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A28290 An historical account of making the penal laws by the papists against the Protestants, and by the Protestants against the papists wherein the true ground and reason of making the laws is given, the papists most barbarous usuage [sic] of the Protestants here in England under a colour of law set forth, and the Reformation vindicated from the imputation of being cruel and bloody, unjustly cast upon it by those of the Romish Communion / by Samuel Blackerby ... Blackerby, Samuel, d. 1714. 1689 (1689) Wing B3069; ESTC R18715 230,149 164

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submit themselves to the Romish Bishops and Prelates and the Histories of those times acquaint us that they were the Professors of the true Religion afterwards called Protestants By Colour of this supposed Act certain persons that held that Images were not to be worshipped Co. Inst 3 d. fol. 40. and such like Doctrines which the Protestants now hold were detained and tormented in Prison till they were compelled before the Masters of Divinity as they called themselves to take an Oath and did swear to worship Images which was against the Moral and Eternal Law of Almighty God. This these Popish Bishops and Prelates did by vertue of this Law which indeed was none for it was onely signed by the King at the instance of the Bishops and Prelates and never assented to by the Commons and therefore in the next Parliament the Commons preferred a Bill reciting the said supposed Act and constantly affirmed that they never assented thereunto and therefore desired that the same might be made void for they protested that it was never their intent to be justified and to bind themselves and their Successors to the Prelates more than their Ancestors had done in times past whereto the King gave his Royal Assent in these words y pleist au Roy. But in the Proclamation of the Acts of that Parliament Co. 12.58 and 3. Inst f. 41. which was 6. R. 2. the said Act of 6. R. 2. whereby the said supposed Act of 5. R. 2. was declared to be void is omitted and afterwards the said supposed Act of 5. R. 2. ca. 5. was continually printed and looked on as a Good Law and the said Act of 6. R. 2. was by the Prelates from time to time kept from the Print Such pious Frauds have been always practised by the Popish Clergy and always found necessary for the supporting of the credit of that Church CHAP. II. Hen. IV. THe Rage of the Popish Clergy against the Wicklivites or Professors of the true Religion increasing with the increase of the light of the Gospel and they fearing that the said contrivance might be detected to the end that they might be yet more able effectually if it were possible to suppress the truth when they had requited R. 2. for granting them that supposed Law with deposing him and assisting H. 4. to usurp the Crown they in the 2 d. H. 4. apply themselves to him for a further Law for the preservation of the Catholick Faith as they called it against Christ's true Religion by them miscalled Heresie and he in gratitude to them in assisting him in his coming to the Crown granted them a Law to their Hearts content which follows as it is printed in Rastal 's Statutes in these words Whereas it is shewed to our Soveraign Lord the King on the behalf of the Prelates and Clergy of this Realm of England in this present Parliament 2 H. 4. ca. 15. Rast Stat. f. 180. By this Law the Professors of the true Religion were to be burnt as Hereticks that although the Catholick Faith builded upon Christ and by his Apostles and the holy Church sufficiently determined declared and approved hath been hitherto by good and holy and most noble Progenitors of our Soveraign Lord the King in the said Realm amongst all the Realms of the World most devoutly observed and the Church of England by his said most noble Progenitors and Ancestors to the honour of God and of the whole Realm aforesaid laudably endowed and in her Rights and Liberties sustained without that that the same Faith or the said Church was hurt or grievously oppressed or else perturbed by any perverse Doctrine or Wicked Heretical or Erronious Opinions Yet nevertheless divers false and perverse people of a certain new Sect of the Faith of the Sacraments of the Church and the Authority of the same damnably thinking and against the Law of God and of the Church usurping the Office of Preaching do perversly and malitiously in divers places within the said Realm under the colour of dissembled Holiness preach and teach these dayes openly and privily divers new Doctrines and wicked heretical and eronious Opinions contrary to the same Faith and blessed determinations of the Holy Church And of such Sect and wicked Doctrine and Opinions they make unlawful Conventicles and Confederacies they hold and exercise Schools they make and write Books they do wickedly instruct and informe people and as much as they may excite and stir them to Sedition and Insurrection and maketh great strife and division among the people and other Enormities horribly to be heard daily do perpetrate and commit in subversion of the said Catholick Faith and Doctrine of the Holy Church in diminution of God's Honour and also in destruction of the Estates Rights and Liberties of the said Church of England by which Sect and wicked and false Preachings Doctrines and Opinions of the said false and perverse people not only most greatest peril of the Souls but also many other harts flanders and perils which God prohibit might come to this Realm unless it be the more plentifully and speedily holpen by the King's Majesty in this behalf namely whereas the Diocesans of the said Realm cannot by their Iurisdiction Spiritual without aid of the said Royal Majesty sufficiently correct the said false and perverse people nor refrain their malice because the said false and perverse people do go from Diocess to Diocess and will not appear before the said Diocesans but the same Diocesans and their Iurisdiction Spiritual and the Keys of the Church with the Censures of the same do utterly contemn and despise and so their wicked Preachings and Doctrines doth from day to day continue and exercise to the hatred of Right and Reason and utter destruction of Order and good Rule Vpon which Novelties and Excesses above rehersed the Prelates and Clergy aforesaid and also the Commons of the said Realm being in the said Parliament praying our Soveraign Lord the King that his Royal Highness would vouchsafe in the said Parliament to provide a convenient Remedy The same our Soveraign Lord the King gratiously considering the premises and also the laudable steps of his said most noble Progenitors and Ancestors for the conservation of the said Catholick Faith and sustentation of God's Honour and also the safeguard of the Estates Rights and Liberties of the said Church of England to the laud of God and merit of our said Soveraign Lord the King and prosperity and honour of all the said Realm and for the eschewing of such Dissentions divisions hurts slanders and perils in time to come and that this wicked Sect preachings doctrines and Opinions should from henceforth cease and be utterly destroyed by the assent of the States and other discreet men of the Realm being in the said Parliament hath Granted Established and Ordained from henceforth and firmly to be observed That none within the said Realm or any other Dominions subject to his Royal Majesty presume to preach openly
Bangor and of Lincoln and besides the same now of late much more divers and sundry forms and fashions have been used in the Cathedral and Parish Churches of England and Wales as well concerning the Mattens or Morning Prayer and the Even-Song as concerning the Holy Communion commonly called the Mass with divers and sundry Rites and Ceremonies concerning the same and in the administration of other Sacraments in the Church and as the Doers and Executors of the said Rights and Ceremonies in other form than of late years they have been used were pleased therewith so others not using the same Rites and Ceremonies were thereby greatly offended and albeit the King's Majesty with the Advice of his most entirely beloved Vncle the Lord Protector and other of his Highness Council hath therefore divers times assayed to stay Innovations or new Rites concerning the premises yet the same hath not had such good success as his Highness required in that behalf whereupon his Highness by the most prudent advice aforesaid being pleased to bear with the frailty and weakness of his Subjects in that behalf of his great Clemency hath not been only content to abstain from punishment of those that have offended in that behalf for that his Highness taketh that they did it of a good Zeal but also to the intent an uniform quiet and Godly Order should be had concerning the premises hath appointed the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and certain of the most learned and Discreet Bishops and other Learned Men of this Realm to consider and ponder the premises and there upon having as well eye and respect to the most sincere and pure Christian Religion taught by the Scripture as to the usages in the Primitive Church should draw and make one convenient and meet order right and fashion of Common and open Prayer and Administration of the Sacraments to be had and used in his Majesties Realm of England and in Wales the which at this time by the aid of the Holy Ghost with one Vniform Agreement is of them concluded set forth and delivered to his Highness to his great comfort and quietness of mind in a Book intituled The Book of Common-Prayer and Administration of the Sacraments and other Rites and Ceremonies after the use of the Church of England From which Preamble I observe 1 st That notwithstanding all the endeavours used by the King and his Council to stay Innovations and throughly to reform the Administration of the Sacraments of the Lord's Supper divers of his Subjects would not comply 2 dly That their non-complyance was attributed to their frailty and weakness And 3 dly that his Clemency was such towards them that he abstained from punishing them because he took it that they did it of a good Zeal This Book of Common-Prayer being compiled further to shew tenderness to the Papists it was Enacted That all and singular person and persons that had offended concerning the premises other then such person and persons as were then in the Tower of London or in the Fleet should be pardoned thereof and that all and singular Ministers in any Cathedral or Parish Church or other place within this Realm of England Wales Callis and in the Marches of the same or other the King's Dominions should from and after the Feast of Pentecost then next coming be bounden to say and use the Matins Evensong celebration of the Lord's Supper commonly called the Mass and Administration of each of the Sacraments and all their common and open Prayer in such Order and Form as is before mention'd in the said Book and none other or otherwise and it was further Enacted That if any manner of Parson Vicar or other whatsoever Minister that ought or should sing or say Common-Prayer mentioned in the said Book or Minister the Sacraments should after the time therein prefixt refuse to use the said Common-Prayers or to Minister the Sacraments in such Cathedral or Parish Church or other places as he should or minister the same in such Order and Form as they be mentioned and set forth in the said Book or should use wilfully and obstinately standing in the same any other Rite Ceremony Order Form or manner of Mass openly or privily or Mattins Evensong Administration of the Sacraments or other open Prayer then is mentioned and set forth in the said Book Open Prayer in and throughout this Act is meant that Prayer which is for others to come unto or heat either in common Churches or private Chappels or Oratories commonly called the Service of the Church or should Preach Declare or speak any thing in derogation or depraving of the said Book or any thing therein contained or of any part