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A26368 The history of the late conspiracy against the king and the nation with a particular account of the Lancashire Plot, and all the other attempts and machinations of the disaffected party since His Majesty's accession to the throne / extracted out of the original informations of the witnesses and other authentick papers.; Histoire de la dernière conspiration d'Angleterre. English Abbadie, Jacques, 1654-1727. 1696 (1696) Wing A52; ESTC R14960 75,108 198

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Hand Brice Blair in his Depositions Bertram 's Deposition March 3. 169● Capt. Porter 's Deposition March 3. 1695 6. La Ruë 's Deposition Febru 26. 1695 6. The Earl of Aylesbury and Sir John Friend Capt. Porter 's Deposition March 14. 1695 6. Goodman 's Deposition April 24. 1696. Goodman 's Deposition April 24. 1696. Brice Blair's Deposition March 16. 1695 6. Sweets 's Deposition March 18. 1695 6. La Ruë 's Deposition Febr. 26. 1695 6. James Ewbanks 's Deposition March 23. 1695 6. Goodman 's Deposition April 24. 1696. Capt Porter 's Deposition April 15. 1696. Brice Blair 's Deposition March 16. 1695 6. They represent us as an ●ntractable Seditious and R belli●us People always Jealous of our Neighbors and seldom in Quiet among ourselves See the Second Book of the History of th● Revolutions in England Brice Blair in his Deposition March 9. 1695 6. Brice Blair 's Deposition March 9. 1695 6. Father d'Orleans wrote the History of the Revolutions i● England according to the Memoirs and Informations which he receiv'd from the Earl of Castlemain Skelton and Sheridon an Irish-Man And besides he tells us that he had the Liberty to Discourse with King James as long as he pleas'd See the Advertisement before the Third Tome Book II. p. 371. Book II. p. 370. 〈◊〉 II. p. 471. ' Twou'd have been thought ridiculous if even before the Late Persecution of the Protestants one shou'd have talk'd of the Popish Cabal in France * So he terms the Vertue and Magnanimity of 〈◊〉 who hazarded their Lives and Estates for the Preservation of their Country They came over in a Vessel which usually past betwixt Calais and Rumney Marsh bringing over Packets to the Conspirators with French Goods and certain Jacobite Passengers who were wont to go and come betwixt these two places And among them there there were certain Priests who oftentimes exported Contraband Goods c. James Hunt s Depositioh April 6. 1696. George Harris 's Deposition April 15. 1696. George Harris 's Deposition April 15. 1696. * T was Maxwell who acquainted the Conspirators with this passage * Chambers Knightly April 2. 1696. Francis de Larue 's Deposition February 26. 1695 6. Capt. George Porter's Deposition March 3. 1695 6. Brice Blair 's Deposition March 9. 1695 6. George Harris 's Deposition April 15. 1696. The brave Grillon refus'd to assassinate the Duke of Guise tho the Proposal was made to him by his Soveraign Henry III. of France And when King John of England would have perswaded Debray the Captain of his Guards to assassinate a Prince that pretended a right to his Crown that generous Officer reply'd That he was a Gentleman and not a flangman and immediately retir'd to his House Richard Fishers 's Deposition February 25. 1695 6. Larne's Deposition February 26. 1695 6. Capt. Porter's Declaration upon Oath before a Committee of the Council March 3. 1695 6. Capt. Porter March 3. 1695 6. Capt. George Porter's Deposition March 3. 1695 6. Larue 's Deposition February 25. 1695 6. * Chambers † Durant * Sir William Parkyn own'd that 〈◊〉 such a ●●mmisi●n which he understood to be King James's that it had a Seal to it that he saw it in the Hand of a Friend c. See the Votes of the House of Commons April 2. 169● * King Francis de Larue 's Deposition February 26. 1695 6. Capt. Porter 's Deposition March 3. 1695 6. Febr. 13. Febr. 14. The Salic Law which is said to be as ancient as Pharamond is an undeniable Argument that the French suppos'd their Government to be as it really was a Hereditary Monarchy * Mezeray says expresly That if the French had ascrib'd that Regulation to the Pope they would have discover'd themselves to be ignorant of their own Right Abreg Chronol p. 206. † Mezeray affirms that the Consent of the People of France was the best Title which Hugh Capet who succeeded Charles cou'd pretend to his Crown Abreg Chron. p. 454. 𝄁 Two Races of Kings have enjoy'd the Crown of France by Virtue of these Regulations that were made for the good of the State † He deserves not the Name of an Englishman who believes with Father d' Orleans That the Power of the English Monarchs is originally as absolute and arbitrary as any Power can possibly be that 't is founded on a Right of Conquest which the Conqueror exercis'd and settl'd in its utmost extent that at first the Parliaments were only Seditious Conventicles erected upon the occasion of a Successful Revolt of the English Nobility who sinding themselves able to prescribe Laws to their Masters assum'd the Power of granting Subsidies c. that afterwards the Kings being oblig'd to call 'em when they stood in need of Supplies these Meetings began to be look'd upon as a lawful Senate and by degrees acquir'd an establish'd Form and the Authority which they enjoy at present History of the Revolutions in England Book III. p. 294. When Father d' Orleans declaims against the Republicans he usually runs to the opposite Extremity and commends the most pernicious Maxims of Despotic Tyranny such as Governing without a Parliament is and will always be Reputed in this Kingdom See the History of the Revolutions in England Book II. * Capt Fisher's Deposition † See the Bishop of Soissons s Order about the beginning of April * Capt Fisher's Deposition Charnock Sir John Freind Rookwood Cranbourn A Declaration of the sense of Archbishops Bishops c.
Art of ruining their Fellow-Subjects They have been frequently Charg'd with the Massacre in Ireland and the Burning of London and 't is strongly suspected that the Public Robbers Pirates Incendiaries Debasers of Money Spies and Assassins were employ'd as Instruments in carrying on the great Design The Reader is left to judge of the Truth or Probability of these Conjectures Whatever Opinion weo ught to have of the Design of the Conspirators we must do 'em the justice to acknowledge their Skill and Dexterity in contriving the most probable Methods and Expedients to accomplish it Of these Means and Expedients fome have been long since Foretold some are universally known our Enemies have betray'd their own Secret by divulging others and we may discover the rest by a heedful Examination of the Proceedings of the Conspirators and the Progress of the Conspiracy I will discourse of 'em in order because the Subject is both Curious and Important About Seventeen or Eighteen Years ago Titus Oates made a Discovery to the Parliament which was variously censur'd by Persons of different Principles and Inclinations Some gave credit to it others rejected it as a meer Fable and there were some who look'd upon it as a Mixture of Truth and Fiction I will neither pretend to justifie nor condemn all his Depositions but content my self with observing that there are some things which were look'd upon as incredible by reason of the Enormity of the Crimes tho later Experience has convinc'd us that they were really true especially what relates to Trade Exportation of Species and the Debasement of Money Oates acquaints us in the Appendix to his Information Sworn before Sr. Edmundbury Godfrey Sept. 27. 1678. That the Conspirators cou'd not endure King Charles II. because he was not of their Religion and that they resolv'd to cut him off with all possible Speed That they Charg'd him with Tyranny and Designs of oppressing Governing by the Sword and without Parliaments and exposing his most Faithful and Valiant Subjects to be wasted and slain in foreign Service 2. That they aspers'd derided expos'd and declaim'd against his Person Counsels and Actions in Parliament and elsewhere and particularly scoff'd at his security and confidence in them and by this means animated and encourag'd their Party and Assassins especially to attempt upon his Life and hasten his Ruine 3. That they disclos'd the King's Counsels to France 4. That they rais'd false News of his Affairs 5. That they disaffected his Majesty's Allies Holland Spain the German Emperor and Princes by false Intelligence c. 6. That they disturb'd Trade 7. That they set up sent out and maintain'd Seditious Preachers and Catechists and directed 'em what to Preach in their own or other private Conventicles or Field-Meetings 8. That they animated different Parties one against another to Arm and put the People in Blood upon the King's Death 9. That our best Cities and Towns were to be Fir'd and Plunder'd by Irish French Lay-brethren and others disguis'd in Frocks and otherwise 10. That they endeavour'd to Poyson and Assassinate by pick'd Quarrels or otherwise those whom they suppos'd to be ready or able to detector otherwise obstruct their Designs 11. That they design'd the Transportation of Trading People Stock and Money ADULTERATING MONEY and Plate to which ends they had Bankers Brokers Merchants Goldsmiths and other Traders whom they Stock'd and Set up with Money of their Society of which they boasted to have a Hundred Thousand Pounds in Cash Those who reflect upon what they see or hear and consider the Temper and Actions of these who make a noise in the World may easily judge whether the Party has continu'd to pursue the same Methods And therefore without insisting longer upon this Subject I shall proceed in the next place to take notice of such of their Maxims as have been discover'd by themselves As for Parliaments 't is their Opinion That a King of England's Condescension to his Parliament seldom produces a good Understanding between ' em And particularly they tell us that King Charles II. was advis'd to stand firm against the Attempts of an Assembly that made it their usual Custom to oppose and contradict him that they wou'd still be starting new Claims and Demands and wou'd at last raise 'em to such a Height that His Majesty wou'd not be able to grant 'em without consenting to his own Deposition and consequently wou'd find himself to be still in the same condition that is after a thousand Condescensions against his own Interest he wou'd at last be oblig'd to break with his Parliament and find that his Complaisance had encreas'd their Boldness and made 'em less afraid to oppose him They have left no means unattempted to set these Stratagems on foot against the present Government by employing all their Artifices in a successless attempt to engage the King to invade the Liberty of his Subjects or to make the People incroach upon the Prerogative of the Crown They endeavor'd to revive the ancient Jealousies that disturb'd