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A89976 An exact abridgment of all the trials (not omitting any material passage therein) which have been published since the year 1678 relating to the popish, and pretended Protestant-plots in the reigns of King Charles the 2d, and King James the 2d. P. N. 1690 (1690) Wing N64A; ESTC R229644 248,177 499

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the Prisoners Mrs. Gaunt to be burnt and the other 3 to be drawn hang'd and quarter'd which was accordingly executed upon them and Mr. Cornish was hang'd in Cheapside over against Kings-street on Friday October 23 1685. and his Quarters afterwards put up in several Places and his Head upon the Guild-Hall where it stood till the tidings of the Dutch Invasion summon'd it with the other Quarters into the Grave after they had been expos'd in that infamous manner the space of 3 Years The Trial of Henry Baron Delamere in Westminster-Hall before George Lord Jefferies constituted Lord High-Steward on this Occasion on Thursday Jan. 14 1685. THen and there the Court being met the Lord High-Steward's Commission was first read and the Staff being carried between Garter King at Arms and the Gent. Vsher of the Black Rod was with 3 Reverences delivered upon the knee to his Grace and by him redelivered to the Gent. Vsher of the Black Rod to hold during the Service Then Proclamation was made by a Serjeant at Arms for all Persons present except Peers Privy Councellors and the reverend Judges now assistant to be uncovered and for all to whom any Writ had been directed for the certifying of any Indictment before his Grace to bring in the same forthwith After which Sir Edward Lutwich deliver'd in his Writ and Return which were read And then the Lieutenant of the Tower was call'd to bring his Prisoner to the Bar which having done Sir Roger Harsnet Serj. at Arms was called to return the Names of the Peers which he had summoned who were then called over by the Clerk of the Crown and those that appeared were these following who standing up uncovered answered to their Names each making a Reverence to the Lord High Steward Lawrence Earl of Rochester Lord High-Treasurer of England Robert E. of Sunderland Lord President of His Majesties Privy-Council Henry Duke of Norfolk Earl-Marshal of England Charles D. of Somerset Henry D. of Grafton Henry D. of Beaufort Lord President of VVales John Earl of Mulgrave Lord Chamberlain of His Majesties Houshold Aubrey E. of Oxford Charles E. of Shrewsbury Theophilus E. of Huntingdon Thomas E. of Pembroke John E. of Bridgwater Henry E. of Peterborow Robert E. of Scarsdale VVilliam E. of Craven Louis E. of Feversham George E. of Berkley Daniel E. of Nottingham Thomas E. of Plimouth Thomas Viscount Falconberg Francis Viscount Newport Treasurer of His Majesties Houshold Robert Lord Ferrers Vere Essex Lord Cromwell VVilliam Lord Maynard Comptroler of His Majesties Houshold George Lord Dartmouth Master-General of His Majesties Ordinance Sidney Lord Godolphin John Lord Churchill The Lord High Steward then having acquainted the Prisoner with the occasion of this meeting order'd the Bill of Indictment to be read which was done twice at the Prisoner's desire And then the Prisoner deliver'd in his Plea to the Jurisdiction of this Court that he ought to be tried by the whole Body of the House of Peers in Parliament the Parliament still continuing being under a Prorogation and not dissolved and because there was some agitation of the matter concerning this Prosecution upon his Petition in the House of Lords c. To which the Attorny General answer'd that the Plea was not good there never having been so much as any Indictment returned there nor found during the Session of Parliament besides that the Plea was in Paper and English The Prisoner then desired Counsel to put it into Form But it being a Plea against the Jurisdiction no time could be allowed and the Prisoner having no Counsel ready to plead his plea was over-ruled and he pleaded Not Guilty After which the Lord High Steward gave the Charge to the Peers and Sir Thomas Jenner Recorder of London opened the Indictment and Mr. Attorny General the Evidence And then the Lord Howard was first sworn Who gave the same account about the Earl of Shaftsbury's design'd Insurrection as before he had done at the other Trials where he was a Witness to which therefore the Reader is referred The Lord Grey deposed that Cheshire was one of the Places pitch'd upon for the Rising and for that end the Duke of Monmouth went his Progress into those Parts to make his Interest there and that the Prisoner was one he was directed to advise with That after the late King's Death the Duke of Monmouth was at Amsterdam with the Lord Argyle where there was an Account given of the Design that was in Hand of an Insurrection in Scotland and at that time came over to Holland Mr. Crag from Major Wildman to promote and recommend a Reconciliation between the Duke of Monmouth and the Lord Argyle who till that time had acted in separate interests giving some account that Means and Money were prepared This encouraged the Duke of Monmouth to send Capt. Matthews into England to Major Wildman to desire him to acquaint several Persons among whom the Prisoner was one that he was designed to join the Lord Argyle When Crag return'd to the Duke he gave an account that Major Wildman had convers'd with these Persons and that their Opinion was that the Duke should go for Scotland whereby they might know the strength of the Enemy here by their sending to suppress the Rebellion there and also that Major Wildman desired the Duke to bring over with him a Broad Seal to seal Commissions with and to take upon him the Title of King That soon after Crag's return Jones came with a Message to the Duke from England and was sent back shortly after by the Duke with a Letter of Instructions And the Duke intended first to have landed in Cheshire he very much depending upon that County but afterwards considering that the Persons there being of great Quality and Interest in their Country and able to manage it without his Assistance he chose rather to land in the West the Friends he relyed on there not being of that Quality Mr. Nathaniel Wade deposed that at Amsterdam soon after the Death of the late King the Duke of Monmouth and the Lord Argyle had a Consultation together and agreed that at the same time the Lord Argyle made an Insurrection in Scotland the Duke should invade England For which end the Duke sent Capt. Matthews into England to acquaint his Friends among whom he heard the Lord Delamere named to be ready for his Assistance Crag was sent over for Money but could get none and therefore the Duke sent him over again to pawn his Jewels and get what Money he could wherewith he fitted out 3 Ships laden with Ammunition and having before ordered his Friends to repair to their own Countries to be ready he set Sail and landed at Lyme and ordered his March so as that he might most conveniently meet with his Cheshire Friends In pursuance whereof they came to Keinsham Bridge where a Party of the Kings Horse set upon them of whom they took some Prisoners and thereupon thought it advisable not to let the Kings
Army joyn together but to go back and engage those that were already come together which was the reason they did not go over the Bridge Mr. Richard Goodenough deposed that he was beyond Sea with the Duke of Monmouth and that Jones was sent among other Persons to the Lord Delamere to give him notice to be ready and take care he was not seized in Town and that he heard the Duke say that he hoped my Lord Delamere would not break his Promise with him Jones deposed that he went into Holland the latter end of April last and by him Mr. Disney sent a Message to the Duke of Monmouth to desire him to keep to the last Conclusion which he would find in a Letter sent to him by the Crop-hair'd Merchant which Message was that his Friends in England would not by any means have him come for England but that he should continue where he was or if he thought good to go for Scotland they approved of it This Message he deliver'd to the Duke at Amsterdam which put him into a great Passion saying this was Wildman's work who was a Villain and that it was too late to send a Message now for he was resolved for England and Wildman should hang with him or fight for it with him and that he should not think to tye up his Hands by tying up his own Purse Sending another Message by him when he returned for England which was May 22d to Capt. Matthews or major Wildman to desire them to acquaint the Earl of Macclesfield the Lord Brandon and Lord Delamere with his Design of coming for England and that they should repair to their Posts to be ready for him delivering to him a Writing sealed up which he was not to open till he came to Sea which when he opened he found it contained a Signification of the Place wherein was to land and where he was to rendezvous which was Taunton and who were the Persons that were to have notice of it among whose Names was the Lord Delamere's That when he came to London which was May 27th he could meet with neither Capt. Matthews nor Major Wildman who were out of Town and therefore he acquainted Mr. Disney with his errand who promised to take care that it should be delivered Story who was Commissary General under the Duke of Monmouth deposed that on May 28th one Brand told him that the day before Jones was returned out of Holland with a Message to Capt. Matthews but he being absent Disney received it and discoursed that Evening with the Lord Delamere and that my Lord went out of Town that Night with 2 Friends that convey'd him by a By-way through Enfield Chase towards Hatfield That this Brand was kill'd at Keinsham Bridg. That at Shepton Mallot he heard the Duke of Monmouth say that his great Dependance was upon the Lord Delamere and his Friends in Cheshire but he fear'd they had failed him or betray'd him and that he could have been otherwise supply'd but that he had a Dependance upon them Vaux deposed That on May 26th the Lord Delamere sent for him to the Rummer in Queens-street and that the next Night he rid out of Town with him about 9 or 10 a clock at Night and got to Hoddesden about 12 and the next day he brought him to Hitchen and so came back again That my Lord went by the name of Brown and said he was going to see his Son that was sick in the Country Mr. Edlin deposed that on May 27th Mr. Vaux asked him if he would ride with him as far as Hitchen which he promised to do and they set out about 9 that Night and went to Hoddesden one Mr. Brown being in their Company whom he had never seen before but now knew to be my Lord Delamere who told them he was going to see a Sick Child Mr. Panceford depos'd that he was at Mr. Disney's on June 14th last where the Duke of Monmouth's Declarations were a Printing for printing whereof Disney had been Executed and one Joshua Lock was there waiting for some which he said he was to send into Cheshire to one Mr. Brown which he understood to be the Lord Delamere having heard Mr. Disney call him by that Name and Mr. Edlin having told him how he went by that Name when he rid with him to Hitchen But also he had heard that Mr. Vermuyden went also by that name of Brown Mr. Babington deposed that in their Consultations there were Discourses of my Lord Delamere under the name of Brown and once at a Tavern about the latter end of May last when my Lord Delamere was named by one in the Company he was presently catch'd up for it and replied to You mean Mr. Brown That being also at Disney's while the Declarations were a Printing he heard one say a great many of them were to be sent into Cheshire to my Lord Delamere under the name of Brown Mr. Hope Master of the Three-Tuns in Coventry deposed that the Lord Delamere came Post to his House he believed 5 times from the Sunday Sev'night before the Coronation to June 21 following Then Thomas Saxon deposed that on June the 3d or 4th he was sent for by a Man that had but one Hand to my Lord Delamere's House Mere in Cheshire where he came when it began to be dark and was conveyed by the Man that fetch'd him into a lower Room where were my Lord Delamere Sir Robert Cotton and Mr. Crew Offley and they told him that he had been recommended to them by the Lord Brandon who had said he was an honest useful Man and they hoped he would prove so For they had sent to the D. of Monmouth who was in Holland and received an Answer by one Jones which as soon as they had my Lord Delamere came away Post into the Country under another Name and by being conveyed through Moorfields came down to raise 10000 Men for the Duke in Cheshire by June 1. But now they had considered of it and found they could not raise them till Midsummer for that they must have time to raise 40000 l. in that Country to maintain the Men. That they asked him if he would undertake to carry a Message to the Duke that he said he would Whereupon the Lord Delamere gave him 11 Guinies and 5 pound in silver for his Journy After which he hired him an Horse and did deliver the Message That he never had any Concern before with the Ld. Delamere but that the Lord Brandon told him that they must make use of such as he to inform the Country of the time of Rising his acquaintance abounding that way being a publick Trades-man in Middlewich Here the Evidence for the King ceasing the Prisoner was called upon to make his Defence But it beginning to be late the Prisoner begg'd the Court might be Adjourned till the morrow But the Lord H. Steward doubted it could not be done by Law this not being a Trial in full Parliament
