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A25719 An Appendix to Mercurius reformatus, or, The new observator by the same author. 1692 (1692) Wing A3573; ESTC R30819 24,994 16

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Thurlo's Clerks sitting in a sleeping posture at a Writing-Desk in a little Closet off the end of the Room who indeed Thurlo had forgot was there Cromwell fearing this Young-man might have heard what had past betwixt him and Thurlo and thereby have come to know the name of his Spy at Brussels instantly pulls out a Dagger which he wore for the most part under his Doublet with a design to kill him dead on the spot had not Thurlo with great importunity dissuaded him from it by assuring him It was next to an impossibility That the young man could hear what he had spoke by reason of the lowness of his Voice and withal That having sate up some four days before all of them together without rest it was to be supposed he was then fast asleep all the time of their Discourse Thus did that Person escape and lives in England to this day who confesses he heard all that pass'd betwixt Cromwell and Thurlo at that time but used that artifice to deceive so jealous a Master and save his own life How far the French Court gets Intelligence of our Affairs and how far they gain by our follies I shall not determine But this must be confest We could never have imagined that Crown should have made so mighty a figure in such a complicated Juncture against it if we had not seen it with our eyes It 's true their Money has done more than their Arms but the last they have made use of in Flanders to good purpose And if we consider what mighty disadvantages the Confederates lye under from the Weakness of the Spanish Frontier and their want of Magazines in the Winter both which the French possess on their part we will not think the Taking of Mons the beginning of the year or what else the French shall do now before the Confederates can be in the Field to be things of any extraordinary nature Tho it should fall out that all the Struggles for the Liberty of Europe should end in Slavery tho it should happen that the French Monarchy in the Period of the present War should gain the vertical point it has aimed at under the Reigns of its two last Kings and in one word Tho the Confederates should be forced to stoop in this mighty Quarrel to the Genius of France none of all which I hope there is any great reason to fear Yet the Character of the present King of England will be handed down to Posterity among the most Illustrious that ever was To Conquer in the Posture and Circumstances the French King is in Is but the effect of Fortune But to have struggled so magnanimously and under so many seemingly irresistible Difficulties as this King has done all along since he first entred the Stage Is the effect alone of a sublime and extraordinary Virtue It 's a pretty Passage a late Author gives us of what past betwixt the King when Prince of Orange and Him much to this purpose and by which we may perceive the Kings own Thoughts about the Difficulties he was at that time engaged with After he had given our Author a short Detail of the unlucky Circumstances the Affairs of Europe were then in and what was his share in them he was pleased to express himself thus That notwithstanding of all the unpromising Aspects that threatned him in that War yet for his part he must go on and take his Fortune That he had seen that morning a poor old man tugging alone in a little Boat with his Oars against the Eddy of a Sluce upon a Canal That when with the last Endeavours he had got up to the Place intended the force of the Eddy carried him quite back again but he turned his Boat as soon as he could and fell to his Oars again and thus three or four times while the Prince saw him And concluded he The old mans business and mine are too like one another and I ought however to do just as the old man did without knowing what would succed any more than what did in the poor man s case Tho never Prince has had greater difficulties to encounter never Prince has surmounted them with a greater Firmness of Mind And all the Strength of the French and Weakness of the other Princes of Christendom serve but the better to set off his Character This I take for certain That either Providence has rais'd him up to break the Fetters of Europe at this Conjuncture or that it will be said of him when gone with far more reason than of the Noble Roman of old Hic sub mole immensae stragis jacet obrutus Ultimus Romanorum Here lies oveowhelm'd under the weight of an Vniversal Ruin the last of those that deserved the name of a Roman They are little acquainted with the Transactions of the Age that know not how greatly this Prince has been courted into the French Interest and what tempting baits has been employed to catch him long before he came to make the Figure he now does His two Vncles thought it not below them to be employed by the French King to turn him about at a time when it could scarce have been expected he could be proof against such charming Offers