thereof and should be thereof lawfully convicted according to the Laws of this Realm by verdict of twelve men or by his own Confession or by the notorious Evidence of the Fact should lose and forfeit to the King's Highness his Heirs and Successors for his first Offence the profits of such one of his Spiritual Benefites or Promotions as it shall please the King's Highness to Assign or appoint coming or arising in one whole year next after this Conviction And also should suffer six Months Imprisonment without Bail or Mainprize And should for his second offence suffer a years Imprisonment and be deprived ipso facto of all his Spiritual Promotions and that it should be lawful to all Patrons Donors and Grantors of all and singular the same Spiritual Promotions to present to the same any other able Clerk in like manner and form as though the Party so offending were dead And for the third offence should suffer Imprisonment during his life And that Lay persons offending in the premises should for the first offence suffer Imprisonment during six Months without Bail or Mainprize and for his second offence suffer Imprsonment during his Life And it is further thereby Enacted that if any person should in any Interludes Plays Songs Rhymes or by other open words declare or speak any thing in the derogation depraving or despising of the same Book or of any thing therein contained or any part thereof or should by open Fact Deed or by open thréatnings compel or cause or otherwise procure or Maintain any Parson Vicar or other Minister in any Cathedral or Parish Church or Chappel or in any other place to sing or to say any common or open Prayer or to Minister any Sacrament otherwise or in any other manner or form than is mentioned in the said Book or that by any of the said means shall lawfully interrupt or let any Parson Vicar or other Minister in any Cathedral or Parish Church Chappel or any other place to sing and say common and open prayer or to minister the Sacraments or any of them in such manner and form as is mentioned in the said Book they should forfeit to the King our Soveraign Lord his Heirs and Successors ten pounds for the first offence and for non-payment should suffer three months Imprisonment without
understand his knowledge and whether he himself might not at some time or other have let slip some suspitious words not with any real design against her but to discover the intentions of others Parry strongly confiding in Nevil earnestly denied it again and again with several Protestations that he was neither party nor privy to any such motion or enterprize Walsingham dealt fairly with him telling him that there was a Gentleman and his friend who would prove the contrary to his Face yet Parry denieth all true Popish impudence though probably had he confest and these were hints enough and accused Nevil at his first asking he might have saved himself and in this his great cunning was overseen Parry thus obstinate in his denials is not permitted to go home but lodged that Night at Mr. Secretry Walsinghams House in London This put him in a peck of troubles fills his Head full of suspitions and having consulted with his Pillow the next Morning he desired to speak with Mr. Secretary which granted he confesseth that now he called to remembrance that he once had Speech with one Nevil concerning a Point of Doctrine contained in one of Dr. Allen's Books wherein it was maintained that it was lawful to take away the Life of a Prince to benefit the Roman Religion but denied that he spake any thing of the Queen That Night he was Examined in Leicesters House before several but still he deny'd all whereupon Nevel was brought before him who punctually justified every circumstance before his Face yet the other as formerly denied all however he is sent to the Tower where perceiving the exactness of the Proof against him he freely and of his own accord confessed all which Confession take as the same is related by Cambden in these words In the Year saith he 1570. I was Sworn one of the Queens Servants and continued intirely devoted to her Majesty till the Year 1580. at which time I came into danger of loosing my Life with great disgrace Parry's Confession Camb. Annals f. 306. for he had broken into Hugh Hares Chamber in whose debt he was and had wounded him for which he was by the Law Condemned but had his Life saved by the Queens gracious Pardon from that time I continued troubled in my Mind and having procured a License to withdraw my self into France not with any intentions to return hither again for I had devoted my self to the Catholic Religion At Paris I was reconciled to the Church of Rome at Venice I had conference with Benedict Palmio a Jesuit concerning the destressed Catholics in England and I gave him some hints that I had found out a way to relieve them if the Pope or any Learned Divines would justifie it to be lawful Palmio extolled this as a Pious design and me he recommended to the Popes Nuncio at Venice whose Name was Campeius and Campeius recommended me to the Pope I besought by Letters that I might come to Rome with a safe Conduct Letters of safe Conduct were sent me from the Cardinal of Como but not large enough afterwards others were sent me more large and full but then was I returned to Paris there I lighted upon Morgan who told me that it was expected by divers that I should do some notable Service for God and the Catholic Church I answered that I was ready to kill the greatest Subject in England but said he why not the Queen her self and this said I might easily be done if it might appear to be lawful for Watts a Priest with whom I had conference about it concealing persons Names affirmed flatly it was not lawful and Chreighton also a Scotish Jesuit avouched the same Teaching that evil was not to be done that good might come of it that God was better pleased with Adverbs then Nouns and approved what was well done and lawfully then what was otherwise good and that many Souls were not to be redeemed with the destruction of any one without the Express command of God notwithstanding I having engaged my self both by Letters and Promises whilst I was in Italy thought it an heinious sin to give over my enterprize in case the Pope should approve it by his Letters and grant me a plenary Pardon which I begged of him by Letters I sent to him by Ragozonio his Nuncio in France who highly commended my design and sent my Letters to Rome being returned into England I procured access to the Queen to whom after all By-standers were removed I discovered the whole Conspiracy how be it cloaked with the best Art I could she heard me without being daunted I departed not without being terrified and cannot now forget what she then said That no Catholic should be called in Question meerly for Religion or the Popes Supremacy so that they shewed themselves good Subjects In the mean time whilst I was a daily Suitor in the Court for the Mastership of St. Catharines I received Letters from the Cardinal of Como wherein my enterprize was commended and my self absolved in the Popes Name These Letters I imparted to the Queen what effect they wrought with her I know not to me they certainly added Courage and took away all scruples yet was I not minded to offer her any violence if she could by any means be perswaded to deal more favourably with the Catholics And therefore least I should commit the Murther I layed away my Dagger still as often as I had access to her when I seriously considered her and her truly Royal vertues I was distracted with doubtful thoughts for my Vows were recorded in Heaven my Letters and Promises amongst Men these things I often pondered with an unquiet Mind I was never much beholden to her for any thing my Life indeed she once Pardoned me but to have taken it away upon that occasion had been cruel and tyrannical hereupon I departed from Court much unsatisfied with my condition I lighted upon Dr. Allens Book against the Justice of Brittain where he taught That Princes Excommunicate for Heresie were to be deprived of Kingdom and Life which Book did strongly encourage me to prosecute my attempt This Book I read to Nevil whom I sometimes invited to my Table six whole Months before he accused me afterwards he came to me and said let us venture upon somewhat since we can get nothing from the Queen and he propounded several things about the delivery of the Queen of Scots But I have said I a greater business in my Mind and of more advantage for the Catholic Church The next day he came and swore upon the Bible that he would conceal and constantly persue any thing that should be for the good of the Catholic Religion and I sware the like we then resolved with ten more Men to set upon the Queen as she rode abroad to take the Air and to kill her All which Nevil concealed till now But having heard that the Earl of Westmorland was dead whose Estate he hath already swallowed in hopes he
People had possest our Souls in meekness and humility honoured Her Majesty born with the infirmity of the State suffered all things and dealt as true Catholic Priests If all of us we say had thus done most assuredly the State would have loved us or at least born with us where there is one Catholic there would have been ten There had been no Speeches amongst us of Racks and Tortures nor any cause to have used them for none were ever vexed that way simply for that he was either Priest or Catholic but because they were suspected to have had their hands in some of the said most Traiterous designments None of Her Majesties Enemies durst so really have attempted her State and Kingdom we had been in better friendship with those that seek now most to oppose themselves against us and to all Men as we are persuaded Bonus odor Christi odor vitae ad vitam Whereas by following the said new violent Spirits quasi turbae impellentes parietem we are become odor Mortis ad mortem non solum iis qui pereunt sed etiam iis qui salvi fiunt And therefore let us all turn over the Leaf and take another course then hitherto we have done CHAP. VIII K. Ja. I. AND now a Man might reasonably suppose that after the first Plottings of the Papists with the Guises the French King and the Pope on behalf and by the instigation of the Queen of Scots after Harding Saunders and S. P. busily exercising their Episcopal Power in England in 1568 after Ridolph's exciting Queen Elizabeth's Subjects to Rebellion sent hither by Pope Pius Quintus for that purpose after the Rebellion in the North fomented by Morton sent hither by the same Pope to that end headed by the Earls of Northumberland and Westmorland who were incouraged thereto by a Letter from the same Pope After Dacres his Rebellion in Cumberland after the Earl of Ormonds Brethren the Bo●telers Rebellion in Ireland after Pope Pius Quintus his Bull declaring the Queen Excommunicate and her Subjects absolved from their Allegiance after the Earl of Twomonds Rebellion in Ireland after Storys Treason ●ir Edward Coke Attorny General to King James ●e First in o●ening the fact ●f the Gun-Powder-Plot at ●he Tryal of ●arnet the Je●ite mentions ●●ese Treasons ●nd Conspira●es The Rela●tion of the ●ryal was Prin●●d Anno ●606 which ●eing taken ne●ce of whilst ●hings were ●resh in memo●y gives the ●reatest confir●ation to the ●ruth of them after the Spaniards the Pope and the Guises contrivances to kill the Queen and set up Mary Queen of Scots and introduce Popery after I say these things had occasioned the making the 13 Eliz. cap. 12 And after Stukelys Plot to invade Ireland and England at once After Fitz Morris his Rebellion in Ireland carried on after his Death by Desmond after another conspiracy in Ireland for the destruction of the Protestant Relligion after the erecting Seminarys abroad for the educating and bringing up Priests to be sent hither to alienate the Hearts of the Subject from their Soveraign and the Actual sending of Campian Parsons and others into England for that purpose who were detected in their attempts to compass such their wicked designs and Executed for Treason after I say