Years and was always bred so till he travelled towards Rome After him Mr. Dugdale was sworn and deposed That he had been acquainted with a Design of introducing Popery about 15 or 16 Years and that he had seen several Letters from beyond-Sea of Mony Men and Arms being ready to Assist That Collections of Mony were made in the Country and 500 l. paid to him so collected which he paid to Mr. Evers to return to London to discharge an Account count of Arms and Things received from beyond-Sea and for carrying on this Design That he himself had given them an Estate of 400 l. Value and because he knew Mony would be wanting had promis'd an 100 l. more as soon as the Lord Aston and he had accounted for this Design and the praying for his Soul That the King of France had promised his Assistance and the Pope allowed some part of his Revenue for the same purpose That of late he had been at several Consultations wherein the Death of the King was discoursed which was intended to be about November December or January 1678. and saw Letters from Paris which advised that it should be thrown upon the Presbyterians who had killed the old King and were likeliest to be thought to have done this and so they might easily get the Protestants of the Church of England to join with the Papists against them to the weakning of Protestantism and accomplishment of their Design That it was agreed that the Lord Aston Sir James Symons and others should go in October 1678. to dispose of Arms to the value he heard of 30000. l. That after the King had been killed an Army was to have appeared to have cut off all that should escape the Massacre which also was designed That he bad been put upon to make Foot-Races to draw People together that they might the better have Discourses together without suspicion That he saw a Letter from the Lord Stafford to Mr. Ewers to shew that things went on well beyond-Sea and hoped they did so here and that particularly the Lord Stafford was by at a Consult about September 1678. with Mr. Heveningham Sir James Symonds Mr. Vavasor Mr. Petre Mr. Howard and the Lord Aston about the Death of the King and that Mr. Heveningham Sit James Symons the Lord Aston Mr. Draycott Mr. Howard and Mr. Gerard did of his knowledge contribute Mony for carrying on the Plot. That he saw a Letter from Whitebread to give Mr. Ewers a Caution to trust only stout and trusty Fellows no matter whether they were Gentlemen or no for killing of the King and another Letter from Harcourt to Ewers dated Octob. 12. and received the 14th 1678 wherein it was said This night Sir Edmondbury Godfrey is dispatched the reason whereof was Ewer's said because he had shewn himself too eager upon Oates's Examination before him and that therefore the Duke of York sending to Coleman to desire him not to reveal what be knew of the Plot Coleman mistrusting Sir Edmonbury sent word back that it would be never the nearer because he had been so foolish as to reveal all to Sir E. Godfrey who had promised to keep it all as a Secret but that now he feared he would witness against him Whereupon the Duke sent word back again That if he would but take care to conceal he should not come in against him And upon this he was quickly dispatched That be had oft been brought to the Oath of Secresy and the Sacrament and particularly when he withdrew on a Monday about the 18th or 19th of November 1678 from the Lord Aston's when he carried all his Papers and burnt them at a Neighbouring-house because he knew they would discover him and others concerned in the Plot But afterwards understanding such his Promises of Secrecy were better broke than kept he came in to make his Discovery Then Mr. Prance deposed That in 1678 he went to one Singleton a Priest at one Hall's a Cook in Ivy-Lane who told him That he did not fear but in a little time to be a Priest in a Parish-Church and that he would make no more to stab 40 Parliament-Men than to eat his Dinner which at that very time he was a doing Then Dr. Oates was sworn and told how in the Year 1676 he was admitted Domestick Chaplain to the Duke of Norfolk being then a Minister of the Church of England Where he became accquainted with some Popish Priests and was told from one Singleton That the Protestant Religion was upon it's last Legs and it would become him and all Men of his Coat to hasten betimes home to the Church of Rome Having a strong suspicion some Years before of the apparent growth of Popery to satisfy his Curiosity he pretended some Doubts and at last a Conviction by she Jesuits because he observed them most able to inform him and accordingly was reconciled on Ashwensday 1676 7. Soon after Strange the then Provincial told him his Ordination was invalid and he must become a Lay-man then he desiring to be of their Order the Fathers upon a Consultation at Wild-House admitted him and because his Years were not suitable to be a novice they proposed travelling to him to go beyond-Sea and do their Business This he accepted and accordingly went April 1677 into Spain to Validolid having their Letters of Recommendation where he found Letters come from England before him and dated in May wherein was expressed That the King was dispatched which caused great joy to the Fathers but afterwards Letters dated the latter end of May came to certify their Mistake and to desire the Fathers to stifle the News Some Letters he opened also by the way wherein was an Account of a Disturbance designed in Scotland and of the Hopes they had for carrying on the Catholick Cause in England That in June Letters came thither expressing That Beddingfield was made Confessor to the Duke of York whom they hoped would prevail much with him in order to this Design and that Letters from St. Omers dated the same Month gave account That Father Beddingfield had assured them of the Dukes willingness to comply with them That travelling through this Country he found that Mony had been there raised and sent to England and particularly that the Provincial of the Jesuits of Castile had advanced 10000 l. promised to be paid in June following That upon some Missioners arriving there in December one Mumford alias Armstrong preach'd That the Oaths of Allegiance and Sumpremacy were Antichristian Heretical and Devilish vilifying and abusing the King's Legitimacy saying That his Religion intitled him to nothing but sudden Death and Destruction In November he return'd for England and coming into Strange's Chamber there was Father Keins lying ill upon Strange's Bed and Keins was saying He was mighty sorry for honest William so they called Grove that was to kill the King for missing in his Enterprize They being more zealous for killing the King after he had refused Coleman the
should be any Disturbance for they valued their Riches more than their Cause And at Oxford that he heard my Lord say again He wondred the People of England should stickle so much about Religion if he were to choose a Religion he would have one that should comply with what was apt to carry on their Cause Mr. John Smith deposed That he had often both in publick and private heard the Lord Shaftsbury speak very irreverently and slightly of the King saying He was a weak Man an inconstant Man of no firm or settled Resolution easily led by the Nose as his Father was before him by a Popish Queen which was the Ruin of his Father And that the King should declare That the Earl of Shaftsbury was not satisfied to be an ill Man himself but got over the E. of Essex too And that he was the chief promoter of the Rebellion in Scotland which when it was told him that he should send back word to the King That he was glad that the King saw not his own Danger But if he were to raise a Rebellion he could raise another-guess Rebellion than was that in Scotland One time particularly being sent for to the Lord Shaftsburies expressing his jealousy of the Irish Witnesses being drawn over to the Court-Party and retracting what they had said he order'd him to persuade them from going nigh that Rogue Fitz-Gerald maintain'd by the King and Court-Party to stifle the Plot in Ireland Saying also That when he was in the Tower he told some he saw Popery coming in and that it was hard to prevent it And that if the King were not as well satisfied with the coming in of Popery as ever the D. of York was the D. would not be so much concern'd about it as he was Afterwards having executed my Lord's Order one Mr. Bernard Dennis gave in an Information before Sir Patience Ward Lord-Mayor against Fitz-Gerald that he had tamper'd with him to forswear all he had sworn before the Copy of which Information he brought to the Lord Shaftsbury who when he had read it was very well pleased with it and said Mr. Smith don't you see the Villany of that Man and that factious Party and that the King runs the same steps as his Father did before him for that nothing of this Nature could otherwise be done I says he these are the very Steps that his Father followed when he was led by his Popish Queen and the poor Man doth not see his Danger Another time before the Parliament went to Oxford in discourse my Lord was saying to him That there was great Preparations made and a great many gathered together upon the Road between London and Oxford which he said was to terrify the Parliament to comply with the King's Desire which he was sure they never would for that the King aimed to bring in Popery But said he we have this Advantage of him if he offer any Violence to us for we expect it that we have the Nation for us and we may lawfully oppose him for it has been done in former Times and he will meet with a very strong Opposition for all that come out of the Country shall be well Hors'd and well Arm'd and so we shall be all and as old as he was that he would be one that would oppose to his Power and die before he would ever bring in Popery or any thing of that Nature Then Mr. Brian Haines deposed That he had often heard the Lord Shaftsbury vilify the King And that he and Mr. Ivey going to him one day about the Narrative he made of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey's Death he desired him not to expose his Person to the King's Anger because he was sure he would never grant a Pardon to any Man that impeached the Earl of Danby Says he Do not fear if he does not grant you a Pardon he makes himself the Author of the Plot and says he the Earl of Essex the Lord Maxfield and I we do all resolve if you 'l put in a Writing we will go to the King and beg a Pardon of him for you which if he does not grant we will raise the whole Kingdom against him for he must not expect to live peaceably in his Throne it he doth not grant it and this is the best Pretence we can have in the World we are prepar'd to raise Arms against him And after having heard a Pardon could not be had being begg'd for by the two Mr. Godfries he praying my Lord for a little Mony to help him to go beyond-Sea because he was sure he could not be safe in England My Lord told him the King durst as well be hang'd as meddle with him And one Day he being in Conference and giving my Lord an exact Account of Transactions having been a Traveller he asked my Lord What Model of Government was designed if they pulled the King down Says he Do you think there are no Families in England that have as much pretence to the Crown as any of the Stewarts Says he There is the Duke of Bucks that is descended of the Family of the Plantagenets one of the Edwards by his Mother and in her Right he should have the Barony of Ross and has as good a Title to the Crown of England as ever any Stewart had Then John Macnamarra being sworn deposed That he being with the Lord Shaftsbury after his return from the Parliament at Oxford concerning some Provision for the Witnesses he heard him express himself That the King was Popishly Affected and did adhere to Popery taking the same Methods that his Father before him took which brought his Father's Head to the Block and that they would also bring his thither and that he had told some Persons of Quality that this would fall out five Years before And at the same time that he said the King was a Faithless Man and no Credit was to be given to him and that the Dutchess of Mazarine was of his Cabinet-Council who was the worst Woman-kind And that he deserved to be deposed as much as ever King Richard the Second did Then Dennis Macnamarra deposed That he also heard the Lord Shaftsbury say in March or April in his own House Mr. Ivey being present That the King was not to be believe there was no Belief in him and he ought to be deposed as well a King Richard the Second and that the Dutchess of Mazarine was of his Cabinet-Council and he nothing but by her Consent Then Mr. Edward Ivey deposed That being at my Lord's House soon after the Parliament was dissolved at Oxford he heard him speak against the King saying He was an unjust Man and unfit to Reign and he wondred her did not take Example by his Father before him and that he was a Papist in his Heart and intended to introduce Popery And afterwards being with him with Hains he bid Hains to put what he had to say about the Death of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey into writing
