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A28290 An historical account of making the penal laws by the papists against the Protestants, and by the Protestants against the papists wherein the true ground and reason of making the laws is given, the papists most barbarous usuage [sic] of the Protestants here in England under a colour of law set forth, and the Reformation vindicated from the imputation of being cruel and bloody, unjustly cast upon it by those of the Romish Communion / by Samuel Blackerby ... Blackerby, Samuel, d. 1714. 1689 (1689) Wing B3069; ESTC R18715 230,149 164

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Obstacle by killing her altered his opinion but was for joyning five more to Savage to make sure of the Matter Which being agreed on they set forward the design of the Invasion The design was by Babington imparted to the Queen of Scots and she was to reward the Heroical Actors in this barbarous Attempt or else their Posterities in Case they perisht in it And he was Commanded to pass his word to the six Gentlemen and the rest concerning their reward for their Service In this Conspiracy were ingaged divers Gentlemen who were very Zealous for Popery Edward Windsor Brother to the Lord Windsor Thomas Salisbury of a Knights Family in Denbeighshire Charles Tilney of an ancient Family who was then but lately reconciled to the Romish Church Chideock Tichburn of Southampton Edward Abbington whose Father had been the Queens under Treasurer Robert Gage of Surry John Travers and John Charnock of Lancashire John Jones whose Father was Yeoman of the Wardrobe to Queen Mary Savage before named Barnwel of a noble Family in Ireland and Henry Dun Clark in the Office of first Fruits and Tenths and one Polley To every of these Gentlemen was a Part in this Conspiracy assigned and all things went according to their hearts desire as they thought Nothing perplexed Babington But his Fears of being failed in the Foreign Aid that was promised him therefore to make sure of it he resolved himself to go over into France and to that purpose to send Ballard privately before for whom by his Money under a Counterfeit name he procured a License to Travel And that there might not be the least Suspicion of himself he insinuated into Secretary Walsingham by means of Polley and earnestly besought him to procure him a License from the Queen to travel into France promising her to do her extraordinary good Service in pumping out and discovering the secret designs of the Fugitives in behalf of the Queen of Scots The Plot discovered but as we say forewarned forearmed he being a faithful and cunning Secretary by his Spies had discovered all and informed the Queen and therefore only commended Babingtons pretended design and made him fair Promises and so from time to time delayed him The chief instrument in discovering this Plot was one Gilbert Gifford who lurked in England under the Name of Lauson in mind Salvage of his Oath but had informed the Secretary what he was and to what purpose sent into England This having gone on for some time Ballard apprehended the Queen apprehending there might be great danger in letting it proceed further ordered Ballard to be apprehended who was seized on before he was aware in Babingtons House just as he was setting out for France Babington and some others of the Confederates being jealous the design was discovered hid themselves in St. Johns Wood near London Notice being given of their withdrawing they are proclaimed Traitors at last are found and seized on and the rest of their fellow Rebels fourteen of whom were executed in September 1586. in St. Giles in the Fields where they used to meer and consult about their intended murthering of the Queen and invading the Kingdom Mary Queen of Scots having been at the bottom in all these designs The Queen of Scots at the bottom Cam. Annals from f. 33 to f. 35. D' Ewes Journal f. 392 393 395 400 401 405 408. A Commission Issued for trying Mary Queen of Scots grounded on 27 Eliz. Cap. 1. Camb. An. l. 3. f. 347. and there being no probability of the Kingdoms continuing in the safe and secure exercise of the Protestant Religion under their Protestant Queen so long as she was in being The Papists being assured by her that in case she had the Crown she would introduce Popery Queen Elizabeth was advised to try her for Treason which she was with great difficulty prevailed to do and Issued out a Commission grounded upon 27 Eliz. Cap. 1. herein before set forth The Commissioners appointed to Try her were these viz John Archbishop of * Whitgift Bakers Chron. f. 369. Canturbury Sir Tho. Bromley Kt. Chancellor of England William Lord Burleigh Treasurer of England William Lord Marquess of Winchester Edward Earl of Oxford great Chamberlain of England George Earl of Shrewsbury Earl Marshal Henry Earl of Kent Henry Earl of Darby William Earl of Worcester Edmund Earl of Rutland Ambrose Earl of Warwick Master of the Ordinance Henry Earl of Pembrook Robert Earl of Leicester Master of the Horse Henry Earl of Lincoln Anthony Vicount Mountague Charles Lord Howard Lord High Admiral of England Henry Lord of Hunsdon Lord Chamberlain Henry Lord Abergavenny Edward Lord Zouch Edward Lord Morley William Lord Cobham Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports Edward Lord Stafford Arthur Lord Grey of Wilton John Lord Lumley John Lord Stourton William Lord Saunders Lewis Lord Mordant John Lord St. John of Bletnesho Thomas Lord Buckhurst Henry Lord Compton Henry Lord Cheney Sir Francis Knolles Kt. Controller of the Houshould Sir Christopher Hatton Vice-Chamberlain Sir Francis Walsingham Secretary William Davison Esq Sir Ralph Sadleir Chancellor of the Dutchy of Lancaster Sir Walter Mildmay Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir Amias Pawlet Captain of the Isle of Jersey John Woolly Esq Secretary for the Latin Tongue Sir Christopher Wray Chief Justice of the Common-Pleas Sir Edward Anderson Chief Justice of the Bench Sir Roger Manwood Chief Baron Sir Thomas Gawdy and William Periam Judges The substance of their Commission was this The substance of the Commission Cambd. Annals f. 348. after the recital of 27. Eliz. Cap. 1. thus it followeth Whereas since the end of the Session of Parliament viz. since the first day of June in ●●e 27 th Year of our Reign divers things have been compassed and imagined ●●nding to the hurt of our Royal Person as well by Mary Daughter and Heir of James the Fifth King of Scots and commonly called Queen of Scots and Dowager of France pretending a Title to the Crown of this Realm of England 〈◊〉 by divers other Persons cum scientia in English with the Privity of the said Mary as we are given to understand And whereas we do intend and resolve that the aforesaid Act shall be in all and every part thereof duly and effectually put into Execution according to the Tenour of the same and that all offences abovesaid in the Act abovesaid mentioned as afore is said and the circumstances of the same shall be examined and Sentence or Judgment thereupon given according to the Tenour and Effect of the said Act to you and the greater part of you we do gi●e full and absolute Power License and Authority according to the Tenour of the said Act to examin all and singular Matters composed and imagined tending to she hurt of our Royal Person as well by the aforesaid Mary as by any other Person or Persons whatsoever cum scientia in English with the Privity of the said Mary and all circumstance of the same and all
submit themselves to the Romish Bishops and Prelates and the Histories of those times acquaint us that they were the Professors of the true Religion afterwards called Protestants By Colour of this supposed Act certain persons that held that Images were not to be worshipped Co. Inst 3 d. fol. 40. and such like Doctrines which the Protestants now hold were detained and tormented in Prison till they were compelled before the Masters of Divinity as they called themselves to take an Oath and did swear to worship Images which was against the Moral and Eternal Law of Almighty God. This these Popish Bishops and Prelates did by vertue of this Law which indeed was none for it was onely signed by the King at the instance of the Bishops and Prelates and never assented to by the Commons and therefore in the next Parliament the Commons preferred a Bill reciting the said supposed Act and constantly affirmed that they never assented thereunto and therefore desired that the same might be made void for they protested that it was never their intent to be justified and to bind themselves and their Successors to the Prelates more than their Ancestors had done in times past whereto the King gave his Royal Assent in these words y pleist au Roy. But in the Proclamation of the Acts of that Parliament Co. 12.58 and 3. Inst f. 41. which was 6. R. 2. the said Act of 6. R. 2. whereby the said supposed Act of 5. R. 2. was declared to be void is omitted and afterwards the said supposed Act of 5. R. 2. ca. 5. was continually printed and looked on as a Good Law and the said Act of 6. R. 2. was by the Prelates from time to time kept from the Print Such pious Frauds have been always practised by the Popish Clergy and always found necessary for the supporting of the credit of that Church CHAP. II. Hen. IV. THe Rage of the Popish Clergy against the Wicklivites or Professors of the true Religion increasing with the increase of the light of the Gospel and they fearing that the said contrivance might be detected to the end that they might be yet more able effectually if it were possible to suppress the truth when they had requited R. 2. for granting them that supposed Law with