these things had raised a greater jealousy of the Papists in the State and caused them to make the 23 El. cap. 1. And after Somervills Conspiracy to kill the Queen after Francis Throgmortons Conspiracy to depose the Queen by Foreign Force after a further design of the Pope the Spaniard and the Guises for invading England in order to destroy the Protestant Religion after Parry's Treason all which Conspiracies and Treasons extorted from the State the 27 Eliz. cap. 1. and 2. after Gilford Savage Babington and others design to kill the Queen and set up Mary Queen of Scots who was at the Bottom of this design her self and promised to reward the Actors in it for which she was Tryed Condemned and Executed after Staffords Conspiracy and Yorks Plot which Treasons occasioned the making the 29 Eliz. cap. 6. and after the Pope and the Spaniards design in 1588. to invade England and thereby destroy the Protestant Religion with its defender by a Force by them called the Invincible Armada and this begun and carryed on by English Priests and Lay-Papists after Heskets Plot to depose the Queen and set up the Lord Strange After Cullens Conspiracy to murther the Queen after Lopez his Conspiracy to poison the Queen for which the Spaniard was to pay 50000 Crowns which Treasons did as it were compel the State to make the 35 Eliz. cap. 2. for confining Papists with in five Miles of their dwelling I say after all these Plots Conspiracies Treasons and open Rebellions invented begun and carryed on by the Papists and all with so little Success and after their own Confession of the whole to be true and their own advice to turn over a new Leaf a man might reasonably suppose that they should have ceased any further Attempts by Treason Rebellion Plot or Conspiracy to introduce the Popish Religion into England But such is the inveterate Malice and implacable Hatred of the Pope and all that are of the Communion of the Church of Rome if I may call it a Church that even before the peaceable James the First of England and the Sixth of Scotland was placed upon the Throne by the unanimous consent of all the Protestant Subjects of England as appears by the Act of Recognition made in the first year of his Reign there were several Plots for the taking away his Life and in one Plot even Watson and Clark two secular Priests of the Romish Church the former whereof joyned with Bluet the Secular Priest in writing the Impot●nt considerations before mentioned wherein they acknowledge all the Plots Conspiracies Treasons and Rebellions before mentioned to have been committed by Papists but insinuate it to be done by the instigation of the Jesuits are found in a Plot against the said King James and Executed for it but before I mention any thing of that Plot I shall give a short Account of what designs were on foot against the said King James his Life before his accession to the Crown Queen Elizabeth being old and weak and as they thought The Papists plot against James the First before his coming to the Crown could not live long the Papists thought it needless to make any more attempts against her person least her death should anticipate their quickest Designs But she and the Kingdom having their Eye upon the said King James being a Protestant to succeed her their main drift was to prevent him if possible from succeeding Queen Elizabeth In order to this in the Year 1601. there was one Francis Mowbray Mowbray's Plot against King James the First Fowlis Hist. li. 10. cap. 1. f. 498. Son to the Laird Barnbowegal who had lived some while in the Infanta's Court at Brussels he they say
An Historical ACCOUNT Of Making the PENAL LAWS By the PAPISTS against the PROTESTANTS And by the PROTESTANTS against the PAPISTS WHEREIN The true Ground and Reason of Making the Laws is given the PAPISTS most Barbarous Usuage of the PROTESTANTS here in England under a Colour of Law set forth and the Reformation Vindicated from the Imputation of being Cruel and Bloody unjustly cast upon it by those of the Romish Communion By Samuel Blackerby Barrister of Grays-Inn Summa est ratio quae pro Religione facit Co. 5.14 b. LONDON Printed for William Churchill at the Black-Lyon in St. Paul's Church-Yard and John Weld at the Crown between the Temple-Gates in Fleet-Street MDCLXXXIX Licensed By Command of the Right Honorable the Earl of Shrewsbury Principal Secretary of State. The 10 th of May 1689. JA. VERNON To the Right Honorable CHARLES EARL of MONMOUTH VISCOUNT MORDANT OF AVILAND BARON of RIGATE ONE of their MAJESTIES most Honorable PRIVY-COUNCIL And the FIRST of the LORDS COMMISSIONERS Of their MAJESTIES TREASURY c. This Historical Account of making these Penal Laws is most humbly Dedicated by the Author His Lordships Most Humble and most Obedient Servant AN HISTORICAL ACCOUNT Of making the Penal Laws By the Papists against the Protestants and by the Protestants against the Papists CHAP. I. Rich. II. BY the 1 Mirror of Justices f. 152. Common Law of England the punishment of Heresie was burning the Heretick by vertue of the Writ de Haeretico comburendo 2 Fitz. Natur. Brev. f. 269. which was first to issue What was accounted Heresie before the time of Ed. the 3 d I shall not enquire That the Church of Rome hath always termed those Hereticks who have opposed her Innovasions and Corruptions can't be denyed and is sufficient to my purpose The first of these that apppeared in England was John Wickliffe in the latter end of the Reign of King Ed. the 3 d in the year 1371. And therefore there was no occasion for putting the Law in Execution till his time but upon his appearance he Preaching and Teaching several Doctrines that tended to a Reformation the Romish Clergy fond of their Diana presently endeavours to silence him which they had done had not the favour of some great men at that time stopt their proceedings against him so that notwithstanding their Rage and Malice against him he at last dyed in his Bed But such an Implacable Hatred they bore to his Memory because he had begun to dispel those Clouds of Darkness and Ignorance with which this Church of England was then overspread that they 3 Ex actis Consilii Constan Procured a Decree of the Synod of Constance for the taking up his Body and Bones to be burnt one and forty years after he was buried for being an obstinate Heretick In obedience to which Decree the Popish Clergy in the time of King Richard the 2 d took up his Bones out of his Grave and burnt them and cast the Ashes into a River Such Enemies were they then to Christ's Religion that they would not suffer the Ashes of this great Luminary to rest lest as they were superstitious enough to think they should again revive to make a further discovery of their Works of Darkness In this 4 Trussel's Continuation of Daniel's History of England fol. 49. King's Reign execution by Fire was first put in practice within this Realm for opposing the Superstition and Idolatry of the Church of Rome Before this time there being no Statute to punish the Oppugners of the Romish Innovasions and Corruptions in matters of Doctrine and Worship The Clergy of the Romish Church made use of the weakness of R. 2. and prevailed with him to consent to the owning a supposititious Law of their own contriving and drawing up without the consent of the Commons Co. Inst 3. p. fol. 40 41. That Commissions should be by the Lord Chancellor made and directed to Sheriffs and others to arrest such as should be certified into the Chancery by the Bishops and Prelates to be Preachers of Heresie and notorious Errors their Fautors Maintainers and Abettors and to hold them in strong Prison until they would justifie themselves to the Law of Holy Church Which Act of Parliament was the first that was made against them that preached against the Church of Rome under the Notion of their being Hereticks who were then called Wicklivites The Act it self I have here inserted as it is Printed in Rastal's Statutes 5 R. 2. Ca. 5. Rast Stat. f. 140. The Wicklivites to be imprisoned Forasmuch as it is openly known that there be divers evil persons within the Realm going from County to County and from Town to Town in certain habits under dissimulation of great Holyness and without the Lycens e of the Ordinacies of the places or other sufficient Authority Preaching daily not only in Churches and Church-yards but also in Markets Fairs and other open places where a great Congregation of people is divers Sermons containing Heresies and notorious Errors to the great embleamishing of the Christian Faith and destruction of the Laws and of the estate of Holy Church to the great peril of the souls of the people and of all the Realm of England as more plainly is found and sufficiently proved before the Reverend Father in God the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury and the Bishops and other Prelates Masters of Divinity and Doctors of canon and of civil Law and a great part of the Clergy of the said Realm especially assembled for this cause which persons do also preach divers matters of slander to engender discord and dissention betwixt divers Estates of the said Realm as well Spiritual as Temporal in exciting of the people to the great peril of all the Realm which Preachers cited or summoned before the Ordinaries of the places there to answer of that whereof they be Impeached will not obey to their Summons and Commandments nor care not for their Monitions nor Censures of the Holy Church but expresly despise them and moreover by their subtil and ingenious words do draw the people to hear their Sermons and do maintain them in their Errors by strong hand and by great Routs It is ordained and assented in this present Parliament that the King's Commissions be made and directed to the Sheriffs and other Ministers of our Soveraign Lord the King or other sufficient persons Learned and according to the Certifications of the Prelates thereof to be made in the Chancery from time to time to arrest all such Preachers and also their Fautors Maintainers and Abettors and to hold them in Arrest and strong Prison till they will justifie them according to the Law and Reason of Holy Church and the King will and commandeth That the Chancellor make such Commissions at all times that he by the Prelates or any of them shall be certified and thereof required as is aforesaid By this Act it appears that there were then several persons who would not
