would be out of our Power to help them for a Prince of Orange is not always ready to rescue us with so vast Expence and hazard of his Person And I must say if ever our Madness should hurry us thus far we should become rather the Objects of Laughter than of Pity In short if there be any of the Prostant Perswasion so strangely infa●uated as but to wish his Return I shall entertain them with no other Answer but the recommending to the● the Ninth of Ezra v. 13 14. And after all that is come upon us for our evil Deeds and for our great Trespass seeing that thou our God hast punished us less than our Iniqui●ies deserve and hast given us such a Deliverance as this Should we again break thy Commandments and j●●n in affinity with the People of these Abominations wouldst not thou be angry with us till thou hadst consumed us so that there should be no Remnant nor escaping FINIS