deposing him and assisting H. 4. to usurp the Crown they in the 2 d. H. 4. apply themselves to him for a further Law for the preservation of the Catholick Faith as they called it against Christ's true Religion by them miscalled Heresie and he in gratitude to them in assisting him in his coming to the Crown granted them a Law to their Hearts content which follows as it is printed in Rastal 's Statutes in these words Whereas it is shewed to our Soveraign Lord the King on the behalf of the Prelates and Clergy of this Realm of England in this present Parliament 2 H. 4. ca. 15. Rast Stat. f. 180. By this Law the Professors of the true Religion were to be burnt as Hereticks that although the Catholick Faith builded upon Christ and by his Apostles and the holy Church sufficiently determined declared and approved hath been hitherto by good and holy and most noble Progenitors of our Soveraign Lord the King in the said Realm amongst all the Realms of the World most devoutly observed and the Church of England by his said most noble Progenitors and Ancestors to the honour of God and of the whole Realm aforesaid laudably endowed and in her Rights and Liberties sustained without that that the same Faith or the said Church was hurt or grievously oppressed or else perturbed by any perverse Doctrine or Wicked Heretical or Erronious Opinions Yet nevertheless divers false and perverse people of a certain new Sect of the Faith of the Sacraments of the Church and the Authority of the same damnably thinking and against the Law of God and of the Church usurping the Office of Preaching do perversly and malitiously in divers places within the said Realm under the colour of dissembled Holiness preach and teach these dayes openly and privily divers new Doctrines and wicked heretical and eronious Opinions contrary to the same Faith and blessed determinations of the Holy Church And of such Sect and wicked Doctrine and Opinions they make unlawful Conventicles and Confederacies they hold and exercise Schools they make and write Books they do wickedly instruct and informe people and as much as they may excite and stir them to Sedition and Insurrection and maketh great strife and division among the people and other Enormities horribly to be heard daily do perpetrate and commit in subversion of the said Catholick Faith and Doctrine of the Holy Church in diminution of God's Honour and also in destruction of the Estates Rights and Liberties of the said Church of England by which Sect and wicked and false Preachings Doctrines and Opinions of the said false and perverse people not only most greatest peril of the Souls but also many other harts flanders and perils which God prohibit might come to this Realm unless it be the more plentifully and speedily holpen by the King's Majesty in this behalf namely whereas the Diocesans of the said Realm cannot by their Iurisdiction Spiritual without aid of the said Royal Majesty sufficiently correct the said false and perverse people nor refrain their malice because the said false and perverse people do go from Diocess to Diocess and will not appear before the said Diocesans but the same Diocesans and their Iurisdiction Spiritual and the Keys of the Church with the Censures of the same do utterly contemn and despise and so their wicked Preachings and Doctrines doth from day to day continue and exercise to the hatred of Right and Reason and utter destruction of Order and good Rule Vpon which Novelties and Excesses above rehersed the Prelates and Clergy aforesaid and also the Commons of the said Realm being in the said Parliament praying our Soveraign Lord the King that his Royal Highness would vouchsafe in the said Parliament to provide a convenient Remedy The same our Soveraign Lord the King gratiously considering the premises and also the laudable steps of his said most noble Progenitors and Ancestors for the conservation of the said Catholick Faith and sustentation of God's Honour and also the safeguard of the Estates Rights and Liberties of the said Church of England to the laud of God and merit of our said Soveraign Lord the King and prosperity and honour of all the said Realm and for the eschewing of such Dissentions divisions hurts slanders and perils in time to come and that this wicked Sect preachings doctrines and Opinions should from henceforth cease and be utterly destroyed by the assent of the States and other discreet men of the Realm being in the said Parliament hath Granted Established and Ordained from henceforth and firmly to be observed That none within the said Realm or any other Dominions subject to his Royal Majesty presume to preach openly
have here inserted as it is Printed in Rastal in these words Forasmuch as great Rumors Congregations and Insurrections 2 H. 5.7 Rast Stat. 1. pt fol. 205. The Magistrates are to take an Oath to suppress the Professors of the true Religion then called Lollard here in the Realm of England by divers of the King's Leige People as well by them which were of the Sect of Heresie commonly called Lollardy as by others of their Confederacy Excitation and Abetment now of late were made to the intent to adnul destroy and subvert the Christian Faith and the Law of God and Holy Church within this same Realm of England and also to destroy the same our Soveraign Lord the King and all other manner of Estates of the same Realm of England as well Spiritual as Temporal and also all manner of Polity and finally the Laws of the Land the same our Soveraign Lord the King to the Honour of God and in conservation and fortification of the Christian Faith and also in salvation of his Royal Estate and of the Estate and of the Estate of all his Realm willing against the Malice of such Hereticks and Lollards to provide a more open remedy and punishment then hath been had and used in the case heretofore so that for fear of the same Laws and Punishments such Heresies and Lollardries may the rather cease in time to come by the advice and assent aforesaid and at the prayer of the said Commons hath Ordained and Established That first the Chancellor Treasurer Iustices of the one Bench and of the other Iustices of the Peace Sheriffs Mayors and Bailiffs of Cities and Towns and all other Officers having governance of People which now be or hereafter for the time shall be The Oath shall make an Oath in taking of their Charges and Occupations to put their whole power and diligence to put out and do to be put out cease and destroy all manner of Heresies and Errors commonly called Lollardries within the places where they exercise their offices and occupations from time to time with all their power and that they assist the Ordinaries and their Commissaries and them favour and maintain as often as they or any of them to that shall be required by the same Ordinaries or their Commissaries so that when the said Officers and Ministers travel or ride to arrest any Lollard or to make assistance at the instance and request of the Ordinaries or their Commissaries by vertue of this Statute that the same Ordinaries and Commissaries shall pay for their costs reasonably and that the King's Services to the which the same Officers be first sworn be preferred before all other Statutes for the Liberty of Holy Church and the Ministers of the same and in especial for the Correction and Punishment of the Hereticks and Lollards before this time made and not repelled being in their force and also that all Persons convict of Heresie of what estate condition or degree that they be by the said Ordinaries or other Commissaries left to the Secular Power according to the Laws of Holy Church shall lose and forfeit all their Lands and Tenements which they have in fee simple in the manner as followeth that is to say that the King have all the Lands and Tenements which the said Convicts have in fee simple and holden of him immediately as forfeit and the other Lords of whom the Lands and Tenements of such Convicts be holden immediately after that the King is so seized answered of the year the day the waste have Liberty out of the King's hands of the Lands Tenements aforesaid of them so holden as hath been used in the Case of Attainder of Felony Except the Lands and Tenements which be holden of the Ordinaries or their Commissaries before whom any such persons impeached of Heresie be convict which Lands and Tenements intirely shall remain to the King as forfeit And moreover that all the Goods and Chattels of these person so convicted be forfeit to our Soveraign Lord the King. So that no person convict of Heresie and left to the Secular power after the Laws of Holy Church shall forfeit his Lands before that he be dead and if any such person so convict be infeoffed be it by Fine by Deed or without Deed in Lands or Tenements Rents or Services in Fee or otherwise or hath any other possessions or Chattels by gift or grant of any person or persons to another's use then to the use of such convicts that the same Lands or Tenements Rents or Services nor such other Possessions nor Chattels shall be forfeit to our Sovereign Lord the King in no wise and moreover that the Iustices of the King's Bench and Iustices of Peace and Iustices of Assize have full power to enquire of all them who hold any Errors or Heresies as Lollards and which be their Maintainers Receivers Favourers and Sustainers common Writers of such Books as well of their Sermons as of their Schools Conventicles Congregations and Confederacies and that this clause be put in Commissions of Iustices of the Peace And if any persons be indicted of any points aforesaid the said Iustices shall have power to award against them a Capias and the Sheriffs shall be bound to arrest the