ingaging him at the little River Gelt after very many of the said Leonard Dacre's Men were slain he left the Victory to the Lord Hunsdon and withdrew himself to the next part of Scotland from whence shortly after he Crossed the Seas into the Low Countries and dyed a poor Man at Lovain The Queen by publick Proclamation pardoned the Multitude whom he had excited to Rebellion The third Rebellion was in Ireland in the same Year beaded by the Botelers Cambd. Annals f. 137. The Reason of these Rebellions was Pope Pius Quintus his Bull. Camb. Annals fol. 145. Baker's Chro. fol. 34. Foulis li. 7. ca. 2. fol. 325. Collection f. 3. Pope Pius Quintus his Bull. Cambd. Annals fol. 146. Fowlis 331. And as the Papists gave Queen Elizabeth these disturbances here in England so they were not wanting in Embroiling of Ireland So ungrateful were they for all the favour and kindness that she had from time to time shewn them Edmond and Peter Boteler the Earl of Ormond's Brethren engaged themselves with the Bishop of Rome and the Spaniard for maintaining the Popish Religion and outing Queen Elizabeth of her Kingdom of Ireland But their Brother the Earl of Ormond quenched this Flame by perswading his Brethren to submit themselves who by that means saved their Lives And no wonder it is that the Papists thus Rebel against Queen Elizabeth when Pius Quintus Bishop of Rome who had from the time he came to the See been continually plotting against her had the year before by his Bull declaratory without any previous admonition or Citation excommunicated her and did afterwards cause the same to be openly published and set up upon the Gates of the Bishop of Londons Palace in these words A Sentence Declaratory of our Holy Lord Pope Pius Quintus against Elizabeth Queen of England and the Hereticks adhering unto her wherein also all her Subjects are declared to be absolved from the Oath of Allegiance and whatever other Duty they owe unto her And those that from henceforth shall obey her are involved in the same Curse or Anathema Pius Bishop Servant to God's Servants for a future Memorial of the matter He that raigneth on high to whom is given all Power in Heaven and in Earth hath Committed his one Holy Catholick and Apostolick Church out of which there is no Salvation to one alone upon Earth namely To Peter the Chief of the Apostles and to Peter's Successor the Bishop of Rome to be by him govern'd with plenary Authority Him alone hath he made Prince over all People and all Kingdoms to pluck up destroy scatter consume plant and build that he may preserve his faithful People knit together with the band of Charity in the Vnity of the Spirit and present them spotless and unblamable to their Saviour In discharge of which Function we who are by God's Goodness so called to the Government of the aforesaid Church do spare no pains labouring with all earnestness that unity and the Catholick Religion which the Author thereof hath for the tryal of his Childrens Faith and for our amendment suffered to be tossed with so great Afflictions might be preserved sincere But the number of the ungodly hath gotten such power that there is now no place in the whole world left which they have not assayed to corrupt with their most wicked Doctrines and amongst others Elizabeth the pretended Queen of England the Servant of Wickedness lendeth thereunto her helping hand with whom as in a Sanctuary the most pernicious persons have found a refuge This very Woman having seized on the Kingdom and monstrously usurped the place of Supream Head of the Church in all England and the chief Authority and Jurisdiction thereof hath again reduced the said Kingdom into a miserable and ruinous condition which was so lately reclaimed to the Catholick Faith and a thriving Condition For having by strong hand prohibited the exercise of the true Religion which Mary the lawful Queen of Famous Memory had by the help of this See restored after it had been formerly overthrown by Henry the Eighth a Revolter there-from and following and embracing the Errors of Hereticks she hath changed the Royal Council consisting of the English Nobility and filled it up with obscure Men being Hereticks suppressed the Embracers of the Catholick Faith Constituted lewd Preachers and Ministers of Impiety Abolished the Sacrifice of the Mass Prayers Fastings choice of Meats unmarried Life and the Catholick Rites and Ceremonies commanded Books to be read through the whole Realm containing manifest Heresie and appointed Impious Rites and Institutions by her self entertained and observed according to the Prescript of Calvin to be likewise observed by her Subjects presumed to eject Bishops Parsons of Churches and other Catholick Priests out of their Churches and Benefices and to bestow them and other Church Livings upon Hereticks and to determine of Church Causes prohibited the Prelates Clergy and People to acknowledge the Church of Rome or obey the Precepts or Canonical Sanctions thereof compelled most of them to condescend to her wicked Laws and to abjure the Authority and Obedience of the Bishop of Rome and to acknowledge her to be sole Lady in Temporal and Spiritual Matters and this by Oath imposed Penalties and Punishments upon those which obeyed not and exacted them of those which persevered in the Vnity of the Faith and their Obedience aforesaid cast the Catholick Prelates and Rectours of Churches into Prison where many of them being worn out with long languishing and sorrow miserably ended their Lives All which things being so manifest and notorious to all Nations and by the serious Testimony of very many so substantially proved that there is no place at all left for excuse defense or evasion We seeing that Impiety and Wicked Actions are multiplyed one upon another as also that the Persecution of the Faithful and Affliction for Religion groweth every day heavier and heavier through the instigation and by means of the said Elizabeth and since we understand her Heart to be so hardened and obdurate that she hath not only contemned the Godly Requests and Admonitions of Catholick Princes concerning her cure and Conversion but also hath not so much as suffered the N●ncio's of this See to cross the Seas for this purpose into England are constrained of necessity to betake our selves to the Weapons of Justice against her being heartily grieved and sorry that we are compelled thus to punish one to whose Ancestors the whole State of Christendom hath been so much beholden Being therefore supported with his Authority whose pleasure it was to place us tho' unable for so great a burthen in this Supream Throne of Justice we do out of the fulness of our Apostolick Power declare the aforesaid Elizabeth as being an Heretick and a favourer of Hereticks and her adherents in the matters aforesaid to have incurr'd the Sentence of Excommunication and to be cut off from the unity of the body of Christ And moreover we do
a Committee to prepare Bills And that Session there was an Act of Parliament made that is intituled 23 Eliz. ca. 1. Rast Stat. 2. part f. 243. An Act to retain the Queens Majesties Subjects in their due Obedience which Act recites That where since the making of the 13th of the Queen Ca. 2. divers evil affected Persons have promised contrary to the meaning of the said Statutes by other means then by Bulls or Instruments written or printed to withdraw divers the Queens Majesties Subjects from their natural Obedience to Her Majesty and to obey the usurped Authority of Rome and in respect of the same to perswade great Numbers to withdraw their due Obedience to Her Majesties Laws established for the due Service of Almighty God. It is thereby enacted that they should be guilty of High Treason Treason in Reconciler and Reconciled to the Church of Rome who should diswade the Subjects from their Obedience to their Prince and from the Religion established in England or should reconcile them to the Church of Rome as also those who should be diswaded or reconciled those also who should say Mass were to be fined 200 Marks and to suffer Imprisonment for a Year or longer if they paid not the Money they who should be wittingly and willingly present at Mass were to be fined 100 Marks and to suffer Imprisonment likewise for a Year and they who refused to frequent Divine Service are to forfeit 20 Pounds a Month but there must in every Case a legal Conviction precede From the History of the Papists Conspiracies and the Queens Carriage towards them during these last ten Years whereof I have given an Account I cannot but observe 1. That the Papists are a most perverse and disingenuous Generation of Men who never have lived nor is it to be believed ever will in Obedience to any Prince who is not of their own Religion 2. That notwithstanding their many Treasons and Rebellions in England and Ireland against Queen Elizabeth yet in ten years time there were not above five executed upon any of the Penal Laws made against them and that she was hardly prevailed upon to execute any of them although for the most apparent Treason and would not have yielded but that it appeared necessary for the Preservation of her self her Protestant Subjects and the Protestant Religion 3. That therefore the Penal Laws were not made so much with design to offend the Papists as to defend the Queen and her Government from the Treasons Rebellions Outrages and Violences every where committed by the Papists stirred up and egged on by the Seminary Priests Jesuits and sent hither for that very Purpose 4. That notwithstanding all their Plots and Contrivances there was no restraint upon their exercising their Religion in their own private Families nor no Prohibitions of saying or hearing Mass till this last Act of Parliament was made which was extorted from the State by their horrid Abuse of their former Liberty So that he that denies the Reasonableness of those Penal Laws against Papists must one would think offer Violence to his own Reason But yet least the Papists should object and any weak Protestant think with too great Colour of Reason that these Facts are the Relation of Protestant Historians who will be sure to write all things with the greatest plausibleness and shew of Reason and Justice on their own side and will be sure to blacken and villifie the Papists as much as they are able although they have never so little reason so to do I shall to back what I have related from our own Historians and to convince all mankind that it is true subjoyn what the Seeular Priests themselves in their important Considerations have owned was the true ground and reason of making this Act of Parliament of 23 Eliz. Cap. 1. and because the Papists shall not say I bely mis-construe or misrepresent them take it in their own Words Col. f. 39. The Secular Priests Confession Of the Pope the Spaniard and Duke of Norfolk's Plot. Steukley's Plot. Furthermore about the coming out of the said Book of Mr. Saunders they had been in the Paragraph before complaining of Mr. Saunders his Writing a Book De visibili Monarchia whereby he justified the Bull of Pope Pius Quintus and the Rebellion in the North and many other such like things the whole Plots before mentioned of the Pope and the King of Spain with the Duke of Norfolk for the Disinheritance of her Majesty and other intended Mischiefs fell out to be fully disclosed afterwards within some four or five years it was also commonly known to the Realm what Attempts were in hand by Mr. Steukley assisted with Mr. Saunders and other Catholics both English Irish and Italians for an Enterprise by force in Ireland under a pretence to advance the Catholic Religion which for that time through some Defect succeeding not the Pope himself The Popes Invading Ireland in 1579. in the Year 1579. abused still by false Pretences did set forward that Course and sending thither certain Forces Mr. Saunders too much Jesuited did thrust himself in Person into that Action as a chief Ring-leader and to perswade the Catholics when he should come into Ireland to joyn with the Popes said Forces for the better assisting certain Rebels then in Arms against their Soveraign Now whilst these Practises were in hand in Ireland The Queen Excommunicated by Gregory 13th Gregory the Thirteenth reneweth the said Bull of Pius Quintus and denounceth her Majesty to be excommunicated with Intimations of all other particulars in the former Bull mentioned which was procured we doubt not by Surreptions the false Jesuits our Country-men daring to attempt any thing by untrue Suggestions and any leud Surmises that may serve their turns This Stratagem accomplisht and ground laid whereupon they imagined to work great Matters these good Fathers as the Devil would have it came into England and intruded themselves into our Harvest being the Men in our Consciences we mean both them and others of that Society with some of their Adherents who have been the chief Instruments of all the Mischiefs that have been intended against her Majesty since the beginning of her Reign and of the Miseries which we or any other Catholics have upon these Occasions sustained Their first repair hither was Anno 1580. when the Realm of Ireland was in great Combustion Parsons and Campians coming into England in 1580. and then they entred viz. Mr. Campian the Subject and Mr. Parsons the Provincial like a Tempest with sundry such great Brags and Challenges as divers of the gravest Clergy then living in England Dr. Watson Bishop of Lincoln and others did greatly dislike them and plainly foretold that as things then stood their Proceedings after that fashion would certainly urge the State to make some sharp Laws which should not only touch them but likewise all others both Priests and Catholics upon their Arrival and after these brags Mr.