the Quiet of the former Reigns as if it had been possible to keep us from perceiving the difference betwixt a Deliverer and an Oppressor whose Characters are so opposite that they can never agree either in the Manner or End of executing their Authority for 't is a necessary consequence of their respective Maxims that the Former shou'd endeavour to Preserve and the Latter to Destroy his People 'T is both the Interest and Duty of an English Parliament to protect the People whom they represent from a Prince who treats 'em as Enemies or Slaves but they cannot without consenting to their own Ruin oppose a King who makes the Honor and Prosperity of the Nation the End of all his Designs and Undertakings And we have reason to adore the favourable Providence of God who has freed us from the Apprehensions of so terrible a Misfortune and establish'd His Majesty's Throne by the most perfect Union that ever was observ'd betwixt a King and his Parliament Besides these Ways to destroy the Nation which they have known and practis'd so long the present Juncture has furnish'd 'em with new Expedients In the beginning of the War our Trade was extremely disturb'd by French Privateers but since their Defeat at La Hogue made 'em both afraid and unable to engage our Fleet they seem to make no other use of their Men of War than to surprise our Merchant-Ships And our treacherous Country-Men are always ready to give 'em secret and timely Notice of our Motions and consequently betray the Riches of the Nation to its most inveterate Enemies In the mean time they were secretly fomenting our Divisions and animating the different Parties that are among us against us and one another The Scotch Presbyterians were incited to take up Arms by Sir John Cochram and those of the same perswasion in England were manag'd by Mr. Ferguson and others About the time of the Siege of Mons Sir John
And even when an attempt was made to bribe his Vertu● with the alluring prospect of the Soveraignty of the Netherlands and a promise to favour and support his pretensions to England at a time when he cou'd not expect to maintain his Right without the assistance that was propos'd to him 't is known that he rejected the tempting Offer and that his Enemies cou'd not forbear admiring a Moderation that broke all their measures and convinc'd 'em that he wou'd never be prevail'd with to accept a Crown on the inglorious Condition of destroying those who had a Title to his Pro ection 'T is from such Instances as these that we ought to Form an Idea of his Majesty's Temper rather than from the groundless conjectures of a byass'd ●ancy And all the actions of h s Life are so many convincing Demonstrations that he has always look'd upon it both as his Duty and Interest to preserve rather than to destroy the People 'T was in pursuance of this Maxim that while there was any hope left of composing the Disorders in England without having recourse to the last and most violent Remedy he endeavour'd to prevent the Ruin of his Father in Law and the Miseries that threaten'd the Nation by tendering an advice which that Prince had the misfortune to reject This is undoubted Matter of Fact and consequently ought to make a stronger impression upon us than if it were only a probability grounded on plausible Presumptions Nor was he either soon or easily prevail'd with to go over to England for he deferr'd that Expedition till he cou'd delay it no longer without neglecting at once his Honor Conscience and Interest These who exclaim against so many Sovereigns for favouring the descent in England do at the same tacitely acknowledge that 't was then the general opinion of those Princes that their common Safety and the Liberty of Europe depended upon the success of that Expedition And 't is plain from the event that they were not deceiv'd The Prince of Orange's arrival in England fill'd the World with an impatient expectation of the approaching Crisis that was to determine the Fate of Europe Every Man was an attentive Spectator of a Revolution in which All were so nearly concern'd and none but such who are uncapable of regarding the public Interest can be suppos'd to be unacquainted with the Circumstances of so important a Transaction And therefore instead of entertaining the Reader with a particular account of his present Majesty's Proceedings on that occasion I shall content my self with observing in the general that 't was his first and principal desire that a Parliament might be call'd to settle the affairs of the Nation That to secure that great Assembly from the apprehension of any disturbance or constraint he offer'd to retire Threescore Miles from the Capital City provided King James's Army wou'd withdraw to an equal distance That when the late King fell into his Hands he suffer'd him to make his escape without considering the dangers to which the Life of an implacable Enemy wou'd in all probability expose him That afterwards he order'd his Forces to March out of the Places where the Members of the approaching Convention were to be chosen that the Elections might be manag'd with an absolute Freedom That at last the Representatives of the Nation of their own accord declar'd the Throne vacant and presented him with a Crown which he had never demanded 'T will not I hope be deny'd even by our Enemies that England is too potent a Nation and too considerable in all resp●ct● to be frighted into a servise complaisance and too Wife and Provident to make so great an Alteration without considering both its Nature and Consequences And therefore since the Representatives of such a Nation look'd upon this as the only Expedient to secure their Liberty the Prince to whom they made their address cou'd neither fancy himself wiser than so great a People who desir'd his Protection and offer'd him the Crown after long and mature deliberations nor prefer some private considerations before the general Good of a whole Nation or rather of many Nations whose Interests were link'd together 'T is plain that an Action of this Nature may be either censur'd or commended according to the Principle from which we derive it and that the Judgment we give in such Cases depends on the Intention we ascribe to the Actor and consequently there is nothing but Prejudice and Ill nature that can hinder us from acquiescing in the Justice of his Majesty's Proceedings Satyr may raise Suspicions or invent Crimes and afterwards endeavour to fasten the imaginary Guilt upon those whom she resolves to attack But unbyass'd History judges a Prince's Actions by his Deportment upon other occasions Those who fancy it unreasonable to suppose that one may be King of England or even Heir to the Crown without endeavouring to destroy the Nation will never be able to comprehend the Motives that shou'd oblige his Majesty to expose his Person for the preservation of his People They know not or at least do not consider that a true King may be distinguish'd by the same marks by which Solomon distinguish'd the true Mother However 't is certain that all the spiteful Reproaches which are levell'd against his Majesty for accepting the Crown rebound with greater force upon the Nation that presented it to him and that those who are possess'd with so Brutish a Fury as to imagine that he may be Assassinated without a Crime because he suffer'd our Representatives to place him upon the Throne do at the same time pronounce a bloody Sentence against the Parliament and condemn the whole Kingdom to Havock and Desolation This is the natural Tendency of the Maxims of that Party and we must do 'em the Justice to acknowledge that their Actions are sutable to their Principles for it will appear that the Conspiracy against the Nation and the barbarous Design against the Person and Government of its Deliverer had the same beginning and advanc'd with equal Steps IMMEDIATELY after His Majesties Accession to the Crown he receiv'd advice from Germany and Holland and even from France that several Persons were landed in England with a resolution to Assassinate him And not long after he was inform'd that they had left the Kingdom because they cou'd not find an opportunity to execute their Design It seems that He either did not believe or at least did not much regard these Informations but He cou'd not behold with 〈…〉 the Dangers 〈…〉 his Subjects There was 〈…〉 Conspiracy discover'd in 〈…〉 here the secret 〈…〉 Government had 〈…〉 such as 〈…〉 for their 〈…〉 to His Majesty to 〈…〉 Edenburgh on Fire in 〈…〉 different places and 〈…〉 retire to the Highlands 〈…〉 were not the main Efforts of the Disaffected Party nor the principal Difficulties with which the Government was oblig'd to encounter The Late King having put himself at the Head of his Party
Gordon Lunt and Thrilfall who came from Ireland with Declarations and Commissions from King James to the Roman-Catholics in several Counties of England They landed in Lancashire where they open'd their Commissions by which Gordon was appointed to go to Scotland Thrilfall to Yorkshire and Lunt to Staffordshire Cheshire and Lancashire In pursuance of these Orders they parted and went immediately to the respective Places that were allotted 'em where they executed their Commissions tho' with different Success Thrilfall had already finish'd his Negotiation in Yorkshire and was returning thro' Cheshire to Ireland when he was pursu'd upon Suspicion and kill'd as he was endeavouring to defend himself Lunt having perform'd his Commission was sent to London to levy Soldiers to be destributed among the Conspirators in the North. In his return from thence after he had Executed his Orders he was Seiz'd at Coventry by one of the Kings Messengers brought back to London and Committed to Newgate Five Months after he was set at Liberty having given Bail to appear next Hillary Term at the King's Bench from whence he was sent to be Try'd at the Assizes in Lancashire He was Committed for High-Treason to the Castle of Lancaster upon the Evidence of the Master of the Ship who brought him over from Ireland and the Officers of the Custom-house who found some of King James's Commissions among the Papers which he left in the Vessel But these were not the most Terrible Witnesses that were like to appear against him For about that time the Conspiracy was discover'd by two several Persons The first was Kelly who declar'd what he knew to the Mayor of Eversham in Worcestershire the Earl of Bellamont and some Persons of Quality in that Country who Communicated the Discovery to the Council But tho' his Deposition remain'd in the Hands of the Government his Person disappear'd so suddenly and in so strange a manner that we cou'd never afterwards hear an account of him His Fate continues a Mystery to this day but whether he was kill'd or carry'd away 't is certain that the Conspirators from that very time began to resume their Courage which was extremely sunk upon the News of his