person or persons so indicted as soon as he may them find by him or by his Officers and forasmuch as the cognizance of Heresie Errors and Lollardies belongeth to the Iudges of Holy Church and not to Secular Iudges such persons indicted shall be delivered to the Ordinaries of the place or to their Commissaries by Indentures betwixt them to be made within ten days after their arrest or sooner if it may be thereof to be acquir or convict by the Laws of Holy Church in case these persons be not indicted of another thing whereof the cognizance belongeth to the secular Iudges and Officers in which case after that they be acquit or delivered before the secular Iudges of such things to the secular Iudges belonging they shall be sent in safeguard to the said Ordinaries or to their Commissaries and to them delivered by Indentures as before to be acquit or convict of such Lollardries Errors or Heresies as is aforesaid after the Laws of Holy Church and that within the term aforesaid provided alwaies that the said Indictments be not taken in Evidence but for Information before the Spiritual Iudges against such persons so indicted but that the Ordinaries commence their Process against such persons indicted in the same manner as tho' no Indictment were having no regard to such Indictments And if any be Indicted of Heresie Error or Lollardry and taken by the Sheriff or other Officer he shall be let to main prize within the said ten days by good Surety to whom the said Sheriffs or other Officers will answer so that the said person or persons which were so indicted be ready to be delivered to the said Ordinaries or to their Commissaries before the end of the said
of Parliament because they yet strengthen and confirm the Truth of the said Conspiracy and that they do so must be confest unless Men will fly in the Face of that Parliament I have here inserted as I find the same in Rastal's Statutes The First is Intituled An Act for publick Thanks-giving to Almighty God every Year on the Fifth Day of November FOrasmuch as Almighty God hath in all Ages shewed his Power and Mercy 3 Jac. 1. ca. 1. Rast Stat. 2. Part. f. 588. The Act for keeping the Fifth of November yearly as a Day of Thanks-giving in the Miraculous and Gracious Deliverance of his Church and in the Protection of Religious Kings and States and that no Nation of the Earth hath been blessed with greated Benefits than this Kingdom now enjoyeth having the true and free Profession of the Gospel under our most gracious Sovereign Lord King James the most Great Learned and Religious King that ever reigned therein enriched with a most hopeful and plentiful Progeny proceeding out of his Royal Loyns promising Continuance of this Happiness and Profession to all Posterity and the which many malignant and devilish Papists Iesuits and Seminary Priests much envying and fearing conspired most horribly when the Kings most excellent Majesty the Queen the Prince and all the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons should have been assembled in the upper House of Parliament upon the fifth Day of November in the Year of our Lord 1605. suddenly to have blown up the said whole House with Gun-powder an Invention so inhuman barbarous and cruel as the like was never before heard of and was as some of the principal Conspirators thereof confess purposely devised and concluded to be done in the said House that where sundry necessary and religious Laws for preservation of the Church and State were made which they falsly and slanderously term cruel Laws enacted against them and their Religion both Place and Persons should be all destroyed and blown up at once which would have turned to the utter Ruine of this whole Kingdom had it not pleased Almighty God by inspiring the Kings most excellent Majesty with a Divine Spirit to interpret some dark Phrases of a Letter shewed to His Majesty above and beyond all ordinary Construction thereby miraculously discovering this hidden Treason not many Hours before she appointed time for the Execution thereof therefore the Kings most excellent Majesty the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and all His Majesties faithful and loving Subjects do justly acknowledge this great and infinite Blessing to have proceeded meerly from God his great Merry and to his most Holy Name do ascribe all the Honour Glory and Praise And to the end this unfeigned Thankfulness may never be forgotten but be in a perpetual Remembrance that all Ages to come may yield Praises to his Divine Majesty for the same and have in Memory This joyful Day of Deliverance Be it therefore enacted by the Kings most excellent Majesty the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled and by the Authority of the same that all and Angular Ministers in every Cathedral and Parish Church or other usual Place for Common-prayer within this Realm of England and the Dominions of the same shall always upon the fifth Day of November say Morning-prayer and give unto Almighty God Thanks for this most happy Deliverance and that all and every Person and Persons inhabiting within this Realm of England and the Dominions of the same shall always upon that Day diligently and faithfully resort to the Parish Church or Chappel accustomed or to some usual Church or Chappel where the said Morning-prayer Preaching or other Service of God shall be used and then and there to abide orderly and soberly during the time of the the said Prayers Preaching or other Service of God there to be used and ministred And because all and every Person may be put in mind of this Duty and be the better prepared to the said Holy Service be it enacted by Authority aforesaid that every Minister shall give Warning to his Parishioners publickly in the Church at Morning-prayer the Sunday before every such fifth Day of November for the due Observation of the said Day And that after Morning-prayer or Preaching upon the said fifth Day of November they read publickly distinctly and plainly this present Act. The Second is intituled An Act for the Attainder of divers Offendors in the late most barbarous monstrous detestable and damnable Treasons The Preamble of which Act runs thus 3 Jac. 1. ca. 2. Rast Stat 2. part f. 589 An Act for the Attainder of the Conspirators IN most humble manner beseeching your most excellent Majesty your most Loyal Faithful and true Hearted Subjects the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and the Commons in this present Parliament assembled That whereas Arthur Creswel Jesuite who at the time of his Profession to be a Iesuite took upon him the Name of Joseph Creswel Oswald Tesmond Jesuite and Thomas VVinter late of Huddington in the County of VVorcester Gent. the last Day of June in the four and fortieth Year of the late Queen Elizabeth of famous Memory at Valedolide within the Kingdom of Spain and at divers other days within the same four and fortieth Year of the said late Queen at Valedolide aforesaid and elsewhere within the same Kingdom of Spain by the Means Procurement and Privity of Robert Catesby late of Ashby in the County of Northampton Esq Francis Tresham late of Rushton in the said County of Northampton Esq and Henry Garnet Iesuite assuming upon him to be Superior of the Iesuits within this Ream of England and others being all natural born Subjects of this Realm did Traiterously and against the Duty of their Allegiance move and incite Philip then and yet King of Spain then being at open Enmity and Hostility with the said late Queen with Force to invade this Kingdom of England and to joyn with the Papists and discontented Persons wi●●in this Realm of England to depose and overthrow the same late Queen of and 〈◊〉 her Crown and of and from all Her Royal Estate Title and Dignity and to suppress and abolish the true Religion of Almighty God truly and sincerely professed within this Kingdom and to restore the Superstitious Romish Religion within the same and to bring this Antient Famous and most renowned Kingdom to utter Ruine and miserable Captivity under Forreign Power and for that the greatest Impediment unto the same Invasion would be the want of Help of good Horses the said Thomas VVinter the rather to incourage the said King thereunto was to offer unto the same King on the Behalf of the Papists of England to give him Assistance presently upon the Landing of his Forces with one thousand five hundred or two thousand Horses and that for their better accomplishing thereof he should move the said King to furnish the Papists of England with a good Sum of Money partly to be employed to
