Selected quad for the lemma: england_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
england_n king_n kingdom_n rebellion_n 2,819 5 9.3926 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A14194 The historie of the life and death of Mary Stuart Queene of Scotland; Annales rerum Anglicarum et Hibernicarum regnante Elizabetha. English. Abridgments Camden, William, 1551-1623.; Udall, William.; Elstracke, Renold, fl. 1590-1630, engraver. 1624 (1624) STC 24509A; ESTC S117760 156,703 264

There are 36 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

VINCVLA CRESCO Another was a Palme tree much laden but rising againe with these words PONDERIBVS VIRTVS INNATA RESISTIT Also an Anagram VERITAS ARMATA out of her name MARIA STEVARTA the letters being transposed which was taken in the worse part Moreouer there were letters shewne as if they had beene intercepted in the which the friends of the Queene complained that all their hope was quite cut off if she was but put into the custodie of the Puritans Vnder this colour she was taken from Shrewsbury and committed to the custody of Amias Paulet and Drewgh Drury and that of purpose as some thinke that being driuen into desperation she might be more apt to take abrupt counsels and more easie to be intrapped For Sbrewsbury in all that fifteene yeeres had so prouidently kept her that there was no place left of plots from her or against her And now also she dealt more earnestly with the Pope and the King of Spaine by Francis Inglefield to hasten that which was begun and that with all expedition whatsoeuer became of her And Leicester who was thought to study how to deceiue the right owner of the succession secretly sent ruffians as many said to murther her But Drury an honest minded and vpright man detested the wickednesse from his heart and suffered them not to haue any accesse vnto her Yet some spies secretly crept in and there were closely sent as well counterfeit as true letters by which her womanish weaknesse might be thrust forward to her destruction as we will say hereafter And to turne quite away the loue of Queene ELIZABETH from her it was whispered in her eares that Allan for the Catholikes Ecclesiasticks of England and Inglefield for the Laicks and the Bishop of Rosse for the Queene of Scotland with common consent and with the consent of the Pope and the King of Spaine had decreed that Queene ELIZABETH was to be deposed from her Crowne and the King of Scotland was to be disinherited of the kingdome of England as manifest and open Heretiques the Queene of Scotland to be maried to some Catholike Nobleman of England he to be chosen King of England by the English Catholikes and the election to bee confirmed by the Pope The lawfull children of this man by the Queene of Scotland to be declared successors in the kingdome And all these things vpon the credit of Hart a Priest But who this Englishman should be Walsingham made diligent inquiry but he found not who he was But the suspicion fell vpon Henry Howard brother to the D. of Norfolke who was of the chiefe Nobility a single man and an earnest Roman Catholike and amongst them of great reputation and account Anno 1585. IN the beginning of this yeare was a Parliament holden at Westminster where the aforenamed Association was confirmed by the common consent of both the houses And it was enacted that foure and twenty or more of the Priuy Counsell and Nobility of the land chosen by the Queenes letters Patents might inquire of them who shall inuade the Realme raise rebellion or attempt to hurt or kill the Queenes person for any whosoeuer or by them whosoeuer who may challenge right vnto the crowne of England But he for whom or by whom they shall attempt shall bee made vtterly vncapable of the Crowne of England and shall be vtterly depriued of all right thereunto and shall be pursued euen vnto death by all the subiects if he shall be iudged and publikely declared by those foure and twenty men to be priuy to such an In●asion rebellion or hurt There were also acts made against Priests and Iesuits to this effect That they should depart out of the Realme within X L. daies That for them who from thenceforth came into the Realme and staied it should be treason That they who knowing them to be such doe re●eeue receiue or helpe them should be fellons so they call all capitall offences vnder treason That they who are brought vp in the Seminaries if within six moneths after proclamation made they doe not returne and doe not make submission vnto the Queene before the Bishop or two Iustices of peace shall be guilty of treason But they who shall submit themselues if within ten yeeres they come vnto the Court or neerer it than ten miles their submission shall be void They whosoeuer shall send any money by any manner of meanes vnto the Students in the Seminaries shall incurre a Praemunire that is perpetuall imprisonment and losse of all their goods If any of the Peeres of the land that is to say Dukes Marquesses Earles Barons Lords of the Parliament shall offend against these lawes he shall be tried by his Peeres They who shall know any such Iesuits and others to lie hid in the Realme and shall not discouer them within twelue daies shall be fined at the Queenes pleasure and put into prison If any man be suspected to be a Iesuite or Priest and doe not submit himselfe vnto examination for his contempt he shall be imprisoned vntill he doe submit himselfe He that shall send his children or any others vnto the Seminaries and Colleges of the Roman profession shall lose and forfeit a hundred pounds of English money And they who are sent shall not succeed in their heritages nor enioy the goods that may fall vnto them by any manner of meanes And so shall they also who within a yeare after they returne home from the Seminaries except they doe conforme themselues vnto the Church of England If the keepers of hauens permit others beside Sailers Mariners and Merchants to passe ouer the sea without the Queenes licence or six of her Counsellors shall lose their places and the Masters of the ship who shall carry them o●t shall lose and forfeit their ships and goods and be imprisoned a whole yeere With the seuerity of these lawes the Roman Catholikes in England were very much terrified and amongst them Philip Howard Earle of Arundell eldest sonne vnto the Duke of Norfolke insomuch that he determined to depart out of the Land lest he should offend against them This man by the benignitie of the Queene was restored in bloud three yeeres before this time a little after he fell out of the Queenes fauor grace by the secret insimulation of some great Courtiers had secretly reconciled himselfe vnto the Romane religion and vsed a very austere life Hereupon he was once or twice called before the Counsell and cleared himselfe of the obiections laid to his charge but yet he was commanded to keepe his house After six moneths more or lesse he was discharged and came to the Parlament yet the first day when the Sermon was preached he stole couertly out of the company The Parlament being ended as being resolued to depart away out of the Land in his letters written vnto the Queene which yet he commanded to be deliuered after he was gone ouer he made a long and lamentable complaint of the enuie of his mighty aduersaries
in Paris One cannot declare with what applause of all the people with what congratulation of all the neighbour Princes with what Magnificence this mariage was solemnized By this her mariage her husband obtained not onely the Title of King of Scotland in the right of his wife but also another more rich and great which was of the most contented Prince the earth then beheld for that hee was ioyned in mariage with a Princesse who besides many other great vertues composed her selfe wholly to please and to giue content vnto her husband and therein vsed not the ordinary care of a Princesse but more trauell and sollicitude than doe the women of meane condition and qualitie maried vnto great Princes as also appeared after his death which befell not long after by her immeasurable mourning not being able to finde any consolation for her sorrow in that place where shee had lost that which shee had loued better than her selfe so much that the amitie of her kinsfolks and allies could not retaine her nor the sorrow and regret of all France could not call her backe nor the sweetnesse of that Court which inuited her could not stay her but that shee would depart from thence After this on the seuenteenth day of Nouember the same yeere deceased Mary of England at which time the Parlament was holden at Westminster being certified of her death with a vniuersall consent in regard of her most certaine right vnto the Crowne of England of the which none could doubt both the Prelates and Nobles with the Commons agreed to haue the Lady ELIZABETH proclaimed Queene which was done with the generall applause and consent of them and all the people Queene ELIZABETH being established and hauing taken order for things at home and domesticall affaires applied her minde next to settle her affaires abroad For which end it was thought fit to send Embassadors vnto Princes to signifie vnto them the death of Queene MARY and her succession vnto the kingdome Vnto Ferdinand the Emperor was sent Thomas Challenor with letter● wherein the Queene vnder her owne hand certified him that her sister Queene MARY was dead and that she by the goodnesse of God was succeeded as her rightfull heire and with the generall consent of her subiects in the gouernment of the Realme and that she desired nothing more than that the ancient League and amitie betweene the families of England and Austria might not only be conserued but also increased Vnto the King of Spaine being in his Low coun●ries was sent the Lord Cobham with instructions to the same purpose King Philip vnderstanding the decease of Queene MARIE his wife fearing lest England Scotland and Ireland should be adioyned vnto France by m●anes of the Queene of Scotland her Title d●lt seriously with Queene ELIZABETH by the Conde of Feria whom he had sent before to visit his sicke wife and the then Lady ELIZABETH also about his mariage with her promising to procure a dispensation for the same This motion troubled her much for to reiect the most mightie King of Europe hauing deserued well of her and suing to her for mariage vpon his owne motion This thing no lesse disquieted the French King who was also fearefull that England and Spaine should bee conioyned againe i● one by mariage therefore ●ee did all that was possible to be done at Rome by the Bishop of Angulesme that no such dispensation should be granted but yet very secretly lest he should prouoke the Englishmen against him but she put him off with a modest and shamefast answer And when hee saw that he could not obtaine his suit for himselfe and had also giuen it quite ouer being agreed with the French King to marry his daughter yet that the kingdome of England might be retained in his family still he moued the Emperour Ferdinand to commend one of his sonnes to be a suiter vnto Queene ELIZABETH which motion he willingly entertained and for that purpose sent vnto her very louing letters and by Gaspar Preynerus free Baron in Stibing diligently followed and prosecuted the same the King of Spaine himselfe also to bring it the sooner to passe and to further it most courteously offering and promising vnto Queene ELIZABETH his singular loue kindnesse and affection THE LIFE DEATH AND VARIABLE fortunes of the most gracious Queene MARIE STEVVARD Queene of Scotland Anno 1559. THe French King Henrie the second for the benefit of his sonne the Dolphin King and MARIE Queene of Scots casting his eies vpon England did not withdraw his French Souldiers out of Scotland as hee had promised but sent secretly more daily into Scotland and dealt vehemently with the Pope to pronounce Queene Elizabeth an Heretike and illegitimate which the Emperor and the King of Spaine most diligently but couertly sought to hinder yet had the Guises drawne the French King into such a sweet hope of adioyning England vnto the Crowne of France by the title of their Niece the Queene of Scots that hee openly claimed the same in the right of his sonne and daughter in law And commanded them when hee could not obtaine his purpose at Rome to vse this title in all their Letters patents FRANCIS and MARIE by the grace of God of Scotland England and Ireland King and Queene and caused the armes of England together with the armes of Scotland to be painted in the walls buildings and in the houshold stuffe and also to be put into the Heralds coats The English Ambassador in vaine complained that herein great wrong was done vnto Queene Elizabeth with whom he had made lately a league and had not done this to Queene MARIE of England who had proclaimed warre against him But Henries sudden death which happened shortly after made an end of his attempts But Francis the second who succeeded him and MARIE Queene of Scots his wife by the counsell of the Guises who were then of great authoritie in France bore themselues openly as Kings of England and Ireland neither did they abstaine from claiming the armes but set them out more and more And vnto Nicholas Throgmorton the Lieger Embassador a man both wise and stout it was first answered That it was lawfull for the Queene of Scots to beare them with some little difference to shew the nearenesse of her bloud vnto the royall line of England Hee stifly denied it saying that by the Law of Armes none who was not begot of the certaine Heire might beare the armes of any familie Afterward they said they bore the armes for no other cause than to cause the Queene of England to abstaine from bearing the armes of France Yet at length he obtained at the intercession of Mont Morancy who loued not the Guises that they left off the armes of England and Ireland altogether But yet from this title and vsurpation of armes which Henrie made the young Queene of Scots to take on her moued thereto by the Guises proceeded all the euils which came so thicke vpon her afterward as from
pittie of Queene ELIZABETH was vnfained or not is not knowne But certaine it is the Councellors of England did enter into a mature deliberation what should be done with her If she should be kept still in England they feared that she which had an alluring eloquence would daily draw to her part many more to fauour the right shee pretended vnto the Crowne of England who would kindle her ambition and leaue nothing vnattempted to purchase the Kingdome for her That forraigne Embassadors would helpe and assist her purposes and that then the Scots would not faile her when they saw such a faire prey Moreouer the fidelitie of keepers was vncertaine and if she should die in England by sicknesse it would giue occasion of slander and the Queene should bee vexed and turmoiled euery day with new molestations If shee should bee sent into France they feared lest her Cosen 's the Guises would againe pursue the right and claime shee made vnto England vpon a conceit and opinion that she could doe much in England with some for Religions sake with others by the probabilitie of the right whereof I speake and with many vpon a mad desire of innouation Besides that the friendship betweene Scotland and England which is very profitable might be broken and the ancient league betweene France and Scotland renewed which might be more dangerous than in former times when Burgundy was tied vnto England in a stricter league than at this present England hauing now no assured friends but the Scots If shee should be sent backe into Scotland they feared lest the English faction should bee put out of authoritie the French faction raised to the gouernment of affaires the young Prince expoled vnto danger the Religion in Scotland changed the French and other forrainers brought in Ireland more vexed and annoied by the Irish Scots and she her selfe brought into danger of her life by her aduersaries at home Hereupon most of them thought best to detaine her as a lawfull prize and not to bee let goe vntill she had satisfied for the challenging the title of England and answered for the death of DARLY her husband who was a natiue Subiect of England for the mother of DARLY the Countesse of Lennox long since blubbered with teares in her owne name and her husbands also had made a grieuous complaint against her and had besought Queene ELIZABETH that shee might bee arraigned for the death of her sonne●● but shee comforting her with courteous words willed her not to lay such a crime vpon so great a Princesse her nearest Cousin wich could not be proued by any certaine euidence That the times were malicious and vniust spight blinde which doth lay crimes vpon innocent persons but that Iustice which is the punisher of offenders was open eied and sitteth by God On the other side the Lord Herris humbly besought the Queene not to beleeue rashly any thing against the truth against the Queene vnheard and that in Scotland Murrey should not precipitate the Parlament to the preiudice of the expulsed Queene and to the destruction of good Subiects Which though shee vrged exceedingly yet Murrey in the Kings name held the Parlament attainted many that stood for the Queene spoiled and destroied their houses and possessions Hereupon the Queene of England being moued with indignation signified by Midlemore vnto the Regent in bitter words That shee could not endure that by a most pernicious example vnto Kings the sacred authoritie of royall Maiestie should be contemned by Subiects and trodden vnder foot at the pleasure of factious people And howsoeuer they had forgotten the dutie and allegeance of Subiects toward their Princesse yet she could not forget any duty or office of good will and pietie towards her sister and neighbour Queene Therefore it was best for him then to come himselfe or else to giue commission vnto fit and apt men for this businesse who should make answer vnto the complaints of the Queene of Scotland against him and his complices and also yeeld iust reasons for their depriuation of her if hee did not that shee would set her at libertie forthwith and restore her to her Kingdome with all the power she could make And withall willed him not to sell away the Queenes apparell and precious ornaments though the Estates had permitted the same Murrey did as she willed him since he had depended vpon no other place but onely vpon England for this course of his fickle gouernment and the Noblemen of the Realme refused to bee sent on that message To Yorke therefore the place appointed for the meeting came hee himselfe and seuen of his dearest and most familiar friends as Commissioners for the King infant namely Iames Earle of Mourton Adam Bishop of Orkeney Robert Commendator of Dunfermellin Patricke Lord Lindsey Iames Mangill Henry Balnaw and Lidington whom Murrey with faire promises enticed to come with him fearing to leaue him at home and George Buchanan one that would sweare it if Murrey spake it accompanied them The same very day came thither Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolke Thomas Ratcliff Earle of Sussex a little before made President of the North and Sir Ralph Sadleir Knight one of the priuie Councell appointed Commissioners to heare the cause of the depriuation for the Queene of Scotland who tooke it most vnkindly that Queene ELIZABETH would not heare her to speake and yet commanded her Subiects to be heard against her before Commissioners forasmuch as shee being an absolute Prince could not be bound to answer but at pleasure vnto her Subiects accusing her There appeared Iohn Leslie Bishop of Rosse William Lord Leuingston Robert Lord Boyde Gawen Commendator of Kilwiming Iohn Gordon and Iames Cocburne for her When they were met on the seuenth day of October and shewed each one to the other their Letters Patents of their Commission Lidington standing vp and turning to the Scots with a wonderfull bold speech admonished them Forasmuch as it should seeme by the Commission granted to the English men that the Queene of England had no other purpose but that they should defame disgrace and discredit the reputation and good name of their Queene mother to their King and that shee as an vmpire and Iudge should giue sentence that they should consider with themselues discreetly what hate and danger they might draw vpon themselues by accusing her of crimes and bringing her in danger and losse of reputation in this iuridicall and publike forme before English men the professed enemies of the Scottish Nation not onely with the Scots that loued the Queene bu● also with other Christian Princes and her Cousins in France and what reason they could yeeld for this insolent accusation not without the wrong of the Scottish Kingdome vnto the King when he being riper in yeeres shall thinke this action a reproach and dishonour to himselfe his mother and his Countrie also Therefore he thought it most fit to leaue off the odicus accusation of so great a Princesse except the Queene
and that forreigne Princes enemies vnto England did cast their eies vpon the Queene of Scotland as the most certaine Heire of England thought it would bee a better way to establish quietnesse and to containe the Queene of Scotland within bounds that shee were maried to the Duke of Norfolke the greatest and most honourable man of England and a man in the loue of the people and bred vp in the Religion of the Protestants rather than to a forreigne Prince who might bring both the Kingdomes into danger by her meanes and also come so to inherit both the Kingdomes which they heartily wished might be consolidated in a Prince of the English Nation if the King of Scotland should happen to die whom they also purposed to bring into England that hee being the true heire of England being brought vp amongst the English might be better loued of the English men And thus all the scruples about the succession might be taken away Queene ELIZABETH should haue no cause to feare the Duke and the Queene of Scotland when she had the King in her hands Moreouer that the Duke should attempt nothing against him but loue him more dearely They determined to espouse Margaret the Dukes onely and little daughter vnto him to bee maried together when they came to riper yeeres Amongst these were the Earles of Arundell Northumberland Westmerland Sussex Pembrooke and Southampton and very many Barons yea and Leicester himselfe whether in pollicie and to worke the Dukes destruction it is vncertaine yet all these thought it good to acquaint the Queene with the matter and to leaue the decision thereof to her pleasure and that she should prescribe the conditions for the full securitie and safetie of her owne person Religion and the Realme But now take the matter briefly if you please from the very beginning out of the written confession of the Duke which I haue seene and the memorials of the Bishop of Rosse who was the greatest dealer in this businesse When the Commissioners met at Yorke the last yeere Lidington and the Bishop of Rosse to winne his fauour talked with the Duke of a mariage to bee made bebetweene him and the Queene of Scotland and so did Murrey himselfe with the Duke at Hampton Court who in priuate talke with the Duke and also with many others fained that he wished nothing more than that matters in Scotland being set in good order the Queene of Scotland his dearest sister might be restored vnto her former dignitie and estate so that onely she would sincerely and vnfainedly receiue into her former fauour and grace her subiects and that all the remembrances of all offences might be quite forgotten Yet he feared if she maried a husband out of her owne choice from France Spaine or Austria that shee would reuenge the iniuries she had receiued change the Religion receiued in Scotland and procure great danger vnto Engl●●d To preuent these things he promised to bestow all his labour that where shee who had first maried a boy then a rash and heady young man and lastly too a mad-braine those were his very words might now bee maried to the Duke a man of discretion which thing might turne vnto the tranquillitie of both the Realmes the securitie of both the Princes and especially to the establishing of Religion since he such was his respect vnto the Queene of England might more prosperously containe Scotland in the amitie of the English and might with the more ease draw the Queene of Scotland vnto the true Religion which he professed With these same things Murrey also secretly acquainted the Queene of Scotland by Robert Meluin and offered his labour very officiously toward the effecting thereof But the Duke answered that he could determine nothing about the mariage before that shee did cleere her selfe of the crimes obiected against her yet Rosse as diligently as hee could ceased not to draw him to it being vnwilling A few daies after Nicholas Throgmorton met the Duke in the Court at Westminister vnto whom he profesled and offered his seruice very kindly and signified that Leicester would talke with the Duke about the mariage betweene him and the Queene of Scotland which Throgmorton said seemed strange to him since Leicester himselfe sued for the same mariage not long since But he willed the Duke in friendship if it were so that he should giue the honour of that mariage vnto Leicester who had beene before time a suiter therein But if hee stood stifly in it to denie and refuse it because that the Scots did charge her with very many hainous crimes But yet said Throgmorton I wish from my heart that shee were maried vnto you as well for the good of Religion as also that shee may not depend of any other but on our Queene Yet this I forewarne you if you doe any thing in this matter let Leicester guide you by aduice for you of yourselfe shall hardly get the Queenes consent A day or two after Leicester moued the matter to the Duke who answered iust euen as Throgmorton sorewarned him and when hee came to speake of the crimes Leicester extenuated the same and called Richard Candish witnesse whose seruice though suspected he commended vnto the Duke Then Leicester told Pembrooke of the matter and the Duke told Arundell and they together with Throgmorton in their letters commended vnto the Queene of Scotland the Duke as a fit husband which Murrey had done also before The Duke also wrote and signified his loue and offered his seruice in very louing words From that time he imparted vnto them all the letters he wrote vnto her or receiued from her and they talked oftentimes with Rosse about the manner of concluding it And by Richard Candish they propounded in the yeere one thousand fiue hundred threescore and eight vnto the Queene of Scotland these Articles written with Leicesters hand viz. That she attempt nothing to the hurt of the Queene of England and her children in the succession of the Kingdome of England Shee should make a league defensiue and offensiue betweene the two Realmes Shee should establish the Religion of the Protestants in Scotland Shee should receiue into her fauour the Scots which were now her aduersaries She should reuoke the assignation of the Kingdome of England made vnto the Duke of Anjeou She should marie some English Nobleman namely the Noble Prince Thomas Duke of Norfolke If she gaue her consent vnto these Articles they promised to procure the Queene of Englands assent and that she should bee shortly restored vnto her Realme and also bee confirmed in the succession of England She readily admitted them all but onely that she could say nothing vnto the league before the French King was certified thereof Shee protested that there was no assignation made vnto the Duke of Anjeou yet she would procure him to make a release and renuntiation if they stood vpon it And willed them aboue all things to get the consent of