Discovery Dodsworth was the Second who alarm'd the Party by discovering the Conspiracy to a Member of Parliament who sent an account of it to one of the Secretaries of State by whose Order the Informer was brought from Lancashire to London And 't was found that his Deposition agreed exactly with that of Kelly tho' they were at a hundred Miles distance when they were examin'd Dodsworth was sent to the Castle of Lancashire to joyn his Evidence to the Testimony of the other Witnesses that were to appear against Lunt who nevertheless cou'd not be convicted according to the usual Forms of Law For when he was brought to his Tryal the Master of the Ship who brought him from Ireland either was or pretended to be sick And the Officers of the Custom-house cou'd not swear that the Papers which were produc'd in the Court were the same which they found in the Ship because they had forgotten to mark ' em Thus the whole Evidence being reduc'd to the single Testimony of Dodsworth Lunt tho' apparently Guilty was acquitted and both the Court and Jury chose rather to absolve a Criminal than to violate the least Circumstance of the Law A rare Instance of Justice and Moderation which at once may serve to convince us of the Mildness and Clemency of the present Government and of the extravagant Prejudice of those who wou'd exchange it for Arbitrary Power and of two things which seem to be equally the Objects of our Admiration leaves us in doubt whether we have greater reason to Love and Esteem the Former or to Hate and Detest the Latter Lunt by his Services and Sufferings had so far insinuated himself into the Favor and Confidence of his Party that in a Meeting of Jacobites at Standish-Hall in Lancashire he was chosen to go to France to acquaint King James with the present posture of his affairs here and to know what Assistance might be expected from him The Answer he brought was that the late King was preparing to come in Person to England the next Spring and that in the mean time he wou'd send 'em his last Instructions by a sure and faithful Hand Not long after Walmuly and Parker came to England by that Prince's Order and appointed a Meeting of the principal Persons of their Faction at Dungen-Hall where they deliver'd the Commissions and Presents they had brought from France and at the same time assur'd 'em that King James wou'd speedily land in England with a sufficient Force to support ' em In the mean they were putting all things in readiness at la Hogue for the intended Expedition The Preparations they made were very great and the Measures they had taken seem'd to promise Success as it will appear by the following account of ' em By the Articles that were agreed upon at the surrender of Limerick the French had cunningly reserv'd a Liberty to retain a very considerable Body of the Irish Forces in their Service whom they design'd upon the first convenient occasion to send over to England These Troops consisted of such as were most deeply engag'd in the routed Party and long'd for a Second War to make up the Losses they had sustain'd in the First They were rather irritated then discourag'd by their late Misfortunes and so unaccustom'd to Labor that the love of Idleness joyn'd to the desire of Booty had made 'em forsake their native Country Besides they look'd upon our Happiness with Envy and Rage and cou'd not endure to be Subject to those whom they once hop'd to enslave Such Men as these were the fittest to be employ'd in a Design of this Nature and in all probability wou'd have prov'd the most effectual Instruments of our Destruction if they cou'd have found an opportunity to join the Disaffected Party among us There were Three sorts of Persons in this Nation whom we might justly look upon as Domestic Enemies First the zealous and bigotted Roman-Catholics or rather all Roman-Catholics in general for tho' some of 'em appear'd more cautious and moderate than the Rest 't was the general opinion of the Party that all the Papists in England wou'd take up Arms on that occasion The Second Order of Jacobites consisted of the late King's Servants who ow'd their Fortune and Preferment to his Favor And the Third comprehends those whose Interest and Safety depended upon the Subversion of the Laws Men of turbulent Spirits and desperate Fortunes who hop'd to raise themselves upon the Ruins of their Country Such Persons as these are at once our Plague and our Reproach but the Breed is not peculiar to England for every Nation has its share in the common Calamity and has the misfortune to produce a Set of Men who seem to be in Love with Disorder and are never more
of which were paid and the rest promis'd Charnock and Harrison were look'd upon by the Court at St. Germains as Persons in whom they might place an Entire Confidence The Project of Assassinating the King was doubtless Communicated to 'em by Parker who is thought to be the first Contriver of it Those who are engag'd in such Barbarous Designs endeavor to find a sort of Justification or Excuse in the Atrocity of their Guilt Every new Crime stretches their Conscience to make room for a Sin of a larger Size and Emboldens 'em both to Contrive and Commit the most Horrible Villanies Nor is it probable that he conceal'd the Design from Porter and Goodman with whom both before and after his Imprisonment he entertain'd an Intimate Correspondence However 't is certain that these Four Men were either the first Contrivers of the Project or at least consulted about the most proper Ways to put it in Execution after it was Communicated to ' em At first they only mention'd the Seizing of the King and the carrying of him to France either because they had no other Intention at that time or because they fancy'd that even the Faintest Sense of Honor and Vertue might make the Conspirators reject the startling Proposal of an Assassination 'T is plain from their Proceedings afterwards that their seeming Moderation on this Occasion was not the effect of any Inclination they had to spare His Majesty's Life That Barbarous Design was propos'd under several and very different Notions according to the Characters of those to whom it was Communicated They usually contented themselves with mentioning the carrying away of the King when they imparted the Project to those in whom they found some unextinguish'd Sparks of Honor but they scrupl'd not to own the Assassination in the broadest Terms to those who they perceiv'd were transported by a brutish and ungovern'd Fury Yet even those who had made the greatest progress in putting off all Humanity cou'd not forbear discovering the inward Horror that rack'd their guilty Consciences Their Minds were so agitated by a Sense of the Enormity of their Crime that they cou'd not fix upon the Way of executing it Sometimes they concluded that the quickest way to bring in King James and restore him to his Crown was by knocking King William on the Head Sometimes they resolv'd to hurry the King away to Rumney-Marsh and from thence to carry him over to France And in some of their Consults 't was determin'd to carry him-alive into France if they cou'd if they cou'd not take him alive then to Assassinate him and pretend it was done by a Random Shot Brice Blair was one of the first to whom they communicated the Design He was a Scotch-Man by Birth and educated a Presbyterian but afterwards turn'd Papist All the Time he had spent in the Service cou'd not procure him a higher Post than that of a Lieutenant and therefore he resolv'd to take a nearer tho a more indirect way to Preferment Yet neither his Religion nor Ambition cou'd make him so much an Enemy to Honor and Virtue as to be a fit Companion for the Conspirators He was never present at those Consults where 't was examin'd whether the Assassination or the Carrying away of the King was the quickest or surest way to bring in King James and restore him to his Crown for when Charnock propos'd the Design to him by the least odious name he rejected it in such a manner that they durst never mention it to him afterwards Not long after Porter and Goodman communicated the Project to Sir George Barelay who was then in England and just ready to go over to France They desir'd him to acquaint King James with their Design that if he appro'd it he might send 'em a Commission with a Pardon included in it It seems Barclay did not send 'em the Commission they expected But some time after Charnock told Goodman that there was an Order to seize the Prince of Orange for so they usually call'd his Majesty Upon this advice a Consult was held where Charnock produc'd one Waugh that was lately come from France who told 'em that he expected a Commission to seize the King This was look'd upon as a sufficient Encouragement to set all their Engines at Work in order to a vigorous prosecution of the Grand Design They held Meeting after Meeting to concert the Methods of executing it In these Consults some of the Conspirators acquainted the rest with the Intelligence they had at Deal where they resolv'd to secure a Vessel To this Effect they sent for a Man who offer'd to furnish 'em with one but dismist him because they cou'd not agree about the Price Then they resum'd their Debates about the Commission but since they had none to produce they broke up without coming to a Conclusion Some days after Charnock Porter and Waugh met at Brentford where they consulted about the Ways of executing the Attempt They view'd the Ground consider'd the Houses where they shou'd place their Men and waited till his Majesty shou'd return from Richmond that they might observe the Guards who accompany'd him and his usual Way of Travelling They continu'd their Meetings during the Months of January February and March 1694 5 and in one of their Consults at the Mitre-Tavern in St. James's Market the Design was communicated to Lariie whom they look'd upon as a Person entirely devoted to the Faction because he had suffer'd a long and tedious Imprisonment upon suspicion of holding Intelligence with the Enemies of the Government He embrac'd the proposal and perhaps was really willing to be engag'd in it tho if we reflect upon the Manner and Circumstances of his Discovery it may be presum'd that he only seem'd to comply with 'em that the Confidence they plac'd in him might enable him to acquaint the Government with the dark Intrigues of its treacherous Enemies The Conspirators were all the while kept in Expectation of a Commission which was retarded by several Accidents Waugh had told King James that the Earl of Arran and the Lord Forbes were willing to be concern'd in the Design to carry away the King but when he attempted to discourse with 'em on that Subject after his return from France they both refus'd to have any thing to do with him 'T was reported among the Conspirators that the News of this Disappointment stop'd the sending of the Commission which was already Sign'd and expected by every post And besides there was one Crosby who went to France and talk'd so freely and particularly of the Design'd Attempt that 't was plain he was better acquainted with the secrets of the Faction than they either imagin'd or desir'd Parker wrote upon this occasion to Porter and Goodman who assur'd him that they had never communicated the Design to Crosby However it seems the Court of St. Germains were so alarm'd by this and other Accidents that they resolv'd to