Parsons presently fell to his Jesuitical Courses and so be-laboured both himself and others in matters of State how he might set her Majesties Crown upon another Head as appeareth by a letter of his own to a certain Earl that the Catholics themselves threatned to deliver him into the hands of the Civil Magistrate except he desisted from such kind of practices In these tumultuous and rebellious proceedings by sundry Catholics both in England and Ireland it could not be expected but that the Queen and the State would be greatly incensed with indignation against us We had some of us greatly approved the said Rebellion highly extoll'd the Rebels and pitifully bewailed their Ruin and Over-throw Many of our affections were knit to the Spaniards and for our Obedience to the Pope we all do profess it The attempts both of the Pope and Spaniard failing in England his Holiness as a temporal Prince The Popes Banner displayed in Ireland to depose the Queen displayed his Banner in Ireland This Plot was to deprive Her Highness first from that Kingdom if they could and then by degrees to depose her from this In all these Plots none were more forward then many of us that were Priests The Layity if we had opposed our selves to these designments would out of doubt have been over-ruled by us How many of our Calling were addicted to these Courses the State knew not In which Case the premises discreetly considered there is no King or Prince in the World disgusting the See of Rome and having either force or Metal in him The Queen Vindicated and commended that would have indured us if possible he could have been revenged but rather as we think have utterly rooted us out of his Territories as Traytors and Rebels both to him and his Country And therefore we may rejoyce unfeignedly that God hath blessed this Kingdom with so gracious and merciful a Soveraign who hath not dealt in this sort with us Assuredly if she were a Catholic she might be accounted the Mirrour of the World but as she is both we and all other Catholics her natural Subjects deserve no longer to live then we hereafter shall Honour her from our Hearts obey her in all things so far as possibly we may pray for her Prosperous Reign and long Life and to our Powers defend and Protect both her and our Country against any whatsoever that shall by force of Arms attempt to damnifie either of them for in the said Garboils and very undutiful Proceedings how hath her Highness dealt with us From the time of the said Rebellion and Parliament The Papists themselves confess not above twelve Executed in ten years there were few above twelve that in ten Years had been Executed for their Consciences as we hold altho our Adversaries say for Treason and of those twelve some parhaps can hardly be drawn within our Account having been tainted with matters of Rebellion The most of the said number were Seminary Priests who if they had come over with the like intents that some others have done might very worthily have been used as they were But in our Consciences nay some of us do know it that they were far from those Seditious humours being Men that intended nothing else then simply the good of our Country and the Conversion of Souls Marry to say the Truth as we have Confessed before how could either her Majesty or the State know so much They had great Cause as politic Persons to suspect the worst Besides to the further Honour of Her Majesty we may not Omit that the States of the whole Realm Assembled in Parliament Anno 1576. Were pleased to pass us over and made no Laws at that time against us The Antient Prisoners that had been restrained more narrowly in the Year 1570. were notwithstanding the said Enterprizes in Ireland again restored to their former Liberty to continue with their Friends as they had done before such as were not suspected to have been Dealers or Abettors in the said Treasonable Accounts were used with that humanity which could not well be expected But when the Jesuits were come and that the State had notice of the said Excommunication there was then within a while great alteration for such were the Jesuits proceedings and with so great boldness as tho all had been theirs and that the State should presently have been changed Her Majesty had seen what followed in her Kingdom upon the first Excommunication and was therefore in all worldly Policy to prevent the like by the second The Jealousie also of the State was much increased by Mr. Sherwin's answer upon his Examination The Jesuits indirect answering of plain Questions above Eight Months before the Apprehension of Mr. Campian For being asked whether the Queen was his lawful Soveraign notwithstanding any Sentence of the Popes he prayed that no such Question might be demanded of him and would not further thereunto Answer Two or three other Questions much to the like effect were likewise propounded unto him which he also refused to Answer Matters now sorting on this fashion there was a greater restraint of Catholics then at any time before many both Priests and Gentlemen were sent into the Isle of Ely and other places there to be more safely kept and looked unto The Queen's Proclamation upon the coming over of the Jesuits Seminary Priests This is a Mistake for the Law made by this Parliament was 23. Eliz. Cap. 1. that made it Treason in converter and converted to the Church of Rome and the Law here mentioned is 27. Eliz. Cap. 2. In January following 1581. according to the general Computation a Proclamation was made for the Calling home of Her Majesties Subjects beyond the Seas such especially as were trained up in the Seminaries pretending that they Learned little there but disloyalty and that none after that time should harbour or relieve them with sundry other Points of hard intendment toward us The same Month also a Parliament ensued wherein a Law was made agreeable in effect to the said Proclamation But with a more severe punishment annexed for it was a Penalty of Death for any Jesuit or Seminary Priest to repair into England and for any to receive or entertain them which fell out according to Bishop Watsons former Speeches or prediction what mischiefs the Jesuits would bring upon us We could here as well as some others have done shew our dislike with some bitterness of the said Law and Penalty But to what purpose should we do so It had been a good Point of Wisdom in two of three Persons that have taken that course to have been silent and rather to have thought by gentleness and sweet Carriage of themselves to have prevented the more sharp Execution of that Law then by exclaiming against it when it was too late to have provoked the State to a greater severity against us And to confess something to our disadvantage and to excuse the said Parliament If all
the Seminary Priests then in England or which should after that tim● have come hither had been of Mr. Morton and Mr. Saunders his mind before mentioned when the first Excommunication came out or of Mr. Saunders his second resolution being then in Arms against Her Majesty in Ireland or of Mr. Parsons The Parliament excused Traiterous disposition both to our Queen and Country The said Laws no doubt had carried with them a far greater shew of Justice But that was the Error of the State and yet not altogether for ought they knew improbable those times being so full of many dangerous designments and Jesuitical practices In this Year also divers other things fell out unhappily towards us poor Priests and other the graver sort of Catholics who had all of us single Hearts and disliked no man more all such factious enterprizes For notwithstanding the said Proclamation and Law Heywoods Practices Mr. Heywood a Jesuit came then into England and took so much upon him that Father Parsons fell out exceedingly with him and a great trouble grew amongst Catholics by their Brablings and Quarrels A Synod was held by him the said Mr. Heywood and sundry Ancient Customs were therein Abrogated to the offence of very many Campian answered as Sherwin did These Courses being understood after a sort by the State the Catholics and Priests in Norfolk felt the smart of it This Summer also in July Mr. Campian and other Priests were apprehended whose Answers upon their Examinations agreeing in effect with Mr. Sherwins before mentioned did greatly incense the State for amongst other Questions that were propounded unto them this being one viz. if the Pope do by his Bull or Sentence pronounce Her Majesty to be deprived and no Lawful Queen The Question propounded to Campian and others and her Subjects to be discharged of their Allegiance and Obedience unto Her and after the Pope or any other by his Appointment and Authority do Invade this Realm which part would you take or which part ought a good Subject of England to take some Answered that when the Case should happen they would then take Councel what were best for them to do Another that when that Case should happen he would Answer and not before Another that for the present he was not resolved what to do in such a Case Another that when the Case happeneth then he will Answer Another that if such deprivation and Invasion should be made for any Matter of his Faith he thinketh he were then bound to take part with the Pope Now what King in the World being in doubt to be invaded by his Enemies and fearing that some of his own Subjects were by indirect means drawn rather to adhere to them then to himself would not make the best Tryal of them he could for his better satisfaction whom he might trust to In which Tryal if he found any that either should make doubtful Answers or peremptorily affirm that as the Case stood betwixt him and his Enemies they would leave him their Prince and take part with them might he not justly repute them for Traitors and deal with them accordingly sure we are that no King or Prince in Christendom would like or tolerate any such Subjects within their Dominions if possibly they could be rid of them Thus much the secular Priests themselves Confess and certainly then 't is not to be denied but they own all the Treasons and Villanies that the Protestants charge upon the Papists only they would fain excuse themselves and the grave sort of Catholicks from having any hand in them And at the same time they justifie the State in their procedure against them because they have a Colour of reason to believe them all alike and know not but they are so But may the Papists say tho the States might have reason to make it a Capital offence to reconcile any of the Subjects of England to the See of Rome yet it seems hard to make a Man a Traitor for staying in or if a Man be out returning to his Native Countrey which 27 th Eliz. cap. 2. doth which Objections will be sufficiciently answered by the following Account of their Practices in the Queens Dominions from the twenty third year of her Reign to the twenty seventh The Papists had Writ so much against the Queen and other Excommunicate Princes that divers who had the Popes power in Esteem were perfectly drawn from their obedience and amongst others in the Year 1583 one Somervil Somervils Conspiracy Camb. Annals f. 289. Foulis Hist l. 7. cap. 4. f. 338. Bakers Chron. f. 361. who went to the Queens Court and breathing nothing but Blood against the Protestants furiously set upon one or two by the way with his drawn Sword and being apprehended Confessed that he designed to have killed the Queen with his own hands One Edward Arden Somervil's Wives Father his own Wife Somervil's Wife and one Hall a Priest were Arraigned and Condemned for this Conspiracy Somervil was three days after found strangled in Prison Arden was hanged and Quartered But so merciful was the Queen that she spared the Women and the Priest This unfortunate Gentleman Somervil was drawn into all this by the cunning of a Priest and cast by his Evidence saith Mr. Cambden In the Year 1584. Francis Throgmorton eldest Son of John Throgmorton a Justice of Peace in Cheshire Francis Throgmorton's Conspiracy Camb. Annals f. 294.298 Bakers Chron. f. 362. was Clapt up for being in a Conspiracy to bring in an Army of Foreigners and Deposing the Queen And no sooner was he Committed to Custody and had Confessed some things But Thomas Lord Paget and Charles Arundel a Courtier who joyned with him in the Conspiracy privily fled the Land and withdrew themselves into France And Mendoza the Spanish Ambassador who was likewise engaged in the same Design being greatly reprehended for it secretly Crost the Seas into France Throgmorton Confessed the Fact and afterwards denied it and after that cast himself upon the Queen's Mercy and in writing Confessed the same again at large But at the Gallows pretended to deny it again he being executed and the others fled that Conspiracy came to nothing Soon after this there was a further Discovery of the design of the Pope the Spaniard Camb. Annals f. 299. Foulis Hist l. 7. cap. 5. f. 345. The Earl of Arundel and Northumberland were ingaged Camb. Annals f. 310 311. there you will see the design was for delivering the Queen of Scots for the Conquering of England and the destruction of the Protestant Religion and the Guises for invading England which was Discovered in this manner One Chreighton a Scotch-man of the Society of Jesus passing into Scotland and being taken by some Netherland Pirates tore certain Papers in pieces the torn pieces being thrown over board were by the Wind blown back again and fell by chance into the Ship not without a Miracle as Chreighton himself said and Sir Willam