Scotland and of Rosse with the Commentarie hee was astonied but beholding the Commentarie with the letters which he thought had beene burned hee brake out into these words I am betraied and vndone by my seruants because I knew not how to distrust which is the sinew of wisdome But hee besought the Commissioners very humbly to speake vnto the Queene in his behalfe promising that hee would hide nothing that hee knew and solemnly protesting that hee approued nothing which might haue beene wrong vnto the Queene or detriment vnto the Realme yea that hee vtterly condemned the purposes and plots to surprize the Queene and the Tower of London and to set free the Queene of Scotland and that hee neuer had a thought to bring in any forraine forces but onely to suppresse the Scots that rebelled against the Queene The same day being examined of fiftie Articles more or lesse he concealed nothing Then all the course of the businesse was laid downe and declared in the Star-chamber a great assembly of Noblemen the Maior and Aldermen of London being present and afterwards to all the Citizens in the Guild-hall by William Fleetwood the Recorder But when the Bishop of Rosse was accused by the confession of euery one of them and by the Duke himselfe also as the contriuer of the businesse a serious consultation was had what was to be done with him that was an Embassadour For he whiles he thought it lawful for him as such kinde of men vse to doe to aduance the affaires of his Prince by any manner of meanes and not to be brought in question of law vpon the inuiolable priuilege of Embassadours in a strange Court had done many things long since turbulently in kindling a commotion and hauing nightly conferences with the Earle of Southampton and others and now againe with the English f●gitiues in the Low-Countries the Duke of Alba the King of Spaine and the Pope about the inuasion of England Therefore the cause was put to Dauid Lewis Valentine Dale William Aubrey and Henry Iones Doctors of the Ciuill Law 1 First whether an Embassadour that raiseth or procureth rebellion against a Prince vnto whom he is Embassadour may enioy the priuileges of an Embassadour and not be subiect to punishment as an enemie They answered Such an Embassadour by the law of Nations and ciuill Law of the Romans hath lost all the priuileges of an Embassadour and was subiect to punishment 2 Secondly whether an Agent of a Prince who is depriued by publike authoritie and in whose place another is crowned may enioy the priuilege of an Embassadour They answered If such a Prince be lawfully depriued his Agent cannot challenge the priuilege of an Embassadour since none but they which haue the rights of an absolute Prince can appoint Embassadours 3 Thirdly whether a Prince who shall come into the Kingdome of another Prince and bee kept in prison may haue his Agent and whether he be to be accounted an Embassadour They answered If such a Prince who shall come into the Kingdome of another Prince and bee kept in prison hath not lost his principalitie hee may haue an Agent but whether that Procurator may be reputed an Embassadour that dependeth on the authoritie of his Commission or delegation 4 Fourthly whether if any such Prince doe denounce tell to such an Agent and Prince being in prison That this Procurator shall bee accounted no longer for an Embassadour whether this Procurator by the Law may challenge the priuileges of an Embassadour They answered The Prince may forbid the Embassadour that he doe not come into the Realme and command him to depart out of the Realme if hee doe not containe himselfe within the bounds prescribed vnto an Embassadour yet in the meane time hee may vse and enioy the priuileges of an Embassadour according to the authoritie giuen him by his Commission After these answers of the learned Lawyers Rosse being brought backe out of the Isle of Ely was sharply rebuked and told by the Councellors that hee was no more to be acknowledged for an Embassadour but as a plotter of treasons to be seuerely punished He answered That he is the Embassadour of an absolute Queene vniustly depriued That hee had dealt diligently according to his place and dutie for the libertie of his Prince and the good of both the Kingdomes That he came into England with a sufficient authoritie which hee shewed with the most ample authoritie of an Embassadour and that the sacred rights and priuileges of Embassadours are not to bee violated by any meanes Burghley told him in discreet words that neither the priuileges of Embassage nor letters of publike credit did protect Embassadours who offend against the publike Maiestie of the Prince but that they are subiect to punishment otherwise it might bee lawfull for wicked minded Embassadours to attempt any thing against the liues of Princes Hee on the other side stood still in it that the rights and priuileges of Embassadours were neuer violated by the course of Law but that I may vse his owne words by the way of fact and bitingly willed them not to vse him with more rigour than was vsed to the English Embassadour Throgmorton in France and to Tamworth and Randolph in Scotland who had raised sedition and openly maintained it and had not any other punishment but onely were commanded to depart within a time appointed When they vrged him with the testimonies of English men he with faire words requested them not to doe so since it was a long receiued custome which was growne to a Law as hee said That the testimonie of a Scot against an English man and of an English man against a Scot was not to bee receiued After much altercation whether this was to bee allowed but onely betweene the Borderers of both the Kingdomes and that also in matters of the borders and then whether the English Embassadors had raised and fostered rebellions Rosse was committed to the Tower of London where he was kept very close and answered in briefe to all the interrogatories with that caution and warinesse that his answers could hurt no body Hee excused the Queene of Scotland that she being a prisoner and in her best time and age could not but seeke all the meanes she could of libertie since Queene ELIZABETH excluded her from all accesse vnto her put her out of all hope of her libertie and openly maintained her aduersaries He excused the Duke that he had dealt nothing in the mariage with the Queene of Scotland but with the consent of most of the Queenes Councell neither that he could leaue her though hee had promised so to doe vnder his hand for that there had passed a mutuall repromission of future mariage betweene them before that time Lastly he excused himselfe that he being an Embassador could not without a great offence depart from his dutie and abandon his foueraigne Princesse in her affliction and aduersitie and that hee propounded the taking of Queene ELIZABETH for
no other cause but to trie the Dukes minde whether hee stood constant and resolute But the crimes of the other he wittily extenuated and by no meanes he could be induced to tell the names of the Noblemen that promised to helpe the Duke to surprize the Queene But he confessed that he by the commandement of the Queene of Scotland did aske aduice of the Duke Arundell Lumley and Throgmorton by their seruants that came to and fro and the Vicount Mountague by Lumley about the deliuerie of the Castles in Scotland the hostages the deliuerie of the King of Scotland vnto the English men and the restoring of the English Rebels Thus much of these matters this yeere out of the Dukes confessions and the Commentarie of Rosse himselfe written with his owne hand sent to the Queene of Scotland Matthew Earle of Lennox Regent of Scotland Grandfather to the King had summoned an assembly of the Estates at Sterling in the Kings name where liuing securely he was taken on the sudden by the Noblemen of the contrarie faction who held a Parlament at Edenburgh at the same time in the Queenes name He had yeelded himselfe to Dauid Spense of Wormeston who labouring diligently to saue his life was slaine together with the Regent who had gouerned the Realme for the King his Grandchild but foureteene moneths by Bell and Caulder In his place was substituted by the voices of the Kings faction Iohn Areskin Earle of Marre who died after hee had beene Regent but thirteene moneths These dangerous times produced in the Parlament holden in England this Law It was made treason if any attempted any harme or hurt made warre or moued any other to raise warre against the Queene If any affirmed that she possessed not the Crowne rightfully but that others had more right to the Crowne or did say that shee was an Heretike Schismatike or Infidell did vsurpe the right of the Kingdome during her life or shall say that any other hath right to the Crowne or that the Lawes and Statutes cannot define and binde the right of the Crowne and the succession of the same If any in the Queenes life by written or printed booke expresly affirme that any is or ought to be heire or successor of the Queene besides the naturall issue of her owne body or shall print or sell any bookes or schedules to that effect hee and his fautors for the first time shall be imprisoned a whole yeere and lose halfe his goods and for the second offence incurre Premunire that is to lose all his goods and lie in prison for euer This seemed somewhat seuere vnto many who were of opinion that the tranquillitie of the Realme would bee established by the designation of a certaine heire But it is wonderfull what iests somelewd construers of words made of that clause Besides the naturall issue of her body since the Lawyers call them Naturall that are borne out of matrimonie but the legitimate they call out of the forme of words vsed in the Law of England Children of his body lawfully begotten insomuch that being a young man I heard it often said that that word was thrust into the Act by Leicester to the intent that hee might at one time or other thrust vpon them against their wills some Bastard sonne of his as the naturall issue of the Queene An Act was made also at this Parlament that it should bee treason in them who reconciled any to the Church of Rome by any Bulls or Rescripts of the Popes or any that were reconciled they that releeued the reconcilers or brought in any Agnus Dei Grana Crucifixes or other things consecrated by the Pope into England should incurre the penaltie of Premunire And that it should bee misprision of treason in them that did not discouer their reconcilers It was moued in the same Parlament that if the Queene of Scotland did offend againe against the Lawes of England that they might proceed against her according to the Law as against the wife of a Peere of the Kingdome of England but the Queene would not suffer it to passe Anno 1572. ON the sixteenth day of Ianuarie Thomas Howard Duke of Norfolke was arraigned at Westminster Hall before George Talbot Earle of Shrewsburie appointed for that day Lord high Steward of England and on both sides of him sate the Peeres namely Reynold Grey Earle of Kent Thomas Ratclif Earle of Sussex Henry Hastings Earle of Huntingdon Francis Russell Earle of Bedford Henry Herbert Earle of Pembrooke Edward Seymer Earle of Hertford Ambrose Dudley Earle of Warwicke Robert Dudley Earle of Leicester Walter Deuereux Viscount Hereford Edward Clintōn Admirall William Lord Howard of Effingham Chamberlaine William Cecill Lord Burghley Secretarie Arthur Lord Grey of Wilton Iames Blount Lord Mountioy William Lord Sands Thomas Lord Wentworth William Lord Burrough Lewis Lord Mordant Iohn Powlet Lord Saint-Iohn of Basing Robert Lord Rich Roger Lord North Edmund Bruges Lord Chandois Oliuer Lord Saint-Iohn of Bletneshoo Thomas Sackuill Lord Buckhurst and William West Lord De La-ware Silence being made the Letters Patents of the Commission was read then a white wand was deliuered vnto the Lord Steward by Garter King at Armes which hee shortly after deliuered vnto the Serieant at Armes who stood by and held it vp all the while Then the Earles and Barons were called by their names and euery one made answer to his name Then silence was made againe and the Lieutenant of the Tower was commanded to returne his precept and to bring the Duke to the Barre Forthwith he was brought in and Sir Owen Hopton stood on the one side of him and Sir Peter Carew on the other side and next by him stood a man holding an Axe with the edge from the Duke Silence being made againe the Clerke of the Crowne said thus to the Duke Thomas Duke of Norfolke late of Keningale in the Countie of Norfolke hold vp thy hand which when hee had done the Clerke read the Inditement with a loud voice that is to say That in the eleuenth yeere of Queene ELIZABETH and after the Duke did traiterously deuise to put her from her Crowne and to kill her and to raise warre against her and to bring in forraine forces to inuade the Realme That whereas he knew MARIE late Queene of Scotland to haue claimed the Diadem of England with the title and armes thereof yet hee without the Queenes knowledge intended to marrie with her and lent her a great summe of money contrarie to the promise he had made vnder his owne hand That whereas he knew the Earles of Northumberland and Westmerland Markenfield and others had raised rebellion against the Queene and were fled into Scotland he releeued them with money That in the thirteenth yeere of the Queene hee by letters requested aid of men from Pope Pius Quintus the professed enemie of the Queene the King of Spaine and the Duke of Alba to deliuer the Queene of Scotland and to restore Papistrie into England
the Queene to these conditions namely To acknowledge the Religion established in Scotland To submit themselues to the King and also to Mourton as his Regent and to his successors in the gouernment To renounce the authoritie of all others To account them Traitors by authoritie of Parlament that attempted any thing against the Religion the King or Regent That the sentence against the Hamiltons and the Gordons should be repealed c. But these conditions William Kircaldy Lord of Grange the Lord Hume Lidington and the Bishop of Dunkelden and others who thought the Queene of Scotland to be iniuriously vsed would vpon no termes admit but fortified the Castle of Edenburgh of which Grange was Captaine placed therein by Murrey looking for aid from France and the Duke of Alba but Sir William Drury being sent into Scotland with forces out of England to ioine with the Scots the same Castle was yeelded in the three and thirtieth day of the siege and so the Castle and all the prisoners were deliuered vnto the Regent who hanged Kircaldy without mercie spared Hume and others at the request of Queene ELIZABETH Lidington was sent to Lieth where he died not without suspicion of poison And to the end that England might also bee more secure from clandestine attempts at home on the behalfe of the Queene of Scotland Iohn Lesly Bishop of Rosse who very faithfully had serued his Queene yet with the destruction of many men and danger of more was deliuered out of prison and commanded to depart out of England and went into France fearing Southampton whom by his appeaching he had brought in danger and also Henry Howard the Duke of Norfolkes brother to mollifie whose anger hee wrote an Apologie He was scarce departed but his secret Letter-carrier Henry Cokin was taken and by him was Morgan detected who prompt to doe some exploit for the Queene of Scotland and desirous to haue done somewhat forthwith fled away Atsloe the Physitian for the Papists and Goad Doctors of Physicke and Francis Berty because they had secret commerce of letters with her were put certaine moneths in prison And for the same cause Henry Goodyer and Richard Louder were called into question In the meane while Rosse did not pretermit any part or dutie of a most faithfull subiect to the Queene of Scotland towards the Emperour the Pope the French King and the Catholike Princes of Germanie who euery one gaue good words and hopes but yet performed nothing And also the Duke of Alba in whom he put his greatest trust did at this time depart out of the Low-Countries to his great griefe Anno 1574. HEnry the third of that name King of France and his mother did all that they could by secret deuices to get the young King of Scotland into France and to get Mourton out of his office of Regent sending secretly Scots out of the French Guard for this purpose into Scotland which thing the Queene of Scotland desired much being perswaded that if her sonne were in France out of danger that shee and the Papists in England should be dealt withall more mildly For hereupon she thought it would come to passe that the faction in Scotland hitherto countenanced by the authoritie of the Kings name would decay and come to nothing and that the English men would feare him more and more as hee grew vp in yeeres as well from France as out of Scotland And as much did the French men wish the same secretly fearing lest the Regent of Scotland depending wholly on the English should dissolue the ancient league betweene the Scots and the French Yet when the Regent earnestly requested that a league of mutuall defence betweene England and Scotland might bee made hee was not heard perhaps for that he requested withall that an annuall pension might bee assigned vnto him and vnto certaine other Scots But they were heard who with a small suspicion touched the Queene of Scotland the Countesse and Earle also of Shrewsburie as though they had wrought a mariage betweene Charles Vncle vnto the King of Scotland vnto whom the King had lately in the Parlament confirmed the Earledome of Lennox and Elizabeth Candish daughter to the Countesse of Shrewsburie by her former husband without the Queenes knowledge For which cause the mothers of both them and others were kept in prison and all the fault was laid vpon the Queene of Scotland And when sundry suspicions grew of the intent and purpose of this mariage Henry Earle of Huntingdon was made Lord President of the Councell in the North with new and secret instructions concerning this matter Anno 1575. THis yeere died in Scotland the most Noble Lord Iames Hamilton Duke of Chasteauleroy and Earle of Arran who was the Grand-childes sonne of Iames the second King of Scotland by his daughter the Tutor of Queene MARIE of Scotland and Gouernour of the Kingdome and heire designed while she was in her minoritie At such time as he had deliuered her vnto the French men hee was made Duke of Chasteauleroy in France then chiefe of the three Gouernours of Scotland appointed by MARIE in her captiuitie Whose cause while he defended most constantly he being a plaine and well-meaning man was vexed with all manner of politike and craftie deuices by turbulent and vnquiet minded people Anno 1577. DOn Iohn d'Austria had made a perpetuall edict at Gaunt to giue satisfaction to the Estates of the Netherlands for their aggrieuances which the Prince of Orange vtterly condemning opportunely heard that Don Iohn intended to marrie the Queene of Scotland on which he willingly laid hold and forthwith certified Queene ELIZABETH thereof by Famier thereby to withdraw her minde from peace yet she as one ignorant thereof by Daniel Rogers shewed her gladnesse of the perpetuall edict of peace though now she had certaine knowledge that Don Iohn by the perswasion of the Earle of Westmerland and the English fugitiues and forward fauour of the Pope and the Guises had in hope swallowed that mariage and withall the Kingdomes of England and Scotland and had already appointed to surprize the I le of Man in the Irish Sea as a fit place to inuade England out of Ireland and the West borders of Scotland wherein the Queene of Scotland had many assured friends as also in the opposite side of England North-wales Cumberland Lancashire and Cheshire where most of the inhabitants were earnest Papists But indeed Don Iohn as wee haue learned of Perez Secretarie to the King of Spaine before now ambitiously minded when hee had lost the hope of the Kingdome of Tunise had dealt couertly with the Pope about the expulsion of Queene ELIZABETH the marrying of the Queene of Scotland and the conquest of England and vnknowne to Philip had preuailed so farre that the Pope as out of the care of the common good moued Philip to make warre against England and Don Iohn himselfe being to depart into the Low-Countries had prosecuted it earnestly in Spaine and afterwards by
That secret snares were so cunningly laid that whether they would or no they should bee brought within the compasse of treason and that they had no hope of safetie at home And to say the truth very craftie trickes and deuices were deuised and vsed to trie mens minds counterfeit letters vnder the names of the Queene of Scotland and the fugitiues couertly sent and left in the houses of Papists spies dispersed in euery place to hearken after rumours and to take aduantage of words bringers of tales whatsoeuer information they brought were receiued and entertained very many examined vpon suspicion and amongst them Henry Earle of Northumberland and his sonne Philip Earle of Arundel commanded to keepe his house and his wife deliuered vnto the keeping of Thomas Sherley William Howard brother to the Earle and Henry Howard their Vncle brother vnto the Duke of Norfolke oftentimes examined concerning letters from the Queene of Scotland from Charles Paget c. who escaped very narrowly for all his prudence and innocencie The Lord Paget and Charles Arundel being arriued in France were watched and obserued by Edward Stafford the Queenes Lieger Embassador with the French King but yet he could not finde out their purposes and practises Yet dealt he with the French King that they Morgan and other Englishmen plotting against their Prince and Countrey might be remoued out of France He was answered If they practised any thing in France that the King would punish them according to the Law that the King could not take knowledge and doe iustice on them if they bad plotted any thing in England That all Kingdomes are free vnto them that flie thither for succour that it behoueth all Kings euery one to defend and maintaine the liberties of his Kingdome and that Queene Elizabeth not long since had receiued into her kingdome Montgomery the Prince of Condee and other Frenchmen and that at this very time the Embassador of the King of Nauarre practising some plots lieth in England About such time as these things were done Bernardino de Mendoza Embassador for the King of Spaine in England passed in great secrecie into France fretting and fuming as if he had beene driuen violently out of England and the right of an Embassador thereby violated when he himselfe being a man of a violent and turbulent spirit abusing the sacred right of Embassade vnto treason was to be pursued as many were of opinion after the ancient manner of seueritie with fire and sword and commanded to depart out of the Kingdome for he medled and was accessary with the wicked plots of Throgmorton and others to bring in forraine power into England to dispossesse the Queene And when he was mildly reproued of those things he was so farre from wiping the obiections away with a modest answer that he re-charged againe the Queene and her Counsellors with their detention of the money of the Genowayes with the succours giuen vnto the Estates of the Netherlands and vnto the Duke of Aniou and vnto Don Antonio the Portugall and with the piracies and spoiles made by Drake Yet lest the King of Spaine should thinke that the lewd parts of Mendoza were not reuenged but the rights of an Embassador violated William Waad Clerke of the Counsell is sent into Spaine who should plainly informe him how badly he had discharged the office of an Embassador and withall should signifie lest the Queene in sending him away might seeme to renounce the ancient amitie betweene the Kingdomes that all kinde and friendly offices should be done on her part if he sent any other as his Embassador who was desirous and willing to conserue the amitie betweene them conditionally that the same courtesies might be shewne vnto her Embassadour in Spaine But when the King of Spaine would not vouchsafe to admit Waad vnto his speech but referred him to his Counsellors he taking it in euill part without feare spake openly that it was a most vsuall and receiued custome that Embassadors should be admitted to the presence of Princes euen by their enemies and in the time of the hottest warres And that Charles the fifth the Emperour father to the King of Spaine admitted to his presence the Herald who from the French King denounced warre against him and in plaine termes denied to acquaint the Counsellors with his errand And when Idiaques Secretary to the King of Spaine could by no policie get out of him what his message was at last he receiued all the matter from Mendoza lurking secretly in France Then he laying aside his publike person in familiar manner signified vnto Waad that he was very sorry that there were some who cunningly laboured to breake the amitie and to nourish discord betweene the Princes that wrong was done to the Catholike King himselfe not vnto his Embassadors first to Despes and now vnto Mendoza and that there was no cause why he should accuse vnto the King any more Mendoza who was sufficiently disgraced by his ignominious sending out of England or complaine that he was not admitted And that the Catholike King did no more but like for like since Mendoza had beene dismissed without audience and as she had referred Mendoza vnto her Counsellors so the King in like manner put him off vnto the Cardinall Granuellan When Waad answered that there was much difference betweene him who had neuer offended the Catholike King and Mendoza who had offended grieuously against the Queene and had a long time not vouchsafed to come vnto her and had committed things vnfitting an Embassadour Yet he could not be admitted and not being heard he returned home The most of the crimes which he was to obiect against Mendoza were taken out of the confession of Throgmorton Who being readie to be apprehended had secretly sent a deske wherein his secrets lay vnto Mendoza His other desks being narrowly searched there were found two Rolls or Lists in one of the which the names of the Hauens of England which were fit to land Forces in the other the names of the Noblemen and Gentlemen of England who professed the Roman Catholike Religion were written downe As soone as he saw them brought out and shewne to him he cried out often that he neuer saw them before and that they were foisted in to worke his destruction yea euen when he was examined vpon the racke but laid againe vpon the racke he denied not to answer vnto their Interrogatories Being asked of those Rolls or Catalogues and for what purpose they were written he made this historicall narration That he a few yeeres since going vnto the waters at the Spaw did consult and deuise with Ieney and Fra Inglefield how England might be inuaded and the forme of gouernment thereof altered and changed and vpon that reason that he set downe the names of the Hauens and of the Noblemen That Morgan by his letters had signified vnto him out of France that the Catholike Princes had now consulted and determined that England should be inuaded and the
Queene of Scotland deliuered vnder the conduct of Guise as Generall who wanted nothing but money and some bands of men in England to ioyne with him to his helpe To procure these things that Charles Paget vnder the counterfet name of Mope was sent secretly into Sussex where the Duke of Guise determined to land his Armie That he acquainted Mendoza who had notice and knowledge of these things already by the Conspirators with the matter and told him the names of the Hauens and Noblemen Neither did he denie that he promised his furtherance and withall to haue admonished Mendoza with what Noblemen he being a publike person should treat of this matter which he being a priuate man could not doe without great danger and that he shewed a way to him how some principall Catholikes as soone as the forraine Forces were landed might leuie souldiers in the Queenes name and then to ioyne them to the forraine Forces These things he voluntarily confessed Yet at the Barre in the Guildhall of London being accused of these things he precisely denied euery one of these things and auerred that they were meere deuices of his owne head to auoid the torment of the racke againe and openly accused the Queene of crueltie and the examiners of falshood deuising an escapatorie or starting-hole by the space of time which was betweene the fault committed and the iudgement Forasmuch as in the thirteenth yeere of Queene ELIZABETH certaine things were made treasons for the which none should be arraigned except the delinquent were indited within six moneths after the fault committed and the crime was proued by the testimonie and oath of two men or by the voluntary confession of the offender without violence and that this time was expired long since and that therefore he was not to be arraigned for the same But the Iudges told him that the crimes obiected vnto him were not of that kinde but that he was liable to the Law by an ancient law of treason made in the time of King Edward the third which admitteth no circumscription of time or proofe and that by that law the sentence of death was pronounced against him Being afterward perswaded he fled vnto the mercy of the Queene and againe confessed in a writing more fully all things which he had said before which things not perseuering in his words he began to denie againe at the gallowes but in vaine M. Waad being returned out of Spaine was sent to the Q. of Scotland about a treatie to be had between her and Sir Walter Mildmay which was propounded two yeeres since and interrupted as is said before vnto whom she affirmed with great protestations with what sinceritie she hath dealt about this treatie and withall deuoteth herselfe and all her labour vnto the Queene and promiseth to depend wholly on her if onely shee would vouchsafe her so much loue and honour Moreouer she firmely promised so that the treatie might goe forward that she would intercede yea and bring to passe that her sonne should receiue Angus and the other Noblemen of Scotland into fauour and also that the Bishops of Rosse and Glasco her Agents and Ministers in France should not plot any thing against the Queene and Kingdome of England and that shee would haue nothing to doe with the Rebels or Fugitiues of England Queene ELIZABETH was glad to heare these things and whereas that Angus Marre I Hamilton and Glammys were fled into England and making vse of the opportunitie offered sent Beale vnto the Queene of Scotland who together with the Earle of Shrewsburie should shew her that if shee continued in the same minde with which shee had acquainted Master Waad that Mildmay should come forthwith vnto her and treat with her about her libertie and then should talke with her in the meane while to entreat her sonne the King to restore the Scottish Fugitiues and to tell her that they had committed no fault against the King but against some violent Counsellors who gaue him euill counsell and lastly that as much as they could they should get out of her the pract●ses of the Guises She being a wise woman answered That she much desired that the treatie might goe forward and that shee requested earnestly of Queene ELIZABETH as of her eldest sister vnto whom shee gaue all honour That shee had propounded nothing vnto Master Waad but vpon condition and that hee whom shee thought to bee an honest man would not say otherwise For the restoring of the Scots that her labour therein would be very necessary and should not be wanting if she certainly knew any good would redound to her selfe and her sonne so that they would humbly submit themselues vnto the King and be obedient vnto him but if that were not done that then the Queene should giue aid vnto her sonne that they might bee reduced vnto their obedience Moreouer she doth not cloake nor hide it that she when she was sickly committed her selfe and her sonne vnto the care and trust of the Guise her most deare Cousin of whose purposes or intents shee knew nothing neither would she discouer them if she knew them vnlesse a firme assurance were giuen her of her libertie for that it was the part of an vnaduised person to forsake her assured friends for an vncertaine hope She requested that she being an absolute Prince might bee no more dishonourably vsed than Queene MARIE did sometime deale with her selfe being at that time her subiect and imprisoned or than the French King did vse the King of Nauarre being also his subiect and bore armes against him Shee also requested that the treatie might bee brought to an end before any in Scotland were sent Embassadour about that matter And for that the French King had acknowledged her ordinarie Embassadour and Seton sent by her sonne into France as Embassadours from Princes of the same authoritie and conioyned she gaue that honour to the Queene to publish this Association of her and her sonne in Scotland and besought her not to preiudicate the same These things were heard but by terrors obiected shifted off and deluded by the meanes of them who know how to nourish the hatred betweene the women that bore no in ward good will one to the other especially by the discouerie of the papers which Chreycton a Scottish Iesuite sailing into Scotland and intercepted by some Sea-rouers of Holland tore in peeces but the torne papers cast out of the ship were cast againe into the ship by a contrary wind not without a miracle as Chreycton himselfe said and glewed together by the great labour and singular skill of Waad laid open and discouered new plots of the Pope of the King of Spaine and the Guises about the inuading of England Therefore to occurre vnto and preuent the wicked counsels and secret policies of seditious persons and to prouide for the Queenes safetie vpon the which both the Kingdome and Religion depended Many men Leicester being the beginner of all estates in England