to the Genius of the Nation and the Humor of the People Nor will the Parliament and People of England be accus'd of Lightness and Inconstancy by any unbya●s'd Person that considers how much they have exceeded even their Wisest and most Wary Neighbors in securing their Liberty and preserving an undisturb'd Peace and Tranquillity in their Country and how firmly they have adher'd to their own true Interest during the whole course of a War which they maintain with equal Glory Prudence and Resolution The Roman-Catholic Princes were upbraided for entering into a Confederacy with the Enemies of their Religion But they were too wise and too well acquainted with the Designs of those who wou'd have perswaded 'em to sacrifice their Interest to their Superstition to suffer themselves to be impos'd upon by an Artifice which twice in our Memory had almost prov'd Fatal to Europe First when under pretext of promoting or at least not opposing the Advancement of the Roman-Catholic Religion the French King was suffer'd to over-run the United Provinces and to extend his Conquests so far that in the Judgment of the least Apprehensive Minds it seem'd hardly possible to hinder him from making himself Master of Amsterdam and with it of the Fleet Army Credit and Money of that potent Republic which wou'd have render'd his Power almost as boundless as his Ambition And a Second time when after the Peace of Nimeghen the French found a way to keep us from looking abroad by engaging us in unnecessary Quarrels about Religion at home and by that means diverted the prudent Jealousie of the only Nation in Europe that was able to curb their Ambition for by retaining the possession of Pignerol Cazal Hunninghen Strasburg Montroyal Luxemburg c. they kept at once Italy Switzerland Germany and the Netherlands under a kind of Subjection and in the General all the Princes and States of Europe were over-aw'd by the severe Politics and formidable Power of an ambitious Monarch who like an ill-natur'd Neighbor made every petty Trespass or accidental Slip the pretext of a new Invasion If our Deliverance had been deferr'd till the Popish Party had secur'd the Plurality of Voices in the Parliament and Modell'd an Army to support their unjust Usurpations If the two Kings had had time to execute the Grand Design of destroying Holland and extirpating the Northern Heresy the House of Austria wou'd have been quickly sensible of the fatal Consequences of this pretended Advancement of the Roman-Catholic Religion But to return to the Kingdom that was doom'd to feel the first effects of these dismal Alterations The English Jacobites as well as the Court of St. Germains were generally divided into Melfordians and Middletonians and while one of the Parties declar'd openly for Arbitrary Power the other insisted upon the Necessity of entering into a kind of Treaty with the Nation The former were entrusted with the Secrets of the Faction and the Command of the Troops that were to be employ'd in the Destruction of their Country All the Colonels were animated with the Spirit of Melford Parker was engag'd in the most furious Designs of the Party and both Parkins and Friend are represented as violent Melfordians by a Person in whom they plac'd a particular Confidence The Lancashire Papists both by Inclination and Interest were zealous Promoters of Arbitrary Power Porter Goodman Charnock and the rest of the Officers who were to act either in the Assassination or Invasion were influenc'd by the same Principles and ready to obey the most barbarous Orders of their Commanders Thus each of the opposite Cabals apply'd themselves to their respective Tasks For while the Middletonians were employ'd to amuse the People with flattering Hopes and Assurances of a favorable Treatment the Melfordians who were the sole Masters of the Forces and Arms of the Faction were putting themselves in a condition to violate the Promises of the former which made one say That he was neither so much a Fool nor a Villain as to engage in the Party It seems the Faction imagin'd that they cou'd easily betray the Nation to the cruel Ambition of a Foreign and Implacable Enemy But notwithstanding their Confidence of Success they scrupl'd not to contrive the basest and most treacherous Expedients to accomplish their unnatural Design The Reader will find an evident Confirmation of both these Truths in a Discourse that past between Brice Blair and Harrison as 't is related by the former upon Oath I wen● says he to see Mr. Harrison a little after Sir George Barclay came from France who told me that there might be something done in a little time which might be an Introduction to King James's Restoration I ask'd him after what manner that business cou'd be effected and after some pause he told me that if King James cou'd not come in time enough that his Friends might burn the Navy Victualling Office wherein the Provisions for the Mouth lay which might retard the English Fleet from getting to Sea for a considerable time I told him being amaz'd to hear such Words from a Priest's Month that it was not practicable and if it were there wou'd be few found that wou'd run the risque He told me that he wou'd have me as forward in the King's Service as any Man and that he was told by a Gentleman and a very good Officer that if he was sure of but a Hundred Horse he wou'd end the War in a Fortnights time c. 'T was by proposing such Expedients that the Conspirators endeavor'd to distinguish themselves since they found by experience that this was the only way to gain the Favor and Esteem of the Party Melford himself was oblig'd to give 'em a new Specimen of his barbarous Politics and even to strain the natural Fierceness of his Temper to support his sinking Credit For after he had been dismist for some time as a Rash and Furious Person who was only fit to pursue violent Methods and incapable of that seeming Moderation which the present Juncture requir'd he was immediately restor'd to Favor as soon as the Party was convinc'd of the Feasibleness of the Project he had contriv'd against the Liberty of the Nation and the Life of its Deliverer Thus Middleton was kept as a Reserve for the Day of Adversity while Melford was cherish'd as their better Genius who alone had the Art of improving an Advantage and making our Yoke so heavy that we shou'd never afterwards be able to shake it off They left no means unattempted to confirm the Court of St. Germains in these Maxims To this End an ingenious Jesuit was chosen to represent the Affairs of England and especially the late Revolution according to the Instructions he had receiv'd from the Party It must be acknowledg'd that the Work is adorn'd with all the Embellishments of a beautiful Stile and the Management of the Subject wou'd have been extremely sutable to the Juncture if the late King had been in as
fair a way to remount the Throne as they imagin'd The Author endeavors to exasperate that Prince's Revenge He imploys all his Art to convince him of the Justice and Usefulness of the Melfordian Principles and to render his Arguments more agreeable and consequently more Effectual his Advices are always intermix'd with Apologies and Panegyrics He commends King Charles II. for seizing the Charter of London and resolving at last to Govern without a Parliament and even has the confidence to tell us that for this reason the Four last years of his Life were properly the only years of his Reign and that he became the Master of his Subjects as soon as they perceiv'd that he was resolv'd to rule without a Parliament He exclaims against the Presbyterians whom he stiles the natural Enemies of the Royal Preogative adding that of all the Protestants they are the most furiously bent to extirpate the Catholics and praises King Charles for the Care he took to suppress their Meetings Yet not long after he becomes their Advocate against the Church of England and brings in King James telling the Clergy that the Persecutions they had rais'd against the Dissenters made divers of his Good Subjects leave the Kingdom He derides the pretended Contract betwixt a Soveraign and His People and reckons it a pernicious Chimera or which is the same thing he puts these Words into the Mouth of those Lords whose Sentiments he approves He speaks of the Protestant Cabal and divides it into the Episcopal and Presbyterian Cabals as if the Roman-Catholics were the Body of the Nation He endeavors to fix a stain upon the Immortal Memory of those Illustrious Defenders of the Laws and Liberty of England who sacrific d their Fortunes for the safety of their Country and were neither afraid nor asham d to mount a Scaffold in so glorious a Cause He speaks of a matchless Infidelity of perfidions designs that cou d not be prevented by the most cautious Prudence of the unheard of Treachery of so many Persons of great Quality who abandon d a Pri ce from whom they had receiv'd such signal Favors of the shameful Conspiracy of so many Kings against him and of the Moderation with which he began his Reign He tell him that Bad Subjects can never be gain d by Kindness and that the Event has taught him what measures he ought to have taken to prevent his Misfortune To conclude he does what he can to inspire him with Revenge and to perswade him that Cruelty and Oppression are the two principal Maxims of State which he ought to pursue for the future At another time the Faction wou d have taken more care to conceal their Sentiments for we must do em the Justice to acknowledge that they want neither Wit nor Prudence But they look'd upon the Conquest of England as so sure a Project and were so little apprehensive of its miscarriage that they scrupl d not to discourse publickly of the New Revolution The News of the Design were spread over all Europe and even there were some who pretended to fix the time of its Execution Some talk'd at Easter others mention d the Beginning of the Spring and some put it off till the Fleet from Thoulo● shou'd join that which lay at Brest In the mean time their confident Menaces were slighted as vain Rhodo montades by all honest Men because they were not acquainted with their execrable Design to Assassinate his Majesty Sir George Barclay a Scotchman Lieutenant of King James 's Guards was the person that was chosen to command the Assassins He set out from St. Germains in September to execute his bloody Commission with the assistance of Twenty or Two and