presently brake his Oath and accused me of these things Cardinal Como's Letter to Parry Foulis Hist lib. 7. cap. 3. f. 393. The Letter also in that Confession mentioned to be writ from Cardinal Como to him as the same is related by Fowlis followeth SIR HIS Holiness hath seen your Letter of the first with the Certificate inclosed and cannot but commend the good disposition and resolution which you write to hold towards the Service and common good wherein his Holiness doth exhort you to persevere and to bring to effect that which you have promised And that you may be the more assisted by that good Spirit which hath moved you thereunto his Holiness grants unto you his Blessing plenary Indulgence and Remission of all your sins according as you have desired assuring you that besides the merit which you shall receive for so doing in Heaven his Holiness will farther make himself Debtor to acknowledg your deservings in the best manner that he can and the more because you use the greater modesty in not pretending any thing or reward Put therefore to effect your holy and honourable purposes and regard your health And to conclude I offer my self to you heartily and desire you all good and happy success At your Service N. Card. Di. Como Rome January 30th 1584. All this he confessed before the Lord Hunsdon Sir Christopher Hatton and Sir Francis Walsingham all three of the Privy Council he acknowledged his Fault and begged Pardon for the same by his Letters to the Queen to Burleigh and Leicester His LETTER to the Queen as Foulis relates it was as followeth Parry's Letter to Queen Elizabeth Foulis Hist lib. 7. cap. 4. f. 341. YOVR Majesty may see by my voluntary Confession the dangerous Fruits of a discontented Mind and how constantly I pursued my first conceived Purpose in Venice for the Relief of the afflicted Catholicks continued it in Lyons and resolved in Paris to put it in adventure for the Restitution of England to the antient Obedience of the See Apostolick You may see withal how it is commended allowed and warranted in Conscience Divinity and Policy by the Pope and some great Divines though it be true or likely that most of our English Divines loss practiced in Matters of this weight do utterly mislike and condemn it The enterprize is prevented and Conspiracy discovered by an honourable Gentleman my Kinsman and late familiar Friend Mr. Edmond Nevil Privy and by solemn Oath taken upon the Bible Party to the Matter whereof I am heartily glad but more sorry in my very Soul that ever I conceived or intended it how commendable and meritorious soever I thought it God shame him and forgive me who would not now before God attempt it if I had Liberty and Opportunity to do it to gain your Kingdom I beseech Christ that my Death and Example may as well satisfie your Majesty and the World as it shall glad and content me The Queen of Scotland is your Prisoner let her be honourably intreated but yet surely guarded The French King is French you know it well enough you will find him occupied when he should do you Good he will not loose a Pilgrimage to save you a Crown I have no more to say at this time but that with my Heart and Soul I do now honour and love you am inwardly sorry for my Offence and ready to make you amends by my Death and Patience Discharge me a Culpa but not a Paena good Lady And so farewel most Gracious and the best Natured and Qualified Queen that ever lived in England From the Tower the14th of Feb. 1584. William Parry Some short time after he was arraigned at the Kings-Bench-Bar in Westminster-Hall Parry's Arraignment and Confession and confessed himself Guilty and when his Confession was recorded and Judgment demanded against him Hatton thought it necessary for the Satisfaction of the Multitude that were present that his Crime should be clearly and fully represented out of his own Confession which Parry acknowledged to be voluntary and prayed the Judges that he might read it Himself But the Clerk of the Crown read both it and also Cardinal Como's Letter and Parry's own to the Queen to Burleigh and to Leicester which he confest to be the very Letters themselves yet did he deny that ever he was resolved to Kill the Queen Being now commanded to speak if he had any thing to say why Judgment should not be given against him he answered perplexedly as if he were troubled in Conscience for the foul Fact he had undertaken I see I must die because I have not been constant to my self Being will'd to declare more plainly what he meant My Blood said he be amongst you Sentence of Death being pronounced he in a Fury cited the Queen to the Judgment-Seat of God. He was executed in the Palace-Yard he said he was never fully resolved in his Mind to take away the Queens Life and then died without in the least commending himself to God. So let all the Enemies of Jesus Christ and his Gospel perish These Plots and Conspiracies produced the said two Acts before mentioned the one for Provision to be made for the Security of the Queens Majesties Person and the Continuance of the Realm in Peace by which the said Association was confirmed The other Act against Jesuits Seminary Priests who would ground any Villanous Plots and Designs upon the Bull of Pius Quintus The former of which Acts of Parliament followeth in these Words as it is in Rastal 27 Eliz. cap. 1. Rast Stat. 2. part f. 283. An Act for Provision to be made for the Surety of the Queens Majesties most Royal Person and the Continuance of the Realm in Peace Treason in any Successor or other for them to take away the Queens Life And in case it happens to be tried notwithstanding the Succession and their Issues utterly excluded from the Crown FOrasmuch as the good Felicity and Comfort of the whole State of this Realm consisteth only next under God in the Surety and Preservation of the Queens most excellent Majesty And for that it hath manifestly appeared that sundry wicked Plots and Means have of late been devised and laid as well in forreign Parts beyond the Seas as also within this Realm to the great endangering of Her Highness most Royal Person and to the utter Ruine of the whole Common-Wealth if by Gods merciful Providence the same had not been revealed therefore for the preventing of such great Perils as might hereafter otherwise grow by the like detestable and devilish Practices at the humble Suit and earnest Petition and Desire of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by the Authority of the same Parliament Be it enacted and ordained if at any time after the end of this present Session of Parliament an open Invasion or Rebellion shall be had or made into or within any of Her Majesties Realms
* Allen before named worthy Man but by the perswasions as they think of Parsons greatly disliked of many both Wise and Learned And especially it was wondred at a while until the Drift thereof appeared more manifestly in the year 1588 that the said worthy Person laid down this for a ground in justifying the said Stanley viz. that in all Wars which may happen for Religion every Catholick Man is bound in Conscience to employ his Person and Force by the Popes Direction viz. how for when and where either at home or abroad he may and must break with his Temporal Soveraign Let us now see what was further doing by the Pope and the Papists against the Protestant Queen and the Protestant Religion in England in the Year 1588 and we shall doubtless see very good reason for making the Statute of 35 Eliz. Ca. 2. which was the last Law that was made against them in Queen Elizabeths time The Pope some Religious Persons in Spain and several English Fugitives The Pope plotting again Camb. Annal. f. 402. Baker's Chron. f. 374. had called back the Spaniard to his former Designs for the Conquest of England which had been interrupted by the Portugal Wars earnestly exhorting him that seeing God had given him Success in laying Portugal and the East-Indies to his Dominions he would do something which should be acceptable to God and becoming the Grandeur and Majesty of the Catholic King that nothing could be more then the propagating and enlarging the Church of God which could not be more gloriously nor more meritoriously done then by the Conquest of England re-planting the Roman Catholic Religion and abolishing Heresie there They suggested that this War would be just because it was necessary as also because it was for the Maintainance of Christs Religion in regard That the Queen of England being excommunicate persisted contumaciously against the Church of Rome supported his Rebels in the Netherlands annoyed the Spaniards by continual Depredations suppressed and sackt his Towns in Spain and America and had very lately put the Queen of Scots to Death violating thereby the Majesty of all Kings That it would be no less profitable than just for so he should add to his Empire those three Kingdoms quell the Rebellion in the Low Countries secure his Voyages to the Indies without the Expence of Convoys To prove this they suggested that the Spanish Navy did far exceed the English in Number Largeness of Ships and Strength especially considering the Addition of the Portugal Fleet that England had no Forts nor defences that it was unprovided of Commanders Souldiers Cavalry and Munition bare of Wealth and Friends that there were many Papists who would presently joyn with him that so great was the Strength of Spain and so unmatchable their Valour that none durst oppose them and confidently assured themselves of Victory That this Opportunity was offered by God himself a Peace being then concluded with the Turk and the French embroiled in a Civil War That the Conquest of England would be far easier than the Netherlands in respect the Cut from Spain to England was much more short and convenient than from Spain to the Netherlands That in order to the Conquest of the Netherlands it was necessary first to conquer England and that England being once conquered the Low-Countries must of necessity be subdued The Spanish King being perswaded to believe all this resolves on the Attempt The Contrivance of