Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n earl_n lord_n pembroke_n 3,481 5 13.4594 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

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
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
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
he should be call'd to an Account for all his Actions for all the World might see that he did resolve to bring in Arbitrary Power and Popery and that unless he would let the Parliament sit at Oxford since he had called them together and put the People to Charges in chusing them and them in coming down he should be seiz'd at Oxford and brought to the Block as was the Logger-head his Father That the Parliament should sit at Guild-hall and adjust the Grievances of the Subject and of the Nation and that no King of his Race should ever Reign in England after him And unless the King did expel from his Council the Earl of Clarendon cunning Lory Hide the Earl of Hallifax that great turn-coat Rogue that was before so much against the Papists a Rascal whom we should see hang'd and all the Tory Counsellors England should be too hot for him That for this End there was in the City 1500 Barrels of Powder and 100000 Men ready at an hour's warning and that every thing was ordered in a due Method against the sitting of the Parliament at Oxford And that he should see England the most glorious Nation in the World when they had cut off that beastly Fellow Rowley who came of the Race of Buggerers for his Grand-father King James buggered the old Duke of Buckingham Railing then at Judg Pemberton saying Let him try Fitz-Harris if he dare I shall see him go to Tyburn for it I hope a turn-coat Rogue That he was for the Plot whilst he was puisne Judg but now he was Chief Justice he was the greatest Rogue in the World even like one of the Pensioners in the Long Parliament That the Prisoner would moreover have put this Informant upon charging the King With the firing of London and the Murder of Sir Edmondbury Godfry telling him that such and suck Lords should live and die by him and that he needed not to fear but that England should espouse his Cause And discoursing then of the Libel of Fitz-Harris The Devil take me said Colledge every individual Word is as true as God is in Heaven and that if the Informant did not join with Fitz-Harris in his Evidence and charge the King home he was the basest Fellow in the World because he made them Slaves and Beggars and would make all the World so and that it was a kind of Charity to charge him home that we might be rid of such a Tyrant He depos'd further That he also receiv'd a blew Ribbond from Mr. Colledge whom meeting after he came from Oxford he asked Where now were all his Cracks and Braggs for that the King had fool'd them who answered That they had not done with the King yet though they could do nothing then for that no Servant no Man living did know whether he would dissolve the Parliament that Day That he was that very nick of Time at the Lobby of the Lords House and there was a Man came in with a Gown under his Arm and every one looked upon him to be a Tailor and no Body did suspect no not his own intimate Friends except it were Fitz-Gerald that he would Dissolve the Parliament that Day But presently he put on his Robes and sent away for the House of Commons and when he had dissolved them before ever the House could get down he took Coach and went away otherwise that the Parliament had been too hard for him for that there was never a Parliament-Man but had divers armed Men to wait on him and that he had his Blunderbuss and his Man to wait upon him The next Witness against Mr. Colledge was Mr. Turbervile who being sworn deposed That when the Parliament sat in Oxford about the middle of the Week he dined with Mr. Colledge Capt. Brown and Don Lewis Clerk of Derby-House at the Chequer-Inn in Oxford After Dinner Don Lewis went out about some Business and Capt. Brown went to sleep and Mr. Colledge and he fell a talking of the Times and he was observing he thought the Parliament was not a long-liv'd Parliament Whereupon Mr. Colledge answered That there was no Good to be expected from the King for he and all his Family were Papists and had ever been such Then said Turbervile the King will offer something or other by way of surprize to the Parliament Said Colledge I would he would begin but if he do not we will begin with him and seize him for there are several brave Fellows about this Town that will secure him till we have those Terms that we expect from him adding That he had got a Case of Pistols and a very good Sword and a Velvet Cap Giving Turbervile a piece of blew Ribbond to put in his Hat to be a distinction if there should be any disturbance Then Mr. Masters was sworn who deposed That he and Colledge had been long acquainted And that a little before the Parliament at Oxford about Christmass after the Parliament at Westminster at Mr. Charlton's Shop the Wollen-Draper in Paul's Church-Yard discoursing with him about the Government he was justifying of the late Long-Parliament's Actions in Forty He said That that Parliament was as good a Parliament as ever was chosen in the Nation and that they did nothing but what they had just cause for and that the Parliament that sat last at Westminster was of their Opinion and so he should have seen it And that another time he calling him in a jocose way Colonel Colledge bid him mock not for he might be one in a little time Then Sir William Jennings being sworn deposed That Colledge gave him one time a Picture and another time he saw him bring into a Coffee-House a parcel of blew Ribbond with No Popery No Slavery wrought in it and sold a Yard of it there to a Parliament-Man as he took him to be for 2 s. who tied it upon his Sword And that on that very Day the Parliament was Dissolved at Oxford he came to him standing in the School-House-yard telling him Mr. Fitz-Gerald had spit in his Face and that he spit in his Face again and that so they went to Logerheads together and that upon Sir William's telling him his Nose bled he said I have lost the first blood in the Cause but it will not be long before more be lost The Evidence for the King here ending Mr. Serj. Holloway briefly explained to the Jury that the seizing the Person of the King was in Law a compassing and intending his Death as it was worded in the Indictment which therefore they ought so to understand Then Mr. Colledge desired to be resolved these Questions upon the Evidence which he had heard 1. Whether any Conspiracy for which his Indictment was had been herein proved 2. Whether there ought not to be two Witnesses distinct to swear words at one and the same time And 3. Whether any Act of Treason done at London shall be given in Evidence to prove the Treason for which he was now