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A34178 The Compleat statesman demonstrated in the life, actions, and politicks of that great minister of state, Anthony, Earl of Shaftesbury : containing an account of his descent, his administration of affairs in the time of Oliver Cromwell, his unwearied endeavours to restore His Most Sacred Majesty, his zeal in prosecuting the horrid Popish Plot, several of his learned speeches during his being Ld. Chancellor, his two commitments to the Tower, the most material passages at his tryal, with many more considerable instances unto His Lordships going for Holland. Dunton, John, 1659-1733. 1683 (1683) Wing C5658; ESTC R35656 48,139 160

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to the Tryal of the said Earl and shall therefore now hasten to the Meeting of the Parliament at Oxford where Business of as high nature was agitated as ever came before the consideration of a Parliament no less than the preservation of the King's Majesty the Protestant Religion and the good people of England all which were now as much as ever Invaded by the Bloody Designs of the Papists This Parliament met the 21th of March 1681. in the Convocation-House at Oxford The House of Lords Sare in the Geometry School where was a Throne and State Erected for His Majesty in which His Majesty being Seated in His Royal Robes declared himself to both Houses to the Effect following That the unwarrantable Proceedings of the last House of Commons were the reason of his parting with them for that he who would never use Arbitrary Government himself would not suffer it in Others That whoever calmly considered the Assurances he had renewed to that last Parliament and what he had Recommended to them His Forein Alliances the Examination of the Plot and the Preservation of Tangier and reflect upon their unsuitable Returns might rather wonder at his Patience than that he grew weary of their Proceedings that it was his Interest and should be his Cause as much as Theirs to Preserve the Liberty of the Subject the Crown not being safe when that is in danger That by Calling this Parliament so soon he let them see that no Irregularities of Parliament should make him out of love with them by which means he gave them another opportunity to provide for the Publick Security and had given one Evidence more that he had not neglected his part That he hoped the ill Success of former Heats would dispose them to a better Temper That as for the further prosecution of the Plot Trial of the Lords c. he omitted to press them as being obvious to consideration and so necessary for the Publick Safety But desired them not to lay so much weight upon any One Expedient against Popery as to determine that all other were ineffectual That what he had so often declared touching the Succession he should not recede from But that to remove all reasonable fears that might arise touching the possibility of a ` Popish Successor if means could be found out that in such a case the Administration should remain in Protestant hands he should be ready to hearken to any such Expedient by which Religion might be secured and Monarchy not destroyed Lastly He advised them to make the known and Establisht Laws of the Land the Rule and Measure of their Votes The 22th the Commons having chosen their Speaker presented him to His Majesty in the Lords House Little beside was done until the 25. when the House considered an Act for Repeal of the Act 35 Eliz. which had passed both Houses in the last Parliament but had not been tendered to His Majesty for his Royal Assent A conference was desired with the Lords as to matters relating to the constitution of Parliaments in passing of Bills Another Message was ordered to be sent to the Lords to put them in mind that the Commons had form●…ly by their Speaker demanded Judgment of High Treason at their Bar against the Earl of Danby and therefore to desire their Lordships to appoint a day to give Judgment against him the said Earl upon the said Impeachment The same day the Examination of Edward Fitz-Harris relating to the popish Plot was read in the House upon which the said Examination was ordered to be Printed the said Fitz-Harris to be impeached at the Lords Bar and a Committee appointed to draw up Articles against him But the House of Lords rejected the Impeachment of Mr. Fitz-Harris whereby a stop was put to their proceedings And on the 28th in the morning the Commons were sent for to the House of Lords where His Majesty told them That their Beginnings had been such that he could expect no good success of this Parliament and therefore His Majesty thought fit to dissolve them And my Lord Chancellor having declared them dissolved His Majesty came the same night to White-Hall I must beg the Readers pardon if he think I have in this Relation deviated from my Theam which was the Earl of Shafton but nothing of a popish Plot hath been yet brought upon the stage wherein he hath not been level'd at he certainly knowing how destructive the Interest of the Papists is to the Government and People of England hath set himself to the hazard of his Life and Family to oppose them The next thing that appeared on the Booksellers stalls was a paper with this Title The Protestation of the Lords Upon rejecting the Impeachment of Mr. Fitz-Harris giving for Reasons why it was the undoubted Right of the Commons so to do because great Offences that influence the Parliament were most effectually determined in Parliament nor could the complaint be