and he should have a Pardon and that if the King did deny it as he durst not they would rise upon him and force him After him Bernard Dennis being sworn gave some account of his first coming into England and how he began his Acquaintance with the Earl of Shaftsbury and was recommended by him understanding him to be a Clergy-Man to Dr. Burnet and afterward to Mr. Ferguson in order to the bringing him over and how my Lord proffer'd him a Benefice And that one time being with him my Lord asked him How many there might be of his Name in his Country and told him that he would have him to advise those of his Name and Friends to be in a readiness when-ever occasion shall serve to stand by and assist the Common-Wealth of England for that they did really intend to have England under a Common-Wealth and would extirpate the King and all his Family as near as they could And said he admir'd at the Irish Nation to be such Fools for that it was very certain that King James Queen Elizabeth King Charles the First and the King that now is does wrong them to very Destruction But that a Common-Wealth would take more pity of them than any do now in this time wherein the King governs Here the King's Evidence ceasing the Jury enquired upon what Statute the Indictment was grounded and whether any of these Witnesses stood indicted To which the Court returning a satisfactory Answer they withdrew and the Court adjourned till three of the Clock When being sat again the Witnesses were all called one by one and examined by the Jury concerning what they had severally deposed Wherein nothing was remarkable but what they examin'd Mr. Secretary Jenkins Whether he heard not a Debate in the House of Commons about an Association And that Booth acknowledged himself to be in Orders tho now not Beneficed Turbervile and John Macnamarra that though they signed the Petition to the Common-Council for some Maintenance and that they were tempted to revoke their Evidence yet never read it nor knew what was in it And that Haynes further said That he heard the Lord Shaftsbury say at a Pastry-Cook's Shop in Iron-Monger Lane that the King had no more Religion than an Horse That when he came came first to England he was inclined to Popery but since he was degenerated from all the Principles of Christianity being just like a perfect Beast The Witnesses being examined the Jury withdrew and took the Statute-Book with them and returned the Bill Ignoramus Upon which the People fell a Hollowing and Shouting which Mr. Attorn Gen. desired might be recorded The Trial of Charles John Count Conningsmark Christopher Vratz Captain John Stern Lieutenant and Charles George Borosky alias Boratzi before the Lord Chief Justice Pemberton At the Old-Baily on Tuesday February the 28th 1681. THE Prisoners then and there appearing were Arraigned for the barbarous Murder of Thomas Thynn Esq And being Foreigners Mr. Vandore and Sir Nathaniel Johnson were sworn Interpreters They pleaded Not Guilty and desired their Jury might consist of half Foreigners which was granted And the Count desired his Trial might be put off a day or two and that he might be tried by himself neither of which were granted Then after some Challenges on both sides the Jury sworn were Sir William Roberts Bar. Moses Charas Gent. Richard Pagett Esq Charles Beelow Gent. George Hocknal Esq Peter Vandenhagen Gent. Walter Moyle Esq Christopher Ripkey Gent. Thomas Henslow Esq Daniel Griggion Gent. John Haynes Esq John Lebarr Gent. To whom the Indictment was read and Mr. Keen and Sir Francis Withens opened the same and then William Cole deposed That on Sunday Feb. 12. about a quarter after Eight at Night his Master Thomas Thynn Esq was coming up St. James-Street from the Countess of Northumberland's and he was walking with a Flambeau in his Hand before the Coach and coming along at the lower end of St. Albans-Street he heard the Blunderbuss go off and turning his Face back saw a great Smoke and heard his Master cry out he was murdered and saw three Horsemen riding away on the right side of the Coach whom he pursued and cried out Murder He ran to the upper end of the Hay-Market till he was quite spent and then turning back again his Master was got into the House whom he understood was wounded One of the Men was upon a little Bay Horse William Ellers deposed That then and there he coming with his Master from the Lady Northumberland's there came three Men riding by the right side of the Coach and as they rid one of them turned about and said Stop you Dog And just as he looked about the Fire was let into the Coach upon his Master and the Men ran away as fast as they could and that he could not know any of their Faces Mr. Hobbs the Chirurgeon deposed That he was with Mr. Thynn about nine or ten a Clock that Night he was wounded and found him shot with four Bullets which entred into his Body tore his Guts and wounded his Liver and Stomach and Gall and broke one of his Ribs and wounded the great Bone below of which Wounds he died and believed there as never a Wound but was Mortal He shewed the Court the four Bullets two of which he thought might be Iron one he found in the Stomach one between the Ribs and the Skin and two were lodged in the Back-bone Then Mr. White the Coroner deposed That on Feb. 13. he sat upon the Body and found four Holes on the right Side behind his short Ribbs as if made with Bullets and he gave order to open the Body and saw Mr. Hobbs take out the four Bullets Boresky being then told what was said replied That he fired the Blunderbuss but did not know how many Bullets there were because he did not charge it but he could tell who did But the Ld. Ch. Justice said that would not be material because his Evidence could charge no Body but himself Then Mr. Bridgman and Sir John Reresby deposed That Borosky Vratz and Stern were examined by them and proffer'd to read their Examinations but the Ld. Ch. Justice would not suffer it because their Evidence could charge no Body but themselves and he would not let the Jury be possess'd by that which is not Evidence And therefore they were only suffer'd to help their Memories by the Examinations and to mention only what they had confessed as to themselves Therefore they said that Borosky then confessed that he came into England at the desire of Count Conningsmark But here the Ld. Ch. Justice interrupted again the Evidence and bid Mr. Bridgman only relate his Confession as to himself which was That he fired the Musquetoon by the Captain 's Order who had before bid him to fire as soon as ever he stopped the Coach Capt. Vratz confessed that he came with a Design to fight Mr. Thynn having sent him Challenges by Post from
Parliaments Julian's Arts to Undermine and Extirpate Christianity c. By Samuel Johnson The Impression of which Book was made in the Year 1683 and has ever since laid buried under the Ruins of all those English Rights which it endeavoured to defend but by the Auspicious and Happy Arrival of the Prince of Orange both They and It have obtained a Resurrection Dr. Gilbert Burnet now Bishop of Salisbury his Tracts in Two Vollumes in which are contained several Things relating to the Affairs of England The Mystery of Iniquity working in the Dividing of Protestants in order to the subverting of Religion and our Laws for almost the space of thirty Years last past plainly laid open With some Advices to Protestants of all Perswasions in the present Juncture of our Affairs To which is added A Specimen of a Bill for uniting of Protestants Liberty of Conscience now highly necessary for England humbly represented to this present Parliament An Enquiry into and Detection of the Barbarous Murther of the late Earl of Essex now under consideration of a Committee of the House of Lords Or a Vindication of that Noble Person from the Guilt and Infamy of having destroyed himself An Account of the Trial of Mr. Papillon To which is added The Matter of Fact in the chusing of Sheriffs in Sir John Moor's Year now under the consideration of the Committee for Grievances A Collection of strange Predictions of Mr. J. P. for the Years 1687 and 1688 about K. James the Second Prince of Wales and the scampering away of many great Ministers of State Arguments against the Dispensing Power in Answer to L. C. J. Herbert The Royal Cards Being a lively Representation of the late Popish and Tyrannical Designs and of the wonderful Deliverance of this Kingdom from the same by the glorious Expedition of William Henry Prince of Orange now King of England whom God long preserve printed in curious Copper Plates Price 1 s. a Pack Mumurers reproved in a Sermon preached by Mr. Hopkins c. England's Call to Thankfulness for her late great Deliverace By Mr. John Olliffe c. Melius Inquirendum Or a further modest and impartial Inquiry into the Lawfulness of taking the New Oath of Allegiance By a Divine of the Church of England A Friendly Debate between Dr. King's-Man a Dissatisfied Clergy-Man and Gratianus Trimmer a Neighbour-Minister concerning the late Thanksgiving-Day the Prince his Descent into England the Nobilities and Gentries joining with him the Acts of the Honourable Convention the Nature of our English Government the Secret League with France the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy c. with some Considerations on Bp Saunderson and Dr. Falkner about Monarchy Oaths c. Written for the Satisfaction of some of the Clergy and others that yet labour under Scruples By a Minister of the Church of England A Brief Vindication of the Parliamentary Proceedings against the late King James the Second Proving that the Right of Succession by nearness of Blood is not by the Law of God or Nature but by Politick Institution With several Instances of deposing Evil Princes shewing that no Prince hath any Title Originally but by the Consent of the People The Dying Speeches of several Excellent Persons who suffered for their Zeal against Popery and Arbitrary Government in the Reigns of King Charles the Second and King James the Second Ireland's Lamentation Being a Short but Perfect Full and true Account of the Scituation Nature Constitution and Product of Ireland With an Impartial Historical Relation of the most Material Transactions Revolutions and miserable Sufferings of the Protestants there from the Death of King Charles the Second to the latter end of April 1689. The Time and Manner of the late King 's Landing there What Men Monies Shipping Arms and Ammunition he brought with him The Manner of his going up and into Dublin His Kneeling to the Host Displacing all Protestants The Strength and Defeat of his Army and what else is of Note To which is added A Letter from a Lieutenant in the Irish Army dated at Dublin May 7. with an Account of Affairs to that Time