Twenty Men who were appointed to obey his orders Some of that infamous Troop came over with their Leader Some went before and others follow'd him Harris was one of the last who in his Deposition April 15th 1696 affirms upon Oath That he was an Ensign of Foot under the late King James in Scotland that he had serv d since in the Second Troop of his Guards in France That about the 14th of January last New Stile King James sent for this Informant and Michael Hare his Camerade That King James spoke with them in the late Queen 's Bedchamber and told this Informant that he had an Opportunity of doing something for him being very sensible he had serv'd him well That he would send him into England where he should be subsisted and that he was to follow Sir George Barclay s Orders and in so doing he would take care of him That he had order d them Money for their Journey which they should receive from Mr. Caroll who is Secretary to the late Queen King James told this Informant further that he should sind Sir George Barclay every Munday and Thursday between Six and Seven at Night in Covent Garden-Square and that they might know him by a white Handkerchief hanging out of his Coat-Pocket and King James pulling a List out of his Pocket told this Informant when he was in England he must go by the name of Jenkyns and Mr. Hare by the name of Guinney Colonel Parker was by all the time when King James spoke to this Informant and by the King's Order Colonel Parker went with this Informant and his Camerade to Mr. Caroll's and Mr. Caroll told them that the King had ordered them Ten Louis d' Ors apiece which would be enough to carry them over and if they should chance to be Wind bound he had writ to the President Tosse at Calais to furnish them with Money c. The rest of the Assassins that were sent over to assist Sir George Barclay were either Troopers in King James's Guards Pensionaries of the Court of St. Germains Officers who expected preferment or Soldiers taken out of the Regiments to be employ'd in that execrable Service The Faction made use of none but such as were Persons of Trust and who they believ'd would not scruple to engage in the dire Attempt And that the Assassination might be look'd upon as a Stratagem of War those who were to act in it were for the most part Officers and Soldiers This Infamous Detachment set out from St. Germains at several times and under various pretex's One gave out that he was going to continue his Studies in one of the Colleges in Scotland and another that he was weary of the Service Secresy was particularly recommended and enjoin d to every one of 'em And least their absence shou d be taken notice of and give occasion to various Discourses and Conjectures King Ja●es declar'd at his Levee that 't was his pleasure that none should presume to talk of their Departure and that he wou d severely punish those who shou'd give him the least occasion to believe that they were more curious to enquire into his designs than zealous in obeying his Orders In the mean time Sir George
resolv'd to retire immediately to the Tower which for that end they propos'd to surprize And 't is probable that the apparent Difficulty or rather impossibillty of making themselves Masters of that Place and the want of a secure Retreat any where else were the main Reasons that made 'em lay aside the Thoughts of performing the Assassination this way Both these Proposals were soon rejected by the Conspirators but there were two other Projects that were the subject of a longer Deliberation being look'd upon as more feasible and obnoxious to fewer and less discouraging Hazards And therefore it will not be improper to give the Reader a more particular account of ' em The King has a House at Richmond whither he usually went to hunt every Saturday when free from the hurry of Business and the perpetual cares in which he had spent the Week he had leasure to divert himself with that Innocent and Manly Recreation Near that place there is a little Park that reaches to the River side the Thames on one side and the Park-pales one the other forming a kind of Defilé or narrow Lane about 150 paces long in the middle of which there is a Gate that hinders Coaches or Horses from passing that way when 't is shut Thro this Lane the King usually return'd from hunting and 't was here that the Conspirators resolv'd to execute their barbarous Design The Park the River the Gate and the Pales were all to be made subservient for facilitating the Attempt Several Persons on foot well arm'd were to be plac'd in Ambuscade behind the Hedges and Pales When the King's Coach had pass'd the Gate it was to be shut upon the Guards that follow'd him the Coach was to be stopt by killing some of the Horses and the Pales were to be saw d so far that they might be broken down assoon as they enter'd upon action In the mean time some Horsemen were to attack Six or Seven of the Guards that go before the Coach and the Party that lay in Ambuscade were to fire on the Body of the Guards that were stopt by the Gate that the Assassins might have time to murder the King and those who were with him 'T was also agreed that after the Assassination such of the Conspirators as were on Horseback shou'd immediately disperse and those of the Ambuscade who were to act on foot dress'd in Countrymens habits shou'd make their escape to the River-side where there was to be a Boat lying ready to receive ' em This proposal was under deliberation for some time during which some of the Conspirators were sent to the place in order to view the Ground and upon the Account they gave of it the above mention dScheme wasfram'd But after all their Consultations since Sir George Barclay was not sure of a sufficient Number of Horse to carry off those that were to lye in Ambuscade who consequently wou'd have been expos'd to very great dangers before they cou'd have reach'd London this Project was also rejected by the Cabal The last way that was propos'd to murder the King was to assault him as he return'd from Richmond in a place betwixt Brentford and Turnham Green In a Bottom where the Ground is moorish and uneven there is a Bridge where divers Roads meet and cross one another on the North-side there is a Road that goes round Brentford and on the South a Lane that leads to the River so that one may come thither from four several Places After you pass the Bridge the Road grows narrow having on one side a Foot-path and on the other a tall and thick Hedge This was to have been the scene of the most dismal Tragedy that ever was acted in England nor cou d they have chosen a more convenient Time or Place for executing their barbarous design For the King us d to return late from Hunting and to cross the River at Queensferry by Brentford with Five or Six of his Guards 'T was also his custom to go into the Boat without coming out of his Coach and assoon as he landed on the other side the Coach drove on without expecting the rest of the Guards who cou'd not cross the River till the Boat return'd to bring em over In the mean time the King with his small Attendance wou'd have quickly arriv d at the Bridge which is at the other end of Brentford next to London and consequently wou'd have faln into the hands of the Conspirators who were to attack him on all sides They were to be divided into Three Parties one of which was to come from Turnham Green another from the Lane that leads to the River and the Third from the Road that goes round Brentford One of these Troops were to attack the Guards on the Front and the other in the Rear while Eight or Ten detach'd Men assaulted the Coach where his Majesty wou'd have been assassinated before the Guards whom he left on the other side of the River cou'd have come up to his Assistance After the Assassination the Conspirators were to have kept together till they came to Hamersmith a little Town betwixt Turnham Green and London There they intended to separate and afterwards by several Roads to enter the City where they hop'd they might lurk securely during the general Consternation till they shou'd be freed from danger by the sudden Landing of the French This Proposal pleased the Conspirators better than any of the former Porter King and Knightly were sent to view the Ground and upon the Report they made at their Return the Business was finally agreed upon Sir George Barclay had brought Eight hundred Pounds from France for the Charge of the Attempt but finding that he cou'd not carry on the Design with so small a Sum he complain'd to his Friends who soon found a way to supply that Defect For Charnock undertook to provide Eight men ready mounted and arm'd Porter Seven and Sir William Parkins Five So that Barclay was only oblig'd to buy or hire Twenty Horses for the Officers and Soldiers he had brought from France Porter and Rookwood commanded the Two Parties that were to attack the Guards and Sir George Barclay reserv'd the honor of the Assassination for himself One of the Conspirators was order'd to wait at Queensferry till the Guards appear'd and then immediately to give notice to the rest that they might have time to prepare themselves and take their respective Posts while the King was passing the River ' They resolv'd to form themselves into several Bodies which were to advance with all possible Diligence to the Place appointed for the fatal Rendezvous They had omitted nothing that might serve to secure and facilitate the Execution of their Attempt They had visited all the Inns about Brentford and Turnham-green and the places where they might set up their Horses till the King shou'd return from Hunting They had also Two Spies or Orderly men as they call'd 'em who were posted at