Royall Maiesty could exempt her from answering in this kingdome and mildly he admonished her to heare the obiections made against her if not they threatned they both might and would proceed against her by the authority of the law She answered That she was not a subiect and had rather die a thousand times than acknowledge her selfe a subiect since that by acknowledging it she should doe preiudice and wrong vnto the highnesse of the Maiestie of Kings and withall should confesse her selfe to be bound vnto all the lawes of England euen in matters of Religion Neuerthelesse she was ready to answer vnto all things in a full and free Parlament since that she is ignorant if onely for a fashion and a shew this assembly was appointed against her already condemned with their fore-iudgements therefore she closely admonisheth them to looke vnto their consciences and to remember that the Theater of the whole world was farre more spacious than the kingdome of England Lastly she began to complaine of the iniuries done vnto her and the Treasurer to rehearse the benefits of Queene ELIZABETH bestowed vpon her viz. that shee had punished many who did impugne the right she challenged vnto England and had hindered that she was not condemned by the Estates of the Realme for the pursuing the mariage with the Duke of Norfolke the rebellion in the North and other things which things when she seemed to make slight of they went away After a few houres by Powlet and the Solicitor they shewed the heads of the letters Pa●ents and the names of the Commissioners that shee might see that they were to deale formally and in good fashion vprightly and not according to the qui●kes of law and extraordinarily She made no exception against the Commissioners but a bitter one against the new or late Act vpon which al the authority of the Commissioners depended that is to wit that it was vniustly deuised purposely against her that there was no example of the like proceeding and that shee would neuer submit her selfe to triall vpon that Act. She asked by what law they would proceed against her If by the Ciuill or Cano● lawes she said the expounders were to be sent for to Pauy or Poytiers and other outlandish Vniuersities since that fit men were not to be found in England Moreouer she added that it was euident by plaine words in the letters that she was accounted guiltie of the fault although she was not heard and therefore shee had no reason to appeare before them and she required to be satisfied of many scruples in these letters which she had noted confusedly and in haste by her selfe alone but shee would not deliuer them in writing for that it did not beseeme a King or Prince to play the scribe About this matter those Commissioners selected came to her againe vnto whom she signified that shee did not vnderstand the meaning of these words Since she is in the protection of the Queene The Chancellor answered This to be apparant enough to any one of vnderstanding but yet it is not the duty of Subiects to expound what the Queene meant neither were they made Commissioners for that cause Then she requested that the protestation which she had made in former times to bee shewed and to be allowed It was answered that it was neuer allowed neither that it was to be allowed now for that it was a wrong to the Crowne of England Shee asked by what authoritie they would proceed It was answered by the authority of the letters Patents and the law of England But you said shee make lawes as you list vnto which it is no reason why I should submit my selfe since that the Englishmen in former times refused to submit themselues vnto the Salicke law of the Frenchmen But if they proceeded by the law of England they should bring a president for their doings since that that law for the most part consisted vpon examples and customes But if by the Canon Law then no other men ought to expound the same but the makers of them It was answered that they would proceed neither by the Ciuill nor Canon lawes but by the lawes of England But yet that by the Ciuill and Canon lawes it might be shewed that shee ought to appeare before them if she did not refuse to heare this neither did she refuse to heare but as in way of communication but not by way of Iustice or triall Hereupon she fell into other speeches viz. that she neuer compassed or deuised any thing to hurt or kill the Queene that she had beene offended at the wrongs and indignities done to her that she should bee a stumbling blocke if she were discourteously vsed That she did by Nauus offer her labour and best meanes for the reuocation of the Popes Bull That she would haue defended her innocency by letters neither was this permitted And to conclude that all her offices of good will for this twenty yeeres haue beene reiected with such like small digressions her going on further they called backe and bade her to say in plaine termes whether shee would answer before the Commissioners Shee replied That this their authority was giuen to them by the new act made to ensnare her That she could not endure the Lawes of the Queene which she vpon good reason suspected That shee hauing beene hitherto of good courage would not now wrong her ancestors the Kings of Scotland by acknowledging that shee is a subiect of the Crowne of England for this is no other thing than openly to confesse them thereby to haue beene rebels and traitors Yet that she refused not to answer so she be not reduced vnto the ranke of a subiect and that she had rather die a thousand times than to answer as a Criminall offender Vnto these speeches Hatton the Vice-Chamberlaine of the Queene said You are accused but not condemned to haue conspired to kill our Lady and anointed Queene You say you are a Queene Be it so But the Royall estate of a Queene doth not exempt you from answering vnto such a crime as this is neither by the Ciuill nor Canon law nor by the law of Nations nor by the law of Nature For all Iustice would be of no force yea be vtterly ouerthrowne if faults of such nature should be committed without punishment If you bee innocent you doe wrong to your credit by flying from triall You protest your selfe to be innocent but Queene ELIZABETH is of another minde and not without cause but truly to her great griefe Therefore to examine your innocency shee hath sent with authoritie most honourable most wise and most vpright men who with equity and with fauour are to heare you and they will reioyce from their heart if you cleare your selfe of this crime Beleeue me the Queene her selfe will be very glad who said to mee at my departure that there could not a thing haue happened more grieuous vnto her than that you are charged with this fault Wherefore laying
a punishment iustly inflicted cannot be thought to be bloudie no more than a medicine prepared and made as it ought fitly for the sicknesse can be accounted violent Howsoeuer the Guises cousins vnto the Scottish Queene take it the Queene hath more occasion and it concernes her more to respect and regard rather the safetie and good of her Nobilitie and people of whose loue shee wholly dependeth than the displeasure of any other whosoeuer and that matters were now come vnto that passe that that old prouerbe of the two Princes Conradino the Sicilian and Charles of Anjou may be vsed and truly said of the two Queenes THE DEATH OF MARIE THE LIFE OF ELIZABETH AND THE LIFE OF MARIE DEATH OF ELIZABETH That the promises of the French King and of the Guises cannot giue assurance of securitie vnto the Queene and the Realme much lesse make amends for her death if she be made away That the French King cannot finde out the secret plots contriued against him at home much lesse against the Queen of England For that treason is closely handled and therefore ineuitable and vnauoidable If the wicked fact be once done what will it doe good to challenge their promise How may the losse for the death of an incomparable Prince be repaired or recompenced and what remedie may be found for the Republike giuing vp the ghost with her in a most lamentable confusion of all things The hand-writings of the Guises who thinke it a meritorious act to dispatch them who are enemies to the Pope and may very easily obtaine and get dispensations for their oath be of small moment or importance or of none at all And what English man is it that will accuse them for killing the Queene ELIZABETH after her death and after that the Queene of Scotland being of the Family of the Guises is enstalled in the Crowne of England What can one recall her backe vnto life thereby But in that the Ambassadors haue called this iudgement rigorous and extraordinarie they haue said it without due consideration for as much as they haue neither seene the processe nor the probations and haue too bitterly taxed the Estates of the Realme of England men of great account chosen for their nobilitie vertue prudence and pietie yea moreouer that they haue absolutely spoken such like words as if they came from the French King very inconsiderately making shew that they would feare with their threats and menaces the Queene and the Estates of the Realme That the English-men are not accustomed to be terrified with threats of the French-men from taking a course and means to establish and settle their securitie for as much as they in the meane time did not shew nor demonstrate any fit or conuenient way or meanes of auerting or putting away the instant and imminent dangers of England But the malitious and spightful enemies of the Queen of Scotland tooke occasions all they could of hastening her death and caused the more to affright Queene ELIZABETH knowing well that in the greatest danger of safetie feare doth exclude all mercie false rumours to be spread in euery place of England daily with fearefull out-cries viz. That the Spanish Eleet were alreadie arriued in the Hauen of Milford that the Scots had inuaded England that the Duke of Guise was landed with a strong armie in Sussex that the Qu. of Scotland was escaped out of prison and had leuied many souldiers that the Northerne men were vp in rebellion that there were other Ruffians who had conspired to kill the Queene and to burne the Citie of London yea and that the Queene was dead and other things of like kinde which either craftie people or men afraid vse to faine in their owne conceits or to increase out of an inbred desire or humour to nourish and vphold rumors and Princes who are vpon curiositie credulous take quickly hold of By such like bugges and formidable arguments the Queenes minde wauering and in great care was by them drawne so farre that shee signed letters by which the mortall sentence of death was commanded to be put in execution and one of the chiefest perswader as the Scots say was Patricke Gray a Scot sent by the King of Scotland to disswade the Queene from putting his mother to death who oftentimes would beat into the Queenes eares that old word Dead men doe not bite But she being by nature slow in her doings began to ballance in her minde whether it were better to take her out of the way or to spare her Not to put her to death these things moued her Her inbred clemencie lest she should seeme to vse crueltie against a woman and she a Princesse and also her kinswoman feare of infamie with the posteritie out of the histories and the dangers hanging thereon as well from the King of Scotland who should then come a step neerer vnto the hope of England as from the Catholike Princes and desperate fellowes who then would aduenture on any thing But if she spared her she fore-saw no lesse dangers at hand That the Noblemen who had giuen sentence against the Queene of Scotland would closely purchase fauour with her and her sonne not without her danger that the rest of her subiects that were very carefull and desirous of her safetie would take it in euill part when they saw themselues to haue lost their labour and thenceforth would neglect her safetie many more would ioyne themselues vnto the profession of the Papists and conceiue greater hope when they saw her conserued as it were by the decree of heauen vnto the hope of the kingdome that the Iesuits and Seminarists when they see her sickly and feare shee will not liue long would bestirre themselues to accelerate the death of Queene ELIZABETH that their Religion may be restored The Courtiers also without any intermission suggested these things and the like Why dost thou spare her that is faultie and iustly condemned who subscribed vnto the Association for thy safetie yet forthwith resolued to vse crueltie against thee being innocent and by thy destruction to tyrannize ouer Religion the Nobilitie and Commons That mercie is a royall vertue but is not to be shewed to them that haue no mercie Let the vaine and idle shew of mercie giue place and yeeld vnto wholesome seueritie Your clemencie hath sufficient cause of commendation in that it hath pardoned her once before to spare her againe is no other thing but to pronounce her not guiltie and to condemne the Estates of the Realme of iniustice to encourage the hearts of her agents to hasten and accelerate the accomplishment of their wicked designes and to dishearten the faithfull Subiects to conserue the Common-wealth Religion the Common-wealth thy owne incolumitie the loue of thy Countrey the oath of Association and the care of the Posteritie with conioyned prayers doe beseech thee that she who ouerthroweth and subuerteth all these seuerall things may with all speed be rid and dispatched out of the way and if they
it vnto Burleigh Burleigh vnto the rest of the Counsellors who all gaue their consent to the quicke dispatch of the execution and euery one vowed to stand to it and to sticke one to another and sent Beale with the Mandate and Letters The third day after when I perceiued that her minde wauered hearing her tell a dreame of the death of the Queen of Scotland I asked if she had changed her minde she said no but said shee another way might haue beene inuented and withall asked if any answer were comefrom Powlet And when I had shewed his letters wherein in plaine termes be refused to take vpon him that which was neither honourable nor iust she chasing said that he and others who had taken the oath of the Association were periured and forsworne men as they who had promised many things but would performe nothing But I shewed her how vniust and infamous this would be and into what danger shee brought Powlet and Drury For if shee approued and allowed the fact shee should draw to her selfe both danger and dishonour with the note of iniustice but if shee disauowed and disallowed the fact shee ouerthrew vtterly those well deseruing men and their posteritie And afterwardshee on the same day the Queene of Scotland was put to death slightly checked mee that the execution was not done What griefe and anger soeuer Queen ELIZABETH conceiued or made shew of for the death of the Queen of Scotland I am sure the King of Scotland her only son tooke it wonderfull heauily who with the most admirable pietie that could bee in a sonne reuerenced his most deare mother and mourned and lamented for her exceedingly For he did not thinke that Queene ELIZABETH in regard of the mutuall loue that was betweene them and the league of stricter friendship lately made betweene them neglecting the so many intercessions of Princes would haue deliuered his mother a Prince of equall estate and her neerest cousin of the Royal bloud into the hands of a base hangman He suffered not Mr. Robert Cary sonne to the Lord Hunsdon who was sent from England to excuse the Queene by laying the fault vpon her Counsellors and Dauison to come into Scotland and hardly would heare him by another man and with much suit receiued the letters he brought Called his Ambassadour out of England and threatned reuenge And some there were that perswaded him that other Princes of Christendome would not let such an iniury done vnto the Maiestie and Royall name of a King goe vnpunished The Estates of Scotland who were assembled in great number professed that they were most readie to reuenge the death of his mother and to defend his right to the Crowne of England yea and to spend their liues and goods in the quarrell and that they could not disgest the iniurie done not onely vnto the King but also vnto the whole Nation of the Scots Some there were who perswaded the King to require aid of ships and of a Nauie of the King of Denmarke vnto whose daughter he began then to sue for mariage Some who were addicted to the Romane Religion suggested vnto him that hee should rather ioyne with the Kings of Spaine and France and with the Pope and so hee might with case get the possession of England And aboue all things to giue no credit vnto the Protestants of England who now ruled all and closely plotted to destroy him also whispering this in his eares He that hath killed the mother will also kill the children if he can Some there were who secretly aduised him to keepe himselfe as Newter openly and to hold both the Protestants and Romanists in suspence For if that hee shewed himselfe openly for the Protestants the Romanists of Europe will lay all their plots against him and would set vp another prop and stay in England to his great danger Some also there were who aduised him to keepe a firme peace with England and not to put his certaine hope vpon the vncertaine fortune of warre And to be constant in his Religion in the which if hee once wauered he should neither get nor purchase friends nor lessen nor diminish his enemies Thus euery man as their fancie gaue or their profit lead them spake But the King being more prouident and more wittie than his age gaue him vsed no haste which is alwaies blinde but weighed their counsels in his minde considerately and maturely a long time both with himselfe and a very few others But Queene ELIZABETH by laying all the fault on Dauison and the rash credulitie of her Counsellors so to mitigate his griefe and sorrow by little and little lest the comfort giuen out of season might more exasperate him and so stayed vntill his sorrow lessened by length of time would suffer it selfe to be handled But when shee saw the French egge on the King to reuenge she fearing lest he by their policies and vpon a burning heat of reuenge should be drawne away from the Religion of the Protestants and the friendship of the English she laboured with all her power to pacifie his minde exulcerated and in a manner alienated from her by all meanes not vnworthy of a Prince Therefore by her Messengers and Agents and after by the Lord Hunsdon Gouernour of Berwicke she proposeth these weightie and important Reasons most diligently First what a dangerous thing it may be for him to breake into open warre against England for this cause which seemed vnto the Estates of England to be as well necessarie for the safetie of the whole Island as also most iust Then let him consider if he be of abilitie to take such a warre in hand for as much as England was neuer better furnished with Military men and Leaders with forces and riches and Scotland exhausted with intestine warres neuer more weake If he depended vpon forraine aid with what great difficultie and how long it would be ere hee can get it and if he doe obtaine it what successe can hee hope for since that England hauing the Fleets of Holland and Zealand ioyned thereunto hath no cause to feare the most mightie and potent Kings of Europe What hope can he place in the French King or the King of Spaine For as much as his power much increased and augmented by the accession and addition of England may crosse or empeach their designes and purposes for that his Religion may be so opposed vnto their profession that they cannot helpe and aid him but with their owne losse and detriment Neither can the French King see with a contented minde the King of Scotland to be augmented with the Kingdome of England for feare lest hee should with warre prosecute the ancient right of the English-men in France or else giue helpe or succour vnto the Guises his Cousins who at this time gape after the Realme of France But the King of Spaine without all doubt will doe all things to serue his ambitious humour for as much as he vaunteth himselfe to be the first Catholike Prince of the bloud Royall of England and the stocke of Lancaster though vntruly In respect of which some Iesuites and others also endeuoured to aduance him whilest the Queene of Scotland was yet liuing vnto the Crowne of England as a man most fit to restore the Roman authority in England the mother and the sonne being not respected nor regarded Moreouer they perswaded him that shee determined in her last Will and Testament to bequeath the Kingdome of England vnto this King of Spaine if her sonne continued in the Religion of the Protestants What may be the meaning of these things and whereunto they may tend and what aid and helpe can be hoped for from the King of Spaine the King may thereby see and perceiue And withall if he shall reuolt and fall from his Religion in the which he hath beene brought vp with what great ignominie he may precipitate and cast head-long his soule into eternall damnation and the whole Iland of Britaine into danger and destruction Moreouer he is to consider and be aduised lest the Estates of England who haue giuen sentence against his mother doe not exclude him altogether from the right of Succession by a new sentence whose loue by yeelding and giuing place vnto necessitie and restraining the passionate motions of his minde he may easily winne and purchase vnto him for as much as that which is done cannot be vndone And at his time he may possesse and enioy quietly the most flourishing Kingdome of England In the meane time he may enioy securitie and may seeme with all men indifferent men that haue vnderstanding and consideration of things to haue receiued no blemish in his honour for as much as when time was he omitted no part of a most pious and vertuous sonne toward his mother And let him assuredly perswade himselfe that the Queene of England would account and vse him most louingly and affectionately as if shee were his owne mother These things shee caused to be beaten into the head of the King of Scotland and that he should not doubt but that his mother was put to death without her knowledge and to confirme him in that opinion shee determined to send vnto him the sentence giuen against Dauison in the Starre-chamber vnder the hands of all the Commissioners and also vnder the Great Seale of England And also another instrument to please him the more signed with the hands of all the Iudges of England wherein they confirmed that the sentence giuen against his mother was no hurt vnto his right in Succession nor could be any preiudice vnto the same And thus an end of this History FINIS 1 2 3 4 5 6
IACOB MAG BRIT REG. MATER SERENISSIMA MARIA REGINA The most excellent Princesse Mary queene of Scotland and Dowager of France Mother to our Soueraigne lord James of greate Brittaine France Ireland king THE HISTORIE OF THE LIFE AND DEATH OF Mary Stuart QVEENE OF SCOTLAND LONDON Printed by Iohn Haviland for Richard Whitaker and are to be sold at the signe of the Kings Head in Pauls Church-yard 1624. TO THE KINGS MOST EXCELLENT MAIESTIE Most Dread Soueraigne ZENO the Philosopher being asked how a man might attaine wisdome answered By drawing neere vnto the dead O the Sepulchers of our Ancestors how much more doe they teach than all the studie bookes and precepts of the learned And herein due praise must needs be ascribed vnto Historie the life of memorie and the mirrour of mans life making those Heroick acts to liue againe which otherwise would be buried in eternall forgetfulnesse whereby the minde a greedy hunter after knowledge is enflamed by affecting the seuerall perfections of others to seeke after excellent things and by feruent imitation to attaine to that glory which is gotten by vertu● For these causes most renowned Soueraigne when I considered Plutarke laying aside the studie of Philosophic to thinke the time well imploied in writing the liues of Theseus of Aristides and of other inferiour persons and knowing how farre the lustre and splendor of Princes shineth beyond the brightnesse of others euery one standing for a million of the common people And being sensible that it is infused euen by nature euery man to desire and to be delighted with the relation and story of his owne Ancestors and predecessors For these reasons I presumed to present vnto your Highnesse this Treatise of the life and death of your Royall Mother the Lady MARY STVART Queene of Scotland A History most fit for this your Meridian of Great Britaine and yet neuer published in the English tongue before Wherein although I confesse the slendernesse of my skill in the exornation and beautifying of the stile and thereby may worthily incurre the reproofe of the learned yet if your Maiesty vouchsafe your gracious and Princely acceptation all faults therein shall easily bee couered and blotted out Therefore I become your humble Orator praying no other thing than the Sunne Diall of the Sunne Aspice me vt aspiciar most humbly beseeching the Almighty to blesse your most Excellent Maiestie with a long happie and prosperous reigne Your Sacred Maiesties most humble subiect WIL. STRANGVAGE THE PREFACE TO THE ENSVING HISTORIE IT is a thing most true and some finde it by experience that here below in this world there is nothing eternall And how can it be otherwise when the great Kings and Princes of the earth who seeme to be created of the most pure substance of the Elements of a matter as may bee said for their excellency incorruptible of the fine gold of Euilath and of the best mould to the patterne of the fairest Ideas and beare and carry the Image and Seale of all puissance as the chiefe impression of natures worke in the plaine greatnesse of Maiestie which engraueth their forehead with a gracious statelinesse Yet doe we see them euery day who seeme vnto men to be lasting and durable as eternity it selfe to quit the arches o● triumph and to yeeld themselues vnto the triumph o● death And more than that the most part of them finish their daies not in the sweet and calme waters like Pourcontrells but by a death disseasoned sometimes in their greene youth and flourishing age by the stormes and tempests as doe the Dolphins within the torrents billowes or waues of the sea tossed by diuers factions And it seemeth that this fatality pursueth ordinarily the most worthy and vertuous persons so that they finish their liues many times with violence or precipitation and not to goe vnto their death in a smooth path but to bee interrupted with some strange accident which cclipseth the bright shining lustre of their greatnesse which dasell the mindes of men that from below beheld them sitting aloft on the throne of Maiestie All which appeared most plainly and euidently to be true in the most worthy and royall Princesse MARY STVART Queene of Scotland who in all her life being tossed and turmoiled with infinite misfortunes concluded it with an vntimely death as followeth in the sequell of this Historie of her life and death MARY STVART Queene of Scotland was daughter vnto Iames the fist King of Scotland a wise and valiant Prince and of the Lady MARY of the Illustrious family of the Dukes of Lorraine whose fame for valour is renowned thorow all Christendome was borne on the eighth day of December in the yeere of our Lord 1541. She was not aboue eight daies old when her father died being left thus young the Noblemen of Scotland being diuided whereof the family of the Hamiltons and the Earle of Lynnox being the heads the one side supported by King Henry the eighth of England and the other by the French King Henry the second she was by the care of her mother who inclined vnto the French King at the age of six yeeres or thereabouts sent into France in the Gallies of Villagagnon a Knight of the Rhodes appointed by the French King vnto this seruice in the which voyage by the West Seas for in the other passage neere the Straits of Calice the Englishmen had laid a strong Nauy to intercept her she hardly escaped drowning by meanes of a storme or tempest that happened neere vnto the coast of little Brittaine in France where she afterward tooke land from whence she was conueyed vnto the Court of France where she was brought vp vnder her Curators the French King and the Dukes of Guise and by their exquisite care she drew in with the aire the sweetnesse of the humours of the countrey and in the end by the singular grace of nature and carefulnesse of her friends and Kinsfolks became with her age the fairest and goodliest Princesse of our time And beside this her rare beauty she had her vnderstanding and intendment so pure and perfect her iudgement so certaine surmounting and aboue the condition of her age and sex that it bred and caused in her a greatnesse of courage which was yet mixt and qualified with such sweetnesse and modesty that you could not see any thing more Royall any thing more gracious Her manners and priuate actions were such and were so well liked of generally that it caused King Henry the second of France and his Queene who was admired for her prudence to marry their eldest sonne Daulphin of France and heire of their Crowne vnto this Lady as vnto one well deseruing to be ioyned in mariage vnto their sonne heire apparant of the greatest kingdome in Europe And so vpon the foure and twentieth day of April in the yeere of our Lord 1558. Francis the Daulphin of France and MARY STVART Queene of Scotland were maried in the Church of Nostra Dama