the Spanish Invasion Camb. Annal f. 403 404. and the next thing considered was in what Way and Means to effect it And the Method agreed on was to do it with a well-provided Army from Spain and the Low-Countries to be landed by a powerful Navy at the Thames Mouth in order to surprize the City of London by a sudden Assault this being resolved on the Preparation was made which was so great throughout all Spain Italy and Scicily that the Spaniards themselves were amazed at it and named it the Invincible Armada Their Cause the Armada and Army they recommended to the Pope and to the Prayers of the Catholics to God and the Saints and set forth a Book in Print for a Terror wherein the whole Preparation was set down The Prince of Parma also in the Netherlands by the Spanish Kings Command built Ships and many Flat-bottomed Boats and other great Preparations in the Sea Towns of Flanders he had an Army of an hundred and three Companies of Foot and four thousand Horse amongst which were one thousand English Fugitives who of all others were least esteemed neither was * Sir William Stanley before named Stanley who had the Command of them nor others who offered their Service and Council once heard but for their unnaturalness to their Country they were debarred from all access and as most inauspicious Persons worthily and with Detestation rejected The Spanish Navy in the whole consisted of one hundred and thirty Ships whereof Galliasses and Galleons seventy two in which were Souldiers nineteen thousand two hundred and ninety Camb. Annal. f. 410. Baker's Chron. f. 374. The Number of the Armada Marriners eight thousand three hundred and fifty Gally Slaves two thousand and eighty great Ordinance two thousand six hundred and thirty for the greater Holiness of their Action twelve of their Ships were called the twelve Apostles the chief Commanders were Don Alphonso Duke of Medina and John Recalde a great Sea-man Sixtus Quintus Curseth Queen Elizabeth Foulis Hist li. 7. ca. 6. f. 350. Camb. Annals f. 410. Sixtus Quintus the Pope that he might not seem to be wanting in so good a Cause did not only assist with his (a) Ant. Cicarella in vità Sexti V. Allen sent into the Netherlands to carry on the Design Treasure but his Papal Curse to boot whereby he excommunicated the Queen dethroned her absolved her Subjects from all Allegiance and published his Croisado in Print as it were against Turks and Infidels wherein out of the Treasure of the Church he granted plenary Indulgences to all that gave their Help and Assistance with this goodly Stuff William Allen a little before made a Cardinal an English-man and an old Traitor to the Queen was sent into the Netherlands the better to encourage the English Romanists to Rebellion Allen pulls out his Papal Tool which he forgeth into a Pamphlet in the English Language which he prints at Antwerp calling it The Declaration of the Sentence of Sixtus Quintus Their Methods And as a farther Interpretation of the Papal Intent and the better to ingage the English to Rebellion he joyns a second Part to it called An Admonition to the Nobility and People of England And that the Reader may better understand the Honesty of the Paper take the Sum of it thus Em. Meteram Hist Belg. lib. 15. p. 473 474. Sam. Purchas Pilgrims vol. 4. l. 10. c. 11. p. 1895 1896. It begins with Calling the Queens Government impious and unjust her self an
Genserick and Henricus with their Arian Hereticks alluding to the State. Here we think both him and divers others that have written to the same effect very greatly to blame Sure we are that the general Cause of Religion for the which both we and they contend as oft we have said getteth no good but hurt by it and contrary to the Old saying be he never so bad yet let him have Justice tho some hard Courses have been taken by the State against us yet hath it not by many degrees been so extream as the Jesuits and that Crue have falsely written and reported of it nor indeed as they deserved Afterwards they inveigh against the Spanish Invasion against Parsons for a Book he writ and against him and Creswel for another they writ they go on thus Whilst the said Invasion was thus talked of and in preparation in Spain a shorter course was thought of Heskets Plot. it might have had success Mr. Hesket was set on by the Jesuits 1592. or thereabouts with Father Parsons consent or knowledge to have stirred up the Earl of Darby to Rebellion against Her Highness Cullen Not long after good Father Holt and others with him persuaded an Irish-man one Patrick Collen as he himself confessed to attempt the laying his violent and villanous hands upon Her Majesty Shortly after in the Year 1593. that Notable Stratagem was Plotted the whole State knoweth by whom for Dr. Lopez the Queens Physician to have Poysoned her Lopez for the which he was Executed the Year after This wicked designment being thus prevented by Gods providence the said Traiterous Jesuit York and Williams Holt and others did allure and animate one York and Williams to have accomplished that with their Bloody hands that the other purposed to have done with his Poyson we mean Her Majesties destruction Hereunto we might add the late Villanous attempt 1599. of Edward Squire animated and drawn thereto as he confessed by Wallpool that pernicious Jesuit Walpool But we must turn again to Father Parsons whose turnings and doublings are such as would trouble a right good Hound to Trace him For in the mean time that the said Traytors one after another were Plotting and Studying how best they might compass Her Majesties Death they cared not how nor by what means he the said Father Parsons so prevailed with the King as he attempted twice in two sundry Years his new Invasion meaning to have proceeded therein The Spaniard designed a Second Invasion not with such great preparation as he did at the first but only to have begun the same by taking some Port Westward Towards which he came so far onward as Silley with his Fleet. At both which times God who still hath fought for her Majesty and this Realm did notably prevent him by such Winds and Tempests as the most of his Ships and Men perished in the Sea as they were coming hitherward Furthermore the said good Father in the midst of all the said Trayterous enterprizes both at home and abroad devised and set forward by him and his Companions was ploding amongst his Papers and playing the herauld how if all his said wicked designments failed he might at the last Intitle the King of Spain and consequently the Infanta his Daughter to the Crown and Kingdom of England To which purpose he framed and after published a Book wherewith he acquainted the Students in those Seminaries in Spain and Laboured nothing more then to have their subscriptions to the said Infanta's Title therein promissing unto her their present Allegiance as unto their lawful Soveraign and that when they should be sent into their Country they should perswade the Catholics there to do the like without any further Expectation of the Queen of Englands Death As Mr. Charles Paget affirmeth in his Book against Parsons They confess in these words That the Jesuitical designments beyond the Seas Collect. 53 54. together with certain Rebellions and Traiterous attempts of some Catholics at home have been the cause of such Calamities and troubles as have happened to us far less we think then any Prince living in Her Majesties Case and so provoked would have inflicted upon us And after they tell us that divers of their Communion have owned so much I shall conclude this Reign with these words of theirs which fully justifie the making the Laws that were made in it We are fully persuaded in our Consciences and as Men besides our Learning Collect. 55 56 57. who have some experience that if the Catholics had never sought by indirect means to have vexed Her Majesty with their designments against her Crown if the Pope and King of Spain had never plotted with the Duke of Norfolk If the Rebels in the North had never been heard of if the Bull of Pius the V. had never been known if the said Rebellion had never been justified If neither Steukly nor the Pope had attempted any thing against Ireland if Gregory the Thirteenth had not renewed the said Excommunication if the Jesuits had never come into England if the Pope and the King of Spain had not practised with the Duke of Guise for his attempt against Her Majesty if Parsons and the rest of the Jesuits with other our Country-men beyond Seas had never been agents in these Traiterous and Bloody designments of Throckmorton Parry Collen York Willians Squire and such like if they had not by their Treatises and writings endeavoured to defame their Soveraign and their own Country labouring to have many of their Books Translated into divers Languages thereby to shew more their own disloyalty if Cardinal Allen and Parsons had not published the Renovation of the said Bull by Sixtus Quintus if thereunto they had not added their scurrillous and unmanly Admonition or rather most Prophane Libel against Her Majesty if they had not sought by false persuasions and ungodly Arguments to have allured the Hearts of Catholics from their Allegiance if the Pope had never been urged by them to have thrust the Kingdom of Spain into that Barbarous Action against the Realm if they themselves with the rest of that generation had not laboured greatly with the said King for the Conquest and Invasion of this Land by the Spaniards who are known to be the cruelest Tyrants that live upon the Earth If in all their Proceedings they had not from time to time depraved irritated and provoked both Her Majesty and the State with these and other such like their ungodly and unchristian practices But on the contrary if the Popes from time to time had sought her Majesty by kind Offices and gentle Persuasions never ceasing the prosecution of those and such-like courses of humanity and gentleness if the Catholics and Priests beyond the Seas had laboured continually the furtherance of those most Priest-like and Divine allurements and had framed their own proceedings in all their words and writings accordingly if we at home all of us both Priests and