then an Army to have appear'd to have cut off those that might escape the Massacre that these Consultations were in Staffordshire one at Tixal another at Boscobel at my Lord Aston's and Mr. Gerrard's Also that Mr. Ewers received a Letter on Munday dated on Saturday from Mr. Harcourt which did express and begin thus This very night Sir Edmondbury Godfrey is dispatched with some other words of like Import Then Mr. Prance deposed that he was told by the Lord Butler that one Mr. Messenger a Gentleman of the Horse to the Lord Arundel of VVarder was by him imployed and the Lord Powis to kill the King for a good Reward That Mr. Harcourt in his hearing said that the King was to be killed by several And that Fenwick said Mr. Langhorn was to have a great hand in it That then an Army of 50000 Men was to be raised and governed by the Lords Arundel and Powis to rain the Protestants and settle the Catholick Religion whereof he hath heard Fenwick Ireland and Grove speak at the same time together Then for the Proof of the particular matters of the Indictment Dr. Oates was sworn who deposed That in April 1677 he went into Spain and in September following Mr. Langhorn's Sons came thither the one a Scholar of the English Colledg at Madrid the other of the English Colledg at Valladolid to study Philosophy in order to their receiving of the Priesthood That in November following he returned into England and brought Mr. Langhorn Letters from his Sons which he delivered soon after his Arrival to him telling him at the same time that he believ'd his Sons would both enter into the Society whereat Mr. Langhorn seem'd mightily pleased saying that by so doing they might quickly come to Preferment in England for that things would not last long in the posture they were in That in the latter end of November he returning to St. Omers Mr. Langhorn deliver'd to him a Pacquet to carry thither wherein when it was opened he saw a Letter from him to the Fathers giving them thanks for their care and kindness towards his Sons promising them to repay them their charges of his Son's Journey into Spain which was 20 l. telling them that he had writ to Father Le Chese in order to their Concerns saying that Mr. Coleman had been very large with him and therefore it would not be necessary for him to trouble his Reverence with any large Epistles at that time which Letter he saw not only this account of it That there was in March or April after another Letter from Mr. Langhorn to the Fathers at St. Omers about an extravagant Son of his wherein he also express'd his great care for the carrying on of the Design of the Catholicks and that the Parliament began now to flag in promoting the Protestant Religion and that now they had a fair Opportunity to begin and give the Blow That in April or May when the Consult was to which several of them came over from St. Omers and at which tho Mr. Langhorn was not present yet that he had Orders from the Provincial to give him an account of what Resolutions and Passages and Minutes pass'd and this he did as well as he could telling him who went Procurator to Rome which was one Father Cary that several of the Fathers were to be admonished for their irregular living as they termed it and that it was resolv'd that the King should be kill'd that Pickering and Grove should go on to do it for which Grove was to have 1500 l. and Pickering 30000 Masses upon the hearing of which Mr. Langhorn lift up his Hands and Eyes and prayed God that it might have good Success That then he saw in Mr. Langhorn's Chamber seven or eight Commissions whereof there were about fifty by Virtue of a Breve from the Pope directed to the General of the Society and signed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Johannes Paulus de Oliva those he saw were for the Lord Arundel to be Lord Chancellor of England the Lord Powis to be Lord High Treasurer the Lord Bellasis to be General the Lord Peter to be Lieutenant General the Lord Stafford to be Pay-Master or some such office in the Army Mr. Coleman to be Secretary of State and Mr. Langhorn to be Advocate of the Army That he saw the Answers of Le Cheese and Anderton who was Rector of the Colledg at Rome to Mr. Langhorn's Letters to them and carried the Originals of them to the Fathers who requested them from Mr. Langhorn wherein Le Chese did assure him of his Stedfastness and Constancy to assist the English Society for the carrying on the Cause And that they should not need doubt but the French King would stand by them That Mr. Langhorn was employed as Solicitor for the Jesuits and went with Harcourt Fenwick Keines and Langworth and communicated the Secret to the Benedictine Monks desiring them to stand by them with a Sum of Money for the carrying on the Design upon which as he heard that 6000 l. was promised and that Mr. Langhorn was to receive it which though he could not prove that he had yet that he was sure he was much disgusted that Sir George Wakeman was not contented with 10000 l. to poison the King saying he was a covetous Man that it was in a Publick Concern and that being it was to carry on the Cause it was no matter if he did it for nothing but he was a narrow-spirited and a narrow-soul'd Physician That Mr. Langhorn also did know of 800000 Crowns come to France for England from the Congregation at Rome Then Mr. Bedloe being sworn there was as a Confirmation of what Dr. Oates had deposed concerning the Commissions an Instrument produced found by Mr. Bedloe in searching Mr. Arthur's Study a Papist a good while after Dr. Oates had given his Testimony publickly signed and seal'd just as the Commissions were He then deposed that about three Years since he was sent by Mr. Harcourt and Mr. Coleman with Letters to Le Chese that the Letters were writ at Coleman's House and brought open by Mr. Coleman to Mr. Langhorn's Chamber in the Temple where the Prisoner read and registred them and then Coleman sealing them up gave them to him to carry away The effect of which was to let Le Chese know that they waited only now for his Answer how far he had proceeded with the French King for sending of Mony for they only wanted Mony all other things were in readiness That the Catholicks of England were in safety had made all Places and all Offices to be disposed of to Catholicks or such as they thought would be so that all Garisons were either in their own Hands or ready to be put into them that they had so fair an Opportunity having a King so easy to believe what was dictated to him by their Party that if they slipp'd this Opportunity they must despair of ever introducing Popery into England for having a
Defence he could but with a broad Sword he was run through his Arms and with a small Weapon he was run through in another place of his Arm. He had several other Wounds and one of them setting his Foot hard upon his Breast and keeping him down he believes was run into the Leg by one of his Companions for he heard him say Dam-me thou hast spoyl'd my Leg. They laughed all the while and were exceeding merry He had then on a pair of Bodice of Whale-Bone notwithstanding which he had four or five Wounds in his Body through them for they were not proof but they imagin'd they were finding their Swords double sometimes and one of them said Dam-me he has Armour on Cut his Throat Immediately one kneeled down and gave him several Cuts in the lower part of his Face he did what he could to defend himself but they gave him some indellible Marks By a Candle in a Window in Sir Timothy Baldwin's House as he supposed and some Women in his Yard giving them the first disturbance and a Boy coming by with a Link the same time he both saw the Face of Giles and remembred it was he whom he had seen in the Lane just before They then pulled the Cloak from off him and he seeing the Light and being eased of the Weight he strain'd all his strength and cried out and then Company came in and carried him into the Sugar-Loaf and from thence to his Lodging where his Friends came to him and a Chirurgion was sent for And that as the Assassinates went away from him they clapt their Swords close to their Bodies and went away laughing aloud one of them saying these Words Now you Dog pray for or pray again for the Soul of Captain Evans who was a Jesuit taken by him in Monmouth and Executed at Cardiffe for being a Priest Who when the Under Sheriff came to give him notice that he had a Warrant for his speedy Execution the said Evans being in a Game at Tennis said God Dam-me I will play out my set first To all which Giles only said that Mr. Arnold knew him very well and that his Wife was a near Relation of his Then Mr. Stephen Phillips deposed That the next day in the Evening about 8 or 9 a Clock he was drinking with Giles at the Crown-Tavern in New-street in Covent-Garden and discoursing about Mr. Arnold's Misfortune among the rest Mr. Giles talking of it said God dam him or God Rot him he had Armour on they say Then Mr. Walter Watkins deposed That on May 5. he being at the stating some Accounts between Mr. Giles and Mr. Richmond at Vske in Monmouth-shire He asked Giles for some Horse-Hair to make a Fishing-Line Giles replied That he had left very good Hair for him at a Farriers in Glocester but he and Mr. Herbert Jones made such haste through Glocester that they did not call for the Horse-Hair and asking the occasion of his Haste he answered it was for fear they should be stopt in their Journey as suspected to be concerned in Mr. Arnold's Business Mr. George Richmond then with whom Giles stated the Accounts deposed the very same adding That he could not say whether Giles called him Esq Arnold or Mr. Arnold or what he seldom used to give him so good words Then Mr. Walter Powel swore That he being at one Peter Darcy's House a Sword-Cutlers in Vske Giles came to him to have his Sword mended and Darcy said to him Where have you been you have been hot at it What have you been fighting with the Devil No said Giles with Damn'd Arnold Upon this Darcy said he must not speak such words and Giles's Wife pluck'd him by the Coat and bid him hold his Tongue This was on May 5. and there were by the Prisoner at the Bar and his Wife and Darcy and his Apprentice Then Mr. William Richmond deposed That Giles asked him in the Afternoon before Mr. Arnold was hurt Where he might buy a good Rapier And that he had then a good Back-Sword in the House That he endeavour'd to have prevented the Execution of Father Lewis and when he was executed was very active a dipping Cloaths in his Blood That the day of the Assault he and Giles went into Long-lane together to inquire after their Friends and afterwards to the Artillery to see the Exercise then to Long-lane again from thence to Whetstones-Park and afterwards to Drury-lane and about 9 at Night they came to their Inn being the Kings-Arms in St. Martins-lane and he left Giles taking a Pipe of Tobacco in the Kitchin and went up into his Chamber with some other Company and drunk till nigh One and about 12 seeing the Maid making up another Bed he stept to her and asked her who it was for she said for a Man that was not willing to lie with any Body After this about one a Clock as he was going to Bed he heard Giles com up stairs and bid him Good-night just as he was pulling off his Breeches Then one Mr. Bridges deposed That about a Year ago he heard Giles say That the Papists were the best Religion and that those that were not of that Religion were Damn'd and that he that says there is a Plot is a Rogue and a Thief One Walter Moor also swore that he had heard him say That if the Lords in the Tower were Executed there would be a greater War than ever was in England and it would cost more Blood than ever was spilt which he swore saying The Lords deserved not Death for that there was no Plot at all Mr. Reynold deposed that on May 2 at Langoone in Monmouth-shire he heard Giles say That he could not think but that Mr. Arnold wounded himself says his wife How could he wound himself in his Arms said he It was himself or some of his Friends Then Mr. Hobbs the Chyrurgeon deposed That he found Mr. Arnold bleeding with two Wounds through his Arm one Wound and several Bruises in his Head two Cuts on his Face another upon his Throat which bled very much two upon his Breast and one in the Belly six Inches and an half deep Which he believed he could not give himself Fifteen or sixteen Witnesses more for the King that were attending in the Court were not examin'd the Court being in some haste and the King's Counsel not pressing it there being so full Evidence Then Mr. Darnall being of Counsel for the Prisoner began a Defence and called Mr. Philpot who said He was at the Crown-Tavern with Mr. Giles when Mr. Phillips was and he heard no such Saying but that Giles said if any thing should be upon Mr. Arnold it was a very strange thing and was sorry for it Mr. Herbert Jones Mayor of Monmouth then deposed That he went with Giles from London and came with him to Glocester and inn'd at the Old-Bear and after Dinner went to the New-Bear and drank Sider and staid several hours in Town and being