ten days if he may by any means for sickness and every Ordinary shall have sufficient Commissaries or Commissary dwelling in every County in a place notable so that if any such person so indicted be taken that the said Commissaries or Commissary may be warned in the notable place where he dwelleth by the Sheriff or his Officers to come to the King's Iayl in the same County there to receive the same persons so indicted by Indentures as before And that in the inquest in this case to be taken the Sheriffs and other Officers to whom it belongeth shall do to be Impannel'd good and sufficient persons not suspected nor procured that is to say that every of them which shall be so Empanell'd in such Inquest have within the Realm of England an hundred Shillings of Lands Tenements or of Rent by the year upon pain to lose to the King's use 10 l. and they which shall be Impannell'd in such Inquests in Wales every of them shall have to the value of 40 s. by year and if any such person be arrested be it by the Ordinary or by the King's Officers or Ministers and escape or break the prison before that he be acquit before the Ordinary the Goods and Chattels which he had the day of such arrest shall be forfeit to the King and his Lands and Tenements which he had the same day seized also in the King's hands the King shall have the profits thereof from the same day until he be yeilden to the prison from which he escaped and that the aforesaid Iustices have full power to enquire of all such Escapes breaking of Prison and also of Lands and Tenements Goods and Chattels of such persons so indicted provided also that if any such person indicted do not return to the said prison and dieth not convict it shall be lawful to his Heirs to enter into the Lands and Tenements of their Ancestor without any other pursuit making to the King for this cause and that all they which have Liberties and Franchises Royal in England as in the County of Chester the County and Liberty of Durham and other like and also the Lords which have Iurisdiction and Franchises Royal in Wales where the King's Writs do not run have power to execute and put in due execution these Articles in all points by them or by their Officers in like manner as the Iustices and other the King's Officers before declared should do By which Act it plainly appears that the Professors of the true Religion were not only to suffer in their own persons by being most inhumanly burnt but their very Wives and Children must feel the effects of Popish Cruelty having nothing left by this Law whereby to support their Families CHAP. IV. Hen. VIII THE three Laws in the precedent Chapters mentioned were put in severe Execution during the Reigns of R. 2. H. 4. H. 5. H. 6. E. 4. R. 3. H. 7. and to the twenty fifth year of Henry the 8 th during which time the Whore of Babylon made her self drunk with the Blood of the Saints not only halling them to prison but burning their Persons and ruining their whole Families In which time divers were Martyred purely to please and gratifie the Popish Clergy for whatever they said was Heresie must be so upon which Account they run the Persecution so high that in 25 H. 8. about which time the Professors of the true Religion were first called Protestants the Parliament began to consider That Heresie was no where defined and made an Act of Parliament for the Punishment of Heresie but by it repealed the Statute of 2 H. 4. ca. 15. the preamble of which Act doth declare That the Clergy did upon their suggestions obtain the said Act 25 H. 8. ca. 14. Rast Stat. fo 537. By this Law Protestants were to abjere or be burnt but that the same did not in any part thereof declare what was Heresie and that the word Canonical Sanctions are so general that it was difficult to avoid the Penalties of the Act in case he should be examined upon captious interrogatories as the Ordinaries did then use to persons suspect of Heresies and that all such proceedings were against the antient Laws of the Kingdom and for those reasons did repeal the said Act of 2 H. 4. ca. 15. and for redress of Heresie did establish 5 R. 2.5 and 2 H. 5.7 and did enact that Sheriffs in their Turns and Stewards in their Leets Rapes and Wapentakes should have Authority to enquire of Hereticks and every such Presentment made in any Turn Leet Co. Inst 2.658 Bulst 3.51 c. concerning Hereticks should be certified to the Ordinary and every person presented or indicted of any Heresie or duly accused by two lawful Witnesses might be cited arrested or taken by an Ordinary or other of the King's Subjects and committed to the Ordinary to answer in open Court and being convict should abjure his Heresies and refusing so to do or falling into a relapse should be burnt in an open place for Example of others By this Act indeed some part of the Common Law as to the Tryal of the Parties guilty seems to be restored but they could not yet think of parting with the severity of the Penalties I mean burning their Persons and confiscating their Estates and that the World might at length know who were deemed Hereticks and who not for before it was no where defined what Heresie was in the 31 st of H. 8. ca. 14. 31 H. 8. ca. 14. Rast Stat. fol. 652. By this Law Protestants are made Traytors Felons and guilty of a premunire An Act of Parliament was made called an Act for abolishing of Opinions in certain Articles concerning Christian Religion six Articles were agreed on and consented to viz. 1. That in the most Blessed Sacrament of the Altar by the strength and efficacy of Christ's mighty word it being spoken by the Priest is present really under the form of Bread and Wine the natural Body and Blood of our Saviour Jesu Christ Conceived of the Virgin Mary and that after the Consecration there remaineth no substance of Bread or Wine nor any other substance but the substance of Christ God and Man. 2. That the Communion in both kinds is not necessary ad salutem by the Law of God to all persons and that it is to be believed and not doubted of but that in the Flesh under the form of Bread is the very Blood and with the Blood under the form of Wine is the very Flesh as well a part as though they were both together 3. That Priests after the Order of Priesthood received may not marry by the Law of God. 4. That Vows of Chastity Widdowhood by Man or Woman made to God advisedly ought to be deserved by the Law of God and that it exempts them from other Liberties of Christian People which without that they might enjoy 5. That it is meet and necessary that private Masses be continued and
admitted in the King 's English Church and Congregations as whereby good Christian People ordering themselves accordingly do receive both Godly and goodly consolations and benefits and it is agreeable also to God's Law. 6. That Auricular Confession is expedient and necessary to be retained and continued used and frequented in the Church of God. He that by word of Mouth Writing Printing Cyphering or in any otherwise doth Publish Preach Teach Say Affirm Declare Dispute Argue or hold any Opinion contrary to the first Article is by that Act of 31 H. 8. ca. 14. Declared a Heretick to suffer Death by burning and to forfeit his Estate as in case of High Treason The publick Preaching and affirming in a Court of Justice any thing contrary to the other five Articles and Marrying after a vow of Chastity is declared Felony without Benefit of Clergy and to forfeit as in cases of Felony And if any Person by Words Writing Printing Cyphering or otherwise publish declare or hold Opinion contrary to the said five Articles he forfeits his Goods and Chattels for ever the Profits of his Lands Tenements and other his real Estate during his life his Spiritual Promotion shall be utterly void and his body imprisoned at the King's Pleasure for the first offence and for the second offence to be adjudg'd a Felon and suffer and forfeit as a Felon without Benefit of Clergy By which Act it plainly appears that the denying of Transubstantiation was by this Law made High Treason The publishing or holding the necessity of Receiving in both kinds the lawfulness of Priests Marrying the unlawfulness of vowing Chastity of private Masses and Auricular Confession was no less than Felony or at least a Premunire So that in a word to be a Protestant was to be a Traytor a Felon or subject to a Premunire And could they have found any punishment inflicted by our Laws that is worse they would no doubt have made the Protestants subject to it and that not as Offenders against the Polity of the Civil State but purely upon the Account of their Religion And therefore the next thing that is done by these destroyers of Souls as well as Bodies is to take away all means of Knowledge as well as to inhibit the Promulgation thereof upon such severe Penalties and for that purpose was the Act of 34 H. 8. ca. 1. made Whereby 34 H. 8. ca. 1. Rast Stat. p. 782. The means of Knowledge in Religion taken away by this Act from the Protestants All Books of the Old and New Testament in English being of Tindal's Translation or Comprising any matter of Christian Religion Articles of the Faith or holy Scripture contrary to the Doctrine aforesaid i. e. the Doctrine of Popery and set forth after the year 1540 or then to be set forth by the King were utterly abolished no Printer or Bookseller was to utter any of the aforesaid Books no person was to play in enterlude sing or rhyme contrary to the said Doctrine no person was to retain any English Books or Writings concerning matter against the Holy and Blessed Sacrament of the Altar i. e. the Mass or other Books abolished by the King's Proclamation there was to be no annotations or preambles in Bibles or New Testaments in English The Bible was not to be read in English in any Church no Women or Artificers Prentices Iourneymen Servingmen of the degrees of Yeomen or under Husbandmen nor Labourers should read the new Testament in English Nothing was to be taught or maintained contrary to the King's Instructions which were for the suppressing Heresie or Protestantism and if any Spiritual person should preach teach or maintain any thing contrary to the King's Instructions or Determinations made or to be made and should be thereof Convict he should for his first Offence recant for the second abjure and bear a Fagot and for his third should be adjudged an Heretick and be burnt and lose all his Goods and Chattels And whoever will take the pains to read over 1 Dr. Burnet the History of the Reformation together with 2 Fox the Book of Martyrs of which Book Dr. Burnet in his Preface to the first part of his History of the Reformation saith that he having compared his Acts and Monuments with the Records had never been able to discover any Errors or Prevarications in them but the utmost fidelity and exactness will