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A95943 A vindication of Mr. Bryan Heyns from all the calumnies and reproaches cast upon him by the phanaticks together with a short relation of the present Presbyterian Plot, against the King and government. Heyns, Bryan. 1682 (1682) Wing V482; ESTC R18923 20,406 26

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was not at all Chief-Justice nor no thoughts thereof Heyns answer'd that Point so well once before that he thought he put an end to the Whiggish Tautologies for when mention was made of my Lord Chief-Justice Pemberton in Colledge's Tryal at Oxford Heyns never named any particular month time or place in relation to Sir Francis Pemberton for if there had been any such Query demanded of him he could easily answer That Colledge spoke ill of my Lord Chief-Justice Pemberton divers times and especially in his own house before Mrs. Fitz-Harris and Mr. Ivy nay if need requires an eminent Citizen of London will be produced that can verifie that Colledge called Sir Francis Pemberton a thousand Rogues and that he hoped the next Parliament that sate would hang him up because he gave his opinion to the King that Fitz-Harris might be tryed out of Parliament And for Heyns being married to one Mrs. Mansfield as is alledged in the said Pamphlet 't is such Non-sense that none but a foolish simple Whig would publish such a ridiculous Story for the Gentlewoman her self denies she ever spoke any such thing If any be curious to know the truth of this false Alarum Mrs. Mansfield lodges at the Twisted Posts in James-street in Covent-garden who will certifie him of the truth of things But 't is no marvel the Phanatiques will six two Marriages upon Heyns at once when they impose two upon His Majesty viz. that He was married to the Duke of Monmouth's mother Horrid Indignation to His Sacred Majesty although he denied it upon the word of a Christian and a King Another idle Fable is set down in the said Pamphlet of Mr. Heyns how he counterfeited a Letter from one Mr. Oliver a Prisoner in the Fleet-Prison to one Mr. Harbottle of Lincoln whereby Mr. Oliver was cozen'd of the value of 200 l. Heyns answered this Whiggish Lye once before and had it printed in Mr. Thompson's Intelligence But I leave it to the judgment of any rational man how the said Oliver could be cheated of 200 l. having sworn himself out of Prison not to be worth 10 l. in all the World by the last Act of Parliament made three or four years ago for the Release of poor Prisoners for Debt Besides the Statute of Bankrupt was extended upon all his real and personal Estate many years before Heyns ever knew him and Mr. Adams that lives in Holborn a Barrister of Lincolns-Inn was one of the Commissioners for the said Statute of Bankrupt moreover Heyns calls God to witness he never knew Mr. Harbottle in all his life Some few things more I have to answer that are published in the said Pamphlet One is that it was beneath the Earl of Shaftsbury to speak to such a mean Rascal as Heyns is or words to that effect Of this Pamphleteer I would ask these two Questions What does he conceive by these word mean Rascal If he intimates Heyns baseness of Birth he can easily prove himself as well born by Father and Mother as the Noble Peer setting aside the King's Impression of Honour his Father is descended from the ancient Family of the Heyns of Connaught originally sprung from a younger Son of Miletin● that was Monarch of Ireland And in Henry the VIII's Reign his Ancestor by the Father side had power of Life and Death upon his own Estate and had Fifty Mannors that were his real Inheritance His Family was always Loyal to the Crown of England so that he will put his Life to issue if ever there was a Traytor of his own Line His Mother was descended of the Noble and Ancient Family of the Burks of Clanricarde that have been Peers of England and are still Peers of Ireland The Royal House of Lancaster married the onely Heiress and Daughter of the Earl of Vlster and Clanricarde whose name was Burke the Title of Vlster being given to the sole Heirs of his Body lawfully begotten and in her Right the Duke of York by the Lancaster Line is Hereditary Earl of the said Province In all Ages the said Family of the Burkes have shewed their Loyalty to the Kings of England and kept the Crown of Ireland upon Queen Elizabeth's head having with unspeakable Fortitude and true Valor defeated the confederate Irish and Spaniards in several pitched Battels when the Spaniards invaded Ireland in Queen Elizabeth's Reign If he means that Heyns was Basely Educated the Pamphleteer will be laughed at for no private Gentleman's Son could have better Documents instilled into him than he had in those liberal Sciences imbellishing a Gentleman Besides he lived always by his own honest industry and independant of any man which several Whigs in London can witness It was his Fathers Loyalty to his Prince that clouded his Birth and Breeding for had he sided with the late Usurper he might enjoy his own Inheritance to this day Let no man imagine that I publish these things of my Family out of Vain-glory but to let the world know I want nothing to make me a complete Gentleman but an Estate and that I am not such an abject person as the Whigs render me to the world Besides I think I do my Prince a great deal of Justice in clearing my Reputation from those Aspersions daily spoke of me by his Enemies And whereas 't is printed in the said Pamphlet that it was altogether groundless what Heyns deposed against the Earl of Shaftsbury relating to the Duke of Buckingham viz. That his Mother was not descended of the Plantagenets Heyns desires the Reader to consult the Heralds who are ready to prove that she was descended of a Sister or Daughter to Edw. IV. But the Pamphleteer may as well deny this point as that the Noble Peer never spoke to Heyns And I do really believe the Earl of S y would not involve his Native Countrey in a Civil War as 't is there mentioned out of any love he had for the Duke of Bucks but out of that odium he bears to the Duke of York and others he would make a New Association with the Infernal Fiends and offer all things that are dear to him in this Life as a libation to the Devil upon condition he might revenge himself upon the Yorkists And whereas the said Pamphlet denies that the Earl of Sh. spoke contumeliously of the King all men know that is not only usual with him to revile and speak ignominiously against the King privately but also publickly in open Parliament See the Speech of the Noble Peer where 't is said We want a Prince that we may Trust And in another paragraph of the same Speech he bids the King to change His Principles c. This uncivil Dialect is customary with Whigs in all Ages to Princes as any Historian can tell that has read the Life of Mary Queen of Scots Vide The History of the Rebellion in Scotland against the said Queen whom Knocks the Minister called often Whore and Jezabel and told her she