as were then made him considering the lowness of his Fortune What Methods was afterwards used to remove off the Stage a Prince they found inexorable to their Insinuations I shall not here relate having a horror at the bare thoughts of them Whatever is in it it 's certain The French King has in all his Conduct exprest a more than ordinary concern with relation to this King and such a hatred as is scarce to be found among those of so elevated a Rank Ambition and Glory uses to be the grounds that animate Princes against one another But the French King has in many Instances shewed his Designs to be chiefly levelled against the Kings Person and to terminate no shorter than his life All Europe saw and laught at the mighty Rejoicings were made in France upon the False News last year of his Death And tho I am of Opinion the French Court were not so long under that Deception as they pretended to be for Reasons I hinted at in one of those foregoing Papers yet there is one thing concurred to make the French Ministers believe the reality of his Majesty's Death which we come to know but of late and that was the expected Success of that damnable Desi n of one JONES to Assassinate the King about that precise time By whom this Villain was chiefly set on to perpetrate so fatal a Blow is not as yet for any thing I know come to light but that he was to do it and that Tyrconnel kept Correspondence about it with France is but too well known by Letters under his own hand Our Plotters in England did again and again assure the late Queen First That the King 's Assa rs would not leave him at liberty to take a Journey to Ireland and
thereafter when they saw he was going in earnest they assured her That before he could be well landed there there would be a formidable Insurrection here which the few Forces the King was to leave behind him would not be able to make head against Queen Mary upon those Assurances and that of the Weakness of our Fleet prevail'd with the French King to send out his Fleet to Sea to countenance and back this imaginary Insurrection In all which our Murmurers trick'd the late Queen and she again trick'd the French King for neither had they the Courage to rise nor had she so little reason as to hope it But the Letter intercepted about that time to her from Tyrconnel shews that she and he was upon a shorter Project and one Assassine was to do what all her Friends in England durst not Here it is I must beg leave to give my own Opinion about one of the true Reasons that I believe prevailed with the French to be at the Charge of so mighty a Fleet just upon the certain News they had received of the King 's being ready to embark for Ireland For it was then that Monsieur de Tourville their Admiral had first Orders to be ready to Sail. There has been probable-enough Reasons given for this Attempt both in some of the foregoing Papers and in another that has made a great Noise in the World under the Name of the Modest Enquiry about the late Disasters in England c. Which I am so far from contradicting that I believe they concurred greatly to turn the French Counsels that way But that accursed Project of JONES being on foot at that time and the concurring of so great probabilities of a change of Affairs in case of its taking effect there is no question to be made but that it help'd to cast the Balance for setting out their Fleet at that precise Juncture The truth is our Enemies at home could scarce be brought to believe that the King could go for Ireland in the Circumstances his Affairs then stood And indeed it was a bold tho necessary stroke for the King to attempt it King James's Friends in England had assured him so positively of the impossibility of it that the first sure Intelligence he had of His Majesty's Landing was full eight days after he was actually there for some of our Men being taken Prisoners in a Skirmish at L●ghbricklane the Commander was brought before the late King and the first Question that was put to him was If the Prince of Orange was landed It 's hard to say whethet Jones went over to Ireland with the King in order to perpetrate the Villany there he had miss'd of here But this is certain Tyrconnel and the French Generals plac'd their last hopes in that Rogue 's undertaking after they heard the King was safe Landed In a Letter about that time intercepted from Tyrconnel at Ardee to the Late Queen Mary he gave her a very melancholy account of their Affairs tells her The Enemy was 40000 strong and furnish d with all things necessary That the King meaning King James was for fighting but he himself was against it and he concluded That notwithstanding of all her care of their Affairs he had now no hopes but in Jones 's Negotiation Thus a Villain was appointed to put a stop to the Fortune of the Confederates by one single Blow against him on whom the Confederacy chiesly depended And thus Heaven warded off a Stroke that carried with it the Fate of Europe This War with France notwithstanding of all the Taxes we are at to maintain it is the only true Measure but one that the English Crown has fallen