provide and furnish the Horses and partly in Pensions to be employed upon some such as were to be prepared for that Service all which the said Thomas VVinter did relate to the said King of Spain who the said Kingdoms of England and Spain then standing in Hostility took that Offer in very good part saying that he would respect and account of the Catholicks of England meaning the Papists as of his own Castilians and thereupon agreed that he would make Invasion and set foot in England about the Spring then next following and would by way of Exchange send over unto the Papists of England one hundred thousand Crowns to be paid at two several Days agreed upon all which particulars are extant in the Confession of some of the chief Offenders at which time sundry Papists of England did extraordinarily furnish themselves by the traiterous and wicked Perswasions and Means of sundry Iesuits both with Horse and Armour But before these things could be effected Almighty God called the said late Queen to his mercy Immediately after whose decease that is to say in the same Month of March wherein she departed out of this World Christopher Wright late of London Gentleman was imployed by the said Robert Catesby Francis Tresham Henry Garnet and others into Spain to Negotiate with the said King of Spain by the means of the said Creswel the Iesuit and others to proceed in that Invasion which the said Thomas Winter had before Negotiated with him And afterwards on the two and Twentyeth day of June in the first Year of your Majesties Reign over this Realm of England Sir William Stanley Kt. Hugh Owen Esq William Baldwin Iesuit and others did by and with the Traiterous procurement and consent of the Offendors aforesaid from and out of Handers in the parts beyond the Seas under the Government of the Arch-Duke Traiterously employ and send Guy Fauks sate of London Genelman unto the said King of Spain to Negotiate with him on the behalf of the said Papists of England for Invasion to be had against this Realm of England to the same effect as was committed to the said Christopher Wright as is aforesaid And the said Guy Fauks and Christopher Wright though they had all the furtherance of the said Creswel the Iesuit that he could give yet finding no such entertainment with the said King who as by the sequel appeareth grew into detestation with the said Propositions and Negotiations as they expected or desired But being wholly disappointed of all their hopes concerning that Matter the said Robert Catesby and divers other Persons within this Realm did send over the said Thomas Winter into the said Country of Flanders to procure the said Guy Fauks a Natural Born Subject of this Realm and yet a most Traiterous desperate and cloudy minded Person then serving as a Souldier in the Low-Countries to come over into this Realm and by and with the Traiterous conspiracy and consent of the said Henry Garnet Oswald Tesmond John Garrard and other Iesuits and Thomas Pearcy late of London Esq John Wright late of London Gent. the said Christopher Wright Francis Tresham Robert Winter late of Huddington aforesaid Esq John Grant late of Norbrook in the County of Warwick Esq Ambrose Rookwood late of Staningfeild in the County of Suffolk Esq Everard Digby late of Gorehurst in the County of Buckingham Kt. Robert Keys late of London Gentlman and Thomas Bates late of London Yeoman to undertake the Execution of the most wicked Barbarous execrable and abominable Treason that ever could enter into the Heart of the most wicked Man by blowing up with Gun-Powder the House of Parliament at such time as your most excellent Majesty and your dearest Consort the Queen and the most Noble Prince Henry together with the Lords Spiritual and Temporal the Iudges of the Realm and the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of Parliament should be in said Parliament-House Assembled for which most Traiterous and Barbarous purpose there were secretly laid in a Vault or Cellar under the Parliament-House Thirty six Barrels of Gun-Powder or thereabouts to the utter overthrow and subversion of the whole State of this flourishing and renouned Kingdom If God of his infinite Mercy had not most Miraculously by your Majesties blessed direction Discovered the same in finding out the said Barrels of Gun-Powder in the said Vault or Cellar but few hours before the time appointed for the Execution thereof All which most Heinous Horrid and Damnable Treasons are most manifest and apparent by the voluntary confession and acknowledgments of the Offenders themselves Of which most Barbarous Bloody and detestable Treason for Conspiring and preparing to blow up the Parliament-House with Gun-Powder The said Robert Winter Thomas Winter Guy Fauks Robert Keyes Ambrose Rookwood John Graunt and Thomas Bates have been lately indicted and during this present Sessions of Parliament Arraigned convicted by Verdict and thereupon attainted And the said Sir Everard Digby Kt. hath likewise been indicted and during this present Sessions of Parliament Convicted and Attainted by his own confession of Record upon his Arraignment according to the Laws of this your Majesties Realm as by the Records of their several Indictments and Attainders it doth and may more plainly appear and for the which Offences the said Sir Everard Digby Robert Winter Thomas Winter Guy Fauks Ambrose Rookwood John Graunt Robert Keyes and Thomas Bates have suffered pains of Death according to their demerits And the said Robert Catesby Thomas Piercy John Wright and Cristopher Wright were Slain in open Rebellion by them and others the said most wicked Traytors moved and stirred within divers Parts and Counties of this Realm shortly after the Discovery of their most detestable and Damnable Treason in Conspiring and preparing to blow up the said Parliament-House as aforesaid and the said Hugh Owen doth of purpose and for fear of condign punishment according to his demerit reside and kéep himself beyond the Seas by means whereof he cannot in respect of such his voluntary absence be Arraigned and publickly by due Tryal of Law upon apparent Testimony and proof against him be proceeded with for such his hainous and abominable Treasons and the said Francis Tresham being one of the said most detestable Traitors and being apprehended and imprisoned in the Tower of London having by sundry his Examinations confest himself a principal Traytor in all the said most abominable Treasons Dyed in the Tower during the time of his said imprisonment and before he could be Indicted of the said Treasons They therefore desired that the King of his blessed care and disposition to and for the continuance of Gods true Religion and Service and for that preservation and safety of his Person the Queen the Prince and the rest of the Royal Progeny and for the intire Love and Affection that his Majesty had always thent●fore born and did then bear to the Common-wealth and safety of this Realm of England to the end that all others might then
expence of Money to animate as many as they could against France Our Lord Treasurer Lord Keeper all the Bishops and such as called themselves Old Cavaliers who were all then as one Man were not less industrious against Popery and had the Purse at their Girdle too Which is an excellent Instrument to gain Friends with and all united against the Duke as Patron both of France and Catholick Religion To deal with all this Force we had no Money but what came from a few private hands And those so mean ones too that I dare venture to say that I spent more my particular self out of my own Fortune and upon my single Credit then all the whole Body of Catholicks in England besides Which was so inconsiderable in Comparison of what our Adversaries commanded and we verily believe did bestow in making their Party that it is not worth mentioning Yet notwithstanding all this we saw that by the help of the Non-conformists as Presbyterians Independants and other Sects who were as much afraid of Persecution as our selves and of the Enemies of the Ministers and particularly of the Treasurer who by that time had supplanted the Earl of Arlington and was grown sole Manager of all Affairs himself we sheuld be very able to prevent what they design'd against us and so render the Sessions ineffectual to their Ends though we might not be able to Compass our own Which were to make some brisk step in favour of his R. H. to shew the King that his Majesties Affairs in Parliament were not obstructed by reason of any Aversion they had to his R. H. Person or Apprehensions they had of him or his Religion But from Faction and Ambition in some and from a real Dissatisfaction in others that we have not had such Fruits and good Effects of of those great Sums of Money which have been formerly given as was expected If we could then have made but one such step the King would certainly have restored his R. H. to all his Commissions Upon which he would have been much greater than ever yet he was in his whole Life or could probably ever have been by any other Course in the World than what he had taken of becoming Catholick c. And we were so very near gaining this Point that I did humbly beg his R. H to give me leave to put the Parliament upon making an Address to the King that His Majesty would be pleased to put the Fleet into the hands of his R H. as the only Person likely to give a good Account of so important a Charge as that was to the Kingdom and shewed his R. H. such Reasons to perswade him that we could carry it that he agreed with me in it that he believ'd we could Yet others telling him how great a damage it would be to him if he should miss in such an undertaking which for my part I could not then see nor do I yet he was prevail'd upon not to venture though he was perswaded he could carry it I did Communicate this Design of mine to Monsieur Rouvigny who agreed with me that it would be the greatest advantage imaginable to his Master to have the Dukes Power and Credit so far advanced as this would certainly do if we could Compass it I shew'd him all the Difficulty we were like to meet with and what Helps we should have But that we should want one very material one Money to carry on the Work as we ought And therefore I do Confess I did shamefully beg his Masters help and would willingly have been in everlasting Disgrace with all the World if I had not with that Assistance of twenty thousand Pounds sterling which perhaps is not the tenth part of what was spent on the other side made it evident to the Duke that he could not have missed it Monsieur Rouvigny used to tell me that if he could be sure of succeeding in that Design his Master would give a very much larger Sum But that he was not in a Condition to throw away Money upon uncertainties I answered That nothing of that Nature could be so infallibly sure as not to be subject to some Possibilities of failing but that I durst venture to undertake to make it evident that there was as great an assurance of succeeding in it as any Husbandman can have of a Crop in Harvest who sowes his Gound in its due Season and yet it would be counted a very imprudent piece of wariness in any body to scruple the ventring so much seed in its proper time because it is possible it may be totally lost and no benefit of it found in Harvest He that minds the Winds and the Rains at that rate shall neither Sow nor Reap I take our Case to be much the same as it was the last Sessions If we can advance the Dukes Interest one step forward we shall put him out of the step of Chance for ever For he makes such a Figure already that cautious Men do not care to Act against him not always without him because they do not see that he is much out-power'd by his Enemies Yet is he not at such a pitch as to be quite out of danger or free from Opposition But if he could gain any considerable new addition of Power all would come over to him as to the only stedy Centre of our Government and no body would contend with him further Then would Catholics be at rest and his most Christian Majesty's Interest secured with us in England beyond all Apprehensions whatsoever In Order to this we have two great designs to attempt this next Sessions First that which we were about before viz. To put the Parliament upon making it their humble request to the King that the Fleet may be put into his R. H ' s. care Secondly to get an Act for general Liberty of Conscience If we carry these two or either of them we shall in effect do what we list afterwards And truly we think we do not undertake these great points very unreasonably but that we have good Cards for our Game Not but that we expect great opposition and have great reason to beg all the Assistance we can possibly get and therefore if his most Christian Majesty would stand by us a little in this Conjuncture and help us with such a Sum as 20000 l. Sterling which is no very great Matter to Venture upon such an undertaking as this I would be content to be Sacrificed to the utmost Malice of my Enemies if I did not succeed I have proposed this several times to Monsieur Rouvigny who seemed always of my Opinion and has often told me that he has writ into France upon this Subject and has desired me to do the like But I know not whether he will be as Zealous in that point as a Catholic would be because our prevailing in these things would give the greatest blow to the Protestant Religion here that ever it received since its Birth