determined any where else For that if the party should be indicted in the Kings-Bench or any other inferiour Court for the same offence yet it were not the same suit an Impeachment being at the suit of the People but an Indictment at the suit of the King Besides that they conceived it to be a denial of Justice in regard that the House of Peers as to Impeachments proceeding by vertue of their Judicial not their Legislative Power could not deny any suitor but more especially the Commons of England no more than the Courts of Westminster or any other inferiour Courts could legally deny any suit or criminal cause regularly brought before them Signed according to the Printed Copy by the following Peers Monmouth Kent Huntingdon Bedford Salisbury Clare Stamford Sunderland Essex Shaftesbury Maclefield Mordant Wharton Paget Grey of Wark Herbert of Cherbury Cornwallis Lovelace Crew Finding the Earl of Shaftesburys Name amongst the other Noble Peers and Patriots I thought it not improper to insert the copy in this place it being the last Act of that great Man upon the publick stage For since that time he hath rather been passive as will further appear by the remaining Discourse We shall only remember that at his return from Oxford the Earl left a massy piece of Plate as a Gift to Baliol Colledg as also did that Heroick Prince James Duke of Monmouth which will be to posterity a Testimony of their Magnificence and Bounty And now to return to what remains for the finishing this Tragical story I shall mention only what is already printed either in Captain Wilkinson's Information Colledg's Trial or else is matter of Fact or set forth in the Trial of this great Peer himself Only I cannot omit that on the 15th of Aug. 1681. Mrs. Fitz-Harris gave a deposition upon Oath that her Husband a little before his Execution not only told her what great offers he had made him if he would at first have charged that Infamous and Treasonable Libel for which he was after executed on this worthy Peer
other Discourse with the L. Shaftesbury the said Earl told him that the Duke of Bucks's Mother was descended of the Family of the Plant aginets naming some of the Edwards and that in her Right he should have the Barony of Ross and in her Right had as good a Title to the Crown of England as ever any Stewart had John Macknamara deposed That a little after the Parliament had been dissolved at Oxford the Earl of Shaftesbury said to him That the King was Popishly affected that he took the same methods that his Father before him took which brought his Head to the block and said We will also bring his thither and that the Earl had said the King deserved to be deposed as much as ever King Richard the second did Denis M●…cnamara declared that my Lord Shaftesbury had said The King was a man that ought not to be believed and that ●…e ought to be deposed as well as Richard the second that the Dutchess o●… Mazarine was one of his Cabinet Council that he did nothing but by her Advice Edward Ivey said that the Earl of Shafton soon after the Parliament was dissolved at Oxford speaking against the King said he was an unjust man and unfit to reign that he was a Papist in his heart and would introduce Popery That another time he heard him exclaim against the King and that they designed to depose him and set another in his stead Bernard Dennis deposed that amongst divers other things the Lord Shaftesbury had told him that they intended to have England under a Common-Wealth and no Crown to have no supream head particular Man or King nor owe Obedience to a Crown Lord Chief Justice told the Jury they intended to call no more Witnesses against the Earl of Shaftesbury the Jury being charged only with that Mr. Papillion desired to know what S●…atute the Indictment was grounded upon my Lord Chief Justice said it was contra formam Statut ' which might be understood Statutorum or Statuti so they might go upon all Statutes that might be the form o that Indictment The Jury desired to know whether any of the Witnesses stood indicted or no. To which the Lord Chief Justice answered they were not properly here to examine the credibility of the Witnesses for that would be a matter upon a Tryal before a Petty Jury where the King would be heard to defend the credibility of his Witnesses if any thing were objected against them That they were to see whether the Statute were satisfied in having matter that was Treasonable and witnessed by Two Men who are intended Prima facie credible unless of their own Knowledg they knew any thing to the contrary Mr. Papillion prayed his Lordships Opinion whether his Lordship thought they were within the compass of their own Understandings and Consciences to give Judgment for if they were not left to consider the credibility of the Witnesses they could not satisfie their Consciences To which the Lord Chief Justice replied that they ought to go according to the Evidence unless there were any thing to their own knowledg and that i●… they expected to enter into proofs concerning the credit of the Witnesses it were impossible to do Justice at that rate The Jury withdrew and the Court adjourned till Three a Clock When met the Jury put many questions to the Witnesses of which for brevity I can but take notice of some Mr. Gwin was asked by the Foreman whose writing the Paper was to which he answered he could not tell whether it was in the Closet before he came there he said it was certainly in the closet for there he found it he knew not the particular Paper but all the Papers in