the originall cause For from hence Queene Elizabeth was an open and professed enemie to the Guises and bare a secret hate against her which the craftie malice of men did so nourish the emulation increasing betweene them and new occasions arising daily that they could not be extinguished but with her death Anno 1560. THen followed the Treatie of Edenburgh wherein amongst many other things it was agreed that the King of France and Queene MARIE should leaue off the bearing of the title and armes of England and Ireland but when the time of confirming the same came and Queene Elizabeth sent into France to haue it ratified as shee had done Throgmorton the Leiger Embassador could not bring them to doe it by any meanes and whilest the matters hung in suspence and rested vndetermined Francis the second King of France not being eighteene yeere old and in the second yeere of his reigne deceased and left the Queene of Scots a widow whether to the greater griefe of the Romanists or ioy of the Protestants in Britaine I cannot say Anno 1561. FRANCIS Earle of Bedford was sent into France to deplore the death of King Francis and to gratulate Charles the ninth his successor and by himselfe and together with Throgmorton the ordinarie Embassador he importuned the Queene of Scots to confirme the treatie of Edenburgh but in vaine for she answered no other thing but that shee could not nor would not determine on so great a matter without the consent of the Nobilitie of Scotland The Queene of Scots entending to returne into Scotland sent Monsieur d'Oysell to request a safe conduct of Queene Elizabeth for to passe by Sea and for d'Oysell to passe thorow England Queene Elizabeth before a great multitude of people denied both the one and the other for this cause she said that she had not ratified the treatie of Edenburgh which if she did shee promised to shew all kindnesse that might bee expected from a Queene from a Cousin and from a neighbour The Queene of Scots being vexed at this repulse sent for Throgmorton with whom shee had long speeches about this matter which I will briefly set downe out of the letters of Throgmorton though I shal make rehearsal of some things already said that the originall and progresse of the priuie malice which was betweene the greatest and wisest Princesses of our time or age may more euidently appeare Shee sending all the standers by away said thus to Throgmorton What is my womanly weaknesse and how farre the passion of my minde may carrie me I know not yet it liketh me not to haue so many witnesses of my weaknesse as your Ladie lately had when shee talked with Monsieur d'Oysell my Embassador nothing grieueth me so much as that I did aske those things which were not needfull by Gods fauour I can returne into my Countrie without asking her leaue as I came hither in despight of her brother Edward Neither want I friends which can and will bring me home as they brought me hither but I had rather haue vsed her friendship than of any other I haue often heard you say that the amitie betweene her and mee was necessary to both our Kingdomes yet it seemeth that shee thinketh otherwise or else she had not giuen mee the repulse in so small a matter but perhaps shee beareth more fauour vnto the Scots which rebell against me than to me the Queene of Scots equall to her in princely royaltie her nearest kinswoman and most certaine heire vnto her Doest thou thinke that that good will and loue can be betweene my rebellious subiects and her that may bee betweene her and me What Doth shee thinke that I shall bee destitute of friends Assuredly she hath driuen mee to aske helpe of them of whom I would not willingly And they cannot wonder enough for what purpose shee gaue aid lately vnto my subiects and now to hinder the returne of mee a widow vnto my subiects I aske nothing of her but amitie I procure no trouble vnto her nor meddle not with the affaires of England But yet I am not ignorant that there bee many in England who are not content with the estate as it is now Shee twitteth me and saith that I haue small experience I confesse it Age bringeth experience with it yet I am so old that I can behaue my selfe friendly kindly and iustly toward my kinsfolks and friends and keepe my tongue from speaking any thing not beseeming a Queene and a kinswoman But by her leaue I may say that as well as shee I am a Queene neither destitute of friends and to beare no lesse high minde than shee and it may beseeme vs to measure our selues with a certaine equalitie but I forbeare comparison which is little better than contention and wanteth not euill will As for the treatie of Edenburgh it was made in the life of the King my husband whom it was my dutie to obey in all things and since that hee delaied the confirmation of the same let the blame remaine in him and not in me After his death the Counsellors of France left me to mine owne Counsellors neither would mine Vncles meddle with the affaires of Scotland because they would not offend Queene Elizabeth nor the Scots The Scots that be with me be priuate men nor such fit men that I should aske counsell of them in such great matters As soone as I shall haue the aduice of the Estates of my Realme I will make a reasonable answer and I will make all the haste I can home to giue it the sooner But shee determineth to stop my way lest I should giue it so shee is the cause that I cannot satisfie her or else shee would not bee satisfied perhaps for the intent that there may bee no end of discord betweene vs. Shee casteth often in my teeth that I am a young girle as a reproach and truly she may iustly thinke mee an vnwise girle if I dealt in these weightie affaires without the aduice of the Estates A wife is not bound as I haue heard with the deeds of her husband neither in her honour nor in conscience but I doe not dispute this thing yet I may say this thing truly I haue done nothing to my dearest sister which I would not haue done to my selfe I haue vsed all offices of courtesie and kindred but shee either beleeueth not or contemneth them I would to God I were so deare to her as I am neare of bloud for this were a pretious kinde of kindred God forgiue them that sow the seeds of dissention betweene vs if there bee any such But thou who art an Embassador tell mee in good sooth for what cause she is so displeased with me who neuer hurt her hitherto either in word or deed To these speeches Throgmorton made answer I haue no commission to answer you but to heare what your answer is about the confirmation of the treatie of Edenburgh But if it please you to heare the cause
her whom she had in her secret purpose appointed husband for the Queene of Scotland that he might be more worthy of that match Baron of Denbigh giuing vnto him Denbigh with the demeasnes and the next day Earle of Leycester to him and his heires males lawfully begotten For whose sake also shee had before created his elder brother Ambrose Baron Lisle and Earle of Warwicke and to his heires males lawfully begotten and to Robert his brother and to his heires males of his body lawfully begotten Dudly aduanced to these honours to purchase fauour and grace with the Queene of Scotland vnto whom hee made suit in mariage studied with all kinde of offices to deserue well of her and forthwith accused Bacon keeper of the great Seale vnto the Queene that hee had dealt in the matter of succession against the Queene of Scotland and that hee was priuie and accessary vnto a Pamphlet made by one Hales who endeuoured to proue the right of the Crowne of England to belong vnto the familie of Suffolke if the Queene died without Heire for the which he had beene put in Prison but Bacon though hee denied the same was with much adoe and after a long time restored vnto the Queenes fauour by Cecill who kept his owne iudgement in this point secret to himselfe and alwaies determined so to doe vnlesse the Queene as he would say commanded him to speake his mind for she could not endure of all things to haue the right of succession called into question and dispute but the wiser and the richer men were troubled with nothing more whilest in the controuersie of Religion the hot Protestants thought the Q. of Scotland was to be put by and reiected because she was of another Religion though her right was vndoubted out of some querks and words of their Law bookes Some of the Romanists and most that regarded equitie and iustice thought she was to be receiued as the true and certaine Heire by the Law And many preferred Margaret Aunt to the Queene of Scotland the wife of Matthew Stewart Earle of Lennox and her children as those of whom they hoped the best as borne in England These things were not vnknowne vnto the Q. of Scotland who to preuent it as much as she could by the aduice of the Countesse of Lennox her Aunt sent for Matthew Earle of Lennox to come into Scotland vnder pretence to restore him into his ancient Patrimonie but indeed to aske him counsell in these affaires who by his wiues meanes obtained leaue and also letters of commendations from Queene Elizabeth after hee had beene banished from his natiue Countrie now full twentie yeeres Hee for I will for more perspicuitie and light to the matter rehearse the same somewhat higher was borne of the same stocke of the Stewarts as the royall familie of the Scots was For Marie daughter vnto Iames the second King of Scotland bore vnto Iames Hamilton Iames the first of this stocke Earle of Arran and Marie his daughter wife vnto Matthew Stewart Earle of Lennox the first of this Christian name Iames Earle of Arran his first wife being diuorced and yet liuing married Ienet Beton Aunt to Cardinall Beton by whom he had Iames D. of Chasteauleroy whom his aduersaries hereupon accounted a Bastard Marie sister to the Earle of Arran bore vnto Matthew Iohn Earle of Lennox who being slaine by the Hamiltons at such time as he would haue restored Iames the fourth to his libertie left this second Matthew Stewart of whom we speake Earle of Lennox most deare to Iames the fift in regard of his father But Matthew the King being dead and the Hamiltons hauing all the gouernment in their power departed secretly into France from whence hee was sent by Henry the second the French King to see that the common wealth of Scotland tooke no harme by Hamilton the Regent and herein he behaued himselfe worthily but being a plaine and honest minded man and entangled by the craft and policie of Cardinall Beton and Hamilton he fell out of the fauour of the French King in a short time And when hee could neither tarrie at home nor returne into France he came into England and submitted himselfe to King Henry the eighth who accepted him as a man well beloued in the West borders and acknowledged him as next heire to the Crowne of Scotland after MARIE then an infant though the Hamiltons confiscated all his possessions as of a Traitor condemned and married him vnto the Ladie Margaret Douglas his Niece by his eldest sister giuing him lands in England worth yeerely of the old rent 1700. Markes he promising for his part to deliuer into the hands of the King of England the Castles of Dunbritton the I le of Butha and the Castle of Rothsay which peeces being couragiously and valiantly attempted could not yet be gotten This man the Queene of Scotland a woman prudent and circumspect and who applied all her studies vpon the hopes of England sent for to come into Scotland as I haue said pardoned his banishment restored him vnto his ancient possessions as well that shee might oppose him against the attempts of Iames the Bastard as also to put other folkes out of hope of the succession of England by his sonne Henry Darly For if that young man borne of the royall bloud in England and well beloued of the English Nation should marrie with some of the great families of England shee secretly to her selfe feared that he bolstered vp with the power of England might bee a blocke in her way in the right of her succession in England since hee was accounted in most mens opinion the second heire of the Crowne of England after her and there was nothing shee more wished than that the Realmes of England and Scotland might deuolue by her meanes vnto some of the Scottish race and by him might bee propagated vnto posteritie in the ancient surname of the Stewarts This came to the knowledge of Queene Elizabeth and to preuent her purpose shee declared vnto her by Randolph that that mariage was so vniuersally disallowed by the English men that she adiourned the Parliament against the will of her Councell vntill another time lest the Estates moued vnto wrath for this cause should make some act against her right in succession which lest it should afterward come to passe she willed her not to doe so but to giue satisfaction vnto the English men by thinking vpon some other match And now againe she commended Leicester whom she had aduanced vnto the degree of an Earle and especicially for that cause with more earnestnesse to bee her husband Vpon this occasion at Barwicke in the moneth of Nouember there talked together about the mariage with Leicester the Earle of Bedford and Randolph and for her were Murrey and Lidington Commissioners The English men promised firme amitie perpetuall peace and certaine hope of the succession if shee would marrie with Leicester for vpon this condition Queene Elizabeth had promised to
declare her daughter adoptiue or sister by authoritie of Parliament The Scots stood hard to it that it was not for the dignitie of a Queene desired for wife by Charles the sonne of the Emperor Ferdinand the King of France the Prince of Condy and the Duke of Ferrara to abase her selfe vnto the mariage of a new-made Earle and a subiect of England vpon a hope onely and no dowrie being offered saying also it was neither honorable vnto the Queene of England to commend so meane a husband to so great a Princesse her next kinswoman but that this should bee a most certaine argument of loue if she would permit her at her owne choice to elect her selfe a husband who shall keepe peace with England and withall assigne a good annuitie vnto her and confirme the right of succession by the authoritie of Parliament In all this businesse Queene Elizabeth earnestly desired that the succession of both the Kingdomes might be established in the English Nation though she was slow in the same The Queene of Scotland when the matter had hung thus in talke for the space of two yeeres now determined to take Darly vnto her husband did suspect that Queene Elizabeth did not deale sincerely with her but that she did propound this mariage for no other end and purpose but that shee might make the first choice of the best suiter or wooer for her selfe or else might marrie with better excuse vnto Leicester But the Scottish Delegates looking also for their owne purposes determined by one way or other to thrust some obstacle or other in any mariage that ●hey might retaine still their authoritie with the Queene Queene Elizabeth had willed the Commissioners to hinder the mariage with Darly and Leicester himselfe accounting himselfe most sure of Queene Elizabeth willed Bedford secretly by his letters not to vrge the matter much And vpon this hope it is thought he fauored Darly in secret Anno 1565. IN the meane time Darly got leaue with much adoe to goe into Scotland and to stay there three moneths by the earnest and humble suit his mother made vnto Queene Elizabeth vnder the colour that he might bee present at the restoring of his father and so he came vnto Edenburgh in the moneth of Februarie He was a young man of personage most worthy of an Empire of a comely stature of a most milde nature and sweet behauiour As soone as the Queene of Scotland saw him she fell in loue with him and to couer her loue she talked now and then with Randolfe the English Embassadour in Scotland about the mariage with Leicester and at the same time sent to Rome for a dispensation because Darly and shee were so neere of kinne that a dispensation was necessary by the Canon Lawes But when these things came to light shee sent Lidington vnto Queene Elizabeth that shee might marrie with Darly by her consent and not bee kept any longer vnmaried vpon vaine expectations Queene Elizabeth propounded the matter to her priuie Councell who out of the secret suggestions of Murrey easily beleeued that the purpose of the Queene of Scotland tended by this mariage to strengthen and againe to claime the title and her right vnto the Realme of England and withall to deduce it vnto the Romane Religion againe and that many would incline vnto them vpon the certaintie of their succession comming of this mariage and others out of the loue vnto the Romane Religion and forasmuch as they vnderstood that most of the Iustices of Peace were addicted vnto it To preuent these things they thought it most necessarie first to winne the Queenes good will to marrie speedily some husband that out of the certaintie of succession by her and her issue and from none other the affaires and hopes of English men might depend for they feared that if the Queene of Scotland maried first and had issue the most of the people would incline and bend toward her side because of the certaintie of the succession and securitie Secondly that the profession of the Romane Religion should bee infringed or weakened as much as might be and that of the reformed diligently aduanced and established this by dealing more moderately with some hot spirited Protestants about things indifferent and the other by calling in the depriued Bishops vnto their prisons for they had beene dispersed into the Countries in the time of the great plague by giuing vnto the Bishops more ample authoritie to exercise the Ecclesiastical lawes against that terrifying bugge of the Premunire which the Lawyers obiected against them by suppressing bookes comming from the Low-countries into England set out by Harding and the Diuines that were fled ouer the Seas by remouing away certaine Scottish Priests that lurked in England by depriuing the English fugitiues of their Ecclesiasticall liuings which they enioyed vntill this time by compelling the Iudges of the land who for the most part were Papists to take the oath of Supremacie But to disturbe the mariage with Darly it was thought best to put them in feare by mustering Souldiers vpon the borders toward Scotland and by putting a greater Garrison into Barwicke that the Countesse of Lennox mother to Darly and Charles her sonne should be committed vnto Prison the Earle of Lennox and Darly his sonne should be recalled out of Scotland vpon paine to forfeit all their goods before that any league could bee made by them with the Kings of France or Spaine that the Scots enemies to the mariage should be maintained and Catharine Gray with the Earle of Hertfort should be receiued into some fauour of whom as of her competitor in the succession of the Kingdome shee seemed somewhat to bee afraid And this was all that they could deuise to hinder the mariage Hereupon Nicholas Throgmorton is sent vnto the Queene of Scotland who should aduise her to deliberate long on that which was to be done but once that repentance alwaies followed hastie mariage and to commend instantly the mariage with Leicester and that the mariage with her Aunts sonne was contrary vnto the Canon Law for Queene Elizabeth very much desired that by her some of the English Nation might succeed in both the Realmes although some men there were that thought it would be the best for Religion and both the Realmes if she died without issue She answered the matter could not bee recalled and that Queene Elizabeth had no cause to bee angry when according to her counsell shee had chosen not a stranger but an English man and one borne of the royall bloud of both the Kingdomes and the noblest man of birth of all Brittaine Lidington lying in England did often propose the mariage of the Queene of Scotland vnto Leicester colourably and also to the D. of Norfolke as to one more worthy of a Princesses marriage who at that time put off the same with a modest refusall The Queene of England to interpose some impediment vnto this hastened mariage called backe Lennox Darly as her
subiects according to the times expressed in their licence The father excused himselfe most modestly in his letters the sonne desired that she would not be against his preferment insinuated that it may be that he may be profitable to his deare Countrie of England and openly professed himselfe a louer and honourer of the Queene of Scotland aboue all others who to giue correspondencie to his loue first made him Knight and afterward Lord A●●●●och Earle of Rosse and Duke of Rothsay and the fift moneth after his comming into Scotland tooke him to her husband with the consent of the most of the Noble men and proclaimed him King Murrey who applied all his wit to his owne priuate ambition and vnder the goodly pretence of Religion had drawne in the Duke of Chasteauleroy an honest minded man vnto his side fretting and others raising tumults and arguing these questions Whether a Papist was to be receiued to be their King Whether the Queene of Scotland might choose her selfe a husband at her owne election Whether the Noblemen of the Land might not by their authoritie appoint her a husband The Queene of England who knew the milde nature of Darly and the plaine and honest minde of the father taking compassion of the young man her Cousin and of the Queene a young woman also who had to deale with most turbulent persons who being aboue this twentie yeeres loosed from the gouernment of Kings could not now endure any Kings tooke it more quietly Neither had she any feare of them when she saw the power of the Queene her aduersarie not increased by that meane match and had the mother of Darly in her hand and foresaw that troubles would arise hereupon in Scotland which began incontinently for many Noblemen of Scotland as Hamilton and Murrey chafing fretting at the mariage this man for that the mariage was made without the consent of the Queene of England the other vpon a spight or priuie malice against the familie of Lennox but both of them vnder the pretext of the conseruation of Religion displaied their banners in manner of warre to disturbe the mariage so that the Queene was of necessitie enforced to leuie forces that the mari●●● might be celebrated with securitie and then she did so fiercely pursue the rebels by the helpe of the King her husband that she made them flie into England before the bands of English men promised to them could come but the Queene of England did couertly grant a lurking place vnto Murrey who was wholly addicted vnto the English and secretly maintained him with money by Bedford vntill hee returned into Scotland which was the day after the murder of Dauid Rizius The causes which Queene Elizabeth alleadged why shee admitted Murrey and the Scottish rebels into England were for that the Queene of Scotland had receiued Yaxley Standen and Welsh English fugitiues into Scotland and receiued O-Neale a great man of Ireland into her protection had intelligence with the Pope against England and had not done iustice on the theeues on the borders and on Pirates Queene Elizabeth not forgetfull of the Scottish affaires a moneth or two after the mariage sent Tamworth a Gentleman of her priuie Chamber vnto the Queene of Scotland to warne her not to violate the peace and to expostulate with her for her hastie marriage with the natiue subiect of England without her consent and withall to request that Lennox and Darly might be sent backe into England according to the league and that Murrey might be receiued againe into fauour Shee smelling his arrand admitted him not to her presence but in articles deliuered in writing promised in the word of a Prince that neither shee nor her husband would attempt any thing to wrong the Queene of England or her children lawfully begotten or the quiet of the Realme either by receiuing fugitiues or by making league with strangers or by any other meanes yea most willingly that they would make such league with the Queene and Realme of England which might be profitable and honourable for both the Realmes neither that they would innouate any thing in the Religion Lawes and liberties of England if at any time they should possesse the Kingdome of England yet vpon this condition that Queene Elizabeth would fully performe this thing on her part toward her and her husband viz. by Parlament establish the succession of the Crowne of England in her person and her lawfull issue and if that failed in Margaret Countesse of Lennox her husbands mother and her children lawfully begotten As for the other things shee answered That shee had acquainted the Queene with her mariage with Darly as soone as she was fully determined to marie him and had receiued no answer from her That she had satisfied the Queenes demands forasmuch as she had not married a stranger but an English man borne who was the noblest in birth and most worthiest of her in all Britaine that she knew But it seemed strange that she might not keepe with her Darly whom shee had maried or not keepe Lennox in Scotland who was a natiue Earle of Scotland As for Murrey whom she had tried to bee her mortall enemie shee in faire words besought her to leaue her subiects vnto her owne discretion since that she did not intermeddle in the causes of the subiects of England With this answer Tamworth returned not respected as he thought according to his estate and place for to say the truth the malapert fellow had touched the reputation and credit of the Queene of Scotland with I know not what slander and had not vouchsafed to giue her husband the title of King Anno 1566. IN Iune the Queene of Scotland in a happie houre and to the perpetuall felicitie of Britaine was deliuered of her sonne Iames who is now the Monarch of Britaine which shee signified forthwith vnto Queene Elizabeth by Iames Meluin Who although she was grieued at the heart that the honour to bee a mother was borne away before her by her aduersarie yet she sent Henry Killigrew incontinently to congratulate with her for her safe deliuerance and the birth of a sonne And to will her not to fauour any more Shane O-Neale then rebelling in Ireland nor to entertaine Christopher Rokesby fled out of England and to punish certaine theeues vpon the borders Shortly after the estates of the Realme in the Parlament holden at London moued the Queene earnestly to marry and to set downe and nominate her successor but she by no meanes could be drawne to it Yet that it might appeare to the world whom shee thought most rightfull successor shee cast into prison Thornton the Reader ●f the Law at Lincolnes Inne in London at that time of whom the Queene of Scotland had complained that he in his reading had called into question and made a doubt of the right of her succession The time being come for the baptizing of the Prince of Scotland the Queene of England being requested to be Godmother
her from mariage againe She answered mildly that she would take deliberation in the matter and consult with the Estates of the Realme about it And to shew herselfe courteous and bountifull to her brother she created him Earle of Marre and afterward Earle of Murrey because Marre was in controuersie and aduanced him to an honourable mariage All this shee did being all this while ignorant that hee affected the Kingdome bragging that he was the lawfull sonne of Iames the fift And to make the way thereunto he through the fauourwherein hee stood with the Queene oppressed the most noble familie of the Gordons who had very many vassals tenants and retainers whom hee feared much both in respect of himselfe and of their religion And banished from the Court the Duke of Chasteauleroy who was accounted the next heire to the Crowne imprisoned the Earle of Arran his sonne banished Bothwell into England and put all them that he thought might crosse him out of office And he as a Guardian kept the Queene as his Ward and at his command being most carefull and diligent to keepe her from mariage And as soone as he vnderstood that on the one side the Emperour sued to her for his brother and the King of Spaine for his sonne he disswaded her vtterly from them both because forsooth the libertie of Scotland would not nor could not endure a forraigne Prince And whensoeuer that gouernment descended vnto women that they maried no other husbands but of the Scottish Nation But afterwards when all the Scots generally wished to see her maried and hee found out that the Countesse of Lennox had so prouidently wrought that shee inclined to marrie Darly hee also commended him as a good husband for her hoping the young man being of a soft nature would be ruled by him in all things Yet when hee saw the Queene to loue Darly exceedingly and he himselfe to grow out of her fauour hee repented him of his counsell hee had giuen and willed Queene Elizabeth to hinder her mariage by one meanes or other The mariage being made vp and Darly proclaimed King when the Queene reuoked the donations made to him and others against the Lawes in her minoritie hee with other put himselfe in armes against the King alleadging that the new King was an enemie vnto the Religion of the Protestants and that he was maried without the consent of the Queene of England But hee fled into England as I haue already said neuer aduenturing to fight And being frustrate of all hope of helpe from thence hee dealt by letters with Mourton a profound subtill man who was as his other selfe that since the mariage could not bee dissolued yet that the loue betweene the parties might be broken by some secret deuices and a fit occasion offered it selfe for she vpon the arising of some priuate discontent to keepe vnder the swelling minde of the young man and to conserue her royall authoritie whole to her selfe had begunne to set her husbands name last in the Proclamations and Records and to omit it vtterly in the coine Mourton being a cunning man to breed discontents with his flattering words crept into the Kings good liking and opinion and then perswaded him to take vpon him the Crowne of the Realme yea in despight of the Queene and to make himselfe free from the gouernment of women for that it is the condition of women said he to obey and of men to rule By this counsell if it were taken he hoped not onely to draw away the loue of the Queene but of all the Nobilitie and commons also from the King to estrange the Queene and with diuers slanders first heartened the King to murther Dauid Rizius a Piedmountoys lest that politike fellow should preuent their purposes this man was a Musitian by profession and came the last yeere with Moret the Embassador of Sauoy and by the Queene for his wit and dexteritie receiued into her houshold and fauour and preferred to write her French letters and vnto her priuie Councell in the absence of the Secretarie Then to estrange her loue the more he perswaded the King to bee present at the murder with Ruthen and the rest who rushing together with him in to the Queenes dining Parlour at supper time shee sitting at the table with the Countesse of Argile assaulted the fellow with their naked swords as he tasted meat taken from the Queenes table at the Cupbord as the seruants of the priuie Chamber vse to doe before her face being great with childe trembling with feare setting a Pistoll at her breast so that shee was in danger of abortion and dragged him into the vtter Chamber where they most cruelly killed him and shut vp the Queene into a Parlour Mourton all this while guarding all the passages This murther was committed the euening before the day appointed vnto Murrey to appeare for his triall in the assembly of the Estates for his rebellion who came in on the next day when no body expected him and no man appeared against him in that troublesome time So that it may seeme that the murder of Dauid was hastened of set purpose to procure the securitie and safety of Murrey Yet the Queene at the earnest suit of the King receiued him courteously and continued in brotherly loue towards him But the King when he considered the enormitie of the offence and seeing now the Queene to bee very angry repented his rashnesse and in humble manner submitted himselfe vnto her clemencie weeping and lamenting and asking pardon did ingenuously confesse that he committed that hainous offence by the instigation of Murrey and Mourton and from thenceforth did so hate Murrey for Mourton Ruthen and others were fled into England vpon the murther with the commendatorie letters of Murrey vnto Bedford that hee deuised to kill him But when out of wrath and rashnesse hee could not conceale his purpose nor such was his respect vnto the Queene his wife durst execute it he told her how profitable it would bee for the common-wealth and also for the securitie of the royall familie if Murrey were rid out of the way She detesting the thing terrified him euen with threats from such enterprises putting him in hope of reconciliation Yet hee when hee saw to his hearts griefe the Bastard to be of such power with the Queene out of his impatience hee plotted the same matter with others which when it came to the eares of Murrey to preuent him vnder colour of dutie hee laieth closer snares for the young man vsing Mourton though absent for his counsellor They thought it requisite aboue all things vtterly to auert the Queenes minde from the King and by flatterie to induce Bothwell lately reconciled vnto Murrey and in great fauour with the Queene into their societie shewing him a hope to be diuorced from his wife and to marrie with the Queene as soone as she was widow And for the performance of these things and also to defend him against all persons