into as to Foreign Affairs for the space of more than half a Century of Years It is true we have entred into it when our Enemies may be said to be in the best Posture they ever were in to deal with us But whose fault it is that they are so there is scarce any man of common sense in Christendom but knows and over and above The greater and stronger our Enemies are the greater is the necessity of the War on our part The other measure that was taken for the true Interest of England was the Triple Alliance betwixt Vs Sweden and Holland tho one of the Princes that entred into it was never hearty in it The breaking that Alliance as it was the work of those Five call'd the Cabal in concert with the French Court so it was turn'd into another Alliance the most unhappy and worst design'd that ever the English Nation made Good God! Who could imagine that England could have ever been wheedled into a League with France against a State which our Interest it was to preserve and upon whose standing or falling the Fortune of our King 's only Nephew depended All the Glory we got by that Holland War was that we began it with two of the most infamous Actions that ever was viz. The attempt upon the Dutch Smyrna Fleet and the shutting up of the Exchequer and in the sequel we were roughly treated in the only Element was our part to deal with them in at last after a great Treasure spent only to agrandize France and weaken our selves We were glad of a Peace Upon the ending of this Vnlucky War the whole Nation groaned for One with France The Parliament the People and most Princes and States about us courted King Charles to enter into it And indeed if King Charles had yielded to them this Point the French King had in all human probability been inevitably brought back to the Treaty of the Pyrenees which was all the Hollanders and their Confederates aim'd at and which is that alone that both then and now can secure the Peace and Safety of Europe But alas King Charles was too much in the snares of France to hear any such Proposal All he could be brought to was to make an Offer of a bare Mediation and even in this he was both jealous'd and slighted by the Parties engaged in the War and at last had the Mortisication to see first The Peace betwixt France and Holland made I may almost say without his knowledg and thereafter That betwixt France and the House of Austria sign'd by the Plenipotentiaries of those Crowns at Nimeguen in such a manner that the English Ambassadors could not sign it with them for a Punctilio of Honour refus d them by the Emperor The comparing of the condition France was in then and what it 's now obliges me to a Thought that I am afraid few will agree to it looks so like a Paradox I am of opinion that at that time when both we at home and most people abroad were so earnest for our declaring War with France both the French and We were in a mistake in our Apprehensions of it It is not necessary I should tell the mighty Successes we promised to our selves against them For how far we were to imitate if not to out do
our Ancestors in their so often-try'd Valour against that Nation in their own Countrey was the ordinary Talk then in England But the truth was we were not more confident of our own Success than the French themselves were of it And the fear alone of our Declaring against them brought them to a Peace If we look back upon the Posture of Affairs in France at that time we shall find it was at least as good as it 's now in this Juncture and consequently they had rather less reason to be afraid of Vs then than they have now They were during the last War safe and at ease on the Italy side the Duke of Savoy and the Switz being intirely in their Interests the Duke of Bavaria was Neutral or rather for the French the King of Sweden not only declared for them but obliged the Duke of Brandenburgh one of the most Powerful of the Confederates to return with his whole Forces from the Rhine to defend his own Lands on the other side of Germany Another powerful Diversion they had obtained upon the Spaniard by raising a formidable Insurrection in Messina which was like to spread it self not only through the rest of Sicily but into the Continent of Italy it self and therein the Kingdom of Naples Not only were they thus well circumstantiated abroad but were much more so at home in respect of what they are now At that time the French King was Master of some Hundred Thousands of the best of his Subjects whereof some Forty Thousand were esteemed the best Troops in his Armies all whom he has forced since to abandon both his Countrey and Service and many of them to take part with the Confederates against him And to add to all the advantages the French were in Possession of during the whole course of that War tho they saw the English Nation were zealous to enter into it against them yet they knew but too well That the King of England was their unalterable Friend and would never be hearty in his People's Quarrel Now how far in the course of this present War the Circumstances of France incline to the worse when compared to what