testified that he being to carry Mrs. Pressicks before Justice Lowther Bolron's Wife said she was sorry for it for she believed her to be an honest Woman and had been a good Neighbour amongst them Mary Walker Servant-maid to Mrs. Lassels Thwing's Sister testified that Bolron proffer'd her 10 l. to swear Thwing was a Priest Then William Bacchus said that when he served a Warrant on the two Mrs. Bolron's to go before Mr. Lowther they said they could say nothing against Six Tho. Gascoyne nor any of the Family Cuthbert Hamsworth said that fie heard Bolron swear Revenge against the Lady Tempest for prosecuting a Suit against him Then the Prisoner endeavoured to prove he was not at Barnborow-hall in 1677. by George Twisley Groom to Sir Tho. Gascoyne who could only say that he used to come there but a night or two in a Year Joseph Cooper said that about a Year ago he heard Mowbray say he knew nothing of the Plot and that he believed Sir Tho. Gascoyne was guilty of no such thing for if he had he should have known it as soon as Bolron and he was a Rogue and a Knave for saying any such thing Edward Cooper sen said he then heard Mowbray say he thought Sir Thomas Gascoyne was not guilty of the Plot. Isabel Heyward a Girle that lived with Bolron as a Servant testified that her Master and Mistrifs falling out she said she would not go to London and if he made her go she would swear that what he had sworn against Mrs. Pressicks was out of Malice Alice Dawson testified that the day after New-years-day was twelve-month Mrs. Bolron said she was sorry for nothing but that her Husband had meddled with Mrs. Tressicks One or two Witnesses more were called but nothing to the purpose Therefore Mr. Justice Dolben summ'd up the Evidence and Mr. Baron Atkins proceeded to do the same And the Jury withdrawing for a while brought in Thomas Thwing Guilty and Mary Pressicks not Guilty And on the Monday following Mr. Justice Dolben sentenced him to be Drawn Hang'd and Quarter'd The Trials of William Viscount Stafford in Westminster-hall from November the 30th to December the 7th 1680. before the House of Peers ON Tuesday Nov. the 30th the Right Honourable Henege Lord Finch Baton of Daventry Lord High Chancellor of England being constituted Lord High Steward for the present occasion and all things fitted for the purpose in VVestminster-hall and both Houses being seated and the Commons all bare VVilliam Viscount Stafford was brought to the Bar kneeling till the Lord High Steward bid him rise and a Chair set for him After which making a short Speech to him concerning the occasion of his appearing there the Articles of Impeachment High Treason against him and the other Lords in the Tower by the Commons of England were read which consisted of seven Heads The 1st That there hath for many Years a Plot been contrived c. 2ly Naming the Persons concerned therein and particularly the Noble Lord at the Bar. 3ly That consults had been held and the Murder of the King resolved on therein c. 4ly That consultations have been for the raising of Men Mony Arms c. 5ly That Commissions had been given and received and particularly a Commission for the Lord Stafford to be Pay-master of the Army 6ly That to hide and hinder a Discovery an Oath of Secresy and the Sacrament had been given and taken and Sir Edm. Godfrey murdered 7ly That the Guilt of that Murder was endeavoured to be put upon Protestants c. The Lord Stafford's Answer to which was then also read wherein he put himself upon his Peers for Trial affirming himself Not Guilty After this Serjeant Maynard Sir Francis VVinnington and Mr. Treby being of the Committee appointed for the Management of the Evidence opened the Charge and Evidence in very excellent Speeches And proposed to prove first the Plot in general and the Guilt of this Lord therein in particular And therefore as to the first Mr. Smith being sworn gave a full relation of his Travels and Perversion and of what he had heard beyond Sea and in England concerning this Plot. How Abbot Montague and Father Gascoyne in France and other Priests and Jesuits told him that if he would turn Catholick he should have Employment among them there and afterwards England for that they doubted not but the Popish Religion would come in very soon and that because as the Abbot said they doubted not to procure a Toleration of Religion and because the Gentry that went abroad did observe the Novelty of their own Religion and the Antiquity of theirs and the Advantages that were to be had by it But one Father Bennet and others said they doubted it not because their party was very strong in England and in a few Years they would bring it in right or wrong That it was Cardinal Crimaldi who perverted him about 1671 to the Romish Religion at Provence and that afterwards he lived several Years in the English Jesuits Colledg at Rome where he hath often heard it disputed and preached and exhorted that the King of England was an Heretick and that there was no King really reigning and whoever took him out of the way would do a meritorious Action particularly by Father Anderton Mumford Campion but chiefly Southwel one of the chief of the Jesuits That when he came away thence for England these Fathers for a whole Month were exhorting that the King of England was not to be obeyed and that in all private Confessions all Persons who might be thought capable of any design were to be instructed that they should use all their Endeavours for promoting Popery That while he was at Rome he read Coleman's Letters of Intelligence once a Month and therein how the Duke and the Queen and the chief of the Nobility were of their side how they carried matters several times the ways the Lord Clifford and Sir VVilliam Godolphin did use to effect the work and that they question'd not to get the Lord Danby on their side too That when he return'd into England he found all the Popish Clergy in great hopes of Popery coining shortly in That he knew of Money gathered in the North but refused to joyn therein That as to the Lord Stafford he knew nothing but that Sir Henry Calverley was turned out of Commission of the Peace through Complaint made to my Lord Stafford of his being active against Popery And that he writ to one Smith that he would not make over his Estate as others did for that he expected some sudden Change or Alteration That the Cardinal who perverted him at the same time spoke of great Assurances that Popery would prevail in England that there was but one in the way and tho that Man was a good natured Man yet they could not so far prevail upon him but that to accomplish their designs they must take him out of the way That now he had been a Protestant two
Ireland and the other Conspirators were produced and the Convictions of Reading Lane Knox and others were delivered in And the Record of the Attainder of Coleman was read in Latin by the Clerk Which concluding the Evidences in general of the Plot the Court thought fit not to enter upon particular Evidences against the Prisoner till another day Whereupon the Lord High Steward adjoun'd the Lords into the House of Lords and the Commons returned to their House where Mr. Speaker reassuming the Chair the House adjourned to Eight of the Clock the next Morning The Second Day Wednesday Decemb. 1. 1680 about 10 of the Clock the Court being sat and the Prisonet appearing Mr. Dugdale being sworn again appeared to Evidence as to the Particulars against the Lord Stafford who accordingly deposed That he had been some Years acquainted with the Lord Staffordy while he was a Servant to the Lord Aston That in August or September 1678 there was a Consult at the Lord Aston's at Tixal at which the Lord Stafford was and with the rest did consent to a Resolve That it was the best way to take away the Life of the King as the speediest Means to introduce Popery That on a Sunday Morning the Lord Stafford coming to the Lord Aston's to hear Mass as he alight off his Horse he said to the Witness It was a sad thing they could not say their Prayers but in an hidden manner but e're long they should have the Romish Religion established That about Septemb. 20 or 21 the Lord Stafford sent for him to his Chamber and proffer'd him 500 l. to be concern'd in taking away the Life of the King wherein he said he was concern'd himself and that he should go in October to London with him and be under the Care of him and Mr. Ireland in London and in the Country of one Mr. Parson's that knew of the Design And that he should have a Reward in London and he understood that the Duke of York the Lord Arundel Lord Bellasis and others were to give it him and that he should have his Pardon from the Pope and be Sainted That also he saw a Letter from the Lord Stafford to Mr. Ewers expressing that things went all well beyond-Sea and so he hoped they did here for the carrying on of their Design Then Dr. Oates being also sworn again deposed That he had seen several Letters in Spain and at St. Omers singned Stafford wherein were assurances of his Zeal for the promoting of Popery in England That in June 1678 he saw the Lord Stafford at Fenwick's Lodging receive a Commission as he believes to be Pay-master General to the Army which promised to effect and going then into the Country he said he did not doubt but at his return Grove should do the Business And speaking of the King he said there He had deceived them a great while and they could bear no longer But the Lord Stafford denied that he either knew Fenwick or Oates After him Mr. Edward Turbervile deposed That he being under some displeasure with his Relations for not entring himself of the Society he betook himself to his Brother a Benedictine Monk in France where staying a while and refusing to be admitted into that Society also her resolved for England and to that end was recommended to the Acquaintance of the Lord Stafford then at Paris who after some time understanding his Condition and imagining him a fit Instrument he proposed to him a way whereby as he said he might not only retrieve his Reputation with his Relations but also make himself a very happy Man And after having obliged him to Secresy he told him in direct terms it was to take away the Life of the King of England who was an Heretick and consequently a Rebel against God Almighty But he desiring time to consider it avoided the seeing my Lord any more and so came to London and by Applications to the Duke of Monmouth he got into the French Service This was in Novemb. 1675. My Lord then charg'd him with running from his Colours and therefore unfit for such a Service and that he never saw him before And here the Evidence ceasing the Lord Stafford began his Defence complaining of his close Imprisonment for two Years and of his abhorrence of those two great Sins Treason and Murder owning and condemning the Gunpowder Plot and the King-killing Doctrine protesting his own Loyalty and Innocency Not doubting to prove these Witnesses perjured and therefore requesting the use of the Lord's Journal-Book and the Depositions of Dugdale Oates and Turbervile without which he could not make his Defence Hereupon arose some Debate in the Court after which the Lords withdrew and after an hour and an halfs space returned and then the Lord High Steward did tell the Lord Stafford that what-ever Evidence there is before the Court of Peers he was to have but for the others they could not help him thereto and in regard he had complained of his Faintness the Lords intended not to put him upon it to go on to make his Defence but would give him time till to Morrow For which the Lord Stafford thanked the Lords but insisted to request moreover the Depositions of Dugdale but he was told they were in the Journal-Book which he was allowed the use of Then the Prisoner desired he might not appear till ten of the Clock next day because he wanted Sleep writing late or that one days respite might be allowed him which the Lord High Steward seemed inclinable for but was opposed by the Managers for the Commons then Court adjourned into the Parliament-Chamber and the Commons went to their House to whom the Lords soon after sent a Message That they had ordered the Prisoner to the Bar at Ten of the Clock next Morning And then the Commons adjourned so Eight the next Morning The Third Day THursday Decemb. 2. 1680. at Ten the Court being sate the Prisoner was set to Bar and required to go on with his Defence For which end he called Turbervile and asked him when he last saw him who said in Novemb 1675. Whence he made his Plea that he was not within the time limited for prosecution but was informed of his Mastake lesser Crimes being limited to six Months but Treason to no time at all Then Dugdale being called again was by him charged That He had sworn at Sir George Wakeman's Trial that he the Lord Stafford was at a Consult at Tixal in August 1678 and proved it by the Testimony of the Lady Marchioness of Winchester and one Mrs. Howard who affirm'd they heard him though Dugdale denied it and then proved that he was all that Month at the Bath and at the Marquess of Worcester's House by Thomas Bonny Clerk of the Kitchen to the Lord Marquess of Worcester Thomas White his Coachman Richard Bevan his Groom and the Lord Marquess himself and that he came not to Tixal till Septemb. 12. and then had no Converse alone with Dugdale