they bound themselues vnder their hands and seales being perswaded if the matter hit right that they might by one labour kill the King vtterly discredit the Queene amongst the Nobilitie and Commons vndoe Bothwell vtterly and bring the gouernment of all the affaires vnto their hands Bothwell being a lewd minded man blinded with ambition and therefore venturous to attempt quickly laid hold on the hope offered vnto him and villanously committed the murther But Murrey had secretly gone home a prettie way off fifteene houres before that he might no way be suspected and that hee might from thence giue aid vnto the Conspirators when any need was and all the suspition might light vpon the Queene As soone as hee returned vnto the Court both he and the Conspirators commended vnto her Bothwell as most worthy of her loue for the Nobilitie of his familie his valour shewed against the English and his approued fidelitie They put in her head that shee being alone and solitarie was not able to represse the tumults that were raised preuent secret plots and vphold the burthen and heauie weight of the Kingdome Therefore she might doe well to take as a Companion of her bed counsell and danger the man that could would and durst oppose himselfe against all trouble And they draue and enforced her so farre that the fearefull woman daunted with two tragicall murthers and remembring the fidelitie and constancie of Bothwell towards her and her mother and hauing no other friend vnto whom to resort but vnto her brothers fidelitie gaue her consent Yet vpon these conditions that aboue all this prouision might bee made for the safetie of her little sonne and then that Bothwell as well might bee cleered from the murther of the King as also from the bond of his former mariage What George Earle of Huntley and the Earle of Argile men of great Nobilitie in Scotland did forthwith protest of this matter I thinke good to set downe in this place out of the originall with their owne hands sent vnto Queene Elizabeth which I haue seene Forasmuch as Murrey and others to cloake their rebellion against the Queene whose authoritie they vsurpe doe slander her openly as priuie and consenting vnto her husbands death Wee doe publikely protest and sweare these things In the Moneth of December in the yeere of our Lord God one thousand fiue hundred fiftie and six when the Queene lay at Cragmyller Murrey and Lidington did acknowledge before vs That Mourton Lyndsey and Ruthen killed Dauid Rizio for no other end but to procure the safetie of Murrey who was to bee attainted at the same time Therefore lest they should bee vnthankfull they wished that Mourton and the rest banished for the death of Dauid might bee brought home againe And this they insinuated could not be done except the Queene were separated by a diuorce from the King which they promised to effect if wee would grant our consents And afterwards Murrey promised vnto me George Earle of Huntley the restitution of my ancient Patrimonie and perpetuall fauour of the banished men if I would fauour the diuorce Then they went vnto Bothwell that hee should consent thereunto Lastly we came vnto the Queene and Lidington in all our names besought her exceedingly to remit the sentence of exile against Mourton Lyndsey and Ruthen He exaggerated the faults and crimes of the King with bitter words and shewed that it was much for the good and benefit of the Queene and the Common-wealth that a diuorce were speedily sued out forasmuch as the King and she could not liue together with securitie in Scotland She answered she had rather depart into France and liue priuately for a time vntill her husband acknowledged his faults for she would haue nothing to be done that should be wrong to her sonne or dishonour vnto her selfe Hereunto Lidington replied saying Wee that are of your Councell will prouide for that But I command you said she not to doe any thing which may bee a blemish to my honour or a staine to my conscience Let things be as they be vntill God aboue doe remedie it That which you thinke may be good for mee may proue euill Vnto whom Lidington said Commit the matter vnto vs and you shall see nothing done but that which is good and that which shall be allowed in the Parliament Hereupon since that within a few daies after the King was most shamefully murdered Wee out of the inward testimonie of our conscience are most assured that Murrey and Lidington were the authors and perswaders of this murder of the King whosoeuer were the actors of the same Thus much Huntley and Argile Now the Conspirators applied all their skill that Bothwell might be cleared of killing the King Therefore without delay the Parliament is summoned for no other cause and Proclamations are set out to apprehend the persons suspected for murdering the King And when Lennox father to the murdered King accused and charged Bothwell as the Regicide and was very importunate that Bothwell might bee brought to triall before the Parliament began This also was granted and Lennox commanded to come in with his accusation within twentie daies On which day when hee heard nothing from the Queene of England and could not bee present in the Citie full of his enemies without danger of his life Bothwell was brought to the Barre and arraigned and acquitted by the sentence of the Iudges Mourton also vpholding and maintaining his cause and openly taking his part This businesse being finished the Conspirators wrought so that the most of the Nobilitie gaue their consent vnto the mariage vnder their hands and seales lest he frustrated of the promised mariage should appeach them as contriuers of the murder But of this mariage of the Queene with Bothwell who was created Duke of the Orkeneis the suspition increased with all men that the Queene was consenting to the Kings death which the Conspirators increased by letters sent into all places and in their secret meetings at Dunkelden they conspired forthwith to kill Bothwell and depriue the Queene Yet Murrey that hee might be thought cleere of this conspiracie obtained leaue of the Queene but hardly to trauell into France And that he might put all diffidence out of her head hee commended all his affaires and estate in Scotland vnto the fidelitie of the Queene and Bothwell Hee was scarce gone out of England but behold the same men which had cleered and acquitted Bothwell from the murder and consented vnto the mariage vnder their hands and seales tooke vp armes against Bothwell as meaning to apprehend him And indeed they secretly willed him to saue himselfe by flight for no other intent but that hee should not be taken and discouer all their plot and withall that they might lay hold of his flight as an argument or reason to accuse the Queene of killing the King But shee being taken they vsed her most contumeliously and in most vnseemely fashion and putting on her an old cloake
thrust her into prison at Lochleuyn vnder the custodie of the mother of Murrey who had beene the Concubine of Iames the fift who most malapertly insulted ouer the calamitie of the imprisoned Queene boasting that shee her selfe was the lawfull wife of Iames the fift and that her sonne Murrey was his lawfull issue As soone as Queene Elizabeth vnderstood these things in her minde detesting this barbarous insolencie of Subiects whom she called oftentimes Traitors Rebels vnthankfull and cruell fellowes against a Princesse her sister and neighbour She sent Nicholas Throgmorton into Scotland to expostulate with the conspirators for this insolencie vsed against their Queene and to take some course how to restore her into her former libertie and for the seuere punishment of the murderers of the King and that the young King might be sent into England that order might bee taken for his securitie and not sent into France And what I shall hereafter declare during his abode in Scotland take yee vpon the credit of his letters which is approued He found the most part in Scotland incensed against the Queene who in plaine termes denied accesse vnto her both to him and also to Villeroy and Crocus the French Embassadors Yet could not the Conspirators agree among themselues what to doe with her Lidington and a few others would haue her to be restored vpon these conditions That the murderers of the King should bee punished according to Law The Princes safetie prouided for Bothwell diuorced and Religion established Others would haue her to bee banished for euer into France or into England So as the King of France or Queene of England did giue their words that she should resigne the Kingdome and transferre all her authoritie vnto her sonne and certaine Noble men Others were of opinion that shee should be arraigned publikely and condemned vnto perpetuall prison and her sonne crowned King Lastly others would haue her depriued both of her life and Kingdome by a publike execution And this Knox and some Ministers of the Word thundered out of their Pulpits On the other side Throgmorton out of the holy Scriptures brought many places to proue that obedience was to bee yeelded vnto the higher powers that carry the sword And wittily argued that the Queene was not subiect to the iudgement of any but onely of the celestiall Iudge That she could not be arraigned or brought to triall before any Iudge on the earth And that there is no Magistrate had any authoritie in Scotland which is not deriued from the authoritie of the Queene and reuocable at her pleasure They opposed the peculiar Law of the Kingdome among both the parties before the Commissioners at Yorke On the fifth day after the resignation Iames the Queenes young son was anointed and crowned King Iohn Knox making the Sermon The Hamiltons putting in a protestation that it should be no preiudice vnto the Duke of Chasteauleroy in the right of succession against the familie of Lennox But Queene ELIZABETH forbade Throgmorton to be present thereat that shee might not bee thought to allow the vniust abdica●ion of the Queene by the presence of her Embassador On the twentieth day after the resignation Murrey himselfe returned out of France and the third day after he with many of the Conspirators came vnto the Queene against whom hee laid many hainous crimes and perswaded her to turne vnto God by true repentance and to aske mercie of him She shewed her selfe sorrowfull for the sinnes of her former life she confessed some things hee obiected others shee extenuated others shee excused by humane frailtie and the most matters shee vtterly denied Shee required him to take vpon him the gouernment of the affaires for her sonne and required him earnestly to spare her life and her reputation He said it lay not in his power but it was to bee sought for of the States of the Realme yet if shee desired to haue her life and honour saued hee prescribed these things for her to keepe That she should not trouble nor disturbe the tranquillitie of the Realme That she should not steale out of prison nor moue the Queene of England or the King of France to vex Scotland with forraigne or ciuill warre That she should not loue Bothwell any more or deuise to take reuenge on the enemies of Bothwell The Regent being proclaimed bound himselfe by his hand and seale to doe nothing concerning peace or warre the person of the King or his mariage or the libertie of the Queene without the consent of the Conspirators Hee willed Throgmorton by Lidington not to intreat any more for the Queene for that hee and the rest had rather endure all things than that she being freed should keepe Bothwell companie bring her sonne into danger her Countrie into trouble and also proscribe them We know said he what you English men can doe by warre You may waste our borders and we may yours we know assuredly that the French men in regard of our ancient league will not abandon and forsake vs. He denied also Ligneroll the French Embassador to haue accesse vnto the Queene vntill Bothwell was taken and euery day hee vsed the distressed Queene worse and worse whereas shee had deserued well at his hands and contrary to his promise hee had made vnto the King of France Thus much out of the Letters of Throgmorton Shortly after Murrey put to death Iohn Hepborne Paris a French man Daglish and the other seruants of Bothwell who had beene present at the Kings death But they which Murrey little expected at the Gallowes protested before God and the Angels that they vnderstood by Bothwell that Murrey and Mourton were the authors of killing the King and cleered the Queene from all suspition as Bothwell himselfe prisoner in Denmarke all his life time and at his death did with many solemne oathes and religious protestations affirme that the Queene was not priuie nor consenting to it And fourteene yeeres after when Mourton was to suffer death hee confessed that Bothwell dealt with him to consent vnto the murder of the King which when he vtterly denied except the Queene did command it vnder her hand To that Bothwell did answer that could not be done but that the deed must bee done without her knowledge This rash precipitate and ouer-hastie abdication or depriuation of the Queene and the ouerthwart stubbornnesse of the Conspirators towards the Embassadors both Queene ELIZABETH and the French King tooke very hainously as a thing tending to the reproach of royall Maiestie and began to fauour the Hamiltons who stood for the Queene Pasquier also Embassador from the French King dealt with the Queene of England that she might be restored by force of armes but shee thought it the better way to forbid the Scots all trafficke in France and England vntill shee was deliuered and so by that meanes the common people might bee disioned from the Noblemen who as it seemed were vnited in the conspiracie against the Queene Anno 1568. IN
of England shall make a mutuall league offensiue and defensiue against all persons that shall trouble them for this matter And thus the Secretarie of Scotland aduised them in the way of friendship They looking one on another said not one word The Commissioners of the Queene of Scotland for the first place of honour was giuen vnto them before they tooke the oath protested although the Queene of Scotland was content that the causes betweene her and her rebellious Subiects should be argued in the presence of the English men yet that shee did not therefore acknowledge her selfe to bee subiect to any or vnder the rule of any being as she is a free Prince and vassall and holding of none The English men protested likewise that they by no meanes admitted that protestation to the wrong of that right which the Kings of England of long time haue challenged and claimed as the superiour Lords of the Kingdome of Scotland On the next day the Commissioners of the Queene of Scotland by writing declare How Iames Earle of Mourton Iohn Earle of Marre Alexander Earle of Glencarne Hume Lindsey Ruthen Sempill c. had leuied an armie in the Queenes name against the Queene taken her vsed her vilely and thrust her into prison in Lochleuin had forcibly broken into her minting house taken away the minting irons and prints all the gold and filuer coined and vncoined and had crowned her sonne being an infant King whose authoritie Iames Earle of Murrey vnder the name of Regent had vsurped and had taken into his hands all the muniments riches and reuenues of the Kingdome And then they shew how she as soone as she was escaped out of prison after eleuen moneths bad publikely declared and taken her oath that whatsoeuer she had done in prison had beene extorted from her vnwilling thereto by force threats and feare of death but yet for the conseruation of the publike tranquillitie that she gaue authoritie to the Earles of Argile Eglenton Cassile and Rothsay to make a composition with her aduersaries who yet set vpon her with their men of warre as shee intended to trauell to Dunbritton by vnknowne waies killed very many of her faithfull subiects lead others away prisoners and banished others for no other cause but for that they had done faithfull seruice vnto their lawfull Princesse That she enforced by these their vile and lewd iniuries retired and withdrew her selfe into England to require helpe which Queene ELIZABETH had oftentimes promised her that shee might bee restored into her Countrie and former estate After a few daies Murrey the Regent and the Commissioners for the King Infant so they called themselues make answer That HENRY DARLY the Kings father being murdered Iames Hepborne Earle of Bothwell Who was accounted to bee the murderer obtained such fauour of the Queene that he tooke her being not vnwilling in the shew of violence and carried her to Dunbar and tooke her to his wife hauing put away his former wife That the Noblemen moued thereat thought it their dutie to punish Bothwell the contriuer of the murder forasmuch as that murder was in euery place laid vpon many Noblemen Conspirators to restore the Queene vnto her libertie to ●nloose her from her vnlawfull mariage and to make prouision for the young Kings safetie and the tranquillitie of the Realme And when the matter was now ready almost to come vnto a bloudie fight That the Queene sent Bothwell away thundred out threats against the Noblemen breathed reuenge So that it was of necessitie to keepe her in their custodie vntill punishment might be taken of Bothwell if he could be found And that she wearied with the trouble of gouernment voluntarily resigned her Kingdome and transferred the same vnto her sonne appointing Murrey to be Regent Vpon this her sonne was with the due rites anointed and crowned King and that all these things were approued and confirmed by the Estates in the Parlament And that the Scottish Common-wealth by the iust administration of iustice reflourished vntill certaine persons enuying the publike quietnesse subtilly gat the Queene out of prison and violating their fidelitie toward the King tooke armes of whom though the King by the fauour of God gat the victorie yet they beare still the minde to worke and threaten all the hostilitie they may And therefore it is very necessarie that the Kings authoritie may be conserued and established against such turbulent subiects To these things the Commissioners of the Queene answer in their Replication hauing first repeated their former protestation and say Whereas Murrey and the Conspirators doe say that they tooke armes against the Queene because Bothwell whom they charge with killing the King was in great fauour with the Queene they cannot with that glose cleare themselues from the marke of traiterous subiects since it was not certaine to the Queene that he killed the King Yea contrariwise that hee was acquitted by the iudgement of his Peeres of the murder and that verdict was confirm●d by the authoritie of Parlament with the consent also of them who now accuse him and at that time perswaded the Queene to marrie him as a man more worthy to beare rule than any other and gaue vnto him their word vnder their hands Neither did they disapproue the mariage so much as in word vntill they had by faire words enticed the Captaine of the Castle of Edenburgh and the Prouost of the Towne vnto their side For then late in the night assaulted they the Castle of Borthwicke where the Queene lay and when she by the darknesse of the night escaped forthwith they leuied an armie vnder the pretence to defend the Queene and met her going towards Edenburgh with Banners displaied ready to fight and by Grange whom they sent before they willed her to send away Bothwell from her companie vntill hee should be brought to triall which she to auoid the effusion of bloud willingly did But Grange secretly willed Bothwell to depart away and gaue his word that none should pursue him so that he whom they might easily haue taken then departed with their good leaue But now hauing taken the Queene they passed not vpon him that they might aduance their ambitious purposes and designes And whereas they charge her to haue vsed them with rough and rigorous words it is no wonder since they being her subiects hauing sworne their allegeance vnto her had vsed her more rudely and vilely than becommeth any to vse the Maiestie of a Prince And when she most willingly referred the cause vnto all the Estates of the Realme and signified so much by Lidington the Secretarie they would not so much as heare the motion but by night conueied her secretly vnto Lochleuyn and put her in prison In that they say shee voluntarily made a resignation of the Kingdome for that she was wearied with molestations in the gouernment is altogether vntrue forasmuch as she was not outworne or decaied by age nor weake by sicknesse hut both in minde and
Warwicke called together with an oath of secresie lest they should preiudice either partie And when Murrey was called home and Boyde as it was commonly reported plotted to steale away the Queene of Scotland out of prison the matter was put off vnto another time Queene ELIZABETH from her heart hating the insolencie of the Scots in depriuing of their Queene Murrey a little before his departure had craftily proposed vnto Norfolke the mariage with the Queene of Scotland and also secretly by Meluin to the Queene a hope to be restored into her Kingdome as wee shall declare anon and at the same time to draw the loue of Queene ELIZABETH from the Queene of Scotland he had spread rumors that she had transposed her right vnto England vnto the Duke of Anjeou and that the transcription was confirmed at Rome and shewed also letters whether true or forged I will not say which the Queene of Scotland had written vnto her friends in which shee both charged Queene ELIZABETH as though shee had not vsed her according to her promise and bragged of hope of aid from some other persons This put Queene ELIZABETH in great feare yet could not shee coniecture from whence this new hope should arise the ciuil warre increasing so in France that the Bishop of Rhedon was sent vnto her by the King to request her not to intermeddle with the affaires in France and the Duke of Alba who was come the last yeere into the Netherlands to profligate the Protestants Religion had very troublesome businesse come vpon him But as it came to light afterward Robert Ridolphus a Florentine who had liued long at London as a Merchant Factor was suborned by Pope Pius Quintus who durst not send a Nuntio openly to stirre secretly the Papists in England against Queene ELIZABETH which hee did both diligently and secretly A small suspition was also growne out of the secret conferences at Yorke betweene Lidington the Bishop of Rosse and Norfolke whom they besought to ioine his aduice and care to helpe the most distressed Queene offering vnto him also her in mariage which hee as a thing full of danger reiected with a modest answer yet he promised not to abandon the distressed Queene in as much as was lawfull for an honourable man to doe sauing his allegeance to his Queene and Countrie Ligon the seruant of Norfolke a great Papist much increased the suspition by his often going to Bolton the Lord Scroopes Castle where the Queene of Scotland was kept by Francis Knolls vnder the pretence of visiting Scroopes wife who was sister vnto Norfolke Although no certaintie was of this yet for more surety the Queene of Scotland was conueied from Bolton where all the bordering neighbours were Papists farther into the Realme vnto Tutburie and deliuered vnto the custodie of George Earle of Shrewsburie Anno 1569. NOw Murrey who had made himselfe a secure way to returne into Scotland by the hope made to the Queene of Scotland of her restitution and to Norfolke and to others in England for shee had repressed the Scots that lay in wait to kill him and charged them not to impeach his returne As soone as hee came vnto Edenburgh he called the Noblemen friends to the Queene vnder the colour to consult with them about her restitution And when Hamilton Duke of Chasteauleroy appointed Lieutenant by the Queene and Herris perswaded by the letters of the Queene too much credulous came thither first Murrey fearing some traps circumuented them and staying for no moe put them in prison and forthwith annoied and vexed the friends of the Queene with fire and sword Hereupon were rumours spread in all places of England against Murrey namely that hee had made a pact with Queene ELIZABETH that the young King of Scotland should bee deliuered vnto Queene ELIZABETH to be brought vp in England That the Castles of Edenburgh and Sterling should bee furnished with Garrisons of English men That Dunbritton should be wonne for the benefit of the English That Murrey should bee proclaimed successor vnto the Realme of Scotland if the King died without issue and should hold the Kingdome of Queene ELIZABETH by fealtie and homage These reports increased and with a certaine probabilitie did so possesse mens mindes thorow all Britanie that Queene ELIZABETH thought good for the conseruation of her owne credit and for the good of Murrey to wipe away these blots Therefore in a writing printed she declared in the word of a Prince that these reports were most vntrue and deuised by them who enuied the tranquillitie of both the Kingdomes and that there had beene no pact either by word or writing betweene her or her Agents and Murrey since hee came last into England that she knew of but that the Earle of Lennox Grandfather of the young King had requested that the King if hee could not bee safe in Scotland from the plots of wicked men might be sent into England Moreouer she affirmed that whatsoeuer is said of the paction betweene Murrey and the Earle of Hertford namely that they would giue mutuall helpe the one to the other to get the Crownes of both the Kingdomes to be vtterly false and vntrue Lastly that she was not the cause why the transaction betweene the Queene of Scotland and her little sonne was not concluded and that shee will labour all that shee may that it may bee effected And indeed she did her best endeuour though shee was tossed on the one side with feare out of the inueterate emulation which doth neuer die betweene women Princesses and on the other side with compassion remembring oftentimes the frail●ie of mankinde The Queene of Scotland kindled more this compassion and minished the feare with her often and louing letters in which she solemnely promised both for the courtesie which shee had found at her hands and also for the neere bloud of kindred which was betweene them that shee would attempt nothing against her and that shee would not bee beholding to any other Prince for her restitution but onely vnto her Insomuch that Queene ELIZABETH dealt earnestly with Murrey by Wood his Secretarie and with other Scots about the restoring of her vnto her former dignitie and estate and if that could not bee granted then that shee might bee ioined with her sonne and if that could not be granted neither yet that shee might liue a priuate life at home among her friends freely securely and honourably But shee could not stirre or moue Murrey who had all the gouernment in his hand to yeeld a iot About the same time a still rumor went vp and downe amongst men of the better sort that the Duke of Norfolke would marrie the Queene of Scotland which was a thing well taken of many but in sundry manners according as men wished For the Papists hereby hoped to haue some good for their religion and others hoped some profit would arise thereby vnto the Common-wealth But many men who saw the Queene was not minded to marrie