they were during the last we need to more but to call to mind these few things Instead of being safe and easie on the Italy side as they were then they are now in War there Savoy being their declared Enemy and making a considerable Effort upon that Quarter Instead of the Switz's being openly for them as they were then they are now Neutral at best The Duke of Bavaria instead of being their Friend as then he is now one of the firmest and sincerest of the Confederacy against them Not only is Sueden not declared for them but both they and the other Northern Crown has assisted the Confederacy with their Troops and has been proof against all Insinuations to gain them to the French Interest or so much as to recal their Forces The Crown of Spain lies under the weight of no diversion by the French on any side but that of Catalonia which was likewise their case the last War But if the French are now in no better circumstances with respect to their Affairs Abroad than they were in the time of the last War it 's beyond all question their Circumstances at Home admit of a great many unlucky aggravations that render them a great deal worse now than they were then Their Countrey is exhausted and impoverish'd beyond expression Some Hundred thousands of that People who made the greatest Figure in their Wars have now setled themselves and all they could carry with them elsewhere And of these a great many do now help to compose the Confederate Troops and none long more to enter into their Countrey again with Swords in their hands than they The Discontents in France are raised to a prodigious height in respect of what they were some years ago And in short tho the French were sufficiently miserable then they are inexpressibly now much more so And to cast the balance for altogether betwixt the two Junctures of the Wars we are treating of Instead of a King on the Throne of England the French were assured of they have now to deal with one that 's entirely in the Interest of England and who when under a less figure scorn'd to be their Friend as long as they prov'd themselves to be the Common Enemy and Great Disturbers of Christendom There is but two things that seem to be more promising for the French in the present War than was in their Case during the last and that is The War in which the Emperor is engaged with the Turks and the French being possessed of more Towns in Flanders and Germany than they were then But laying even these in the Balance with those disadvantages I have named I hope I am not altogether out of my reckoning in saying their Case is at least no better now than it was then All this comparison I have made for two Reasons 1. To shew it was not so easie to make Head against France especially in an Offensive War as some people imagined at first And 2dly That in all human probability we may expect either now to bring France to Reason or we shall never do it And if we do it not then it 's impossible to foresee the Thousandth part of the Miseries that attend England since that is the mark that most of the Designs of France are levell'd against He that 's at pains to reflect upon that prodigious turn of Affairs in Holland in the year 1673. when after the French had render'd themselves Masters of so great a part of these Provinces that Amsterdam was within one Ace of sending the Keys of their City to the French King then at Utrecht The Prince of Orange at the age of Twenty one years with a handful of Men and those new-rais'd and ill-disciplin'd did put a stop to that mighty Torrent and in a few months not only oblig'd the French King in the height of all his Glory to quit all his Conquests on that side but by a miracle of Bravery and Conduct carried the War to the Frontiers of France it self I say He that is at pains to consider all this and at the same time the insuperable Difficulties this young Prince lay then under He may from the justest methods of Reasoning conclude That in all probability The same Prince when at the head of Three Kingdoms as well as of the Armies of Holland and the Confederates may out do what at that time all the World thought utterly impossible to be done Our Malecontents in England would fain flatter themselves with hopes that the Hollanders may come to be wearied of this War and that they may be brought to enter into terms of Accommodation with France rather than to continue it much longer at so vast a charge and under so many discouragements in their Trade Of this I see by some of their late Pamphlets they would fain