the bag were there They asked whether he knew not of a Discourse of an Association in Parliament He said he was not of the last Parliament but had heard an Association talked of Then the Foreman asked Mr. Secretary Jenkins whether he knew not of a Debate in Parliament concerning an Association whether he remembred not that it was read upon occasion of the Bill The Secretary answered that he was not present at the Debate that there was an answer to a Message from the House of Commons had somthing in it which did strongly imply somthing of an Association that he heard such a thing spoke of but was not present at the Reading Being asked the date of the Warrant for my Lord Shaftesbury's commitment he must he said refer himself to the Warrant that he thought it was about the beginning of July Being asked whether all the Witnesses had been examined before the Committee he answered they were and he was present at the Examination Being asked again whether all he said he knew not whether all but he was sure he was at the Examination of several but could not tell how many Then the Jury examined the rest of the Witnesses one by one Booth being asked whether he had easie admittance into my Lords company said he ever went with Capt. Wilkinson and had easie admittance whether Captain Wilkinson were with him every time he said no not every time not this time to divers other questions he answered That he had been in Orders that he had not been indicted for Fellony that he did not directly know any one man of the Fifty beside himself that he never was with my Lord but at his own House that he was never desired to be a Witness against my Lord until he had intimated something of it till he was told of Brownrigg the Yorkshire Attorney concerning somwhat my Lord had said to Irish men he then said he was sure there was somthing as to that purpose to English men that he thought he had no Commission to offer him a Reward that he was not acquainted with Callaghan nor Downing never heard their names nor was in their company that he knew of that he knew not one Mr. Shelden nor Mr. Marriot only had heard of one Marriot that belong'd to the D. of Norfolk but never was in his company nor discoursed with from him but had heard from Baines about Brownrigg about Irish Witnesses Mr. Godfrey asked whether he had never heard of Irish Witnesses sent down by Mr. Marriot to the Isle of Ely Then the L. Ch. Just. said We have given you all the Liberty in the World hoping you would ask pertinent questions but these are trifles he did not expect that any wise men would have asked such questions Then he asked of Mr. Godfrey what it was to the purpose whether Mr. Marriot sent any Irish Witnesses to his Tennant or no. To which the Foreman told his Lordship that he had it under the hand of the Clerk of the Council Mr. Turbervil answered to several questions that he had the Discourse with my Ld. Shaftesbury about the beginning of February and about July 4. communicated it to Mr. Secretary Jenkins The Foreman then asking whether he had met with no body about the beginning of July
to them the dangers that threaten your Majesties Person and the whole Kingdom from the mischievous and wicked Plots of the Papists and the sudden growth of a foreign Power unto which no stop or remedy could be provided unless it were by Parliament and an Union of your Majesties Protestant Subjects in one mind and one Interest And the Lord Chancellour in pursuance of your Majesties commands having more at large demonstrated the said dangers to be as great as we in the midst of our fears could imagine them and so pressing that our Liberties Religion Lives and the whole Kingdom would certainly be lost if a speedy provision was not made against them And your Majesty on the 21st of April 1679. having called unto your Council many Honourable and Worthy Persons and declared to them and to the whole Kingdom That being sensible of the evil effects of a single Ministry or private Advice or foreign Committee for the general Direction of your Affairs your Majesty would for the future refer all things unto that Council and by the constant Advice of them together with the frequent use of your great Council the Parliament your Majesty was hereafter resolved to govern the Kingdom We began to hope we should see an end of our Miseries But to our unspeakable grief and sorrow we soon found our expectations frustrated the Parliament then subsisting was prorogued and dissolved before it could perfect what was intended for our relief and security And tho another was thereupon called yet by many prorogations it was put off till the 21st of Octob. past and notwithstanding your Majesty was then again pleased to acknowledge that neither your Person nor your Kingdom could be safe till the matter of the Plot was gone through It was unexpectedly prorogued on the 10th of this Month before any sufficient Order could be taken therein All their just and pious Endeavours to save the Nation were overthrown the good Bills they had been industriously preparing to Unite your Majesties Protestant Subjects brought to nought The discovery of the Irish Plots stifled The Witnesses that came in frequently more fully to declare that both of England and Ireland discouraged Those foreign Kingdoms and States who by a happy conjunction with us might give a check to the French Powers disheartned even to such a despair of their own security against the growing greatness of that Monarch as we fear may enduce them to take new Resolutions and perhaps