find so many instances of putting all these bloody Laws before mentioned in Execution as I perswade my self that there are some Papists would e'en blush at and be throughly ashamed of and if they have any thing of Humanity in them must utterly abhor But before I can carry on the account of the rest of the Penal Laws made by the Papists against the Protestants the Reformation in King Edward the 6 th's time of Glorious Memory intervening I shall shew how the Reformers used the Papists in his Reign CHAP. V. Ed. VI. IT may be expected that I should say something of Henry the 8 th's Reformation But as to what was done in Henry the 8 th's time I shall not trouble the Reader with any thing because the Reverend and Learned Doctor Burnet is so far from giving him the Character of good that he concludes his first part of the History of the Reformation Hist of the Reformation vol. 1. p. 362. with this speaking of Henry the 8 th I do not deny that he is to be numbred among the ill Princes yet I can't rank him with the worst Which Character certainly the preceeding account of the Laws made in his time against the Protestants does evidence to be very favourable to him I shall therefore begin with the Laws made in the Reign of King Edward the 6 th and the manner of introducing them King Edward the 6 th coming to the Crown young and Cranmer and others designing throughly to reform the Church of England from the Errors and Corruptions that were crept into Her during the time she was under the Popish Tyranny The first step that was set in order to it was the visiting the Clergy quite over England and compiling some wholesome Homilies Mild Methods us'd by King Ed. the 6th before any Laws made to supply the defect of Sermons by reason of the ignorance of the then Clergy and to prevent unnecessary Disputes in the Pulpits Their Articles and Injunctions for the Visitation were to be observed under the pains of Excommunication Sequestration or Deprivation not upon the Penalty of being burnt as a Heretick or forfeiture either of Lands in fee simple or Goods or Chattels or either or any of them This was done before the Parliament was called November the 4 th 1547. The Parliament met and the first Act of Parliament that was made was an Act against such as should unreverently speak against the Sacrament of the Altar and of the receiving thereof under both kinds which Act of Parliament in the Preamble takes notice That the King
Eliz. QUeen Mary dyed the 17 th of November Queen Elizabeth's Birth-Day Anno Domini 1558. Whose Death put an end to this severe Persecution The Parliament then assembled in the sixth and last year of her Reign Queen Elizabeth her Accession is the Crown and her r●●●e●●ete calling of a Parliament D'Ewes Journal of Q. Eliz. Reign f. 1. Cambd. Ance●s f. 12. Hist R. f. 2 pt f. 373. being by her demise Dissolved The thrice Excellent and Prudent Princess Queen Elizabeth according to her Right and Hereditary Title saith Sir Simon D'Ewes true and lawful Heir to the Crown according to the Act of Succession of 35 H. 8. saith Cambden the next and indisputed Heir to the Crown saith Doctor Burnet and Heath the then Lord Chancellour so called her without any opposition or difficulty King Philip being then very happily beyond the Seas succeeded to all the Realms and Dominions of Mary her Sister excepting Calais and those other inestimable places in France which had been most dishonourably and vainly lost in the time and towards the end of the Reign of the said Queen Mary and finding also the Innocent Blood of God's Saints Arch-Bishop Cranmer Bishop Ridley Bishop Hooper and the rest shed for the Witness of the Truth to have stained the former Government with the just brand and stygma of Persecuting and Tyrannical and that her Realms and Dominions were much impoverished and weakned as Doctor Burnet in his Letters hath made evident almost all places abroad are where Popery is the prevailing Religion Popery and Slavery being inseparable Companions she therefore in the very entrance of her Reign applyed her first are to the restoring of the Protestant Religion which she verily perswaded her self was most true Cambd. Hist f. 13. and consonant to the Sacred Scriptures and the sincerity of the Primitive Church and well considering and foreseeing that the surest and safest way to establish the Truth to abolish all Foreign and Usurpt Authority to repair the weaknesses and breaches of her said Realms and Dominions to strengthen her Kingdom with Shipping and Munition and to revive the decayed Trade thereof was by the common Advice and Counsel and with the publick Assent did summon her first Parliament to begin on Munday the 23 d day of January in the first year of her Reign But before I give any Account of what Laws were thereby made relating to the Papists I shall 1 st Shew how the Law stood at to the Papists when she came to the Crown 2 d. I shall show that the Protestant Religion was restored by much more lenil and mild Methods towards the Papists in Queen Elizabeth's time than the Popish Religion was introduced by in Queen Mary's 3 d. I shall make it fully appear that they gave just occasion for making the severe Laws against them that were made in Queen Elizabeth's time and when in time the occasion was given and the Laws made which last thing will run through the whole thread of the following account As to the first whoever will give himself the trouble to consult our Statute and Law-Books will find 1 How the Laws stood as to the Papists before any new ones were made 25 F. 3. ca. 2. that long before her Reign it was Treason to compass or imagine the death of the King the Queen or their Eldest Son and Heir or to levy War against the King or to adhere to the King's Enemies or to give to them Aid or Comfort 2 Rog. Hov. in Hen. 2. 13 R. 2. sta 2. ca. 2 Co. Inst 3.100 ca. 36. That it was Treason and afterwards Felony to bring or send into this Kingdom or the King's Power which is the same with Dominions any Summons Sentence or Excommunication against any person of what Condition soever he be 3 16 R. 2 ca. 5.3 Inst 120 121 126.12 Co. 37.40 Davis 84. that he incurr'd a Premunire that purchased Bulls from Rome and that the Crown of England even in the Popish times was subject to none 4 Co. Rep. 5. f. 12 15 17 21 22 23 27 28. and Co. Inst 3. Ca. 36. It was of old Treason by the Common Law of the Land to procure or bring in any Bull of Excommunication against any Subject much more certainly against the King or Queen because it gives way to Foreign Authority 5 Co. Inst 3. ca. 67. f. 144. And by the Laws of England all Subjects are prohibited to take any Pension c. of any Foreign King Prince or State without the King's License altho' in League with England Thus stood the Laws when that Glorious Queen of ever Blessed Memory ascended the Throne and one would have thought these would have guarded her against all attempts of the Papists and 't is not unreasonable to believe that she her self was of that mind if we consider 2 ly That the Methods taken by Queen Elizabeth for restoring the Protestant Religion were much milder than those taken by Queen Mary to introduce the Popish This will appear by the Laws themselves of which I come now to give an account and of the occasion of their making The first is That which restores to the Crown 1 Eliz. ca. 1. Rast Stat. 2. part f. 1. The Crown restored to its Antient Jurisdiction in causes Ecclesiastical a power given to delegate the exercise of it the Oath of Supremacy and what shall be taken for Heresie ascertained the Antient Iurisdiction over the Estate Ecclesiastical and Spiritual and abolisheth all Foreign Powers repugnant to the same Which it doth by reviving the Laws of Henry the 8th against the See of Rome and of Edward the 6th for the Protestants Which Laws were repealed by Queen Mary and Laws for Convicting and Burning Hereticks i. e. Protestants in an Arbitrary way revived which had been Repealed in Edward the 6th's time This Law therefore particularly repeals 5 R. 2.5 5 H. 4.15 2 H. 5.7 made against the Protestants then called Hereticks and Lollards and then doth abolish Foreign Iurisdiction wherein it is but declarative of the Antient Laws of the Kingdom and annereth Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction to the Crown and gives a power of delegating the Exercise of it establisheth the Oath of Supremary but in tenderness to the Papists leaves out Supream Head of the Church and provides that all Ecclesiastical Persons Temporal Iudges Iustices Mayors or other say or temporal Officers and every other person having her Highness Fee or Wages shall take the said Oath upon the penalty of forfeiting their places Ecclesiastical or Temporal upon an obstinate refusal and disability to hold the same for the future the penalty of maliciously maintaining a Foreign Iurisdiction is for the first offence the loss of Goods and Chattels only and if he be not worth 20 l. then over and above the forfeiture of his Goods and Chattels he shall suffer twelve Months Imprisonment without Bail or Mainprize the second offence is made a premunire the third offence high