bee sent ouer into Ireland if reciprocally the Irish men be tied with the same condition not to passe ouer into Scotland For the more firme assurance of these things they consented to giue hostages whomsoeuer the Queene of England would name except the Duke of Chasteauleroy the Earle of Huntley Argile and Atholl Moreouer they consented that the Queene of Scotland should bee excluded from all her right of succession in England if she attempted any thing against the right of the Queene of England so that the Queene of England might againe b●e tied in some equall penaltie also if shee attempted any thing against the Queene of Scotland Concerning the Castles of Hume and Fast Castle they requested that they may bee restored vnto the Lord Hume the true Lord and proprietarie of them and that the English men would detaine them no longer from him And that to deliuer Fortresses in Galloway or Cantire vnto forrainers was no other thing than to giue a new occasion of warre When they could not agree vpon these Articles and the Commissioners came not from the Regent of Scotland and in the meane time it was reported and bruted that aid was earnestly requested by her friends of the Pope the King of France and the Duke of Alba for the deliuerance and freeing of the Queene of Scotland and the English rebels as Westmerland the Countesse of Northumberland and the rest were conueied secretly out of Scotland nothing came of this Treatie but yet The Bishop of Rosse sent the Articles of this treatie vnto the Pope and the Kings of France and Spaine and insinuated vnto them that the Queene of Scotland must of necessitie yeeld vnto them vnlesse they holpe her both with aduice and other aid very shortly which he did most importunately request at their hands but in vaine for all they were earnestly busied with other matters Anno 1571. A Little before this time Ridolphus the Florentine before named who had vsed much merchandize and trafficke at London fifteene yeeres sent very secretly the Letters of the Pope vnto the Queene of Scotland in the which hee promised his care and studie to the vtmost of his goods and labour to aduance the Catholike Religion and her and required her to shew fauour and giue credit vnto Ridolphus in all things and also that hee may vnderstand by him who now determined to returne into Italy by what meanes he may doe any good and giue any releefe vnto the Catholike Religion and remedy vnto the common mischiefes in England and Scotland Ridolphus also in his owne priuate letters requested the Queene to impart these things vnto the Duke of Norfolke and her friends and that she would commend him vnto them But she delaied her answer though the Kings of France and Spaine and the Duke of Alba wrote to the same effect vntill she saw vnto what end the treatie already begunne would come For there was come as from the King of Scotland to talke of the Scottish affaires the Earle of Mourton Petcarne Abbot of Dunfermelling and Iames Mac-Gill who vnto Queene ELIZABETH commanding them to lay downe euidently the causes of their depriuing the Queene of Scotland and to proue them to be iust shewed a tedious and long instruction or memoriall wherein with a most insolent libertie and bitternesse of speech they endeuoured to proue the people of Scotland to be superiour and aboue their Kings by the ancient priuileges of the Kingdome of Scotland by old forgotten and also late examples collected from all places yea and by the authoritie of Caluin they also endeuoured to proue that the popular Magistrates are appointed and made to moderate and keepe in order the excesse and vnrulinesse of Kings and that it is lawfull for them to put the Kings that bee euill and wicke● into prison and also to depriue them of their Kingdomes But they spake much of their lenitie vsed toward their depriued Queene because they suffered her to set her sonne in her place and to appoint gouernours vnto him That it proceeded out of the mercie of the people and not for her innocencie that they suffered her to liue and many other things which turbulent wits doe malapertly deuise and inuent against the royall Maiestie of Kings This memoriall Queene ELIZABETH read but not without indignation and as a libell written in the slander and reproach of Kings condemned it though she said nothing but vnto the Commissioners she answered that as yet shee did not see a iust cause of their abusing and vexing the Queene in that manner and therefore her will was that they should take some speedy course for the quenching the diuision and discord in Scotland Hereupon at the house of Bacon Keeper of the great seale it was proposed vnto the Bishop of Rosse the Bishop of Galloway and the Lord Leuingston Commissioners for the Queene of Scotland That for to giue securitie vnto the Kingdome and Queene of England and vnto the Noblemen that tooke the Kings part the Duke of Chasteauleroy the Earles of Huntley and Argile the Lords Hume and Herris and another Lord should be giuen for hostages and the Castles of Dunbritton and Hume deliuered vnto the hands of the English men for three yeeres They answered it was not to be doubted but the Queene of Scotland who of her free will committed her selfe to the protection of the Queene of England would also most willingly giue her satisfaction in all things which might conueniently bee done but to deliuer such great men and such Fortresses was no other thing but to spoile and depriue the distressed Queene of the succour and strength of all her most faithfull friends and of most strong places But they offered two Earles of whom one should be one of the three named and two Lords to be hostages for two yeeres but that the Holds and Castles by the league could not bee deliuered vnto the English men except others in like manner were deliuered vnto the French men But said Bacon all the Realme of Scotland the Prince the Noblemen and Castles are not all sufficient to giue securitie vnto the Queene and the most flourishing Realme of England and therefore the Queene of Scotland was not to be let goe vpon any securitie the Scots could propose Hereupon they immediatly gathered and said openly that now at length they plainly vnderstood that the English were resolued fully to keepe the Queene prisoner for euer in England and withall to breake off the Treatie since they exacted so earnestly such securitie as Scotland could not by any meanes performe yet the other Councellors of England protested that they earnestly desired the deliuerance of the Queene of Scotland so that sufficient securitie were giuen And to that purpose they also talked with Mourton and his associates hereof and of deliuering the King into England who in plaine termes answered that they had no commission to treat or deale either to receiue home the Queene into Scotland or to deliuer the King into England
But the Commissioners of the Queene of Scotland reiected this speech as a friuolous excuse For certainly they that had authoritie to depriue the Queene had also authoritie enough to restore and set her at libertie neither needed they to looke for any authoritie from the rest of the Conspirators since that their wicked fact had made them equalls facinus quos inquinat aequat As for the Prince he could not being but fiue yeeres old giue them authoritie and as for the Regent he had committed all the matter to Queene ELIZABETH and to her pleasure Therefore they besought the Commissioners of England that these men might bee compelled to consult thereof or else the matter ended and compounded vpon equall conditions without these men But Queene ELIZABETH when shee saw nothing could bee done to giue her selfe the King and the Realme securitie except both the factions agreed together Shee thought it fitting that the Estates of Scotland which were shortly to assemble did elect and choose out men who should endeuour to make a composition Hereupon Rosse and his associates openly complained that many of the Queene of Englands Councellors did abuse the prudence of the Queene of England and the patience of the Queene of Scotland and to haue deluded forraine Princes with their subtill policies and brought the Scots in a vaine hope to their great hurt And indeed the Queene of Scotland stomacking and complaining of the same and wearie of these delaies called away the Bishop of Galloway and Leuingston and commanded Rosse whom the Queene of England had commanded to depart from London to stay at London by the right of an Embassador which made a suspicion to grow and appointed her friends in Scotland to take armes and not trust any longer vnto the truces which had beene hurtfull vnto them For in the time wh●n these things were done in England they had sustained great losses many had beene put to execution more slaine and Dunbritton the strongest Fort in Scotland taken and Iames Hamilton Archbishop of Saint Andrewes brother to the Duke of Chasteauleroy as priuie to the murder of the King not so much as arraigned or tried was hanged by the accusation of a Priest who affirmed that he had heard it in confession by one of the Regicides When now the captiue Queene had no hope left and was in great griefe and all her seruants but ten and a Priest to say Masse were sent away and all her hope to obtaine her libertie was gone shee could not refraine but did open that which she had long concealed in her minde Shee therefore sent secretly vnto the Duke of Norfolke a long Commentarie of her purposes which she had written before time and certaine loue-letters in a priuate Character knowne to them two and other letters to be carried to the Pope and the King of Spaine by Ridolphus whom she commended as one very carefull of her good and her very friend Higford the Dukes Secretarie who wrote out this Commentarie and letters in an vsuall hand and letter was commanded to burne it but hee hid it vnder the Matt in the Dukes chamber and that of purpose as it seemed This Ridolph once to the Duke himselfe and more times by Barker reasoned thus That hee had obserued that there were many Noblemen and Commons in England that desired an Innouation and those were of three sorts Some that had bin in credit in the time of Queene Maries reigne now were not accounted of Others that were addicted to the Popish Religion and grudged inwardly that they might not vse it freely And others that were not content with their estate and hoped for better These were ready but wanted some Nobleman to bee their Captaine or Leader and forraine aid There could not be a fitter man for Captaine and more noble than the Duke who had the loue of the Realme And hee had great reason to reuenge the wrongs done vnto him by his long detention in prison and now to his reproach not called vnto the Parlament in which he had a place and voice as the chiefest Nobleman and Earle Marshall of England And to perswade him the more effectually he shewed him a roll of the Noblemen who had vowed to spend their liues and goods for him if he would attempt it As for forraine aid he assured him that the Pope so that the Romish Religion might bee aduanced would defray all the charges of the warre who had already laid in banke a great summe of money the last yeere when the Bull was published of the which money Ridolph himselfe had distributed a great part among the English fugitiues Hee promised that the King of Spaine irritated by the iniuries of the English men would send to helpe them foure thousand horse and six thousand foot which might bee sent ouer and landed at Harwich a Port in Essex whereabouts the Duke had many tenants and Gentlemen holding of him most fitly and without suspicion in the beginning of Summer when the Duke of Medina Caeli was to come with a good Nauie into the Low-Countries Lastly he concluded that such a moderation might be vsed that all suspicion of treason in the Duke might be taken away and prouision made for the safetie of the Queene of England if onely shee would embrace or tolerate the Romish Religion and consent to the mariage of the Queene of Scotland with the Duke The Duke gaue eare to these things as likely but yet refused to subscribe vnto the letters of credit as they call them which Ridolph being ready to depart shewed vnto him Neither would he heare the aduice of Rosse which hee had long studied and put into his head by Barker namely that the Duke with a selected companie of Noblemen to take the Queene suddenly and to disturbe the Parlament and by this meanes the mariage with the Queene of Scotland might bee finished and the Romish Religion set in better state in England without any great stirre and without any forraine aid Which might easily be done hauing so many Noblemen ready and prompt to enter into this action as could not bee assembled againe in one place without suspicion And iust cause there was for that the Duke was kept long in prison against the Lawes of the Realme and not admitted into the Parlament and also for that more rigorous Lawes were deuised against the Papists And to doe this hee brought in the example of Castrutio in Italy and others who by sudden actions had prosperously effected great matters and how fiue Noblemen in Scotland very lately had disturbed the Parlament wherein Murrey was to bee attainted and gotten the Queene into their hands This aduice the Duke who was out of his inbred good nature farre from any villanie detested and disliked as pernicious and dangerous But about the same time Henry Percy offered his seruice vnto Rosse for to deliuer the Queene of Scotland out of prison so that Grange and Carre of Ferniherst would receiue her at the borders of
vpon thy Peeres who haue found thee guiltie therefore this Bench doth adiudge that thou shalt bee lead backe from hence vnto the Tower from whence thou camest and from thence laid on a Hurdle shalt be drawne vnto the place of execution and there to bee hanged cut downe aliue to bee bowelled thy head cut off thy body to bee diuided into foure quarters thy head and thy quarters to bee disposed of at the Queenes pleasure And so our Lord haue mercie on thy soule The Duke hearing this iudgement said with a good courage Iudgement is giuen against mee as against a Traitor I trust in God that excluded from your fellowship I shall enioy the celestiall fellowship I will prepare my selfe to die I request this one thing that the Queene would bee good to my children and seruants and see my debts paid A few daies after Barney and Mather were executed who conspired with Herle a Ruffian to kill some o● the priuie Councellors and to deliuer the Duke But Herle presently discouered the matter vnto whom Barney said smiling when hee saw him brought forth to giue euidence against him Herle thou wentest but one houre before me otherwise I had stood there in thy place to giue euidence and thou hadst stood here in my place to be hanged These plots and the like which were many were taken hold of to hasten the Dukes death which yet was staied and deferred for foure moneths But on the second day of Iune at eight of the clocke in the morning the Duke was lead vnto a Scaffold new builded on the Tower-hill and when hee was gone vp and Alexander To these things she first protesting that shee was a free Queene and subiect to none answered with a stout courage and countenance 1 That shee had not vsurped the title and armes of England but that the King of France and her husband imposed them vpon her being very young and vnder the direction of her husband and therefore not to bee laid vpon her for a fault neither that she did weare or vse them after her husbands d●ath neither that shee will claime them as long as Queene ELIZABETH and her children liued 2 That she neuer imagined any detriment or hurt to the Queene by her mariage with the Duke of Norfolke being perswaded it would bee for the good of the Common-wealth and that shee did not renounce it because shee had giuen her faith and troth vnto him 3 That she willed the Duke by some meanes to get away out of danger and prison which shee did out of the dutie she ought to him as her husband 4 That shee had not raised rebellion nor was priuie to the same who was alwaies most ready to reueale any attempts against the Queene if shee would vouchsafe to heare her speake 5 That she neuer releeued the English Rebells onely that in her letters shee commended the Countesse of Northumberland vnto the Duke of Alba. 6 That she vsed Ridolph whom she knew to be highly in the Popes fauour in many matters yet receiued no letters from him 7 That she neuer moued any to attempt her deliuerance yet that she willingly gaue eare vnto them that offered their labour therein and for that purpose that shee communicated vnto Rolston and Hall a priuate Character 8 That she had receiued sometimes letters from the Pope very pious and consolatorie in which were no such phrases of speech 9 That shee procured not the Bull That shee onely saw the coppie thereof printed and when she had read it ouer that she burned it 10 That if any in forraine Regions write or name her otherwise than they ought to doe let them answer for it 11 That shee neuer by letters required aid of the Pope and the King of Spaine to inuade England but onely to be restored into her Kingdome by their meanes and that with the Queenes priuitie 12 But if any question or doubt bee made of those letters of effecting the mariage by force of armes she requested since shee was borne of the royall bloud of England that shee might answer personally in the next Parlament that was to be holden And at this time the French King fauouring the Queene of Scotland and her partie and the Queene of England the King and his partie earnestly moued Queene ELIZABETH to deliuer the Queene of Scotland which the Queene of England denied to doe saying In very truth I keepe the Queene of Scotland in custodie after a faire manner as a pledge of mine owne securitie and of the safetie of England But when it was come to light that the Queene of Scotland intended a secret confederacie with the King of Spaine by the Lord Seton who landing in Essex disguised like a Mariner had promised aid of men to the Scots of the Queenes partie from Alba both shee was kept straiter in prison and the kindnesse of the French men toward her waxed key-cold Shortly after the league betweene England and France being concluded at Blois and the Duke of Momorancie being sent into England to confirme the same he in few words in his Masters name requested that as much fauour might bee shewed vnto the Queene of Scotland as might be without danger That there might bee a cessation of armes in Scotland and that concord might be established there by Parlament Hee was answered That more fauour was shewed to the Queene of Scotland than shee deserued and should bee shewed for the French Kings sake although the Estates of the Kingdome who were now assembled thought the Queene could be in no securitie without some seueritie shewed vnto her As for the cessation of armes the Queene had dealt diligently therein and for that purpose had sent very lately Drurie the Marshall of Barwicke with Crocus the French Embassadour and that they by no perswasions could bring Grange and the Garrisons in the Castle of Edenburgh to peace being induced by hope of aid from France and the Low-Countries though Huntley and Hamilton Arbroth for the Duke his father had bound themselues vnder their hands to obserue peace and the others of the Queenes side had giuen their word also Anno 1573. IN Scotland Iames Dowglas Earle of Mourton by the meanes of Queene ELIZABETH was made Regent in the place of the Earle of Marre who hauing his authoritie established in the Parlament did enact in the Kings name certaine Lawes against the Papists and against Heretikes but the custodie of the King hee confirmed to Alexander Areskin for that the Earle of Marre vnto whom the custodie of the King of Scotland in his minoritie doth belong by a peculiar right was vnder age vpon these conditions that is to wit That the Papists and they of the other faction should bee vtterly excluded an Earle might come in with two men a Baron with one man other men alone and euery one of these vnarmed And whereas Queene ELIZABETH by Henry Killigrew had drawne Iames Hamilton Duke of Chasteauleroy George Gordon Earle of Huntley who stood for
Escouedo sent out of the Netherlands he had desired to haue some Hauens in Biscay granted vnto him from whence hee might inuade England with a Nauie But Philip disliked their intentions and began to neglect him as one ouer ambitious Yet Queene ELIZABETH vnderstood not these things fully vntill Orange informed her In the meane time Don Iohn couertly prosecuted the mariage and at the same time to cloake the matter sent vnto Queene ELIZABETH the Viscount of Gaunt to shew her the conditions of the peace and to request longer daies of paiment for the money lent vnto the Estates which she willingly granted and dealt with him againe by Wilson to recompence the Merchants of England for the hurt sustained in the sacking of Antwerpe He eludeth the matter whiles he seemed to attend about the Perpetuall edict for peace he brake out suddenly into open warre and by policie gat into his hands many Cities and Castles and wrote vnto the King of Spaine that he thought it best to subdue and conquer the Ilands of Zeland before the Inland Prouinces and beleeuing that which he hoped endeuoured to perswade him by his Secretarie that England was easier to be conquered than Zeland Anno 1578. ABout this time Margaret Dowglas Countesse of Lennox Neece to Henry the eighth by his eldest sister widow of Matthew Earle of Lennox Grandmother vnto IAMES King of Great Britaine ouerliuing her eight children departed to the ioies of heauen in the threescore and third yeere of her age and was buried at Westminster with a solemne funerall at the Queenes charge a Matron of worthy pietie patience and chastitie who was thrice cast into prison as I haue heard her speake it not for matter of treason but for loue matters First when Thomas Howard sonne to Thomas Howard first Duke of Norfolke being in loue with her died in the Tower then for the loue of Henry Darly her sonne to the Queene MARIE of Scotland lastly for the loue of Charles her younger sonne ●o Elizabeth Candish mother to Arbella of which mariage the Queene of Scotland was accused to bee a procurer as I haue said before About the same time the credit and authoritie of Mourton began to decay insomuch that hee was remoued from his office of Regent and the administration of all things deliuered vnto the King by the common consent of the Estates and because hee was not past twelue yeeres old vnto twelue of the chiefe Noblemen which were named of whom three euery three moneths by turnes should bee present with the King to giue him aduice and Mourton was one of them that they might seeme to bring him lower not to cast him downe Shortly after Mourton trusting on his sharpe wit long experience and many dependants and retainers thinking nothing well done except he himselfe did it and also not brooking not to be the same man he had beene drew backe all the administration vnto himselfe not regarding his associates and not obseruing the consent of administration set downe hee kept in his hand the King within the Castle of Sterling and shut out excluded whom he pleased and admitted others at his owne choice Wherewith the Noblemen being moued made the Earle of Atholl their Captaine and made Proclamation in the Kings name that all men aboue sixteene and vnder threescore yeeres should meet in Armour with victuals for fifteene daies There met very many and with Banners displaied they marched vnto Fawkirke where Mourton with his friends met them in Armour ready to fight But Robert Bowes the English Embassadour by intreatie and mouing honest conditions kept them from fighting and Mourton forthwith as wearie of businesse went home secretly and the Earle of Atholl died incontinently not without suspicion of poison which the mindes incensed against Mourton tooke to his slander and for this and other things they neuer ceased to persecute him vntill they had brought him to his destruction as we will declare hereafter Anno 1579. THe Scots were in feare of hauing their Religion altered by a French man called Amatus or Esmaus Stewart who came at this time into Scotland to see the King his Cousin for he was the sonne of Iohn Stewart brother vnto Matthew Earle of Lennox who was the Kings Grand-father and called Aubigney of a Towne in Berry which long since Charles the seuenth King of France had giuen to Iohn Stewart of the familie of Lennox who being Constable of the Scottish Armie in France put the English men to flight at Baugy and was afterwards slaine by them in the battell of Herrings and euer since that time it hath belonged vnto the younger sonne of that house This man the King vsed with singular kindnesse gaue him good liuings made him of his priuie Councell and Lord Chamberlaine of Scotland and Captaine of the Castle of Dunbritton and then Earle of Lennox and after Duke This extraordinarie fauour of the King towards him caused many to enuie him who murmured that he was a fauourer of the Guises and of the Roman Religion and sent purposely into Scotland by secret meanes to ouerthrow the true Religion The suspicion was much increased in that hee was familiar with the aduersaries of Mourton and intreated to haue Thomas Carre of Fernihurst recalled home who was the most assured friend to the Queene of Scotland of all others Mourton resisting the same with all his power but in vaine for his authoritie was lesse and lesse with all men although it might seeme that hee deserued well in profligating the Hamiltons and taking the Castle of Hamilton and Daffraine Anno 1580. IN Scotland when many Ministers of the Word and Noblemen perceiued that Lennox was in the Kings high fauour first they raised one Iames Stewart of the familie of Ochiltree Captaine of the Guard and Earle of Arran for hee had vsurped that title from I know not what cession of Iames Hamilton Earle of Arran whose Tutor hee had beene when hee was not well in his wit to affront him But the King in a short time reconciled them When this way serued not their turne they procured him as much hatred as they could at home and accused him hainously vnto the Queene of England as one sent in couertly by the Guises to shake the state of Religion to procure the libertie of the imprisoned Queene and to dissolue the amitie betweene England and Scotland These men were soone beleeued and vpon this matter was kept a serious consultation in England though hee in his letters cleered himselfe to the Queene and openly professed the Protestants Religion For the Councellors of England feared lest he should suppresse the Scots who were friends to England nourish excursions in the borders and entice the King to marrie in France or in some other place vnknowne to the English men whereupon the young King trusting might trouble England and being growne to mature yeeres assume to himselfe the title of the Realme of England as his mother had done before which if hee should
doe there would bee more danger in him than was in his mother since hee was borne to the certaine hope of both the Kingdomes he might get many moe fautors and now the Scots being bred vp in their warres at home and in the Low-Countries were more exercised and skilfull in marshall affaires Hereupon they thought good to wring Lennox out of the Kings fauour by one meanes or other or else to driue him out of Scotland and that without delay since it was bruted abroad that hee had sent for one Balfure out of France who had gotten I know not what hand-writing of Mourtons wherein it was hoped that Mourton might bee conuinced of the murder of the Kings father and also that he had obtained the Captainship of the Castle of Dunbritton for no other purpose but either to let in forraine forces into Britaine or else to carry ouer from thence the King of Scotland into France It was reported also that he perswaded the King to resigne his Crowne vp to his mother as if shee had beene depriued vniustly and by a most impious example or president by her subiects accepting assurance to take it from her by a lawfull resignation whereby hee should most strongly confirme his Kingdome to him and extinguishing the factions thereby bee acknowledged of all men for a lawfull King Hereupon Robert Bowes Treasurer for the Garrison at Barwicke was sent into Scotland who should challenge and charge Lennox with those things before the King and his Councellors and admonish them to beware of their imminent euils As soone as hee was admitted to speake he required to haue Lennox remoued from the Councell which the Councellors vtterly denied as a thing strange and neuer heard of that a Kings Councellor should bee put out of his place and his cause not heard or not knowne They doubted also whether the Queene did expresly command him so to doe and required him to shew his instructions to maintaine his credit He denied to shew them but onely to the King and vnto one or two more whereupon hee was vnheard forth with called home and tooke leaue of the King who thought of no such matter complaining that the wholsome admonishments of his Lady the Queene who deserued well at their hands were reiected Immediatly vpon this was sent from Scotland Alexander Hume to excuse these things and to learne what these imminent euils were but hee was not admitted vnto the Queene but was sent to Burleigh who with a briefe and discreet speech shewed him That the Queene thought not good to admit him to her speech not that shee did neglect him whom she had tried to be sound in Religion and a man carefull for the good of his Prince Countrie and the tranquillitie of both the Realmes but out of a iust griefe that her Maiestie and the credit of her Embassadour was so contemptuously vsed who had kept himselfe within the compasse and bounds of his Embassade and had beene commanded to shew his commission which was a thing neuer heard of Hee cast all the fault vpon the new Councellors and excused the King who wanted experience through his young yeeres and wished that hee would giue eare vnto the wholsome and profitable aduices of the Queene who bare a true motherly minde vnto him and not to make lesse account of her than he did of his French Cousin and a subiect to the French King matched with a French woman and a Papist in Religion and who perhaps doth seeke the Hamiltons being at this time banished to be designed second person to the King And said Let the King remember that there is no affection more vehement than Ambition and let the Scots remember what broiles the French men had made in Scotland if the Queene by her prudence and power had not preuented them So Hume was sent backe into Scotland and all these things were done of purpose to put the King in feare and to make him beleeue that Lennox had vndertaken dangerous plots and deuices against the King and the Realme Yet for all this shortly after Mourton who was wholly for England was accused of treason by the Earle of Arran and cast into prison Anno 1581. HEreupon in the beginning of Ianuarie Sir Thomas Randolph generall Post-master was sent into Scotland with instructions to conserue the Religion and amitie with the English men and to labour all hee could that no violence should bee offered vnto Mourton to remoue Lennox away out of Scotland and to comfort the Noblemen of the English faction Hee made diligent and earnest intreatie for Mourton alleaging his merits towards the King the honour of Queene ELIZABETH if shee so well deseruing should haue a repulse and the enuie of his accusers The King answered That hee could not out of his Princely dutie but bring to triall a man appeached of treason and that he acknowledged by experience the Queenes good will and that hee would not commit any thing that might iustly displease her by any meanes After Randolph was admitted to speake in the assembly of the Estates recounting the benefits of Queene ELIZABETH towards Scotland and the King himselfe to wit How she had deliuered the Realme from the French men with the bloud of English men defended their Religion and King and yet neuer thought to conuay him away as it was falsly reported or to obtaine an Acre of Scottish ground when yet shee had opportunitie and meanes to conquer Scotland the King being in his Cradle his mother prisoner in England and the Noblemen at dissention But on the other side shee hath bestowed all her care to preserue in safetie the King and his Realme who was tied vnto her with the most strait bonds of bloud vicinitie and Religion whose loue she found most sincere towards her as she had done all the Regents successiuely before that Aubigney Earle of Lennox came into Scotland Since that time hee hath ruled the King as a Ward hath auerted his minde from the friendship of the English men vnto the French men who haue not hitherto so much as acknowledged him for King hath put out of their offices the most faithfull subiects of the King and hath put in others not so faithfull and hath by his letters which he shewed dealt with forraine Princes about the inuading of England He hath moued the King to hate and abhorre the Ministers of Gods word as if they were railers and turbulent people and hath had no care of the administration of iustice betweene the borderers All which things Queene ELIZABETH could not but take in very euill part when she saw a Prince of such vertue and her neerest Cousin alienated and drawne forcibly away by these bad deuices Yet nothing was then effected either to helpe Mour●on or against Lennox who most men thought was falsly charged with the crimes and also that the letters which were shewed were counterfeit Therefore Randolph attempted another politike way He vnto the aduersaries of Lennox and vnto the friends of