such as may be fatal to Us the Strength and Courage of our Enemies both at home and abroad encreased and our selves left in the ●…tmost danger of seeing our Country brought into utter desolation In these extremities we had nothing under God to comfort us but the hopes that your Majesty being touched with the groans of your perishing People would have suffered your Parliament to meet at the day unto which it was prorogued and that no further interruption should have been given to their proceedings in order to their saving of the Nation But that failed us too so then we heard that your Majesty had been prevailed with to dissolve it and to call another to meet at Oxford where neither Lords nor Commons can be in safety but will be daily exposed to the Swords of the Papists and their Adherents of whom too many are crept into your Majesties Guards The Liberty of speaking according to their Consciences will be thereby destroyed and the validity of all their Acts and Proceedings consisting in it left disputable The straitness of the place no way admits of such a concourse of persons as now follows every Parliament The Witnesses which are necessary to give Evidence against the popish Lords such Judges or others whom the Commons have impeached or had resolved to impeach can neither bear the charge of going thither nor trust themselves under the protection of a Parliament that is itself evidently under the power of Guards and Souldiers The Premises considered We your Majesties Petitioners out of a just abhorrence of such a dangerous and pernicious Council which the Authors have not dared to avow and the direful apprehensions of the calamities and miseries that may ensue thereupon do make it our most humble Prayer and Advice that the Parliament may not sit at a place where it will not be able to act with that freedom which is necessary and especially to give unto their Acts and Proceedings that Authority which they ought to have amongst the people and have ever had unless impaired by some Awe upon them of which there vvants not precedents and that your Majesty would be Graciously pleased to order it to sit at Westminster it being the usual place and where they may consult vvith Safety and Freedom And your Petitioners c. Monmouth Kent Huntingdon Bedford Salisbury Clare Stamford Essex Shaftesbury Mordant Ewers Paget Grey Herbert Howard Delamer In October during the Session of the last Parliament it is very remarkable that Francisco de Faria Interpreter to the Portugal Ambassadour amongst other high matters relating to the popish Plot gave it in his Information at the Bar of the House He declared that the said Ambassador had tempted him to kill the Earl of Shaftesbury by throwing a Hand-Granado into his Coach as he was passing the Rode into the Country And about the 20th of Novemb. one Zeal being called to the Bar of the House delivered his Information at the Bar the purport whereof was this That being a Prisoner in the Marshalsea Mrs. Cellier came divers times to him and treated with him not only to be Instrumental himself but to procure others to Assist him to fire His Majesties Ships as they lay in the Harbour as also to swear against the E of Shaftesbury such Art●…es of High Treason as she should get ready prepared for him or to that purpose To sum up the many various Methods and Waies that were devised and put in execution to cut off the Life of this Noble Peer would be Task enough to fill many Volumes The Jesuites next to the Attempting His Majesties Life set all their Inventions and Engines on work to make away the Earl of Shaftesbury he was the Beam in their Eye the Clog that hindered the motion of their Curst Designs What have they not attempted that might render him distastful to the King throwing the foulness of their own Treasons upon him as appears by the Deposition of Brian Haines before the Council in Octob. 1681. That David Fitz Girald told the said Brian Haines that he the said Fitz Girald possessed His Majesty and had given it under his hand and Seal that the late Plot was a Presbyterian Plot and Invented by the Right Honourable Anthony Earl of Shaftesbury on purpose to Extirpate the Family of the Stuarts and dethrone his present Majesty and turn England into a Common-wealth or else set the Crown upon the Earls own Head with more to this purpose of which we shall have occasion to make farther mention when we come
my Lord Shaftesbury's Closet to which Mr. Gwin replied that there was nothing Mr. Secretary Jenkins witnessed that that was the Paper he had of Mr. Blithwayt Some things I am forced for brevity to omit My Lord Chief Justice said Now it appears this was the Paper taken in my Lord Shaftesbury's Closet And the Paper was Read which contained the words of that commonly called The Form of an Association When it had been Read Sir F●…n Withins said This Paper was very plausibly penn'd in the 〈◊〉 and runs a great way so but in the last clause but one there they come to perfect Levying of War for they do positively say They will obey such Officers as either the Parliament or the major part of them or after the Parliament is Dissolved the major part of them that shall subscribe this Paper shall appoint The Foreman of the Jury enquired what Date that Paper was of and whether there were any hand to it to which Sir Francis answered that it was after the Bill for Exclusion of the Duke of York for it says that way failing they would do it by force as to the having a name to it Sir Francis said there was none at all The rest of