nor could ever endure him reviling him as having been a poor Boy found at the Door then a Thresher then a Baily and now a Witness for the King To this end he acknowledged that he spoke to Dugdale on the 20th of September in his Chamber but not alone nor about any thing but a Race to be run that day on Etching-Hill which he proved by the Testimony of his own Servants Nicholas Furness a Dutch-man whose Blunder in his Evidence made the Auditory laugh and George Leigh He produced also Thomas Sawyer a Servant to the Lord Aston and Mr. Phillips Parson of Tixal as to the Reputatiof Dugdale who said little more to disparage him than that he ran away from the Lord Aston and was apprehended and would then have been own'd by my Lord as his Servant which was refused and Six Walter Bagot Mr. Thomas Kinnersley and Sir Thomas Whitgrave being the Justices before whom he was brought affirmed That then he took the Oaths of Allegiance c. and protested he knew nothing of the Plot. Then the Lord Stafford offered to prove further against Dugdale that he had offered Mony to some to swear falsly against his Lordship to this end William Robinson a Worcestershire-man affirmed That about Midsummer was twelve-month Dugdale offered him Mony in London to swear against the Lord Stafford and John Morral a Barber in Ridgley in Staffordshire that he proffer'd him 50 l. in Hand and 50 l. more when the thing was done to swear against Mr. Howard Sir James Symonds Mr. Herbert Aston and several others as concern'd in the Plot And Samuel Holt a Black-smith at Tixal that he proffered him 40 l. to swear that Walter Moor carried Ewers away Then the Lord Stafford proceeded to prove that Dugdale deposed at the Trial of the five Jesuits That he communicated the News of Sir E. Godfrey's Death which was on Saturday to Mr. Sambidge the Tuesday following which Mr. Sambidge denies That he so swore Mr. John-Lydcott a Fellow of King's-Colledg in Cambridg and one Charles Gifford who were present at that Trial and took Notes did testify And Mr. Sambidge denied that he heard of the News till Friday or Saturday or that he was at the Ale-house with Dugdale at all but that he was an ill Man and very abusive especially to the Clergy Then the Lord Stafford proceeded against Dr. Oates objecting against him That when he was examin'd before the Council having named many and not naming the Prisoner he said he had no more to accuse and for the proof of this he call'd Sir Philip Lloyd who remembred nothing of it and appealed to the Lords then present but none could speak to it till at length the Earl of Berkley did say That he remembred in the House of Lords when Dr. Oates was asked If he could accuse any other Person of what Quality soever Oates answered That he had no more in relation to England to accuse but in relation to Ireland he had which was after he had accused the Lord Stafford though before he had accused the Queen Then he called for Mr. Dugdale again and objected further against him That he did depose before Tho. Lane and J. Vernon two Justices in Staffordshire Decemb. 24. 1678. That presently after one Howard Almoner to the Queen went beyond-Seas he was told by Geo. Hobson Servant to the Lord Aston that there was a Design c. Whereas this Hobson was not a Servant to the Lord Aston of three Years after the Almoner went and yet here he says presently But Dugdale explained that his meaning was that Hobson told him there was a Design presently after the Almoner went c. Which was contested but at last submitted to Then Mr. Turbervile was called again and the Prisoner objected against him his deposing to the Year 1673 one day and to 1672 the next whence he concluded him to be necessarily perjured But Sir William Poultney who took his Affidavit related the whole Story which shewed him to be mistaken in the Year which he finding out that Night by a Paper he found came and corrected it himself the next Morning And whereas the Lord Stafford had charged him for a Coward and for running away from his Colours he produced his Discharge from his Captain which certified otherwise Then whereas Turbervile had before deposed that his Lordship was lame of the Gout when he waited upon him in France he declared he had not been lame these forty Years and never had the Gout in his Life and his two Servants Furness and Leigh testified the same for the time they had lived with him and who were with him then in France but denied that ever they saw Turbervile with him And whereas Turbervile deposed That he came to England by Calice he said he came by Diep and produced one Mr. Wyborne who testified the same together with his aforesaid two Servants Again whereas Turbervil deposed That when he came from Doway his Relations were angry with him and the Lord Powis and his Lady he affirmed that he was upon his return received courteously at the Lord Powis's House and by his Relations which was testified by John Minhead one that belonged to the Lord Powis and a French-Man And whereas Turbervile said he was disinherited his elder Brother by another Mother testified the kindness of his Relations towards him and that there was no Estate likely ever to come to him there being so many Heirs before him Finally whereas Turbervile also in his Affidavit had said the Lord Castlemain was at the Lord Powis's at such a time which must be either in the Years 1672 1673 or 1674 he called Mr. Lydcott again to testify he was not in Wales in any of those Years who by his Notes which he confessed he had transcribed out of another Book spoke very particularly to the times only the beginning of 1672 he could not tell how to account for nor did Turbervile ever say positively to a Year So the Lord Stafford being asked if he had any more Witnesses and answering he had three or four the Peers thought it too late to proceed and so adjourned into the Parliament-Chamber and the Commons went back to their House to whom the Lords sent a Message that they had ordered the Prisoner again to the Bar at Ten next Morning The Fourth Day FRiday Decemb. 3 1680. about Ten the Court being sat and the Prisoner at the Bar the Ld. High Steward reminding him how far he had gone and where he left off in his Defence desired him to go on Who called therefore John Porter Butler to the Lord Powis who said That about a Year ago in several places in London he heard Turbervil say that he believed neither the Lord Powis nor the rest of the Lords were in the Plot and the Witnesses that swore against him he believed were perjured and he could not believe any thing of it and that as he hoped for Salvation he knew nothing of it neither directly
which the Court adjourned and the Lords sent a Message to the Commons that they had ordered the Prisoner to the Bar again on Monday morning at 10 a Clock The sixth Day MOnday December 6. 1680. about 11 the Court being sat and the Prisoner at the Bar his Petition was read which was for leave to offer a few things more to clear himself and which the Ld. H. Steward told him the Lords had granted He then said that seeing he had received their Order that his Counsel should not be heard touching the continuance of Impeachments from Parliament to Parliament he desired that he might offer them his own Conceptions concerning that urging that they had not yet declared their own Judgments either as to that or whether they did acquiesce in the Judges Opinions praying that his Counsel might be heard as to the other points protesting his own Innocency and Abhorrency of Treason reading then his Case and repeating his Defence c. After which the Lords adjourned into the Parliament Chamber and the Commons returned to their House and received a Message from the Lords that they had ordered the Prisoner to the Bar to receive Judgment to morrow at 10. The seventh Day TUesday December 7 1680. About 11 the Court being sat the Ld. H. Steward took the Votes of the Peers upon the Evidence beginning at the Puisne Baron and so upwards in order the Lord Stafford being as the Law required absent The Ld. H. Steward began then saying My Lord Butler of VVeston Is VVilliam Lord Viscount Stafford Guilty of the Treason whereof he stands impeached or not Guilty Lord Butler Not Guilty upon my Honour The same Question was put to the rest whose Names and Votes follow Ld. Arundel of Trerice Not Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Crewe Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Cornwallis Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Holles Not Guilty upon my Honour Ld. VVootton Not Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Rockingham Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Lucas Not Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Astley Guilty upon my Honour Ld. VVard Not Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Byron Not Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Hatton Not Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Leigh Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Herbert of Cherbury Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Howard of Escrick Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Maynard Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Lovelace Guilty upon my Honour Ld. Deincourt Not guilty upon my Honour Ld. Grey of Wark Guilty upon my honour Ld. Brook Guilty upon my honour Ld. Norreys Not guilty upon my honour Ld. Chandos Guilty upon my honour Ld. North and Grey Guilty upon my honour Ld. Paget Guilty upon my honour Ld. Wharton Guilty upon my honour Ld. Eure Guilty upon my honour Ld. Cromwel Guilty upon my honour Ld. VVindsor Not guilty upon my honour Ld. Conyers Guilty upon my honour Ld. Ferrers Not guilty upon my honour Ld. Morley Not guilty upon my honour Ld. Mowbray Not guilty upon my honour Ld. Viscount Newport Guilty upon my honour Ld. Visc Faulconberg Guilty upon my honour Earl of Conway Guilty upon my honour E. of Berkley Not guilty upon my honour E. of Maclesfield Guilty upon my honour E. of Hallifax Not guilty upon my honour E. of Feversham Not guilty upon my honour E. of Sussex Guilty upon my honour E. of Guilford Guilty upon my honour E. of Shaftesbury Guilty upon my honour E. of Burlington Guilty upon my honour E. of Ailesbury Not guilty upon my honour E. of Craven Not guilty upon my honour E. of Carlisle Guilty upon my honour E. of Bath Not guilty upon my honour E. of Essex Guilty upon my honour E. of Clarendon Not guilty upon my honour E. of St. Albans Not guilty upon my honour E. of Scarsdale Guilty upon my honour E. of Sunderland Guilty upon my honour E. of Thanet Not guilty upon my honour E. of Chesterfield Not guilty upon my honour E. of Carnarvan Not guilty upon my honour E. of Winchelsea Guilty upon my honour E. of Stamford Guilty upon my honour E. of Peterborough Not guilty upon my honour E. of Rivers Guilty upon my honour E. of Mulgrave Guilty upon my honour E. of Barkshire Guilty upon my honour E. of Manchester Guilty upon my honour E. of Westmoreland Guilty upon my honour E. of Clare Guilty upon my honour Earl of Bristol Guilty upon my honour E. of Denbeigh Not guilty upon my honour E. of Northampton Guilty upon my honour E. of Leicester Guilty upon my honour E. of Bridgwater Guilty upon my honour E. of Salisbury Guilty upon my honour E. of Suffolk Guilty upon my honour E. of Bedford Guilty upon my honour E. of Huntington Guilty upon my honour E. of Rutland Not guilty upon my honour E. of Kent Guilty upon my honour E. of Oxford Guilty upon my honour Ld. Chamberlain Not guilty upon my honour Marquess of Worcester Not guilty upon my honour D. of Newcastle Not guilty upon my honour D. of Monmouth Guilty upon my honour D. of Albemarle Guilty upon my honour D. of Buckingham Guilty upon my honour Ld. Privy-Seal Guilty upon my honour Ld. President Guilty upon my honour Ld. H. Steward Guilty upon my Honour Prince Rupert Duke of Cumberland Guilty upon my Honour The Ld. H. Steward then declared that upon telling the Votes he found there were 31 that think the Prisoner Not Guilty and 55 that have found him Guilty Whereupon the Prisoner was brought to the Bar and the Ld. High Steward informing him the Lords had found him Guilty He said God's Holy Name be praised for it confessing it surpriz'd him for he did not expect it and that he had only this to say for suspending of Judgment That he did not hold up his Hand at the Bar which he conceived he ought to have done and that though he was tried upon the Act of 25. Edw. 3. yet there being nothing more in that Act than what is included in the Act of the 13th of this King he ought only to lose his Seat in Parliament which was the Punishment there put down for a Peer submitting to their Lordships and desiring their Judgments in these Points Then the Lords Adjourned into the Parliament-Chamber and the Committee of Commons returned to their own House and the Speaker having re-assumed the Chair the whole Body of the House went with their Speaker to the Bar of the House of Lords to demand Judgment of High-Treason against William Viscount Stafford upon the Impeachment of the Commons of England in Parliament in the Name of the Commons in Parliament and of all the Commons of England Then the Commons with their Speaker went back to their House Then the Lords took into Consideration what Judgment was to be given and it was moved that he might be beheaded After some Debate the Judges were asked Whether if any other Judgment than the usual Judgment for High-Treason were given upon him it would attaint his Blood The Judges were of Opinion that the Judgment for High-Treason appointed by Law is to