Kensington One of 'em was to give notice when the King went out and the other was to bring an account when the Guards began to March And that the Assassination might pass under the Notion of a Military Exploit they produc'd an Order to take up Arms against the Prince of Orange and his Adherents There was some Difference among the Conspirators concerning the Terms and Expressions of the Commission even after they had confess'd their Crime For some of 'em acknowledg'd that it contain d an express order to Kill the King whereas others pretended that it only authoriz'd em in the general to levy War against the Prince of Orange and all his Adherents 'T is the Opinion of several Judicious Persons that the most considerable Discovery was made by those who endeavour'd to put the fairest Construction on this execrable Project For to Levy War against the King and his Adherents after such a manner and in such Circumstances cou'd signifie nothing else than the Murdering of the King and Parliament and of all that lov'd and were resolv'd to maintain the Laws Religion and Liberty of England The Fifteenth of February was chosen for the Execution of the dire Attempt 'T was on that fatal Day that England or rather Europe was to lose its Deliverer and with him all its hopes of accomplishing the Great Work which he had so happily begun and 't was then that Heaven was resolv'd to work a new Miracle for our Preservation If we had foreseen the Danger that threaten'd him the remembrance of past Hazards wou'd have only serv'd to heighten our Apprehensions for the future His Subjects cou'd hardly have welcom'd him at his return from so glorious a Campaign and instead of celebrating his Victories wou'd have trembl'd at his Approaching Fate But we found to our Comfort that the same Providence which had so often cover d his Head in the Day of Battle and guarded him from the fiercest Assaults of his Enemies was also able to preserve him from the treacherous Fury of Assassins To prevent Suspicion they dispos'd their Men in different places of the Town and even in the remotest Parts of it Barclay and Rookwood expected the Signal in Holborn and Porter with some others waited upon the same account at the Blue Posts in Spring garden Charnock resolv'd to accompany the latter either because he mistrusted him and intended to animate him by his example or because he was willing to chuse a Post that was least expos'd to Danger as another of the Conspirators suspected And perhaps he had still so much Reason left notwithstanding the impetuous Pa● on that disturb'd his Judgment as to decline acting in the most odious Part of the Tragedy Thus they lay expecting the News of the King's Departure for Richmond but his Majesty did not go out that day and some of the Conspirators were so alarm'd at this Disappointment that they began to reflect either upon the Danger or Infamy to which such an Attempt wou'd expose ' em Plowden who came purposely to Town to act under Porter went back to the Country and did not think fit to return according to his Promise Kenrick pretended that he was disabl'd by a Fall and appear'd for some days with his Arm in a String Sherbourn started so many Scruples when the Design was propos'd to him that they did not think fit to press him further And even the fiercest and most harden d Assassins began to be apprehensive of the Success of their Project But at last concluding that their Design was not discover'd because they were not secur'd Sir George Barclay Sir William Parkins Captain Porter and Goodman met on the 21st of February and resolv'd to make a new attempt to execute their Project without altering the Method of it In pursuance of this Resolution the Assassins were to be prepar'd for the bloody Action on Saturday the 22d of February which was to have been the last Day of our Liberty and the Fatal Aera of the irrecoverable Ruine of England The Morning was spent in an impatient Expectation of Advice from those whom they had appointed to give 'em notice when the King went out Charnock who for some days had been very uneasy and full of Jealousy and Suspicion sent a Man to Porter for a List of those who were to act in the Assassination He seem'd particularly to doubt Larue and perhaps was desirous to have some Satisfaction concerning him The List was sent to him with Larue's Name at the head of the rest and he sent it back again after he had inserted the Names of those whom he was to furnish Pendergrass was one of those who were with Porter They had sent for him out of the Country and wou'd have assign'd him a remarkable part in the Assassination Porter had a Musketoon that carry'd 6 or 8 Bullets with which Pendergrass was to shoot at the King and they desir'd him not to be afraid of breaking the Coach-glasses The Conspirators were disappointed a Second time and the boldest of 'em cou'd not forbear discovering their Fears when Keys acquainted 'em that the Guards were come back all in a foam and that there was an unusual muttering among the People This unexpected piece of News put 'em all into a Consternation the Cabal was entirely dispers'd and most of 'em endeavour'd to secure themselves by a speedy flight Nor was this meerly the effect of a Panic Dread or groundless Apprehension for the Conspiracy was actually detected Fisher Pendergrass Larue and another had separately given Information to Different Persons concerning it tho they had not yet discover'd the Particulars Captain Fisher was the Man whom God inclin'd to make the first Discovery of this inhumane Design He went to the Earl of Portland on the Tenth of February Five Days before the Time that was appointed for the Execution of it and inform'd him of the intended Enterprize without acquainting him either with the Time Manner or Circumstances which were not yet agreed upon but he promis'd to give him further notice as soon as they shou'd come to a positive Resolution And now we may justly reflect with an equal amazement upon the Sedateness and Generosity of his Majesty's Temper who cou'd hardly be perswaded to suspect those who only waited for a convenient opportunity to Murder him and the barbarous Fury of his Enemies who scrupl d not to conspire the Death of so Good and so Brave a Prince Any other Person wou'd have been startl'd at an Advice of this nature or at least wou'd have look'd upon it as too important to be neglected but the King secure in his own Vertue conscious of no Guilt and consequently incapable of Fear was so far from being alarm'd at the Discovery that he wou'd not give credit to it because the Circumstances were not particularly mention'd Three Days after Fisher return'd to Whitehall and gave the Earl of Portland an account not only of the Design
the long expected Time shall come that the Just Desires of those who long to see Peace and Tranquility once more establish'd in Europe shall be accomplish'd it will appear and be acknowledg'd by the grateful World that as England was deliver'd from Slavery and Oppression by the Blessing of God upon His Majestys generous Undertaking so 't was England that had the greatest share in the general Deliverance of the Christian World Time and Experience will ere long convince us of this great and important Truth and Posterity will for ever acknowledge the Immortal Obligation And even tho it were possible that future Ages shou'd forget their Great Benefactor the Benefit will remain notwithstanding their Ingratitude as long as there shall be Laws in England or a Free People in Europe FINIS T●e People of England t●ank'd His Majest● ●y their R●presentatives for their Great and Miracu●ous Deliverance from P●pery and Arbitrary Power of which he was the Instrum●nt S●e the Parliament's Address May 18. 1689. The Parliam●nt of Scotland thank'd him also for th●ir Deliv●rance and Preservation of which they acknowledg'd him next to God to be the great and only Instrum●nt S●● the Answer of the Conv●ntion to His Maje●●ie's L●tter in 1689. History of the Revolutions in England Book II. pag. 437. See the Preface to the Third Time of the History of the Revolutions in England When the People stopt his Coach at Dort and ask'd whether he was their Statholder he reply'd that he was satisfy'd with the Honors that were conferr'd upon him But we are not answer'd the People unless we have you for our Governor An. 1674. The D●puties of the Nobility and 〈◊〉 representing the 〈…〉 of the Dutchy of Guelderland and County of Zutphen osser'd him the Sover●ignty of the Province in the ●●me of their Maste●s 'T is notoriously known that these Proposals were made by France * M. Fage● wrote on this occa●ion to Mr. Stewart And when the Court of England endeavor'd to perswade the World that thus was a supposititious letter and that it did not give a true a●●ur of their Highnesses Sentiments having publish'd a Book to that E●e●t call'd Parlamentum Pacificum Mr. Fagel complain'd openly of the d●singenuity of their Proceedings and by a second Letter confirm'd the Declaration he had formerly sent in their Highnesses Name * After the death of Charles II. he rejected the advice and assistance of the late Elector of Brandenburg and when that Prince wou'd have engag'd him to go over to England he reply'd that he wou'd never make any Attempt against the King his Father in Law without an absolute necessity but at the same time he protested that if he cou'd not otherwise prevent the subversion of the Laws and Religion of England he wou'd undertake the Voyage tho' he shou'd be oblig'd to Embark in a Fisher-boat His Enemies cou'd not forbear commending this Effect of his Moderation See the History of the Revolutions in Engl. Book II. See the Act 1 Gulielm Mariae entitl'd An Act declaring the Rights and Privileges of the Subjects to regulate the Succession to the Crown History of the Revolutions in Engl. Book II. 1689 The Discovery was made by a French Protestant who insinuated himself into the Favour and Confidence of the Conspirators by pretending to be engag'd in the same design He was hinder'd by several Accidents from giving such timely Notice to the Court that the Assassins might be apprehended The Discovery was communicated in Holland to some zealous Friends of the Government and in England to My Lord Sydney In this account I have neither magnify'd nor multiply'd the Disorders that were committed by the Government They were either corrected by the Late King himself upon the News of the Prince's Expedition or after his Flight by the Convention The Laws that were made upon that occasion by the Parliaments of England and Scotland are undoubted Testimonies of the several Attempts that were made to subvert our Laws and Religion nor will any reasonable Person expect any other Arguments to prove the Truth of a matter of Fact of which all the Inhabitants of these Nations were either Eye or Ear-Witnesses See his Proclamation publish'd in that Kingdom Dr. King the present Bishop of London-derry then Dean of Dublin in his Book entitul'd The State of the Protestants of Ireland under the Government of the late King The whole Book is full of Instances of this Nature of which I have not mention'd the Twentieth part * The Duke of Schomberg 1690. 1691. * The Magistrates of Roterdam imprison'd a Villain who offer'd to kill the French King They sent an ac●ount of the project to Mr. Montausier and offer'd to deliver up the Offender † Another Proposal of the same naturewas made to the King when he was Prince of Orange The Person who offer'd to undertake the Murder gave an account of the place where he was to be sound and the Prince sent Mr. Dickfelt immediately to acquaint the Count d'Avaux with the whole Project November 1691. December 1691. Febr 1691 2. April 1692. History of the Revolutions in England Book II. History of the Revolutions in England Book II. p. 428. 1692. 1692. 1692. Larue in Charnock 's Tryal 1692. History of the Revolutions in Engl. Book II. Sr. Edmundbury Godfrey's Murder which cannot be reckon'd a Fable is a strong Confirmation of at least part of that Discovery See how they design'd to bring the Irish over to England The application of the rest of the Particulars is obvious History of the Revolutions in England Book II. p. 357. Deposition of Brice Blair March 12. 1695. See the Character of the Presbyterians in the History of the Revolutions in England Book II. 1692. His Depositions are in the Hands of the Government See his Letter to the Lords and Commons of that Kingdom Dared from on board his Ship July 1693. Decemb. 1693. January 1693. July 1694. July 14. 1694. July 17. 1694. Octob. 17. 1694. Sir William Williams took Post for London immediately after Taff's Declaration and gave a horrible Character of the Witnesses having obstinately resus'd to hear any thing that was offer'd to be alledg'd in their Favor or to comply with some of the Judges who wou'd have proceeded to the Examination of other Witnesses See the Votes of the House of Commons on that occasion 1695 Goodman 's Deposition April 24. 1696. This agrees with the Character that Brice Blair gives of him in his Depositions Good man 's Deposition April 2 d 1696. Brice Blair's Deposition March 13th 1696. Goodman 's Deposition April 24 th 1696 Goodman 's Deposition April 24 th 1696 Captain Porter 's Deposition April 24 th 1696. Goodman 's Deposition April 24. 1696. Capt. Porter 's Deposition April 15. 1696. Larüe 's Deposition February 26th 1696. Capt. Porter 's Deposition April 15. 1696 Capt. Porter 's Deposition April 15. 1696. This appears by Capt. Porter's Deposition April 15th 1696. King James wrote several Letters to him with his own