from the good understanding of their Duty towards God the Queen had by their Lewd and subtle Practices and Perswasions so far wrought that sundry persons had been reconciled to the said usurpt Authority of the See of Rome and did take Absolution at the hands of the said naughty and subtle Practicers whereby there was grown great disobedience and boldness in many not only to withdraw and absent themselves from all Divine Service but also did think themselves discharged from all Obedience Duty and Allegiance to her Majesty that thereupon most wicked and unnatural Rebellion had ensued and to the further danger of this Realm was likely to be renewed if the ungodly attempts in that behalf were not by severity of Laws restrained and bridled This Law therefore provides that they who by Bulls or other Instruments of the Bishop of Rome should reconcile any person to the Church of Rome and those also who should be so reconciled should incur the Penalty of High Treason That those who should relieve such as did so reconcile Men or should bring into England any Agnus Dei's or any Crosses Pictures Beads or such like vain and superstitious Things Consecrated by the Bishop of Rome should undergo the Penalty of a Premunire That they who should not discover such as did so reconcile should be guilty of Misprision of Treason From the precedent History of Fact and the Preamble of these two Acts of Parliament and the Acts themselves I observe three things 1 st That the Kingdom of England is in it self a Free State exempt from all Foreign Jurisdiction whatever by the Common Law of this Kingdom 2 dly That there had been deep Designs on foot before the making of these Acts of Parliament for the inslaving this Kingdom to the Bishop and See of Rome subverting the Protestant Religion and introducing Popery and in order thereunto there were several Plots laid to destroy the person of the Queen 3 dly That these were all laid and carried on by the Pope and some Papists that were the Queens own Subjects and others their adherents and therefore certainly it must be granted that it was very necessary at that time to make these Laws against the Papists And that it was but reasonable to make them The Secular Priests own the Reasonableness of making these Laws Collection of several Treatises concerning the reasons and occasions of the Penal-Laws The 1st printed in 1583. the second in 1601. the third in 1662. and all reprinted in 1688. fol. 36. even the Secular Priests themselves have owned in their important Considerations They confess that Pius V. did practise her Majesties subversion that Ridolpho was sent hither by the Pope under Colour of Merchandize to sollicit a Rebellion That Pius V. moved the King of Spain to Joyn in this exploit That the Bull was devised purposely to further the intended Rebellion for depriving her Majesty from her Kingdom That the Pope and King of Spain assigned the Duke of Norfolk to be head of this Rebellion That the Pope gave order to Ridolpho to take 150000 Crowns to set forwards this Attempt That some of this money was sent to Scotland and some delivered to the Duke That King Philip at the Pope's Instance determined to send the Duke of Alva into England with all his forces out of the Low-Countries to assist the Duke of Norfolk which they confess in this manner That these things their Adversaries the Protestants Charged on them as true and that they were in hand whilst her Majesty dealt so mercifully with them and therefore ask'd them how they could excuse these designs so Unchristian so unpriestly so Treacherous and so unprince-like To which they answer that when they first heard the aforementioned particulars they did not believe them but would have laid their Lives they had been false but when they saw them printed in the Life of Pius V they appeal to God they were amazed Collection f. 37 and say they can say no more but that his Holiness was misinformed and indirectly drawn to these courses They confess that there being several persons in Prison when the Rebellion in the North before mentioned brake forth that it was known that the Pope had Excommunicated the Queen that there followed a great restraint of the Prisoners but none of them were put to death upon that occasion the Sword being then only drawn against such Catholicks as had risen up actually into open Rebellion wherein say they we cannot see what her Majesty did that any Prince in Christendom in such a case would not have done and confess these things to have been the occasion of making 13 Eliz. ca. 2. against bringing in Buls c. thus they express themselves Collection f. 38. we cannot but confess as reasonable men that the State had great Reasons to make some Laws against us except they should have shown themselves careless for the continuance of it but be the Law as any would have it never so extream yet surely it must be granted that the occasions of it were most outragious and likewise that the Execution of it was not so Tragical as many have since written and reported of it for whatsoever was done against us either upon the pretence of that Law or of any other would never we think have been attempted had not divers other preposterous occasions besides the Causes of that Law daily fallen out amongst us which procured matters to be urged more severely against us And afterwards they accuse Saunders the Jesuit for writing a Book in 1572 de visibili Monarchia and therein justifying the Excommunicating the Queen and the said Rebellion in the North and do themselves own that the persons that suffered upon that account were Arraigned Condemned and Executed by the Antient Laws of the Country for High Treason As to the Acts themselves It is not to be denyed but they are very severe yet not severe enough to deter the Papists from carrying on their designs against the Queen and the Protestant Religion as I shall by and by make appear but before I do that let us a little enquire Story 's Plot. Cambd. Hist li 2. fol 168. Dyer 13 Eliz. fol. 298. Baker 's Chron. fol. 343. The Duke of Norfolk executed what proceedings there were upon these Laws after they were thus made In the year 1571 't is true one John Story Doctor in Laws one of the Duke of Alva's Servants an Englishman and a Papist was Executed but it was for High Treason not Religion for having conspired the Queen's Death cursed her daily in his Grace at Meals and shewing the Duke of Alva's Secretary the way to Invade England to put Ireland into Rebellion and to excite the Scots to break into England all at once The Duke of Norfolk was also Tryed Convicted and Executed and after his Condemnation and before his Execution one Barney and Mather were Executed for conspiring with one Herle to make away some of the Council and
Gregory the 13 th which alwaies afforded new supplies of Priests for England when the old ones failed whose business it was privately to spread the Seeds of Popery here amongst us From whence the Colledges had the name of Seminaries and they called Seminary Priests who were bred up in them In these Seminaries amongst other disputations it was concluded that the Pope hath such fulness of Power by Divine Right over the whole Christian World both in Ecclesiastical and Secular Matters that by vertue thereof it is lawful for him to Excommunicate Kings absolve their Subjects from the Oath of Allegiance and to deprive them of their Kingdoms Out of these Seminaries were sent forth into divers parts of England and Ireland at first a few young men and afterwards more according as they grew up who were entered over-hastily into holy Orders and instructed in the above mentioned Principles They pretended only to administer the Sacraments of the Romish Religion and to preach to Papists but the Queen and her Council soon found that they were sent over underhand to seduce the Subjects from their Allegiance and Obedience due to their Prince to oblige them by reconciliation to perform the Pope's Command to stir up intestine Rebellions under the Seal of Confession and flatly to execute the Sentence of Pius V. against the Queen to the end that Way might be made for the Pope and the Spaniard who had designed the Conquest of England To these Seminaries were sent daily out of England by the Papists in contempt and dispight of the Laws great numbers of Boys and young Men of all sorts and admitted into the same making a Vow to return into England Others also crept secretly from thence into the Land and more were daily expected with the Jesuits who at that time came first into England This occasioned the Queen to issue out a Proclamation Camb. Annals f. 245. Collection f. 42. That whosovever had any Children Wards Kinsmen or other Relations in the parts beyond the Seas should after 10 days give in their Names to the Ordinary and within four Months call them home again and when they were returned should forthwith give notice of the same to the said Ordinary That they should not directly or indirectly supply such as refused to return with any Money That no man should entertain in his House or harbor any Priests sent forth from the aforesaid Seminaries or Jesuits or cherish and relieve them and that whoever did to the contrary should be accounted a favourer of Rebels and Seditious Persons and proceeded against according to the Laws of the Land. Camb. Annals f. 246. Before such time as this was proclaimed the Papists pretended that they were sensible too late of the Inconveniencies by the said Bull and that they were ill pleased that ever it came forth A defence of the same written by the said Nicholas Sanders they cunningly supprest and prohibited the Question concerning the power of the Bishop of Rome in Excommunicating and Deposing of Princes to be publickly disputed Which notwithstanding brake forth every day hotter and hotter amongst them Robert Parsons also and Edmund Campian English-Men and of the Society of Jesus being now ready to come over to advance the Romish affairs in England obtained Power from Gregory the Thirteenth Bishop of Rome for moderating that severe Bull Parsons and Campian sent into England by the Pope to promote the Popish interest here The Faculties themselves are Printed verbatim in English and Latin by the L. Burligh in his Examination