AN APPENDIX TO Mercurius Reformatus OR THE NEW OBSERVATOR By the same AUTHOR LONDON Printed for RICHARD BALDWIN near the Oxford-Arms in Warwick-Lane MDCXCII AN APPENDIX TO MERCURIUS REFORMATUS OR The New Observator WHO the Author of the NEW OBSERVATOR is the World comes to know with a witness A Paper I always blush'd to own and which hitherto has past only under a bare suspicion of being mine an unexpected Accident has now oblig'd me to acknowledg before one of the most August Assemblies upon earth I find it 's expected I should continue to Write this Paper both upon the account it has not wanted Friends at Home and Abroad that have thought it has done some Service to the Government and that the Honourable Speaker of the House of Commons was pleased to lay no Commands upon me to discontinue it when I was before Them But upon second thoughts and mature deliberation I hope I may be forgiven to lay it down for once lest some one time or another in tracing Truth too near I may come to have my Teeth struck out Yet even the fear of this should not deter me if by all that can occur to me from the present Juncture of Affairs of Europe I did not think Their Majesties Throne was setled beyond a possibility of being shaken and therefore they come to stand in need of no man's Pen far less mine to assert their Right Tho I do not repent me to have written the New Observator yet I have found too late that I have done it under a hateful and invidious Title The Gentleman that began both the Thing and the Name in the Two last Reigns has justly entail'd upon the very word Observator an indelible stain that must needs stick to the softest and justest Pen that shall ever attempt to write again under that Name The Outrages done by him to whole Bodies and Professions of Men and to Parliaments themselves could never have been past over in any Reign but that of Two Princes that shew the World every day They scorn to establish Their Throne upon any other Basis but that of an unimitable Mercy It 's no wonder then that I 'm asham'd to have borrowed from a Paper so justly abominated by all Men of Temper a Title to any thing I wrote Tho at the same time I must say It was rather the Fault of the Bookseller I first employed than mine There is one thing more that puts me to the blush about this Manner of Writing The Gentleman that first begun it was set a-work by the late Instruments of our design'd Slavery as a Tool to lash or turn into Ridicule every Person and Thing that then stood or was afterwards like to stand in opposition to the Arbitrary Designs then on foot Here was another Misfortune like to overtake any body that should Write for a Government in time coming And they who were not acquainted with the Author of the New Observator might be I am afraid inclinable to believe him a Tool in this Government as he that wrote the Old one was in the last Which is so far a mistake that I here declare to all the world Neither any of the King's Ministers nor any about Him did put me at first upon Writing neither did they nor any body else give me Instructions Advice or Assistance in the continuing of it far less did I write for Place or Pension but out of Zeal to a Settlement that only could make these Three Nations happy I have the honour to serve a Prince that neither uses nor needs such kind of Tools All his Actions carry along with them such Impressions of Honour as his very Enemies are not proof against And there is one thing remarkable in Him that perhaps cannot be trac'd in History Never Prince has attain'd to be more Popular and never Prince has used less Art to be so I leave these Papers to take their fate and shall make no other Apology for the Faults and Imperfections that may be found in them than that most of them were written in a hurry of Business and very seldom had I time to read them over after I wrote them If any Party of Men think themselves therein hardly treated impute it to something in my Nature that 's diametrically opposite to Bigotism for if the extent of my Charity in point of Religion were known perhaps somr of the Bigots of the Age would be ready to stone me And I had rather err in the Excess than in the Want of so necessary a Cement of Human Society I am afraid I have said too much of those Papers with relation to the Author And being I am to take my leave of this kind of Writing I beg leave to subjoin a few things with reference to the Papers themselves and to the subject-matter of them The present Circumstances of Affairs in Christendom We are now in the Third Year of a War in which most Nations of Europe are some one way or another concerned but none more than these Three Kingdoms It is now that the Quarrel betwixt France and Us is not the Re-inthroning of the late King James for every body knows that that Prince's Interest is quite out of doors with the French Court But it 's a Quarrel of a far other nature that takes in all that a Nation can wish to regain or preserve In one word either we must bring France to a condition not to be able to hurt us or we must resolve to see our selves despoyled of our Glory our Strength at Sea our Trade and our Plantations in America if not to be reduced to the worst of Fates even that of receiving Laws from a severe Conqueror The last Summer the French play'd the Defensive part both at Sea and Land But there 's reason to believe this Winter will not pass without some Remarkable Attempt in War upon their side and whether that be so or not we may assure our selves it will not pass without the mightiest efforts that Crown ever made to pave a way for a Peace with some of our Allies Spain probably will be the last that ever will give