Cochram sent a Person in whom he confided to King James assuring him that in some parts of Scotland there were several Presbyterian Ministers who were the Leading Men of the Party and some Gentlemen of Note that were intirely at his disposal He offer'd his Interest to King James from whom he had receiv'd Fifteen Hnndred Pounds Sterl which he said he had faithfully distributed among his Creatures and desir'd him to send Three thousand Pounds more In the mean time he pretended an extraordinary Zeal for Liberty of Conscience and declar'd if King James wou'd not comply with his Subjects in that point he wou'd Wade thro a Sea of Blood to go thither Thus he was equally unfaithful to the Nation and to that Party which he seem'd to espouse by selling the Blood and Liberty of the Former for so small a Sum and by obliging the Latter to depend upon the Late King's Word for an Advantage of which they were already in possession and betraying 'em to those who are particularly animated against ' em Ferguson the noted Contriver of those Intrigues which at last prov'd Fatal to the unfortunate Duke of Monmouth fam'd for Inconstancy and Treason that Prodigy of Plotters whose whole Life is One black Mystery was also a busie Promoter of this execrable Design The Character that is given of him in the History of the Conspiracy against King Charles II. and the Duke of York which was Written by their Order is very remarkable and serves to shew us what use the Party intended to make of a Person with whose Temper they were so well acquainted The Author of that Book informs us that Ferguson was not only engag'd in the Design of Assassinating those two Princes but applauded it as a Glorious Work saying that it wou'd be an Admonition to all Princes to take heed how they oppress'd their Subjects and adding upon another occasion that it was never thought Injustice to Shoot or set Traps for Wolves and Tygers And one of the principal Conspirators speaking of a Blunderbuss which he intended to use in the Assassination of his Majesty broke out into this prophane Jest That Ferguson shou'd first Consecrate it In the same Book we are told that the Duke of Monmouth confess'd to the King That in all their Debates Ferguson was always for cutting of Throats saying that was the most Compendious Way That Ferguson himself when he took his leave of the Conspirators declar'd That he wou'd never be out of a Plot as long as he liv'd and that at one of their Consults he propos'd that Five or Six of the Old Rich Citizens shou'd be kill'd at First and their Estates given to the Mobile to terrifie the rest That 't was his constant Custom to out-do all the rest of the Conspirators by some peculiar Circumstance of Cruelty of his own Invention That upon all accounts of his restless Spirit fluent Tongue subtil Brain and hellish Malice he was perfectly Qualifi'd to be the great Incendiary and common Agitator of the whole Conspiracy and that after Shaftsbury's Death he was the Life and Soul of all especially for the carrying on of the Assassination While such Persons as these were endeavoring to incite the Presbyterians to Rebellion the Episcopal Party was cajol'd by some of the Depos'd Bishops or by certain Prelates that were sent as private Emissaries from King James And the same design was also zealously promoted by some Clergy-men who despair'd of Preferment under a Prince who makes Merit and Vertue the only Objects of his Favor and Bounty They were enrag'd to find themselves disappointed of the great Expectations they had conceiv'd in the preceding Reign when the Government designing to render the Church of England weak and contemptible made want of Merit one of the principal Recommendations to Advancement It must be acknowledg'd even by those who envy our present Happiness that the constant Care which is taken to bestow the Benefices and Dignities of the Church upon the most deserving Persons and to prefer the Desires of the People in the choice of their Pastors before the most pressing Solicitations of particular Persons is one of the distinguishing Beauties of this Reign The Merit of those who have been advanc'd to the Episcopal Function since the Revolution is sufficient either to stop the Mouths or baffle the Impudence of their most virulent Enemies And 't is known that these worthy Prelates are not only encourag'd but enjoin'd to make a conscientious use of the Power with which they are entrusted by virtue of their Office and Character to dispose of a considerable number of the Inferior Benefices So that 't is hard to imagine where the most impudent Malice can find a pretext to censure His Majesty's Conduct in this Point Nevertheless 't is certain that the Conspirators carry'd on their black Intrigues in all places and among all sorts of Persons and even were not asham'd to contradict themselves by endeavoring at once to perswade all the several Parties in the Kingdom that they had just cause of Complaint They suggested to the Rigid Presbyterians whose ungovern'd Zeal made 'em capable of such Impressions that they ought not to support a Prince who protected the Church of England And at the same time the Toleration he had granted to Dissenters was made use of as a pretext to render him odious to the hottest Asserters of Episcopacy He had already given us a sufficient Intimation of his Sentiments in this Case and of the Maxims he intended to pursue when he declar'd in the beginning of his Reign That He wou'd be King of his People and not of a Faction He lov'd moderate Persons in all Parties and resolv'd to maintain all his Subjects Indifferently in the Possession of their Privileges and Properties He wou'd never permit any Order or Set of Men to domineer over the rest of their Fellow Subjects but suted his Maxims to the Free and Manly Genius of his People who love to be Govern'd by Law He is naturally inclin'd to Goodness and Clemency and tho his Temper alone were not sufficient to secure us against uneasie Apprehensions the Consideration of his Interest wou'd infallibly restrain him from abusing his Authority The preceding Reign furnishes him with Instructing Examples and his Virtue is confirm'd by the Faults of his Predecessor He was advanc'd in opposition to Arbitrary Power and can never consent to the abolishing of those Laws on which his Authority is founded Nor can he endeavor to render himself absolute in one place without ruining his Interest in another for he is equally oblig'd to maintain the Laws of England that he may preserve his Authority in Holland and to preserve the Liberty of the Dutch that he may maintain his Power among us Never was the Interest and Happiness of a Prince so inseparably united to that of his People and never had Subjects less reason to be Jealous of the Authority of their Soveraign This is unquestion'd Matter of Fact a Truth
they might be oblig'd to depend upon the Party They endeavor'd to engage the Officers by Flattering 'em with Hopes of Preferment making the Ensigns Captains and promising Regiments to those who were Captains before For 't is neither Reason nor Justice but Licentiousness and Disorder that advance the Designs of a Faction Of their Troopers some had Money to buy Horses but there were few of this Number some reckon'd to borrow 'em upon occasion and others resolv'd to take 'em where they cou'd find ' em Sir John Fenwick was the Author of the last of these Projects for instead of rendering themselves suspected by providing a great number of Horses he advis'd 'em when the Design shou'd be ripe for Execution to seize on all the Horses they cou'd find in or about London And this Advice was so well lik'd by the Conspirators that some of 'em took care to take a List of the Horses Nor was this meerly the Effect of Sir John Fenwick's Prudence for he had already been so Liberal a Benefactor to the Faction that he found himself oblig'd to moderate his Expences for the Future His Creditors to whom he had resign'd his Estate allow'd him an Annuity which was sufficient for his Subsistence but not for carrying on his Designs Sir John Friend was almost in the same condition for he had advanc'd such considerable Summs for the subsistence of his Men that he was afraid if the Design of the Invasion shou'd miscarry he shou'd not have enough left to carry on his Trade Sir William Parkins had also put himself to a considerable Charge tho he had bought but Thirty Horses which was a meer Trifle in comparison to the Number he wanted And besides the Arms he had provided wou'd not have furnish'd the Twentieth part of his Regiment however they were more than he durst own and therefore he was forc'd to hide 'em in the Country To conclude they cou'd not but foresee that those whom they had drawn in by supplying their present Necessities wou'd not be so ready to encounter the apparent Dangers of the Attempt as they were to offer their Service 'T is plain from these Remarks that 't wou'd have been a hard Task for the Conspirators to make good their Promise to meet the Late King at the Head of Two Thousand Horse Besides the Charge of carrying on the Design was too heavy for those that were engag'd in it their Money was spent in useless Preparations and a longer Delay wou'd have been as dangerous as a rash and preposterous Haste Charnock was a Man of too much Sense and to well acquainted with the Strength of the Faction to rely upon the Promises they had made him And therefore he