the Evidence were John Booth John Macknamara Edward Turbervill Dennis Macknamara John Smith Edward Joye Bryan Haynes Bernard Dennis Booth deposeth That in January last he was introduced into my Lord Shaftesbury's acquaintance by Captain Henry Wilkinson in order to get a Commission and Plantation in Carolina That the first time he went to my Lord there was my L. Craven and Sir Peter Colliton who are of the Proprietors of that Collony that after this acquaintance he had been there between Christmas and March four or five times and that he found great difficulty in his Accession to his Lordship who was cautious of what company were admitted to him that the said Earl used to inveigh sharply against the Times and look upon himself as not so valued nor respected nor in those Places and Dignities as he expected seemed discontented Particularly that the Earl of Shaftesbury should say that the Parliament would never grant the King Money nor satisfie him in those things that he desired unless he first gave the People satisfaction in those things that they insisted on before and particularly the Bill of Excluding the Duke of York from the Crown Another was the Abolishing the Statute of the 35th of Elizabeth The third was giving his Royal Assent for the passing a New Bill whereby all the Dissenting Protestants should be freed from those Penalties and Ecclesiastical Punishments that they are subject to by the present Establish'd Law That he had Established fifty Gentlemen persons of Quality that he believed would have men along with them that they were to come to Oxford at such a time that if there were any Violence offered to any of the Members by the King's Guards or the Retinue of the Court that then these men with others that other Lords had appointed should repel his force by greater force and should purge the Guards of all the Papists and Tories that Captain Wilkinson was Intrusted with the Command of these men and that these men should be ready to Assist himself and those of his Confederacy to purge from the King those Evil Councillors that were about him That particularly there were named the Earl of Worcester Lord Clarendon Lord Hallifax Lord Feversham Lord Hide which persons were lookt upon to be dangerous and gave the King Evil Advice That those Lords should by Violence be taken from the King and the King brought to London where those things should be Establisht which they designed for their Safety in those two Respects for the preserving the Protestant Religion and likewise for the defending and keeping us safe from Arbitrary Power and Government And likewise that the said Booth had provided Arms and a good Stone-Horse for himself and Arms for his Man before the Parliament Sate at Oxford That the Thursday before the Parliament was Dissolved Captain Wilkinson told him he expected that very week to be called up to Oxford with those men that were Listed with him but Saturday bringing News of the Dissolution of the Parliament it had no further Effects This was the most material of what Booth said for being straitned in Room I am forced to render it as short as I can Turbervil declared That about the beginning of February waiting on my Lord Shaftesbury to have his advice how he might come by some Monies and to gain his Lordships Letter in his behalf to the President of the Council the Earl should say there was little good to be expected from the King as long as his Guards were about him that his Lordship should say the Rabble about Wapping and Aldersgate were of that side that the rich men of the City would vote for Elections but it could hardly be expected they should stand by them in case of a disturbance for they valued their Riches more than their Cause and that at Oxford he had heard the Earl say he wondred the People of England should stickle so about Religion if he were to chuse a Religion he would have one should comply with what was apt to carry on their Cause Smith said that one time being sent for by my Lord Shaftesbury by one Captain Manly his Lordship should tell him that Mr. Hetherington had told him he was afraid the Irish Witnesses would go over to the Court Party and retract what they had said formerly that he advised him to persuade them not to go near that Rogue Fitz-Girald that great Villain that is pampered up and maintain'd by the King and the Court party to stifle the Plot in Ireland and that the Earl had further said That if the King were not as well satisfied with the coming in of Popery as ever the Duke of York was do you think the Duke of York would be so much concerned for the bringing in of Popery as he is That a little before my Lord went to Oxford he should tell the said Smith there were great preparations made and a great many gathered together upon the Rode be tween London and Oxford and Smith asking his Lordship what it might mean my Lord should answer that it was only to terrifie the Parliament to comply with the Kings desire which he was sure the Parliament would never do That they were now more resolute than ever That they clearly saw the Kings aim was to bring in Popery That they had the Nation for them and might lawfully oppose him and he would meet with very strong opposition for that all that came out of the Country should be well Hors'd and armed and so they should all be That the City had resolved to bear the charge of their Members and send so many men to wait on them and that he would be hang'd before he would ever bring in Popery or any thing of that nature Bryan Hains deposed that among