Mourton deploreth the vnfortunate estate of Scotland and laieth before them the dangers hanging ouer the heads of the King the Common-wealth and themselues hee complaineth that the intercession of the Queene of England is not regarded of the vnthankfull people and couertly aduiseth them to trie whether they can effect that by armes which they cannot obtaine by other meanes and promised them helpe of men and money out of England And so hee drew to his side the Earles of Argile Montros Angus Mourtons brothers sonne Marre Glencarne Ruthen Lyndsey and others But they by and by after ●heir ends and purposes being seuerall when they saw the King wholly to bend his fauour towards Lennox and not to bee terrified with the English forces which were on the borders against which he had opposed his the most of them disagreeing and reuerencing royall Maiestie euen in a young man durst attempt nothing against Lennox and thought it enough if they tooke compassion on Mourton Yet Angus and Marre secretly deuised plots for Mourton and against Lennox of which when the King had knowledge by Wittingham Angus was commanded to depart and liue beyond the Riuer of Spea and Marre was commanded to deliuer the Castle of Sterling vnto the King Randolph doubting some danger to himselfe slipped secretly away to Barwicke and willed Angus and Marre things going against them to looke to themselues either by recouering the Kings fauour or else by resorting vnto the protection of the Queene of England But the English forces were now called backe from the borders and not long after Mourton as priuie vnto the murder of the Kings father was beheaded being first found guiltie of the same For hee had confessed as they say That Bothwell and Archibald Dowglas did communicate vnto him their intent and purpose to kill the King and that hee durst not reueale the same in such a doubtfull world as that was neither could he denie after the murder was committed but that Archibald Dowglas one of the murderers was one of his most inward friends and that hee gaue his faith and word vnder his hand to defend Bothwell if any man accused him for murdering of the King Angus and the other who stood in defence of Mourton fled into England Anno 1582. QVeene ELIZABETH that shee might bee more secure at home purposed to make a composition with the Queene of Scotland by Walter Mildmay but finding out that the Guise was deuising some secret practises with some English sugitiues and to gather forces together vnder pretence to send them into the Low-Countries to serue vnder the Duke of Anjeou but indeed to bee transported into England from Ewe an obscure part in Normandy belonging vnto him the matter was put off vntill another time and she was not regarded But about the same time William Ruthen whom the King had lately created Earle of Gowry not degenerating from his father who bare a deadly hatred against the Kings mother and other conspirators deuised to remoue Lennox and the Earle of Arran from the King vnder the pretence to assure Religion the Kings safetie and amitie of England whereunto they were incensed and whetted on by their Ministers So when Lennox was departed from Perth where the King lay vnto Edenburgh about some affaires of the Realme and Arran also was absent Gowry Marre Lyndsey and others taking the opportunitie inuited the King vnto the Castle of Ruthen where they detained him against his will and would not permit him to ride or walke into the fields threatning him with death They put from him all his faithfull seruants cast the Earle of Arran into prison and compelled the King to call home the Earle of Angus who was banished the Queene of England who was of their counsell making intercession for him and to send backe Lennox into France who being a man of a milde nature gaue ouer the Castle of Dunbritton which he might easily haue defended by the perswasion of the King set on by them and refused not to returne into France But they not content herewith enforced the King against his will to approue this his surprize in letters to the Queene of England and to pronounce the assembly of the Estates summoned and called by them to be lawfull When the French King heard this for a certaintie he dispatched Motfenelan by England and Manninguill by Sea with one and the same instructions into Scotland to wit That they should take some order by one meanes or other to set the King free and confirme the faction of France to allure and winne the Kings minde vnto the friendship of the French and as ioifull newes signifie vnto him that the Queene his mother out of her motherly pietie did grant and bestow vpon him the title of King and admit him very willingly now into the fellowship of the Kingdome to the end that hee might bee taken and acknowledged as a true and lawfull King by all Christian Princes and all the Scots and thereby the diuision and partaking of factions wholly taken away She in the meane time being vexed and troubled in minde oppressed with miseries and pining away with the calamitie of her long lasting imprisonment without any hope of libertie in her long letters written in French which her motherly loue and anxietie of minde extorted from her deplored vnto Queene ELIZABETH her grieuous and hard fortunes and the most distressed estate of her sonne to this effect for I will out of the originall written with her owne hand abbreuiate them When I heard for certaintie that my sonne was taken and surprized by Rebels as I my selfe was certaine yeeres agoe out of a iust feare lest hee should fall into the same and like vnfortunate estate that I am in I cannot but powre out my mournfull complaints and engraue the same if it may be in thy conscience that my innocencie may euidently appeare vnto posteritie and also their ignominie and shame by whose iniquitie I am cast into these miseries But since the policies and cunning reaches of these persons though wicked and lewd haue hitherto preuailed more with thee than my iust complaints let the right and iustice now yeeld and giue place vnto thy power and let force oppresse the truth with men I will appeale vnto the immortall God whom alone I acknowledge to bee superiour of vs Princes of equall right and honour And I will call vpon the same God with whom gloses and deceits are not regarded and will not preuaile that at the last day hee will reward vs two as wee deserue each to other howsoeuer my aduersaries haue skill to cloake their craftie and deceitfull policies with men and peraduenture also with thee In his name therefore and as it were before his Iudgement-seat I present vnto thy minde by what policies some spies vsing thy name drew the Scots my subiects to rebell against me at such time as I liued in Scotland and set on foot all the euils which haue happened there from that day to
serious consultation among the Councell of England and most of them were content that shee should bee deliuered vpon these conditions To wit 1 That she and her sonne should promise to practise nothing hurtfull to Queene ELIZABETH and the Realme of England 2 That she should voluntarily confesse that whatsoeuer was done by Francis the second the French King her husband against Queene ELIZABETH was done against her will and that shee should vtterly disallow the same as vniust by confirming the treatie of Edenburgh 3 That shee should condemne all the practises euer since that time and ingenuously renounce them 4 She should binde her selfe not to practise any thing directly or indirectly against the gouernment of the Realme of England in Ecclesiasticall or Ciuill affaires but by all manner of meanes oppose her selfe and resist such practisers as publike enemies 5 That shee shall challenge or claime no right vnto her selfe in the Kingdome of England during the life of Queene ELIZABETH and that afterward shee will submit her right of succession vnto the Estates of England 6 And to the end shee may not hereafter vse any cauill and say That she condescended to these conditions being a prisoner and by coaction shee her selfe should not onely sweare vnto them but also procure the Estates of Scotland to confirme them by publike authoritie 7 The King himselfe also should ratifie them by oath and by writing 8 And that hostages should be giuen As for the consociation with her sonne in the administration of affaires it was thought fit that the Queene of England should not interpose her selfe but this they referred to the King of Scotland himselfe and the Estates of Scotland But if they were ioined together that they should talke about the league with them iointly if not by themselues These things were consulted of but with no successe For the Scots of the English faction vtterly reiected them crying amaine that many Scots deadly enemies to the English Nation were called out of France by the counsell of the Queene of Scotland And that Holt an English Iesuit was sent secretly into Scotland to take order for the inuading of England The French Embassadours which went into Scotland not obtaining that they came for departed whereupon the Noblemen that had surprized the King grew haughtie in minde as also for that Lennox died at that time which putting them into securitie the King contrary to their expectation disdaining to be vnder the gouernment of three Earles recouered his libertie went to the Castle of Saint Andrewes and with good words willed many of the surprizers to depart from the Court to auoid any stirre and promised them pardon if they would aske it within a certaine time which thing Gowry onely did and called Arran backe to the Court but they were so farre off from doing of that as they secretly practised to take him suddenly againe Hereupon they were commanded to depart out of the Realme by a day appointed Marre Glamis the Commendators of Dryburg and Paslet and others went into Ireland Boyd Zester-Weim Locheluin went into the Low-Countries and Dunfermellin went into France Angus was confined into Angus onely Gowry hauing a new plot in his head tarried after the time prefixed to his owne destruction And then the King to shew himselfe a Prince began to exercise his Regall authoritie And whereas these Conspirators in an assembly called by their owne priuate authoritie had enacted and recorded That this surprize of the King was iust he on the contrary part declared in a great assembly of the Estates that the same was traiterous Although the Ministers as if they were the supreme Iudges in the Realme in a Synod called by their owne authoritie pronounced the same to bee iust and iudged all them that did not approue and allow the same worthy to be excommunicate Anno 1584. IN the beginning of the Spring some of the Scots returned out of Ireland vpon a pact made betweene them and Gowry who had conspired anew with diuers to take the King againe professing that they set before their eies nothing else but the glory of God the truth of Religion the securitie of the King and Realme and the amitie with England against them who by sinister meanes as they gaue out abused the King not yet come vnto sufficient age But the King hearing hereof sent Colonell Stewart to apprehend Gowry who lay at the Hauen of Dondee as if hee had beene going out of the land who after hee had defended himselfe an houre or two in his house was taken and carried away vnto prison In the meane time the other Conspirators tooke Sterling by sudden surprize and the Castle was yeelded vnto them yet by and by they leaue them both because the King displaied his banners as ready to fight not so many met as Gowry had promised and their hope of English helpe failed them and so for feare Marre Glamis and Angus who was come to them and others fled into England humbly beseeching the Queene to releeue their necessities and to intreat the King for them Forasmuch as they had lost all their goods and the Kings fauour for shewing their loue to her and England vnto whom shee thought good to shew some fauour that they might bee opposed against the contrary faction in Scotland and the rather for that the Ministers bruted that the King was vpon the point to fall from his Religion vpon no other ground though they fained other matters but for that hee vpon a fi●all loue inclined to his mother and receiued into his especiall fauour and grace those whom he knew to bee most addicted vnto his mother In the meane time Gowry was arraigned before his Peeres at Sterling vpon these points That he intended and began a new conspiracie against the King whom he had also kept prisoner in his house beforetime That he conferred by night with the seruants of Angus to seize vpon Perth and Sterling That he had resisted the Kings authoritie at Dondee had conceiued a conspiracie against the life of the King and his mother Lastly that he had asked counsell of Maclena the Witch and being found guiltie by his Peeres he was in the euening beheaded but his seruants sowing the head vnto the body buried it incontinently About the same time were some practises in England but with no successe in the behalfe of the Q of Scotland of which the chiefest was Francis Throgmorton eldest sonne to Iohn Throgmorton Iustice of Chester who fell into suspicion out of his letters vnto the Queene of Scotland which were intercepted As sonne as hee was taken and began to confesse some things Thomas Lord Paget and Charles Arundel a Courtier fled out of the land into France who with other Papists lamenting their estate among themselues complained that the Queene by the wicked and craftie dealings of Leicester and Walsingham was estranged from them That they were abused with contumelies and reproaches That strange kinds of subtiltie were inuen ted against them
out of common charitie whilest they feared not her but were fearefull of the other bound themselues in a certaine Association with their mutuall oathes subscriptions and seales to persecute with all their forces vnto death them who did attempt any thing against the Queene The Queene of Scotland who quickly vnderstood that a way was made by it to make her away wearie of her long miserie and fearing worse things propounded these things to the Queene and her Counsellors by Nauus her Secretarie If her libertie might be granted and that she might be assured of the sincere minde and loue of Queene ELIZABETH that she would binde her selfe in a most strict league of amitie with the Queene most dutifully honour and obserue her before all other Christian Princes forget all offences past acknowledge her the true and most rightfull Queene of England and that she would not challenge during her life any right vnto the Crowne of England nor practise anything against her directly or indirectly and vtterly to renounce the title and armes of England which she had vsed by the commandement of Francis her husband and also vnto the Bull of the Pope about her deposition and depriuation Yea and also enter into that Association for the securitie of the Queene and into a defensiue league sauing the ancient league betweene France and Scotland yet so that nothing be done in the life of the Queene or after her death which may be hurtfull vnto her her sonne and their heires in succession before they be heard in the Assemblie of the Estates of England For more assurance of these things that she will remaine as an hostage in England and if she may haue leaue to depart out of England that she will giue pledges Moreouer that she will alter nothing in Scotland so that the exercise of her religion be permitted only to her and her familie That she will for euer forget all the wrongs done her in Scotland but yet vnder that condition that the things published to her infamie may be repealed That she will commend vnto the King Counsellors which were desirous to keepe peace with England and would reconcile vnto him as much as lay in her the Noblemen that were fled into England if they would humbly acknowledge their fault and that the Queene gaue her word to giue aid vnto the King against them if at any time they fell or departed from their obedience That she would doe nothing about her sonnes mariage without the priuitie of the Queene and that she would not doe anything without the priuitie of her sonne so she requested that her sonne might be ioyned in this treatie whereby it may be made more strong She doubted not but that the King of France would be contented and binde himselfe by promise together with the Princes of the house of Lorraine for the performance of these agreements She also desired that these things might be answered with speed lest any thing might happen in the meane while to hinder it Lastly she earnestly desired that she might haue the fauour to haue more libertie that therein the loue of the Queene might appeare more euidently to her Out of these things as matters of much honour and dutie Queene ELIZABETH seemed to reioyce and it was then thought she was inclined to deliuer her although there were some in England who setting new feares before her eyes drew her from it But the matter being well followed and in a manner concluded was most of all hindered by the Scots of the contrary faction who exclaimed that Queene ELIZABETH was vtterly vndone if she were deliuered out of prison and both the Realmes would be vndone if she were ioyned with her sonne in the kingdome of Scotland and if the exercise of the Roman Religion were permitted vnto her if it were but in her Court And some of the Scottish Ministers in Scotland out of their Pulpits and in their meetings railed most vilely against their Queene they spoke ill of the King and his Counsellors and being commanded to appeare in person obstinately and contemptuously denied so to doe as if the Pulpits were exempted from the Kings authoritie and that Ecclesiasticall persons were not subiect to the King but to the Presbyterie directly against the lawes made this yeere in the Assemblie of the States in the which the Kings authoritie ouer all persons both Ecclesiasticall and Laicks was confirmed for euer viz. That the King and his Counsellors are competent Iudges in all causes and they who would not obey the same are to be accounted for Traitors The assemblies of Pre●byteries as also those of Laicks as well generall as particular were prohibited as hauing arrogated without the Kings priuitie boundlesse authoritie and when they list of meeting together and of prescribing lawes vnto the King and vnto all the Realme And also the popular equalitie of Ministers was abrogated and the dignitie and iurisdiction were restored vnto the Bishops whose vocation the Presbyteries had condemned as Antichristian And the sla●derous writings against the King his mother and Counsellors were forbidden and by name the Historie of George Buchanan and his Dialogue De iure regni apud Scotos as those which containe many things fit to be corrected and blotted out of memory And also many men blamed Patrick Grey the Scottish Embassador in England as if he won by br●bes had babbled out much matter to the hurt of the King and his mother and had hindered that these most equall conditions propounded from the Kings mother and sent by Nauus were not admitted Whereupon shee hauing her patience oftentimes wronged fell into a grieuous sorrow and indignation and so great was her desire of libertie that she gaue her minde and eares as well vnto the treacherous counsell of her enemies as vnto the pernicious deuices of her friends And so much the more for that as she had perswaded her selfe that the Association was made to endanger her life so now she had an inkling that by the policie of some men she was to be taken away from the keeping of the Earle of Shrewsburie who being an vpright man did not fauour their plots and to be committed vnto new Keepers And that it might be done with a better colour and the credit of the Earle of Shrewsburie which was approued and well knowne might not seeme to be suspected for it was not thought good to call in question the reputation of so great a man which yet they had cracked by secret slanders vpon the finding fault of his vnreasonable wife suspicions were laid hold on as if the plot of getting her libertie had beene begun out of certaine Emblemes sent by some vnto her Those were Argus with many eyes lulled asleepe by Mercury playing tunes on his pipe with this little sentence ELOQVIVM TOT LVMINA CLAVSIT Another was Mercury striking off the head of Argus keeping Io. A graft or cyon engrafted in a stocke and bound with bands yet flourishing and written about it PER
Queene ELIZABETH was found out and came to light which I will briefly describe At Easter this yeere Iohn Ballard a Priest of the Seminarie of Rhemes who had visited many Roman Catholikes in England and Scotland returned into France accompanied with Mawd one of Walsinghams spies a most craftie dissembler who had bleared his eyes and talked with Bernardino Mendoza at that time ordinary Embassadour of the King of Spaine in France and with Charles Paget a man exceedingly addicted to the Queene of Scotland about the inuading of England saying that now was a most fit time all the militarie men being absent in the Low Countries and that they could not hope for a fitter time since that the Pope the King of Spaine Guise and Parma were determined to set vpon England by that way to turne the warre out of the Low Countries And though Paget held it cleere that it would be in vaine as long as the Queene liued yet Ballard was sent backe into England being sworne to procure aid and helpe vnto the Inuaders and libertie vnto the Queene of Scotland and that with all speed and as soone as he could At Whitsontide following this Ballard apparelled like a souldier and called by a counterfet name Captaine Foscu arriued in England and talked at London about these things with Anthony Babington of Dethick in Derbishire a young man well borne rich of an excellent wit and learned aboue his yeeres who being addicted to the Roman Religion had a little before stollen ouerinto France without any licence and had beene very familiar with Thomas Morgan one that belonged vnto the Queene of Scotland and with the Bishop of Glasco her Embassador which two in extolling continually the heroicall vertues of such a Queene had shewed such certaine hopes of great honours and preferments by her of which the ambitious young man quickly tooke hold they also commended him thinking of no such matter in their letters to the Queene of Scotland For when he was returned into England she curteously saluted him by her letters and from that time Morgan vsed to send ouer and to conuey letters vnto her by his meanes vntill such time as she was put ouer to be kept by Amyas Paulet For then the young man seeing the danger left off With this Babington I say did Ballard deale about this matter He was fully perswaded that the Inuasion of England would come to nothing so long as Queene ELIZABETH liued But when Ballard had insinuated that she should not liue long that Sauage who had taken an oath to kill her was already come into England Babington did not like that so great a matter should be committed onely to Sauage lest hee should faile in his attempt but rather to six stout Gentlemen whereof he would haue Sauage to be one lest he should breake his oath and Babington deuised a new way to haue the land inuaded by strangers of the hauens where they should take land of the aid that should be ioyned to them how to deliuer the Queene of Scotland and to kill the Queene Whiles he studied earnestly about this matter he receiued by a boy vnknowne letters in a character or ziffre samiliar betweene the Queene of Scotland and him which mildly accused him for his long silence and bade him to send with speed a packet of letters sent from Morgan and deliuered by the Secretary of the French Embassador which thing he did and withall by the same messenger wrote letters vnto her wherein he excused his silence for that he was depriued of meanes and opportunity to send from the time that she was put into the custody of Amyas Paulet a Puritane a meere Leycestrian and a professed enemie of the Catholike faith for so he called him He opened vnto her what he had conferred with Ballard and told her that six Gentlemen were selected to execute the tragicall murder and that he with a hundred other would deliuer her at the same time Hee besought her that rewards might be propounded and giuen vnto the heroicall actors in this businesse or to their posterity if they failed or died in the action Vnto these letters answer was made the 27. of Iuly the forward care of Babington toward the Catholike Religion and her selfe is commended but he was aduised to proceed in the businesse warily and that an Association might bee made amongst them as though they feared the Puritans and that no stir should be made before they were certaine and assured of forraine helpe and forces that some tumult might be raised also in Ireland whilest a blow or wound might be giuen in these parts Arundell and his brethren and Northumberland might be drawne into their side Westmorland Pager and some others secretly called home And the way also of deliuering her is prescribed either by ouerthrowing a Cart in the gate or by burning the stables or by intercepting her selfe when she rode vp and downe in the fields for her recreation betweene Chartley and Stafford Lastly Babington is commanded to giue his word and promise for the rewards vnto the six Gentlemen and the others He had already gotten vnto himselfe some Gentlemen who were earnest Roman Catholikes among the which the chiefest were Edward Windsore brother to the Lord Windsore a milde young man Thomas Salisbury of a worshipfull family in Denbighshire Charles Tilney of an ancient worshipfull house the only hope of his family and one of the Gentlemen pensioners to the Queene whom Ballard had lately reconciled vnto the Roman Church both of them very proper men Chidiocke Tichburne of Hamshire Edward Abington whose father was Cofferer to the Queene Robert Gage out of Surrey Iohn Trauerse and Iohn Charnock of Lancashire Iohn Iones whose father had beene Taylor vnto Queene Mary the aforenamed Sauage Barnwell of a worshipfull family in Ireland and Henry Dun a Clarke in the office of the first fruits and tenths into this society Pooly also insinuated himselfe a man perfectly instructed in the affaires of the Queene of Scotland a notable and cunning dissembler who is thought to haue discouered all their purposes and counsells vnto Walsingham day by day and to haue vrged these young men ready enough to doe euill headlong by suggesting and putting worse things into their heads though Na●●s Secretary to the Queene of Scotland had secretly aduised them to take heed of him Vnto these men Babington communicated the matter but not all things vnto euery one hee sheweth his letters and those of the Queene of Scotland vnto Ballard Tichburne and Dun he moueth Tilney and Tichburne to dispatch the Queene At the first they deny to contaminate and ●mbrue their hands in their Princes bloud Ballard and Babington tels them that it is lawfull to kill Princes who be excommunicated and if one offend it is to be done for the good of the Catholike Religion Herewith they with much adoe perswaded doe consent Abington Barnwell Charnock and Sauage readily and voluntarily sweare to doe it Salisburie could not be perswaded