endeavours to have over-ruled without so much as hearing the Prisoners Counsel for the maintaining it for that they said it was nought because it produced no Record of his Impeachment and did not specify what the High-Treason was for which he was Impeached and that the King had Power to proceed on an Impeachment or Indictment for the same thing at his Election Nevertheless the Attorny General demurred and the Prisoner joined in the Demurrer And then after much arguing a Day was given to argue the Plea till Saturday May. 7. At which time the Attorny General added to the Exceptions he took to the Plea Whether a Suit in a Superior Court can take away the Jurisdiction of the Cause of the Person and of the Fact at the time of the Fact committed To maintain the Plea Mr. VVilliams of Counsel for the Prisoner in a very long and learned Discourse first spoke stating the Prisoner's Case upon the Indictment the Plea to the Indictment and the Demurrer to the Plea Alledging the Difference of an Impeachment from an Indictment and offering some Reasons why this Court ought not to proceed upon this Indictment Then answering distinctly Mr. Attorney's Exceptions to the Plea producing some Presidents of this Courts Prosecution being stop'd by Pleas to the Jurisdiction shewing what had been done upon those Pleas What Doom they had Laying before the Court the Right of the Commons to Impeach in Parliament the Judicature of the Lords to determine that Impeachment and the Method and Proceedings of Parliament submitting it to them how far they would lay their Hands on this Case thus circumstantiated Here the Ld. Ch. Justice declared That all these Things were quite foreign to the Case and the Matter in Hand only was Whether this Plea as thus pleaded was sufficient to protect the Prisoner from being questioned in this Court for the Treasonable Matter in the Indictment before them To which Mr. VVilliams reply'd That 't was an hard matter for the Bar to answer the Bench. After which Sir Francis Winnington pleaded That he conceived that it was confessed by the Demurrer that there is an Impeachment by the Commons of England of High-Treason against Fitz-Harris lodged in the House of Lords Secundum Legem consuetudinem Parliamenti And that the Treason for which he was impeached is the same Treason contained in the Indictment So that now the general Question was Whether an Impeachment for Treason by the House of Commons and still depending were a sufficient Matter to oust the Court from proceeding upon an Indictment for the same Offence Which he learnedly endeavoured to make good by several Reasons as well as Presidents Mr. Wallop pleaded next on the same side whose Province was to prove That the Treason in the Impeachment and in the Indictment was the same and that this was well averred in the Plea Mr. Pollexfen pleaded That a general Impeachment in Parliament was a good Impeachment and the Judges had declared so to the King and Council concerning the five Popish Lords who could not therefore be tried upon Indictments so long as general Impeachments were depending for the same Treason and that therefore this Plea was good both as to Matter and Form c. In reply to vitiate the Plea it was insisted on by Mr. Attorn Gen. Mr. Sol. Gen. Serj. Jefferies and Sir Francis VVithens of Counsel for the King that the Plea concluded not in the usual Form That perhaps this Matter if the Prisoner had been acquitted upon the Impeachment might have been pleaded in Bar to the Indictment but it was not pleadable to the Jurisdiction of the Court That in the Case of the five Lords the Indictments were removed into the House of Lords and that the Judges Opinion given at the Council-Board was not a Judicial Opinion nor did any way affect this Cause After which the Ld. Ch. Justice thought fit not to give present Judgment but to take time for Deliberation Whereupon the Prisoner was carried back to the Tower And on Tuesday May 10. Mr. Attorney moved the Court to appoint a Day for their Judgment on the Plea and for Fitz-Harris to be brought up which they appointed to be the next Morning Accordingly on Wednesday Morning May 11. the Prisoner being brought to the Bar the Ld. Ch. Justice deliver'd the Opinion of the Court upon Conference had with other Judges That his Brother Jones his Brother Raymond and himself were of Opinion that the Plea was insufficient his Brother Dolben not being resolved but doubting concerning it and therefore awarded the Prisoner should plead to the Indictment which he did Not Guilty and his Trial ordered to be the next Term. The Trial of Edward Fitz-Harris at the King's-Bench Bar at Westminster before the Lord Chief Justice Pemberton on Thursday June 9. 1681. THE Prisoner then and there appearing after several Challenges made for the King the Jury sworn were Thomas Johnson Lucy Knightly Edward Wilford Alexander Hosey Martin James John Viner William Withers William Cleave Thomas Goffe Ralph Farr Samuel Freebody John Lockier To whom the Indictment was read which was for High-Treason in conspiring the Death of the King and subversion of the Government the which Mr. Heath Serj. Maynard and Mr. Attorn Gen. opened And then Mr. Everard deposed How the Prisoner was with him on Monday Feb. 21. 1681. having a little before been with him to renew the Acquaintance which had been between them while they were both in the French King's Service and to perswade him to re-ingratiate himself into the French and Popish Interest and gave him by word of Mouth Heads to write a Pamphlet to scandalize the King raise Rebellion alienate the Hearts of the People and set them together by the Ears Whereupon he acquainted one Mr. Savile of Lincolns-Inn Mr. Crown Mr. Smith and Sir William Waller with it And the next day Mr. Fitz-Harris coming again to his Chamber in Grays-Inn he convey'd Mr. Smith into a Closet Sir William Waller failing to come where he both saw and heard the Prisoner ask him What he had done as to the Libel and give him further Instructions about what to write viz. That the King was Popishly Affected and Arbitrarily Inclined That King Charles the First had an Hand in the Irish Rebellion and King Charles the Second did countenance the same c. That the People should therefore be stirred up to rebel especially the City c. That the Day after he coming again he had convey'd Sir William Waller into the next Room where he also might both hear and see shewing him to Copies of what he had drawn up which he marked that he might know them again and see what alteration would be made That Fitz-Harris did them read one of the Copies and amended it adding some things and striking out other things saying The Libel was to be presented to the French Ambassador's Confessor and he was to present it to the French Ambassador and that it was to beget a
had the Assassination gone on these things were to be done The Lord-Mayor and Sheriffs were to be kill'd and as many of the Lieutenancy as they could get and Papillon and Dubois be forc'd to take the Office of Sheriff upon them or else be used as the rest And Sir Thomas Gold Sir John Shorter or Alderman Cornish who was thought the fittest Person be set up for Lord-Mayor The Principal Ministers of State also were to be kill'd the Lord Hallifax the Lord Rochester and the Lord Keeper whom they said they would hang upon the same post that Colledge was hang'd upon for his Murder Sir John Moor was to be kill'd and hung up in Guild-Hall and the Judges to be flead and stuffed and hung up in Westminster-Hall And several of the Pentionary Parliament were to be hang'd up also The King 's Natural Sons they said were good lusty Fellows and would serve for Porters or Water-men and the Lady Ann they would marry to some Country Gentleman for a Breed to keep out Foraign Pretences And that the Prisoner at the Bar was sometimes at these Meetings when these things were discoursed of though not so often as the rest And after the News of the Fire he said he believed God shew'd his disapprobation of the thing desiring to have his Name concealed whereupon Ferguson told him he needed not to be ashamed for that it was a glorious Action and such an Action as he hoped to see publickly gratified by the Parliament and question'd not but they should be fam'd for it and have Statues erected for them with the Title of Liberatores Patriae That he had told some Nonconformists who desired him to forbear but says he they are silly People that do not know how to distinguish between killing a Prince for difference in Opinion about Religion and destroying a Tyrant for preservation of the Rights and Liberties of the People saying it was an Action that would make all the Princes of the World tremble and teach them to use their Subjects kindly That about Christmass Col. Rumsey acquainted him of an Insurrection design'd to be about March carry'd on by the D. of Monmouth Ld. Russel Ld. Grey Ld. Howard Col. Sidney Major Wildman and Mr. Hambden to whom they drew up some things to be done for the People but they were rejected in regard all was to be left to a Parliament That he was at the Salutation where Mr. Nelthrop called Mr. Keeling Culing That there was a Treaty with the Scot's but was broke off as Mr. Ferguson told him because they would not presently declare for a Common-Wealth That at the Young Devil-Tavern he met with the Prisoner and others where Holloway did propose that since the Scotish Business was broken off they should try what Forces could be rais'd here and Mr. Ferguson did say that if 3000 Men could be had he believed the D. of Monmouth and the Lord Russel would appear in the head of them That a Map was brought and the City divided into 20 parts and each 20th part into 14ths and 15ths and one principal Man was to have one 20th Part and that Goodenough reported afterwards that there were 1300 Men out of two of the Hamlets That Mr. Bourn told him he had spoken to one Parson Lobb who said he would try what his Congregation would do That about a fortnight before the discovery Rumbold told him the jealousy he had of Keeling which if he could be satisfied of that he design'd to betray them he would get him into the Country and kill him but upon the Saturday before the Discovery Rumbold and one Gale that was to be one of the Assassinates lent Keeling 100 l. he being in need and they unwilling to discourage him On the Monday after the Discovery they met in the Morning at Capt. Walcot's Lodging where it was agreed to go beyond Sea only the Witness had no mind to go and a Boat was hired and 5. l. given in earnest But understanding the Messengers were abroad and believing the River was beset every Man shifted for himself and the Witness shifted by the means of Mr. Bourne who help'd him to a Conveniency for two or three days That being thus retired they got Mr. Keeling in the City and Rumbold discours'd him in the presence of several Persons who denied that he had discovered wishing a great many Imprecations upon himself That after some discourse of killing him they propos'd to him to go out of Town which he refused That the same Night upon tracing him they found he had called out his Brother and was gone to the Secretary's whereupon it was took for granted that the Discovery was made and that every Man must shift for himself That upon that Mr. VVade said That if the Duke of Monmouth would go into the West they might try a Push for it still And the Prisoner at the Bar said he was satisfied God would deliver the Nation but that he did not approve of the present Instruments Thus the sum of what was fastned on the Prisoner was That he was at several Meetings where the killing of the King and Duke was consulted of that he went down to Rumbold's House to view the Place and undertook to fight the Guards To this he pleaded that he never was at Rumbold's House but once as he travell'd from York by Norwich and so to London And that he was not so natural a Fool to think for him to charge the Guards when another kills the King but that he should be as Guilty as he that kills And that he was ill of the Gout all the while the King was at New-market And for that Assassinating the King it never entred into his thoughts more or less But a Letter was then produc'd under his own hand to Sir Lionel Jenkins Secretary of State purporting His trouble to see himself in his Majesty's Proclamation and his resolution to lay himself at his Majesty's Feet and acknowledg his Crime and discover all he knew relating to England Scotland and Ireland which he supposed might be more than the Original Discoverer was able to acquaint his Majesty with And farther That if his Majesty thought fit he would follow those Lords and Gentlemen who were fled and as soon as he could would inform his Majesty what Measures they intended to take next Otherwise he was resolved to give his Majesty no further trouble but to lie at his Mercy let him do with him what he pleased This letter Mr. Blathwait swore Capt. VValcot owned for his when he was examin'd before the King And Capt. Richardson swore likewise that yesterday his Clerk discover'd a piece of Paper in the Prisoner's Hand which he designed to have given his Son which was a Letter to Capt. Tracy his Landlord to desire him to speak to Col. Rumsey and Mrs. VVest to speak to her Husband to be tender of him have ground enough to serve the King upon other Men and the last words of the Note were If