for Treason Col. f. 12 13. And by Foulis in his History f. 337. The Character of Parsons and Campian Cambd. An. f. 246. Bakers Chron. f. 356. and that in these words Let there be humbly prayed of our most Holy Lord who is generally the most wicked of the whole Court of Cardinals an Explanation of the Bull Declaratory set forth by Pius the V. against Elizabeth and her adherents to give her the Title of Queen after she was excommunicated would have been to disown their own Doctrine of the Lawfulness to depose and kill Princes which Bull the Catholics i. e. the Romish Rebels and Traytors do desire may be understood in this manner that it may always bind Her and the Hereticks i. e. the Protestants and their Protestants Queen but in no way the Catholicks as matters now stand for they were wise enough to carry on their Cruel Designs and knew well enough that whatever Cruelties they used they should be commended for it whether they had any orders for it or not but only hereafter when publick Execution of the said Bull may be had they doubted not of effecting their enterprize for washing their hands in the Blood of the Protestants these Graces aforesaid the Bishop hath granted to Father Robert Parsons and Edmund Campian who are now to take their Journey into England the Fourteenth day of April 1580. in the Presence of Father Oliver Manarcus Assistant This Parsons was of Somerset-shire a violent fierce natur'd Man and of rough behaviour Campian was a Londoner of a sweet disposition and a well pollish'd Man both of them were by Education Oxford Men and known there to Cambden himself as he avers Campian being of St. John's Colledge bare the Office of Proctor of the University in the Year 1568. and being made Deacon made a shew of the Protestant Religion he withdrew himself out of England they can turn themselves into all shapes to carry on their Barbarous and Cruel Conspiracies against the Protestants and the true Religion which they profess Modern Instances of this we have not a few Parsons was of Balliol Colledge wherein he openly professed the Protestant Religion until he was for his loose carriage Expell'd with disgrace and went over to the Papists and it hath been observed by many and that very truly that they who go over from the Protestant to the Popish Religion are generally Men of very vitious and loose Lives These two coming privately into England Travelled up and down the Country and to Popish Gentlemens Houses Covertly and in the disguised Habits sometimes of Souldiers sometimes of Gentlemen sometimes of Ministers of the Word and sometimes of Apparitors diligently performing what they had in Charge both in word and writing Parsons who was Constituted Superior being a Man of a Seditious and Turbulent Spirit and Armed with a Confident Boldness tampered so far with the Papists about deposing the Queen that some of them Cambden saith he speaks upon their own Credit thought to have delivered them into the Magistrates hands Campian the more modest yet by a written Paper Challenged the Ministers of the English Church to a Disputation and published a Neat well-pen'd Book in Latine called Ten Reasons in Defence of the Doctrine of the Church of Rome And Parsons put out another virulent Book in English against Clark who had soberly written against Campian's Challenge but to Campian's Reasons Whitaker gave a solid Answer Campian himself
be effected so long as the Jesuits Seminary Priests and other Priests were tollerated here for it hath been observed by some with a great deal of Truth that there was never yet a Plot against the Government but the Popish Priests had their share in it It was therefore thought necessary to follow the example of Swedeland the State of Venice and other Countries who have banisht the Jesuits and wisely to carry it a little further and banish Priests too they being such Disturbers of the State which was accordingly done by 27. Eliz. cap. 2. But least the Papists should again object against the Authorities I cite for the History of the Fact I shall here insert the very Words of their Secular Priests in their important Considerations whereby the truth of the Fact is Confest the Words are these About the time of the overthrow of the Popes Forces in Ireland The Secular Priests confess the truth of all the foregoing Account Collect. f. 44. The Popes Plot with King of Spain and Duke of Guise Mendoza his Holiness by the false instigation of the Jesuits plotted with the King of Spain for the assistance of the Duke of Guise to enterprize upon the sudden a very desperate design against Her Majesty and for the Delivery and advancement to the Crown of the Queen of Scotland For the better asserting whereof Mendoza the Jesuit and Ledger for the King of Spain in England set on work a worthy Gentleman otherwise one Mr. Francis Throckmorton and divers others And whilst the same was Contriving as afterwards Mr. Throckmorton himself Confessed 1584 the Jesuitical humour had so possessed the hearts of sundry Catholics as we do unfeignedly rue in our hearts the remembrance of it and are greatly ashamed that any Person so intitl'd should ever have been so extreamly bewitched Two Gentlemen about that time also viz. Anno 1583. Mr. Arden and Mr. Somervil were convicted by the Laws of the Realm Throgmortons Confession you have Printed Camb. Annal l. 3. f. 297. Arden and Somervil Dr. Parry Earl of Northumberland for having purposed and contrived how they might have laid violent hands upon Her Majesties sacred Person Mr. Somervils Confession therein was so notorious as it may not be either quallified or denied And Dr. Parry the same Year was plotting with Jesuits how he might have effected the like Villany How the worthy Earl of Northumberland was about this time brought into the said Plot by the Duke of Guise then still in hand we will pretermit Mr. Parsons that was Actor in it could tell the Story very roundly at Rome it wrought the Earls overthrow in 1585 which may justly be ascribed to the Jesuitical Practices of the Jesuite Mendoza and others of that Crew They mentioned several other Treasons which I shall not here take Notice of but reserve them till I come to give the further Account of their Treasons and only set down the Conclusion of this Paragraph These things say they we would not have touched had they not been known in effect to this part of the World and that we thought it our Duties to shew our own dislike of them and to clear Her Majesty so far as we may from such imputations of more then barbarous Cruelty towards us as the Jesuits in their Writings have cast by Heaps upon her They themselves as we still think in our Consciences and before God having been from time to time the very Causes of all the Calamities which any of us have endured in England since Her Majesties Reign which we do not write simply to excuse Her Highness altho we must Confess we can be contented to indure much rather then to seek her Dishonour but for that we think few Princes living being perswaded in Religion as Her Majesty is and so provoked as she hath been would have dealt more mildly with such their Subjects all Circumstances considered then she hath done with us Let us now see what reason can be given for making the rest of the Penal Laws that were made against the Papists in this Queens Reign The Earl of Arund tryed and fined only Camb. Annals f. 330. He was in 1589. tryed for high Treason and Condemned but the Queen spared him Camb. Annals f. 424.429 The first thing I meet with remarkable after the making these Laws forementioned is the fining the Earl of Arundel 5000 pounds in 586. for holding Correspondence with Allen and Parsons the Jesuit the Queens Enemies for that publickly in writing he had questioned the Justice of the Kingdom and that he had intentions of departing the Realm without License The Earl protesting his obedience to the Queen and his Love to his Countrey modestly excused himself by his Love to the Catholic Religion and his ignorance of the Law Confessed his fault and submitted In the * Gifford Savage Ballard and others Plot to kill the Q. Camb. Annals f. 336. Foulis Hist l. 7. cap. 5. sec 1. f. 343. Bakers Chron. f. 367. same year a very dangerous Conspiracy was discovered against Queen Elizabeth in the English Seminary at Rheimes there were some who were so bigotted to the Popish Religion that they thought the Pope could by his Authority do any thing and that the aforementioned Bull of Pius Quintus for deposing the Queen was dictated by the Holy Ghost and thought it a Meritorious Act to take away her Life and doubted not of a Canonisation as Martyrs if they fell in the Attempt William Gifford Doctor in Divinity Gilbert Gifford and one Hodgson Priests did so infuse this treasonable Doctrine into the mind of one John Savage a Bastard as was reported that he readily Vowed to kill the Queen One Ballard an English Priest at Rheimes bestirs himself in England and Scotland for carrying on the Design and for that purpose prepares Disciples then goeth into France and treats with Mendoza before named Charles Paget and others about invading of England judging they could never have a fairer opportunity then at that Juncture of time forasmuch as the Pope the Spaniard the Duke of Guise and the Prince of Parma were all resolved to set upon England thereby to divert the War from the Netherlands Having delivered the Message there he returns for England to promote the design here gets to London where in a Souldiers habit under the false Name of Captain Fescue he agitates the Plot. Babington and divers other Gentlemen engaged in this design of taking off the Queen At London he discovered this Affair to one Mr. Anthony Babington of Dethick in Derbyshire a young Gentleman greatly addicted to the Romish Religion and who had in France Commenced an Acquaintance with the Bishop of Glascow the Queen of Scots Ambassador and one Thomas Morgan an English Fugitive and a busie Agent for her Babington at first was of opinion that as long as the Queen lived an Invasion would signifie little or nothing but when he understood that Savage had undertaken to remove that