ear to an Accommodation with France but if the French can but gain any one of the Confederates be sure England will be the last they will make Peace with It 's England that the French King has his eye upon if not to make it a Conquest at least to render it insignificant He only wishes a Peace with the Confederates that he may turn his whole Force against this Island And his Emissaries give it out already in some Foreign Courts That they may assure themselves of a Peace with France on what terms they please all that he requires of them being but to ask and have The French stick at nothing that can any-wise favour their Design upon England They spare no Cost to get Intelligence of our Affairs and they have fallen upon such unerring Methods to obtain it that they make
no scruple now to brag openly of it It is no wonder they should for they have had time to bring the Art of Bribing among us to Perfection having practised it upon us to our eternal Reproach for the space of near Three whole successive Reigns The French Court has it self taken notice of the great difference in matter of Intelligence of the Affairs of England betwixt what it was at the time of Cromwel's Government and in the Reigns which have hapned since And I remember a late Author when treating of this subject gives a Reason that I leave to the Reader to judge of without adding my own Opinion about it In Cromwel 's time says he men served their Countrey and the Government out of a Principle of Religion which Principle tho in it self mixed with a Thousand Enthusiasms and false Lights had yet this natural good effect attending it That to discover the least Secret of the Government they lookt upon as a Crime God would never pardon And thence it was continues he That Cardinal Mazarine was pleased often to confess he had more difficulty to get Intelligence of Cromwel 's Designs than of all the other Princes and States in Europe together The Notions of Religion tho never so mistaken are the surest Tyes which possibly can bind men to the Interest of their Countrey And thence it is that the wisest people among the Ancients endeavoured always to make the Rules of the Civil Government depend on their Principles of Religion To this purpose I have often reflected in my mind on the great Cunning and Politick in the frame of the Mahometan Religion which was so contrived as it could scarce have failed of extending it self to that prodigious Growth that it has now attained in the world Mahomet in his System of Divinity tho in a great many other things strangely ridiculous yet in the Methods to propagate both it and his Empire together fell upon the Luckiest Principle that ever was invented viz. That it was the chiefest and most meritorious part of Religion to extend the Mahometan Law by Force of Arms and that whoever had the hap to dye either in the Propagation or Defence thereof was sure of Paradise It was this Notion alone that gave Wings to the Follies of Mahomet which has since overspread so considerable a part of the three great Cantons of the habitable world And while this Political Maxim of Religion continues in its full force it 's next to an impossibility that ever the Princes of the Mahometan Religion can be brought to any irrecoverable ebb of Fortune by those of a contrary Persuasion The Secresy that visibly attends the Measures of France may be partly owing to a Principle of Religion as well as of Honour As they abhor the Baseness of betraying their Master's Secrets so they fear the Sin of it And thus both Honour and Religion takes place with them But how far both of these are wanting with some who pretend to a more Refined System of Theology I leave it as a melancholly Subject I love not to rip up at this time Tho France during the late Usurpation of Cromwell was greatly to seek in point of Intelligence of the English Affairs as I have said yet Cromwell was not so as to theirs And I remember to have seen an Account of no less Sum than Ten Thousand Pounds expended for meer Intelligence from France for the space but of Fifteen Months audited and allowed by Cromwell himself with this very Remark at the foot of it All well bestowed written with his own hand I am the less astonish'd at the success of the French Emissaries and Pensioners in England when I consider how far a dexterous Spy can insinuate himself into the Secrets of a Court. Of this I could give several remarkable Instances from both Ancient and Modern History But I shall only mention one in the time of King Charles's Exile There was a Gentleman employed by Cromwell as a Spy about the King who had the Wit and Dexterity to get into his most Secret Transactions and as he was wont afterwards to say himself into his very heart In this unsuspected and unlimited Intimacy did he continue for some years about the King and might have done it longer if an unexpected Accident joined to a piece of Inadvertency in Cromwell had not occasioned the Period of his Intriegue and Life together Which was thus The late Duke of Richmond having for a considerable time preserved himself in the good opinion