desir'd another Meeting which was held at a Tavern near Sir John Fenwick's Lodgings and consisted of the same Persons that were present at the former except the Lord Montgomery There Charnock desir'd to know whether they were resolv'd to make good their proposals and upon the new Assurances they gave him he undertook the Commission and some days after embark'd for France But the late King's Council did not think fit to Answer their Expectations For the Design was not yet ripe for Execution nor their Affairs either in England or France in such a Posture as they desir'd They had sounded the Inclinations of the Parliament People and Army and by several vain Attempts had endeavor'd to debauch their Fidelity 'T was their Interest and Desire that either the whole Army or a considerable part of it shou'd be disbanded by the Parliament that there might not be a sufficient number of standing Forces left to oppose the Conspirators To this end their Emissaries were instructed to exaggerate the unavoidable Inconveniencies of the War and to perswade the People and especially their Representatives that 't wou'd be necessary to encrease our Naval Force for the security of our Trade and at the same time to lessen an Army that was useful to Foreigners but only chargeable to our Selves How is the Nation cheated was their usual Cant and what occasion is there for so vast an Expence as if so brave a Fleet were not sufficient to defend us How are we degenerated from the Valor of our Ancestors how basely do we injure their glorious Memory by dreading an Enemy whom they have so often defeated and how poorly it sounds in the Mouth of an English-Man to talk of an Invasion from France By these and such like cunning Insinuations they wou'd have perswaded us that we were oblig'd in Honor to give our Enemies all the advantages they cou'd desire and that 't was a mark of Cowardice to put our selves in a posture of Defence But these Artifices did not take effect tho there were even some well-meaning Persons who had learn'd the Language and promoted the Designs of those who at the same time were plotting their Ruine They had endeavor'd to stir up the People to Rebellion or at least to try what might be expected from 'em if an Insurrection shou'd be begun In pursuance of this Design some Facobites taking advantage of the Mildness of the Laws and the Indulgency of the Government met at a noted Tavern where under pretext of a Drunken Frolic which they hop'd wou'd be either slighted or excus'd they assum'd the boldness to stop those who happen'd to pass that way and to make 'em drink a Health to King James and the pretended Prince of Wales But at last the People were so incens'd and broke into the House with so much Fury that the Impudent Rioteers fearing to be torn in pieces by the Rabble were glad for their own security to be seiz'd and carry'd to Newgate They had also form'd a Project to surprize the Tower to favor the intended Insurrection but all the Friends they had in it were not able to make 'em Masters of that important Place nor cou'd they hope to keep it if they shou'd have succeeded in the Attempt They had in the last place endeavor'd to corrupt the Forces that were left in the Kingdom but had no great reason to boast of their Success For except some Troopers in the Earl of Oxford's Regiment and here and there an Officer or a Soldier in the Militia there were none who wou'd be engag'd in so black an Enterprize Nor was the posture of their Affairs in France more encouraging than in England For Lewis XIV stood in need of all his Forces to oppose the Confederates whom he cou'd not hinder from making considerable Conquests We were Masters of the Sea and were either preparing or had actually begun to Bombard his Sea-port Towns His Fleet was coop'd up in the Mediterranean and durst not venture to repass the Streights So that how welcome soever the Proposals might be to the Courts of Versailles and St. Germains they cou'd not in such a Juncture spare so many Men as their Friends in England desir'd And therefore Charnock was sent back
with a Compliment to the Jacobites and a promise of Assistance upon the first convenient Occasion The last Winter was the Time they pitch'd upon to make good their Promise Thirty Batalions were order'd to March towards Calais and the late King left St Germains to put himself at the Head of ' em Three or Four Hundred Transport Ships were prepar'd with all possible secrecy and diligence to bring over their Land-Forces under the Convoy of a Squadron of Men of War some of the Men were already embark'd and the rest were embarking in order to make a Descent upon this Kingdom before Providence thought fit to discover the mysterious Design of this Expedition Any considering Person that was not acquainted with the Mystery of Iniquity wou'd have concluded the Invasion of England to be as Impracticable then as it was the Summer before The French Fleet was still at Thoulon and notwithstanding the advice we had of their Design to Re-pass the Streights we had no reason to be afraid of any Attempt they cou'd make against us For in all humane probability we seem'd to be equally secure whether the Squadron that was design'd to reinforce our Fleet in the Streights shou'd pursue their intended Voyage or remain in our Ports since their arrival there wou'd have prevented the Return of the Thoulon Fleet into the Ocean and their staying here wou'd have enabl'd us to encounter with both the Fleets of our Enemies And our Apprehensions were extremely lessen'd by the daily Expectation of our Squadron from Cadiz which we had all the reason in the World to believe wou'd sail immediately after the French since they had nothing to do in the Mediterranean after their departure Besides we know that the Thoulon Fleet cou'd not pass the Streights without a favorable Wind and that even the quickest aud most prosperous Voyage they cou'd expect wou'd extremely retard the Execution of their Designs Our Enemies knew before this time that our Squadron wou'd not sail to the Mediterranean for that was so far from being kept secret that 't was openly declar'd Nor cou'd they be ignorant that we had a very considerable Number of Men of War in our Ports and that the outward bound Fleets of Merchant Ships with those that were daily expected wou'd furnish us with a more than sufficient Number of Seamen to Man them Before they cou'd execute their Design against us 't was necessary they shou'd Embark their Troops pass the Sea and make a Descent in this Kingdom And after their Landing some time must have been spent in Receiving the English Rebels forming a Body of Horse Entrenching their Forces and furnishing themselves with Provisions and Ammunition Now supposing that all these Preparations wou'd have requir'd no more than Four or Five Days 't is plain from the Event that even upon so short a Warning we cou'd have put our selves in a posture of Defence For not long after they found to their cost that we were able in as little time to bring Fourscore Men of War together and consequently wou'd have been equally in a Condition to bring over a sufficient Number of Forces from Flanders and to hinder our Enemies from sending a Reinforcement to make good their Descent Nor cou'd it be suppos'd that any Jacobites who had not entirely lost ●he use of their Reason wou'd ven●re to join an Army of Foreigners ●at wou'd have been in a manner besieg'd both by Sea and Land and cou'd neither avoid nor resist the just Fury of an injur'd Nation And besides we shou'd have quickly rais'd a numerous and formidable Army for the City of London alone offer'd to furnish the King with Twenty Thousand Men on that occasion Thus 't is plain that the Design of invading England in such a Juncture was either absolutely impracticable or at least attended with unavoidable and almost invincible Difficulties and consequently might have been justly look'd upon as the Wild Project of a Distemper'd Brain if the Conspirators had not depended upon the success of an Expedient which they had contriv'd to dissolve the Parliament and put the whole Kingdom into a Consternation that wou'd have made us incapable of defending our selves They knew that His Majesty was the Life and Soul of his Subjects that his Wisdom secur'd 'em from the Devices as his Valor protected 'em from the Attempts of their Enemies and therefore resolv'd upon the compendious Way of Destroying England in the Person of its Great Defender But before I proceed to give an account of that Hellish Enterprize 't will be highly convenient to take a view of the preceding Intrigues and Contrivances of the Faction In France they industriously exaggerated the Number and Power of the English Jacobites To perswade the People of that unhappy Nation to endure with a servile patience the Tyranny of their insolent Oppressors they gave out that the English were quite Exhausted by the multiply'd Taxes that were impos'd upon 'em that they were not able to support the Charge of the War any longer and wou'd be quickly forc'd to submit to the Mercy of Lewis the Great And the same Artifice was made use of to encourage the French Council to protect and assist the Late King It appears that the French King gave Credit to those Surmises for in a Letter which he wrote to his Ambassador at the Court of Sweden he says expresly That his Troops were Marching to the Coasts and ready to Embark as soon as the News of an Insurrection in that Kingdom shou'd confirm the Advices he had so often receiv'd c. that the Nation was generally Dissatisfy'd with the Prince of Orange's Government But he was quickly made sensible of his Mistake and that too in a manner which was equally glorious to the English Nation and mortifying to its most terrible Enemy for 't is certain and must be acknowledg'd even by those who saw it with Grief and Vexation that never any Subjects discover'd a more tender Affection and a more hearty and vigorous Loyalty to their Sovereign than the Parliament and People of England did on this occasion to His Majesty In the mean time the Emissaries of the Faction who are dispers'd thro all Europe were industriously labouring to defame the English Nation and to render us either odious or suspected to the Princes our Allies that they might look upon us as unworthy of their Assistance and leave us to the Mercy of our Enemies They endeavor'd to put all the World in Expectation of beholding New Catastrophe's in a Kingdom which they usually stile The Land of Revolutions 〈…〉 th●y pretend that Tumults and In●●rre●tions are the familiar Recreations of the People To vindicate the Honor of our Country and disc●●● the Weakness and Injustice of these spiteful Aspersions 't will be sufficient to observe that it has been the constant Practice of the Faction to fasten their own Crimes upon us and to ascribe the Disorders and Divisions which they kindle and soment among us