to our welbeloued and trusty Henry Lord Compton another of the Lords of the Parlament And also to our welbeloued and trustie Henry Lord Cheney another of the Lords of the Parlament To our welbeloued and trusty Francis Knolles Knight Treasurer of our houshold another of our Priuy Counsell And also to our welbeloued and trusty Iames Crofts Knight Controller of our said houshold another of our Priuy Counsell To our beloued and trusty Christopher Hatton Knight our vice-Chamberlaine another of our Priuy Counsell And also to our trusty and welb●loued Francis Walsingham Knight one of our chiefe Secretaries another of our Priuy Counsell And also vnto our trusty and welbeloued William Dauison Esquier another of our principall Secretaries of our Priuy Counsell And to our trusty and welbeloued Ralph Sadleir Knight Chauncellor of our Dutchy of Lancaster another of our Priuy Counsell And also to our trusty and welbeloued Walter Mildmay Knight Chauncellor of our Exchequer another of our Priuy Counsell And to our trusty and beloued Amyas Powlet Knight Captaine of the I le of Iersey another of our Priuy Counsell And to our trusty and welbeloued Iohn Wolley E●quire our Secretary for the Latine tongue another of our Priuy Counsell And also to our trusty and welbeloued Christopher W●ay Knight chiefe Iustice of the Kings Bench And to our trusty and welbeloued Edmund Anderson Knight Chiefe Iustice of the Common Bench Roger Manwood Knight Chiefe Baron of our Exchequer Thomas Gawdy Knight one of our Iustices of the Kings Bench And William Peryam one of the Iustices of our Bench Greeting c. And not to set it downe verbatim After the recapitulation of the Act made the last yeere these words follow When after the end of the Session of Parlament viz after the first day of Iune in the XXVII yeare of our reigne diuers things haue beene compassed and deuised tending to the hurt of our Royall Person as well by Mary daughter and heire of Iames the fift lately King of Scotland and commonly called Queene of Scotland and Dowager of France pretending title vnto the Crowne of this Realme of England as by diuers other persons with the priuity of the same Mary as it is giuen vs to vnderstand and for that we intend and determine that the said Act should be executed rightly and effectually in all things and by all things according to the tenour of the said Act and that all the offences aforesaid in the aforesaid Act as it is said mentioned and the circumstances of the same should be examined and sentence and iudgement thereupon giuen according to the tenor and effect of the said Act We giue vnto you and to the greater part of you full and ample power faculty and authority according to the tenour of the said Act to examine all and singular things compassed and deuised tending to the hurt of our Royall Person with the priuity of the said Mary and all the circumstances of the same and all the aforesaid offences whatsoeuer mentioned in the said Act as it is said and all circumstances of the same offences and of euery one of them And moreouer according to the tenour of the said Act to giue sentence and iudgement euen as the matter shall appeare vnto you vpon good proofe And therefore we command you to proceed diligently vpon the aforesaid things in the forme aforesaid at certaine daies and places which you or the greater part of you shall appoint and prouide for this purpose c. The most of these came to Fodringhay Castle in Northamptonshire on the xj day of October where the Queene of Scotland was then kept On the next day the Commissioners sent vnto her Sir Walter Mildmay Sir Amyas Powlet and Edward Barker a publike Notary who deliuered into her hands the letters of Queene ELIZABETH which when she had read ouer she with a Princely countenance and quiet minde said I am much aggrieued that the Queene my most deare sister is wrong informed of me and that I who haue so straitly beene kept so many yeeres and being now lame after I haue offered so many equall and faire conditions for my liberty haue laine so long time neglected Although I haue fully forewarned her of many dangers yet I was not beleeued but was alwaies despised although I am most neere to her in bloud When the Association was made and when it was confirmed in the Parlament I foresaw that whatsoeuer danger befell either by forraine Princes abroad or any harebraine fellowes at home or for the cause of Religion I should pay deare for the same I hauing so many deadly enemies at the Court I may take it in euill part and I haue cause for it that a league was made with my sonne without my priuity or knowledge but such like things I pretermit But to come vnto these letters It seemeth strange vnto me that the Queene commandeth me as if I were her subiect to come vnto a triall I am an absolute Queene neither will I doe or commit any thing which may empaire or wrong the Royall Maiestie of Kings and Princes of my place and ranke or my sonne My minde is not so deiected neither will I yeeld and sinke downe vnder calamity I referre my selfe vnto those things which I protested before Bromly and the Lord De la Ware The lawes and statutes of England are to me vtterly vnknowne I am destitute of counsellours I tell you plaine I know not who may be my Peeres my papers and notes of remembrances are taken from me there is none that dare pleade or speake in my cause I am free from all offence against the Queene neither am I to be called in question but vpon mine owne word or writing which can neuer be brought against me But yet I cannot deny but that I haue commended my selfe and my cause to forraine Princes On the next day returned vnto her in the name of the Commissioners Powlet and Barker who shewed this answer put into writing and they asked her if she persisted in the same After she had heard it distinctly read she commended it as truly and rightly conceiued and said she would persist in the same But said she I did not remember one thing which I wish may be put in Wh●reas the Queene hath written I am subiect and liable vnto the lawes of England and am to be iudged by them because I liued vnder the protection of them I answer That I came into England to aske and craue aid and helpe from which time I haue beene kept and deteined in prison and could not enioy the protection and benefit of the lawes of England and hitherto I could not vnderstand by any body what the lawes of England were In the afternoone many chosen out of the Commissioners with men skilfull in the Canon and Ciuill lawes came vnto her but the Chancellor and the Treasurer declared their authority out of the letters patents and shewed her that neither captiuity nor the prerogatiue of
and not vnworthy of the King and her most louing Cousin But when as the Ambassadors out of season mingled threats amongst their requests they were lesse acceptable and sent away within few daies with very small hope Pomponius Bellieurus who was sent by the French King for the same cause when he was come vnto the Queene hauing in his company L'aubespineus of Castro Nouo the ordinary Ambassador and had in few words signified how the French King was distracted on this side for his singular loue toward her and on that side for the strait familiaritie and affinitie betweene him and the Queene of Scotland he propounded in writing these things and the like once or twice The most Christian King of France and all other Kings are interessated that a Queene and free and absolute Princesse be not put to death The safetie of the Queene may be more endangered by the death than by the life of MARY that she being deliuered out of prison can attempt nothing against the Queene for that shee was sickly and could not liue long That shee challenged and claimed the Kingdome of England was not to be laid to her charge as a fault but was to be ascribed to the tendernesse of her age and her naughtie counsellors That she came into England to intreat helpe and fauour and therefore the lesse iustly detained and that now at length she was to be let loose vpon some ransome agreed vpon or else to haue mercy vsed to her Moreouer that an absolute Prince is not to be called in question of his life in so much that Cicero said It is so vnusuall for a King to be arraigned that it is a thing neuer heard before this time If she be innocent then shee is not to be put to death if faultie to be spared for this would proue more to her honour and vtilitie and it should be the eternall example of the clemencie of England To this intent the historie of Porsenna was rehearsed who pulled the hand of Mutius Sceuola who had conspired to kill him out of the flames of fire and dismissed him That the first precept of reigning well is to spare bloud that bloud calleth for bloud that it cannot be otherwise thought but to be cruell and bloudie to vse tyrannie toward her That the French King will do all his labour and vse all diligence that the attempts and endeuours of all that plot any thing against the Queene may be repressed and stopped And that the Guises the kinsmen of the Queene of Scotland would sweare the same and confirme it with their hands and seales who if shee be put to death will take it in very euill part and perhaps will not suffer it to be vnreuenged Lastly they requested that she should not be vsed according to that rigorous and extraordinarie iudgement if not that the French King could not but take it in very euill part and be much offended howsoeuer all other Princes may take it Vnto these writings answer was made in the margin vnto euery article thus That the Queene of England doth hope that the most Christian King of France will haue no lesse regard and respect vnto her than vnto the Scottish Queene who plotted to kill an innoccnt Prince her next cousin and the Kings confederate And that it is behouefull vnto Kings and Common-wealths that mischieuous actions specially against Princes be not left vnpunished That the English-men who acknowledge only Queene ELIZABETH to be Supreme Gouernour in England cannot at once acknowledge two Soueraignes free and absolute Princesses in England neither that any other whomsoeuer whilest she liued was to be taken as equall with her Neither could they see how the Scottish Queene and her sonne that now reigneth can be accounted at one time soueraigne and absolute Princes Whether that the Queenes safetie may be exposed vnto greater dangers if she be put to death dependeth vpon contingencie and vncertaintie hereafter that the Estates of England who haue studied seriously on this point thinke otherwise to wit that there will neuer want occasions of plo●ting mischiefes during her life especially for that matters are now come to that passe that there is no hope left for the other except the other be extinguished or taken away and this sentence may come often to minde Either I her or shee me The shorter her life is with the more speed the conspirators for this cause will accelerate and hasten the execution of her plots That shee would not hitherto renounce and giue ouer the right shee claimeth and challengeth vnto the Realme of England and that for that cause she hath beene most rightfully detained in prison and is still to be detained although shee came for succour and helpe into England vntill shee haue renounced and giuen ouer the same And that she ought to sustaine punishment for the faults she hath committed in prison for what cause soeuer she was put into prison That the Queene also hath pardoned her most mercifully when shee was condemned by the consent of all the Estates for the Rebellion raised in the North to make the mariage betweene her and the Duke of Norfolke and to spare her againe were a fond and cruell kinde of mercie That none are ignorant of that saying of the Lawyers An offender in the territory of another and there found is punished in the place where the ●ault is committed without any regard or respect of dignitie honour or priuilege And that the same is euident as well by the lawes of England as also by the examples of Licinius Robert King of Sicilie Bernard King of Italy Conradinus of Elizabeth Queen of Hungarie of Ioan Queene of Naples and of Deiotarus for whom Cicero pleading said it was not vniust for the King to be arraigned though it were vnusuall For the words goe thus Quod primùm dico de capite fortunisque Regis Quod ipsum etsi non iniquum est in tuo duntaxat periculo tamen est ita inusitatum c. That she who hath beene found guiltie by a lawfull iudgement is to be put vnto execution forasmuch as that which is iust is honest and that which is honest is also profitable That the History of Porsenna did not agree vnto this matter proposed except one should thinke that there is a long traine of them who seeke to hurt the Queene and could perswade her to dismisse her without any hurt out of feare and some little respect of honour but no regard of her owne safety as Porsenna sent Mutius away when he had auowed that there were other three hundred who had conspired to kill him Moreouer that Mutius ventured vpon Porsenna in a war proclaimed and by the sending of Mutius away he perswaded and assured himselfe that he had escaped all danger Bloud is to be spared that is the innocent God commanded this It is true that the voice of bloud crieth for bloud and that France before the massacre of Paris and afterward can witnesse this That
cannot obtaine their request at thy hands SAFETIE it selfe cannot saue and preserue this Common-wealth and the Historians will publish to the succeeding age that the most cleere shining daies of England vnder Queene ELIZABETH ended in a loathsome euening or rather into an eternall darke night The posteritie will finde lacke of our prudence who which thing doth accumulate our miserie could see our euils and could not preuent them and will impute the masse of our miseries not so much to the malice of our aduersaries as to the carelesse and slothfull negligence of these times Let not the life of one Scottish woman praeponderate and be of more weight with thee than the vniuersall safetie of England Let there be no stay nor delay vsed in so great a matter for that forbearance and delay procureth danger neither let space and time be giuen vnto these wicked plotters and contriuers of mischiefe who now will seeke their last succour and helpe by bold and audacious aduentures and besides their impunitie will hope for a reward for their mischieuous action He that doth not beware to auoid a danger as much as he can doth tempt God more than trust in God All the dangers whatsoeuer hang ouer our heads from forraine Princes by her death will be taken away neither can they hurt England but by her What will and power soeuer the Pope hath to doe hurt will cease and come to nothing when shee is gone The King of Spaine hath no reason to be angry for that he himselfe for his owne security made away his only son Charles and at this time doth lie in wait to take away the life of Don Antonio the Portugal to serue his owne ambition The French doth religiously obserue and keepe the amitie with England and it also much concerneth his good that by the speedie death of the Scottish Queene the hopes of the Guises who relying and trusting vpon the hoped and future power of their Kinswoman doe now more insolently insult ouer their King The King of Scotland both by naturall affection and in respect of his honour may indeed be grieued or disquieted yet in his wisdome hee will expect rather to haue things long after with securitie than to haue things in ouer-much haste with danger And the n●erer hee is to his chiefest hope the futher forraine Princes will hold off from ioyning to helpe him for as much as it is familiar and ordinarie for them by one meanes or other to stop and hinder the increasing power of another Prince at the beginning They set before her eyes also domesticall examples for as much as that which is done by example deserueth the more to be excused How the Kings of England carried themselues toward their Cousins and Competitours for their owne securitie namely Henry the first toward Robert his eldest brother Edward the third or rather his mother toward Edward the second Henry the fourth toward Richard the second Edward the fourth toward Henrie the sixt and his sonne Edward Prince of Wales and toward his owne brother George Duke of Clarence Henry the seueuth toward the Earle of Warwick the young sonne of the Duke of Clarence Henry the eighth toward De la Pole Earle of Suffolke Margaret Countesse of Sarisburie and Courteney Marquesse of Exceter who euery one for smaller matters if the crimcs be compared were put to death and made away Neither did the Courtiers alone buzze these things into the Queens head but also some Preachers very earnestly and many of the Cōmons also out of hope or fear exercised the fantasie of their brains and wits too saucily and malapertly in this Argument Amongst these pensiue thoughts which made the Queene so carefull and doubtfull that she delighted in solitarinesse and sate without any cheere and sometimes without speaking a word and oftentimes sighing would mutter to her selfe Either beare it or strike home and out of some obscure Embleme Kill lest thou be killed shee deliuered to Dauison one of her Secretaries letters signed with her hand that a Mandate should be made vnder the great Seale of England for the putting of her vnto execution which might be readie if any danger were readie to fall and commanded him not to communicate the matter to any man But on the next day she whilest feare did not allow her owne counsell changing her minde commanded Dauison by William Killigrew that the Mandate should not be made vp He forthwith came to the Queene and told her that the Mandate was made and sealed with the great Seale She chafing reproued him for making such haste neuerthelesse he communicated the Mandate and businesse vnto the Queenes Counsellors and perswadeth them who quickly beleeued that which they desired that the Queene commanded that it should be put in execution without delay Beale than whom there was none more euill affected vnto the Queene of Scotland for Religion is sent with one or two executioners and letters in the which authoritie is giuen vnto the Earles of Shrewsburie Kent Darby and Cumberland with others that she should be put to death according to the Lawes vnknowing to the Queene and although at that very time shee had signified vnto Dauison that shee would take another way and course about the Queene of Scotland yet he did not call Beale backe As soone as the Earles came to Fotheringhay they came to her with Amias Poulet and Drewgh Drury in whose custodie she was and signified the cause of their comming reading the Mandate and in few words admonished her to prepare her selfe vnto death for that shee was to die the next day Shee without feare and with a setled minde answered I did not thinke that Queene ELIZABETH my sister would haue consented vnto my death for I am not subiect vnto your Law but since it is otherwise death shall be vnto me most welcome neither is that soule worthy of the heauenly and euerlasting ioyes whose bodie cannot endure one blow of the hangman Shee requested that she might conferre with her Almoner her Confessor and with Meluin her Steward They in plaine termes denied her confessor to come vnto her and the Earles commended the Bishop or Deane of Peterburgh for to comfort her whom when shee had reiected the Earle of Kent being fiery hot in Religion turned vnto her and amongst other words broke out into these Thy life will be the destruction of our Religion as on the other side Thy death will be the life of the same Mention being made of Babington shee constantly and vtterly denied that shee knew of his plots left the reuenge vnto God And being demanded of that which was done by Nauus and Curlus she asked if euer it was heard that the seruants were suborned and admitted as witnesses to the death of their Masters When the Earles were departed shee commanded them to make haste with her supper that shee might set things better in order She supped sparingly and soberly as her manner was In supper time beholding her men
was cut off at two blowes The Deane saying aloud So let the enemies of Queene ELIZABETH perish the Earle of Kent saying the same and the multititude sighing and grieuing thereat Her bodie was embawmed and was after buried like a Prince in the Cathedrall Church of Peterburgh And her funerals were kept most magnificently at Paris at the charges of the Guises who performed all the best offices of kindred for their Cousin both aliue and dead to their great commendation In this lamentable manner ended her life MARIE Queene of Scotland the great grand-daughter of Henry the seuenth by his eldest daughter in the XLVI yeere of her age and the XVIII yeere of her captiuitie A woman most constant in her Religion adorned with a wonderfull pietie toward God wisdome aboue her sex and was also very faire and beautifull And is to be accounted one of those Princes whose felicitie was changed into aduersitie In her infancie shee was with strife desired for wife by King Henry the eighth of England for his sonne Edward and by Henry the second King of France for Francis the Dolphin At the age of fiue yeeres she was carried into France and at the age of fifteene yeeres married vnto the Dolphin Shee flourished and was Queene of France one yeere and foure moneths Her husband being dead she returned into Scotland and was maried againe vnto Henry Stuart Lord Darley and had by him IAMES the first Monarch of Great Britaine Tossed and turmoiled by Murrey her bastard brother and other her vngrate and ambitious subiects deposed from her Kingdome and driuen to flie into England and circumuented and entrapped as men speaking indifferently thinke by sundry English-men carefull of the conseruation of their Religion and of the safetie of Queene ELIZABETH and thrust forward by others desiring much to restore the Roman Religion and oppressed by the testimonies of her Secretaries who were absent and as it seemed corrupted with rewards Neere to the graue an Epitaph in the Latine tongue was affixed and forthwith taken away MARIA SCOTORVM REGINA REGIS FILIA REGIS GALLORVM VIDVA REGINAE ANGLIAE AGNATA ET HAERES PROXIMA VIRTVTIBVS REGIIS ET ANIMO REGIO ORNATA IVRE REGIO FRVSTRA SAEPIVS IMPLORATO BARBARA ET TYRANNICA CRVDELITATE ORNAMENTVM NOSTRI SECVLI ET LVMEN VERE REGIVM EXTINGVITVR EODEMQVE NEFARIO IVDICIO ET MARIA SCOTORVM REGINA MORTE NATVRALI ET OMNES SVPERSTITES REGES PLEBEII FACTI MORTE GIVILI MVLCTANTVR NOVVM ET INAVDITVM TVMVLI GENVS IN QVO CVM VIVIS MORTVI INCLVDVNTVR HIC EXTAT CVM SACRIS ENIM DIVAE MARIAE CINERIBVS OMNIVM REGVM ATQVE PRINCIPVM VIOLATAM ATQVE PROSTRATAM MAIESTATEM HIC IACERE SCITO ET QVIA TACITVM REGALE SATIS SVPERQVE REGES SVI OFFICII MONET PLVRA NON ADDO VIATOR Which may be Englished thus MARY Queene of Scotland daughter of a King widow of the King of France kinswoman and next heire to the Queene of England adorned with Royall Vertues and a princely spirit hauing often but in vaine implored the right of a Prince the ornament of our age and the true princely light is extinguished by a barbarous and tyrannical crueltie And by the same wicked iudgement both MARY Queen of Scotland is punished with a naturall death and all Kings liuing are made common persons and punished and made liable vnto a ciuill death A strange and vnheard kinde of grant is here extant in which the liuing are included with the dead for with the ashes of this blessed MARY know thou that the Maiestie of all Kings and Princes lye here depressed and violated and because the Regall secret doth sufficiently admonish Kings of their dutie O Traueller I say no more Out of this lamentable fortune of so great a Prince the disposition of the diuine prouidence most euidently appeared as some wise men haue obserued For those things which the Queenes ELIZABETH and MARY chiefly wished and studied to procure by this meanes came to passe Queene MARY which also shee said at her death desired nothing more earnestly than that the diuided Kingdomes of England and Scotland might be vnited in the person of her deare sonne And the other wished for nothing more than that the Religion by her established in England might be kept and conserued with the safetie and securitie of the people And that almightie God did heare their praiers England to her vnexpected felicitie doth now see and with great ioy acknowledge As soone as word was brought to Queene ELIZABETH that the Queene of Scotland was put to death shee not thinking thereof she heard it with great indignation shee looked heauily and could not speake a word and readie to swound for sorrow in so much that she put on mourning apparell and grieued exceedingly and lamented very much Shee caused her Counsellors being reproued and forbidden her presence to be examined and commanded Dauison to be brought into the Star-Chamber And as soone as her dolour would permit her she in great haste wrote this letter following vnto the King of Scotland with her owne hand and sent it by Mr. Robert Cary one of the Lord of Hunsdons sonnes Deare brother I would to God you did know but not feele with what incomparable griefe my minde is tormented and vexed by reason of the lamentable euent which hath befallen contrary to my minde and will which you shall vnderstand fully by my Cousin for as much as I cannot abide and endure to set it downe by writing I beseech you that as God and many others can beare witnesse vnto my innocencie in this matter so I desire you to beleeue that if I had commanded it I would neuer haue denied the same I am not of that base minde that for any terrour I should feare to doe that which is iust or to deny it being done I doe not so degenerate from my Ancestors nor am I of such an ignoble minde But as it is not the part of a Prince to couer and cloake the sense of his minde with words so will I neuer dissemble nor glose mine actions but I will performe that they shall come to light and appeare to the world in their colours I would haue you be assuredly perswaded that as I know that this was done vpon desert so if I had imagined it I would not haue put it ouer vpon any other neither yet wil I impute that to my selfe which I did not so much as thinke He who shall deliuer you these Letters shall acquaint and impart other things vnto you As for me I would haue you to beleeue that there is none other who loueth you better and beareth better affection to you or that will haue a more friendly care of you and your affaires If any one suggesteth or putteth other things into your head I would haue you to think that he beareth more good will and affection to others than to you God Almightie keepe you in health and preserue you alwaies In the meane time that Mr. Cary
the Queene of England lest some hurt did come vnto her and the Duke for want thereof which shee had experimented in the mariage with DARLY without her consent Yet they thought best to trie first the mindes of more Noblemen of whom most gaue their consent with this clause So that the Queene was not against it Neither did the Kings of France and Spaine dislike it onely they feared Murrey lest hee that had first broached the matter and promised to further it all that hee could should first hinder it Yet they agreed on this that Lidington who was then expected should bee the first to trie the minde of Queene ELIZABETH In the meane time the Duke imparted to the Lord Lumley whatsoeuer had beene done in this businesse and with much adoe obtained of Leicester to aske the aduice of some other friends Yet a while after he opened the matter by the consent of Pembrooke vnto Cecill also About which time Leonard Dacres deuised and compassed to steale secretly away the Queene of Scotland out of prison at Whinfield where shee was kept by the Earle of Shrewsburie Northumberland being priuie vnto this deuice signified it vnto the Duke who forbade them to doe it for hee feared they would haue deliuered her to be maried vnto the King of Spaine and hoped to obtaine the consent of Queene ELIZABETH ●re it was long But the rumor of this mariage came more plainly to the Queenes eare by the Ladies and women of the Court who smell out cunningly and quickly these loue matters Which when the Duke vnderstood to be true he dealt very earnestly with Leicester both by Throgmorton and by Pembrooke to open the matter speedily vnto the Queene he made delaies and lingred as it were to stay for a fit time to speake But Cecill willed the Duke who was now full of care to open all the matter to the Queene himselfe whereby all scruple might bee speedily taken away from the Queene and from himselfe also Leicester was against it and promised to open the matter to the Queene in the progresse But in the time that hee put it off with smooth words from one day vnto another the Queene being at Farneham set the Duke at her table and bitingly willed him to take ●eed on what Pillow hee laid his head Then at Titchfield Leicester was somewhat sicke or else fained so to bee and vnto the Queene that came to see him and cheered him comfortably and perceiuing his spirit and bloud to bee drawne inward for feare with sighs and asking pardon of his fault hee opened the whole matter from the beginning At which time the Queene called the Duke vnto her in a gallery and chid him very much that without her priuitie he had sued vnto ●he Queene of Scotland in the way of mariage and commanded him vpon his allegeance to cease from further medling therein He promised so to doe willingly and gladly and doubted not to say as though hee cared not a whit for her that his reuenues in England were little lesse than those of the Kingdome of Scotland at this time lamentably impouerished by the warres and also when hee was in his Tennis-court at Norwich he seemed to himselfe to bee equall after a sort vnto many Kings But from that time he began to bee more deiected in minde and when hee saw the Queene to looke and speake to him more sternely and Leicester in a manner estranged and most of the Noblemen to steale away out of his companie scarce saluting or speaking to him hasted vnto London without taking any leaue and went in to Pembrooke who bade him be of good cheere and comforted him very much And on that same very day Queene ELIZABETH reiected with shew of displeasure the Scottish Embassador intreating her very much to deliuer the Queene captiue and bade that she should behaue her selfe quietly lest shortly shee saw them on whom she chiefly relied to hop headlesse And now when the rumor of the mariage was hotter euery day than other and the French Embassador exceedingly vrged her deliuerie more by the perswasion of some English men than by the commandement of the French King as it was after knowne new suspicions from euery place were laid hold on and Cecill who applied all his care for the good of the Republike and Religion was very diligent to finde the depth of the matter and therefore wrote vnto Sussex Lord President of the North who was a familiar friend and neere allied in bloud vnto the Duke to certifie the Queene what he knew of the Dukes mariage But his answer is vnknowne vnto mee And where it had beene obserued that the Duke had many secret conferences with Murrey Regent of Scotland at Hampton Court George Cary sonne to the Lord Hunsdon was sent secretly vnto Murrey to learne of him if the Duke had imparted vnto him any thing about this mariage The Duke in the meane while terrified with a false rumor spread that there was a commotion raised in the North and being certified by Leicester that he should bee put in prison went out of the way into Norfolke whiles his friends in the Court who had promised so much might auert turne aside the storme that hung ouer his head he himselfe might mitigate the Queenes displeasure by his humble letters But there were men set about him to marke and note all his actions When he found no comfort among his friends and Heydon Cornwallis and other worshipfull Gentlemen of those parts perswaded him if he were guiltie of any offence toward the Queene to flie vnto her mercie he wauered and was tormented with diuersitie of cares In this while was the Court in quandarie suspitious and fearefull that he would breake out into rebellion and they say it was determined to kill the Queene of Scotland presently if he did so But hee out of his inbred good nature and out of his conscience that hee had not offended against any Law made treason for that act of marying the Kings sisters or brothers or aunts children without the Kings knowledge made treason by Henry the eighth was repealed by King Edward the sixt and also for feare lest the Queene of Scotland out of suspicion should be vsed more hardly and extremely hee sent letters vnto his friends in the Court and told them that hee stept aside vnto his house that in time and by his absence he might procure a remedy against malicious rumours which are at all times entertained with open eares in the Court and asked pardon most humbly for his offence and forthwith tooke his iourney toward the Court. As he returned at Saint Albans Owen a gentleman belonging to the Earle of Arundell sent secretly by Throgmorton and Lumley who were committed willed him to take all the fault vpon himselfe and not to lay it vpon Leicester and others lest he should make his friends his enemies There Edward Fitz-Gerard brother vnto the Earle of Kildare Lieutenant of the Pensioners met and