of the Protector begg'd leave at length to make a step over Sea for his Health and Diversion as he pretended Cromwell agreed to his Request but with this condition That he should not see his Cousin Charles Stuart as he was pleased to call the King The Duke coming to Brussels and being resolved to wait on his Prince and withal to to save his Credit with Cromwell was introduced in the most secret manner several times to the King in the dark At his return Cromwell pretended to ask the Duke only in jest If he had been with Charles Stuart who answering him That he had never seen him the other replied in a Passion It was no wonder for the Candles were put out This unexpected answer put the Duke of Riehmond to write to the King That he must needs be betrayed by some in the greatest Intimacy about him and at last the Traytor was accidentally discovered in the very moment he was writing to Cromwell an account of the Duke of Richmond's Letter to the King and was thereupon shot to death upon the place It 's more than time to shut up this Subject and yet I know not but the Reader may forgive me to mention further a remarkable Passage that hapned upon this Reply of Cromwell's to the Duke of Richmond which as it was never yet committed to Print for any thing I know so it carries with it one of the truest Idea's we can ever attain of that Great Man's Character Scarce was the Discourse I mentioned betwixt Cromwell and the Duke of Richmond ended but the first found he had committed a dangerous mistake in letting the Duke know how much he was acquainted with King Charles's Secrets and thereby exposing his Spy to the narrowest Enquiry could be made upon it The fear of this obliged him to go strait to Secretary Thurlo's Chamber tho then very late where with the greatest concern of mind he told him what a wrong step he had made in his Discourse with Richmond and how much he fear'd the Person he employed as his Spy about the King naming him at the same time might run the hazard of being discovered through so unlucky a piece of Inadvertence When Cromwell came first in he had both enquired and was told by Thurlo there was no body but them two in the room But while Cromwell was walking up and down in the Chamber in the restlessness of mind this affair had put him in he espies one of
Jurieu and Monsieur Bale But some months thereafter the Debate growing hot betwixt them the one affirming the other denying with equal passion It fell out that Monsieur Bale among other Arguments brought by him to prove his Innocence adduced that Passage in the New Observator wherein the Author gave a hint of the Advis aux Refugés being concerted with the French Court and of his saying He knew the Author of it And thence concluded That since the Author of the Observator knew the Author of the Avis aux Refugeés and that Monsieur Bale and the Author of the Observator was not acquainted together Therefore Monsieur Bale was not the Author of the Avis aux Refugeés This Argument of Monsieur Bale's and some Papers written since by Monsieur Jurieu obliges me to give here a true Account of what I know of this Affair leaving these two learned Persons to make what use of it on either side they think fit And this I do the more willingly that Monsieur Jurieu has been pleased in several Letters to Persons of Note in England to signify his grief for some mistaken Expressions he had us'd towards me in one of his late Books on that score This Book Avis aux Refugeés had scarce appeared in France and was not yet seen in England when from a Worthy and Noble Person in France since in Chains for his Religion I had an account both of the Book it self of its being concerted with the French Court and that every body in Paris looked upon Monsieur Pellison as the Author of it In return of a letter of mine in answer to his my Friend told me That according to my desire he had employed one that was intimately acquainted with Monsieur Pellison to inquire of him the truth of that common report And that Monsieur Pellison was pleas'd to allow the Person that spoke to him to think him the Author though he would not positively confess he was so adding that it was not fit for him or for the King's service to acknowledge that Book publickly to be his though he were the Author of it In short this Worthy Gentleman gave me both his own and the universally received opinion at Paris That Monsieur Pellison was the Author of the Avis aux Refugées and backed it with a great many probable arguments needless here to be mentioned The Book it self appearing here in London a little after I took occasion to mention what my Friend told me about it and withal upon his Information said I believe I knew the Author meaning Monsieur Pellison with whom I was a little acquainted at Paris Nine Years ago In one word I was the first that ever mentioned in Print That that Book was concerted with the French Court or that it was written by a French Emissary And was very glad to find so Learned and Fam'd a Man as Monsieur Jeurieu to Print a Book some Months thereafter designedly to prove at length what I had