you cannot be Private leave the Issue to God To the whole the Prisoner pleaded That the Witnesses had made long Speeches though very little of them relating to him though too much That he was sent for out of Ireland where his Habitation was being a Man of a competent Estate by the Lord Shaftsbury to go Governour to Carolina but it being some while before he came his Lordship gave his Commission to another That being in England the Lord Shaftsbury invited him to go with him into Holland which he did and upon his Lordship's Death he returned to London That he confess'd it was his folly to frequent this Company but it was plain that the Witnesses had sufficiently dipp'd themselves and therefore to save their own Lives they had combin'd to take away his That he did hear a deal of what they had now deposed but never had any hand in it either directly or indirectly and therefore supposed his Crime could be only Misprision of Treason The Jury then desiring he might be asked What he had to say to the Letter he replied That what he had promised he undertook upon his intimacy with Mr. Ferguson by whose means he believed he should have an Interest with the rest That he did according to his Promise give an Account of what he had heard but the King was not pleas'd with him because he did not descend to Particulars which he could not do he having never been at any of their Meetings or Debates nor knew any thing but what he had by a private Hand He then produced one Witness who testified his being ill of the Gout for about three Months but could not certainly tell the Time After this Mr. Sol. Gen. having summ'd up the Evidence the Ld. Ch. Justice gave his Charge to the Jury who after about half a quarter of an hours consideration returned and brought the Prisoner in Guilty The Trial of William Hone at the Old-Baily on Friday July 13. 1683. THen and there the Prisoner appearing having been arraign'd the day before for Conspiring the Death of the King and the Subversion of the Government and for providing himself with Arms to that purpose And after some frivolous Evasions pleaded Not Guilty though he confess'd himself then Guilty of the Conspiracy but not of providing Arms He desired now to retract his Plea and confessed the Indictment though still denying that he had provided Arms but owning that his Deposition before Sir William Turner was true and that he was asked by Mr. Richard Goodenough to go along with him but was not told whither though he understood it was to kill the King and the D. of York But this not being taken for a full Confession Serjeant Jefferies desired he might be tried So the Jury were sworn without any Challenges viz. Nicholas Charlton Christopher Pitts Robert Beddingfield John Pelling William Winbury Thomas Seaton William Rutland Thomas Short Theophilus Man John Jenew John Short Thomas Nicholas To whom the Indictment being read Mr. Jones and Mr. Attorny General opened the same And then Mr. Keeling deposed That he saw the Prisoner at the Dolphin-Tavern where the Arms were agreed upon and the King 's coming from New-Market discoursed on and about the Swans-Quills Goose-Quills Crows-Quills Sand and Ink c. After which he took acquaintance with him and after some time told him he was one of them that was to go down to Rye to Assassinate the King And since at a Coffee-House in Swithen's Alley he told him It would never be well till the Black-Bird and the Gold-Finch were knocked on the Head meaning the King and the Duke of York Mr. West then deposed That he was at the Meeting before-mentioned but that he was sure the Prisoner did not come in till the Discourse was over That he told him then that Mr. Goodenough had spoke to him about a little Job for the Duke That he had seen him often in the Company of Manning who was designed to be another of the Assassinates That being once at his Chamber the Prisoner said to him Master shall we do nothing Adding that if the Duke of Monmouth would be true and appear he could bring fifty or sixty honest Men of t'other side the Water to do the Business either a brisk Push or the two Brothers the Captain and Lieutenant which were the terms they used since the Van-Herring was printed That he thought him a pretty honest Fellow before this Time and that he thought him deluded by Goodenough in the thing Whereupon the Ld. Ch. Justice asked West if be came to justify these things West reply'd That he had been basely deluded and he was sorry for the poor Fellow Which caus'd the Ld. Ch. Justice to tell him that it was unusual for Men in his Condition to use such Expressions in such a Case And being afterwards told by Mr. Serj. Jefferies that he found him not worthy of the Mercy the King had shewn him Then Mr. West reply'd That it was a Word put from him unawares Then Sir Nicholas Butler deposed That he had long known the Prisoner and that he was always ready for plotting such Purposes as were now laid to his Charge For that when Sir Francis Chaplain was Lord-Mayor and the King stood at Mr. Waldo's the Prisoner came to his House and told him that now they had a fair Opportunity to take off the King and the Duke at once To which purpose there were to be half a dozen with Cross-Bows at a Window in Bow-Steeple just opposite to the Balcony That thereupon he acquainted the King and the Duke of York herewith and one Horsel was appointed to search and watch the Steeple but none came and that the Prisoner upon his Examination hereof before the King had confessed all this Capt. Richardson deposed That he was by while Sir Nicholas examin'd the Prisoner as to the Crime he now stood charged with and that he said that Mr. Goodenough came and told him he wanted Labourers and that it was to kill the King and the Duke of York and confess'd that he agreed to be one that would undertake it and that Goodenough promis'd him 20 l. to bu him an Horse and Arms. That at another Meeting he said he was for killing the King and saving the Duke but Goodenough was for both That he told them the Business of Rye which place he knew not but said it was the place where the King was to be murdered To all this the Prisoner said little or nothing only that he did not know the place where nor when it was proposed about the Rye and that he was drawn into it by Goodenough That as to the Cross-Bows he was only told it but never design'd it And being ask'd what Religion he professed he answered That he heard sometimes Baptists sometimes Independents and sometimes Presbyterians After a short Charge the Jury brought him in Guilty without stirring from the Bar. The Trial of William Russel Esq at the Old-Baily on Friday
Meetings was upon the account of carrying on the Conspiracy and discoursing about the Condition the Conspirators were in As to the intended Insurrection he said If he could but see a Cloud at big as a Man's Hand he would not be wanting to employ his Interest That the Prisoner also had told him that he intended to take an House near the Tower to place Men in in order to surprize it to that end he held correspondence with some Sea-Captains and that he had been with them at Coffee-Houses Mr. Richard Goodenough deposed That being in company with the Prisoner he had heard him approve of the Design and promise to use his Interest in raising Men and not only to be assisting in the Division allotted him but in surprising the City Savoy c. and in driving the Guards out of Town Then the Prisoner called several Witnesses to invalidate Lee's Testimony Sir Robert Adams testified to a false Report of his about beating three Knights Sir Simon Lewis was called to the same purpose but appeared not James Child could say nothing but that Lee was an Honest Man One Baker was also call'd to testify that Lee would have suborned him against the Prisoner to his Prejudice some Years since of which he had made Affidavit before Sir William Turner But Baker not appearing Sir William Turner was desired to give account of it but it being above two Years since he could not remember such Particulars His Clerk Mr. Tomkins remembred such an Affidavit was made in 1682 which mention'd Mr. Lee but to the best of his remembrance it was returned before the King and Council and he could not give any account of the Particulars Mr. Bateman then desiring to know upon what Statute he was Indicted and being assisted by his Son by reason of his Incapacity making little more Defence the Ld. Ch. Justice of the King's-Bench summ'd up the Evidence and other Prisoners were tried and just before the Jury went out the aforesaid Baker being found with much ado it was obtain'd that he should give in his Evidence which was That Lee perswaded him to intrude himself into the Prisoner's Company and some others and to discourse of State-Affairs by which means he would find a way to make him a Man of which he had made Affidavit before Sir William Turner But this the Court interpreted to Lee's Advantage as if he only thereby designed to make a discovery of the Plot and so have got a further Evidence to corroborate his own reflecting on Baker as a broken Fellow c. After which the Jury withdrawing for half an hour brought the Prisoner in Guilty And accordingly he being brought again to the Bar on Friday following Mr. Recorder sentenc'd him to be Drawu Hang'd and Quarter'd which was executed upon him at Tyburn on Friday Decemb. 18th following The Trial of John Hambden Gent. At the Session's-House in the Old-Baily on Wednesday Decemb. 30. 1685. THen and there the Prisoner appearing and the grand Jury for the County of Middlesex call'd over his Indictment was read which was for High-Treason in conspiring the Death of the late King and raising a Rebellion in this Kingdom To which before Mr. Hambden pleaded he intimated his having been tried for the same Fact above two Years ago and withal gave the Lord Chief Justice to understand that he thought he had as much to say in Point of Law for himself as any Prisoner that ever came before him but that he was resolved to pass by all Pleas whatsoever and cast himself wholly upon the King's Mercy The Lord Chief Justice told him his former Indictment was for High-Misdemeanour but this for High-Treason and therefore a different Fact requiring him therefore to plead Then he pleaded Guilty to the Indictment requesting his Lordship's Intercession for him with the King Which was readily enough granted and the Method he was perswaded to take highly approved as answering the Design of giving Life and Credit to the Fanatick Rlot and gratifying the Importunity possibly of some Great Ones However the dismal Sentence of Death was by Mr. Recorder pronounced upon him due to High-Treason yet not without a shew of Tenderness and some encouragement of an Obligation this brave Person had hereby merited with them This getting a Pardon when nothing else must Books lately Printed and Sold by Jonathan Robinson at the Golden Lion in St. Pauls Church-yard relating to the great Revolutions in England and Scotland 1688 1689. ☞ AN Account of the Reasons of the Nobility and Gentry's Invitation of the Prince of Orange into England Being a Memorial from the English Protestants concerning their Grievances with a large account of the Birth of the Prince of Wales presented to their Highnesses the Prince and Princess of Orange A Collection of Political and Historical Papers relating to the wonderful Revolutions in England and Scotland in 12 Parts from the time of the seven Bishops petitioning K. James the 2d to the Coronation of K. Willian and Q. Mary A Brief History of the Succession of the Crown of England c. Collected out of the Records and the most Authentick Historians written for the Satisfaction of the Nation Wonderful Predictions of Nostredamus Grebner David Pareus and Autonius Torquatus wherein the Grandeur of their Present Majesties the Happiness of England and Downfall of France and Rome are plainly Delineated With a large Preface shewing That the Crown of England has not been obscurely foretold to their Majesties William the 3d and Queen Mary late Prince and Princess of Orange and that the People of this Ancient Monarchy have duly contributed thereunto in the present Assembly of Lords and Commons notwithstanding the Objections of Men of different Extremes A Seasonable Discourse wherein is examined what is lawful during the Confusions and Revolutions of Government especially in the Case of a King deserting his Kingdoms and how far a Man may lawfully conform to the Powers and Commands of those who with Various Successes hold Kingdoms Whether it be lawful 1 In Paying Taxes 2 In personal Service 3 In taking of Oaths 4 In giving up himself to a final Allegiance A Seasonable Treatise wherein is proved That King William commonly called the Conqueror did not get the Imperial Crown of England by the Sword but by the Election and Consent of the People To whom he swore to observe the Original Contract between King and People An Answer to a Paper Intituled The Desertion Discussed being a Vindication of the Proceedings of the late Honourable Convention in their Filling up the Throne with King William and Queen Mary An Exact Collection of the Debates of the House of Commons particularly such as relate to the Bill of Exclusion of a Popish Successor c. held at Westminster Octob. 21. 1680 Prorogued the 10th and Dissolved the 18th of January following With the Debates of the House of Commons at Oxford Assembled March. 21. 1680. Also a Just and Modest Vindication of the Proceedings of the said