but hinted at in an Observator though at the same time was sorry that any French Protestant much more one of Monsieur Bale's parts should be accused for it And this is all I know of an affair that has employed the Press in Holland for near a Year together The other Passage I think my self obliged to clear is about a Letter from King James the First to Doctor Abbot concerning the Canons of Bishop Overals Convocation of which Letter I publish'd an exact Copy in one of the Observators That Learned Dr. Sherlock's late Book of The Case of the Allegiance due to Soveraign Powers Stated and Resolved c. that laid such weight on this Convocation-Book was the occasion of my making some Reflections both upon the Convocation it self and the reasons of its being call'd of its medling with so nice points as the Rights of Kings and why the Canons made therein were never inforc'd with the Royal Assent Several Pamphlets written against Dr. Sherlock since that time has endeavour'd to lessen the Credit of this Letter to Dr. Abbot And some have been so good-natur'd as to question both the truth of it and the veracity of the Author that has oblig'd the World with so important a Paper Though I owe no kindness to some People that have importun'd me on this score Nor shall take any other notice of a personal reflection against me in one of their Papers of my being forc'd to flee my Countrey in the last Reign than to confess it was true and that I glory in having chose to be overwhelm'd in the ruins of my Countrey rather than to have any share in the Causes of them Tho at the same time I must tell that Gentleman I had as great offers from the Late King as any of my quality ever had if I would have accepted them And that I came not to serve the present King out of meer necessity notwithstanding of my being ruin'd in the two last Reigns Since my good Fortune rather than my Merit procured me about the same time an honourable Call from a Crown'd Head abroad to one of the best Posts that a person of my Profession could wish For which so undeserved a favour I shall ever retain the profoundest Veneration and Gratitude to that Generous Prince that offer'd it me However love to truth and the desires of some Eminent Persons both in Church and State to whom I have caus'd it to be shewn has prevail'd with me to leave the Original Letter with Mr. Baldwin for ten Days time together just after the Publishing of this Paper in order to be seen in his hands by all that please to call for it This is one trouble more that for the sake of the Publick must be put upon a Man that has in all times been firm to the interest of England and that has suffered more since this Revolution for Printing Books he thought was written for the Government than all the Booksellers in London have done for Books written against it Thus have I done with this Appendix having written it in a hurry of business and under the dismal apprehensions of the greatest disaster that can befall me on earth And tho I trouble the World with no more Observators yet I promise from time to time in some other way and under some other Title to serve my King and Countrey with my Pen when any emergency falls out that requires it FINIS BOOKS Sold by Richard Baldwin THE First Second Third and Fourth Volumes of Mercurius Reformatus Or the New Observator Containing Reflections upon the most Remarkable Events falling out from time to time in Europe and more particularly in England Christianissimus Christianandus Or Reason for the Reduction of France to a more Christian State in Europe By Marchimam Needham A New Plain Short and Compleat French and English Grammer whereby the Learner may attain in few Months to Speak and Write French Correctly as they do now in the Court of France And wherein all that is Dark Superfluous and Deficient in other Grammers is Plain Short and methodically supplied Also very useful to Strangers that are desirous to learn the English Tongue For whose sake is added a Short but very Exact English Grammar By Peter Berault Mathematical Magick Or The Wonders that may be perform'd by Mechanical Geometry In Two Books Concerning Mechanical Powers Motions Being one of the most Easie Pleasant Useful and yet most neglected part of Mathematicks Not before Treated of in this Language By J. Wilkins late L. Bishop of Chester The Devout Christian's Preparation for holy Dying Consisting of Ejaculations Prayers Meditations and Hymns adapted to the several States and Conditions of this Life and on the four last Things viz Death Judgment Heaven and Hell Vtrum Horum Or God's Ways of Disposing Kingdoms and some Clergy-mens Ways of Disposing of them The Royal Flight Or the Conquest of Ireland A New Farce The Folly of Priest-Craft A New Comedy Passive Obedience in Actual Resistance Or Remarks upon a Paper fix'd up in the Cathedral Church of Worcester by Dr. Hicks With Reflections on the present Behaviour of the Rest of the Family The Great Bastard Protector of the Little one Done out of French And for which a Proclamation with a Reward of 5000 Lewedores to discover the Author was publish'd