Conspired his Death That it was a prime Rule and Precept for well Governing to be sparing of Blood that Blood cryeth for Blood That to use the extreamity of rigour towards her could not but seem a cruel and bloody Part. That the French King would do his best to repel and frustrate the Attemps of all Men whatsoever who should offer violence to the Queen and that the Guises the Queen of Scots near Kinsmen would engage themselves to do the like by Oath and Covenant under their hands who in Case she should be put to death would take it very hardly and haply not leave her unrevenged Lastly they required she might not be proceeded against according to so rigorous and extraordinary a Sentence Otherwise the French King could not but take very great displeasure thereat howsoever other Princes should hap to resent it The Answer to those Reasons To these Reasons Answer was made from Point to Point as followeth That the Queen of England trusted the most Christian King of France would have no less a regard and respect for her then he had for the Queen of Scots who had practised the destruction of an Innocent Princess her near Kinswoman and a Confederate with the French King. That it was expedient and necessary for Kings and Common-wealths that wicked attempts especially against Princes should not go unpunished That the English which acknowledged the Soveraign Authority of Queen Elizabeth only in England could not acknowledge two Supream free and absolute Princes in England at one time or account any other whomsoever equal to her in England as long as she lived Neither indeed did they see how the Queen of Scots and her Son who at present Reigneth can be reputed both at one time for Supream and Absolute Princes Whether the Queens safety would be exposed to greater danger upon her being Executed depended upon future Accidents and Contingences the Estates of England upon serious deliberations of the Matter thought otherwise there would never be occasions wanting for bad attempts especially when the Matter was now come to that pass that the one had no hope of safety unless the other were ruined and this saying they might call to Mind aut ego illam aut illa me either I must take away her Life or she will take away mine The shorter the time to come of her Life was the sooner and more eagerly would the Conspirators hasten the Queens danger That the Title which she claimed to the Crown of England she would not yet renounce and therefore she was with good reason detained in Prison and so to be detained though she came a Supplicant into England till she had renounced the same and the Crimes which she had committed since she was Prisoner she ought to suffer for whatever were the Cause of her first casting into Prison That the Queen had formerly most Graciously spared her Life when by unanimous consent of the Estates she was Condemned for a Rebellion raised about an intended Marriage between her and the Duke of Norfolk and to spare her again were but unadvised and cruel pity that no man was ignorant of that saying of the Lawyers A Man offending in anothers Territory and there found is punished in the Place of his Offence without regard of his Dignity Honour or Priviledge And that this was both justifiable by the Laws of England and by the Examples of Licinius Robert King of Scicily Bernard King of Italy Couradine Elizabeth Queen of Hungary Joan Queen of Naples and Dejotants for whom Tully pleading said it was no unjust thing that a King should be found Guilty and put to Death though it were not usual For thus the words run which I speak first touching a Kings forfeiture of Life and Estate which thing though it be not unjust especially when thy Life is in danger from him yet is it so unsual c. That she ought to be punished having been found Guilty upon a just and legal Tryal considering that what is just the same is honest and what is honest is also profitable and Expedient That the Story of Porsenna suited not with the present Case unless a Man should imagine a numerous Combinations of men to have laid wait for the Queens Life and should thereupon perswade her to let the Queen of Scots at Liberty without any hurt out of a fear of them with some regard to her own honour but none to her safety as Porsenna discharged Mutius after he had affirmed that three hundred like himself had Conspired and vowed his death Moreover Mutius attempted this against Porsenna in a just and declared War and when Mutius was let go Porsenna verily perswaded himself that all the danger was over but the Case here is quite otherwise That Blood indeed is to be spared but it must be inoncent Blood this God hath commanded True it is indeed that the voice of innocent Blood crieth for Blood and this can France both before and since the Massacre at Paris well witness and testifie That Death that is justly inflicted cannot seem Bloody as is neither Physic prapared duly and as it ought to be esteemed violent That howsoever the Guises the Queen of Scots Kinsmen might take the Matter yet it highly concerned the Queen to regard rather the safety of her self the Nobility and People of England upon whose love and affection she wholly depended then the displeasure of any whomsoever That the Matter was come to that pass that what was said of old concerning two Princes Couradine of Sicily and Charles of Anjou might now be spoken of two Queens it might now be truely said the Death of Mary is the Life of Elizabeth and the Life of Mary the Death of Elizabeth That the French King or the Guises promises could not secure the Queen and Realm much less make satisfaction for her Life if she should be made away That the French King could neither discover nor hinder secret Plots against himself at home much less was he like to hinder those against the Queen of England For Treason is plotted in secret and therefore hard to be prevented if the fact were once committed what would it avail to claim their Promises how should an incomparable Prince's death be made amends for and in so sad and woful a Confusion of all things what Remedy could be found for the languishing Common-wealth That the Obligations and Oaths of the Guises were of small value who judged it Meritorious to kill the Bishop of Rome's Adversaries and could easily procure Dispensations for their Oaths and what Englishman if Queen Elizabeth were slain and the Queen of Scots of the house of Guise advanced to the Crown durst accuse them of the Murther and if any should accuse them could they thereby make her alive again And the Ambassadors in calling this a rigorous and extraordinary Sentence have spoken rashly and unadvisedly for as much as they have neither seen Process nor Proofs and have more sharply then is fitting taxed the
at home and their Ministers The Principal Root hereof The Councel of Trent which agreed to extirpate Christian Religion which they term Heresie whereunto divers Princes assented and bound themselves in solemn Manner Pope Pius Quintus sent his Excommunication against Her Majesty Dr. Mourton and Mendoza a Spanish Ambassador bestirred them a Northren Rebellion was bred the Pope and the rest Practiced for the Scottish Queen and she being acquainted proceeds by her means Pope Paulus the thirteenth proceeds and sends Jesuites and Seminaries to England and Ireland and they proceed to inveagle the the Subjects and disswade them from obedience Viska beginneth a Rebellion in Ireland James Fitz Morris furthereth the Execution thereof Doctor Saunders and Desmond stir new Rebellion there and wrote into England c. Parry was moved to kill Her Majesty and perswaded it was Meritorious Pope Sixtus the fifth imitateth the other Popes to execute their former Devices and writeth to the Cardinal of Lorain and Guise that he will overthrow the Gospel which Mr. Vice Chamberlain honourably termed the glorious Gospel and therefore moved them to joyn with the Princes of the League and to practice to win the King of Scots and to set up the Scottish Queen in England and make his reckoning of the Cantons that were Popish the Switzers the Duke of Savoy they Duke of Ferara King of Spain and King of France A chief Instrument to work this was one Carew called also Father Henry He was sent into Germany and over Italy and France wrote to the Scottish Queen that the Powers will joyn to overthrow England and make known the effect of his Labour to the Pope Invasion should have been made into England and Ireland the last year and not like to be unattempted this year The Pope Excommunicateth the King of Navar the Pope accounteth not of Popish Preaching and perswasions that way But nevertheless moveth all to use the Word and for maintenance thereof spareth his Treasure otherwise and withdraweth maintenance from Jesuites Seminaries and divers other Letters were found with the Scottish Queen which prove all these to be true If we serve Almighty God in sincerity of Heart we need not to fear It is to be remembred that the King of Spain sought to recover some part of his Fathers Credit by using our Treasure and Force to get St. Quintines but he soon made his advantage of it and regarded not our Territories in France But suffered the loss of Calice and all our Territories and after the Death of Queen Mary what he could Her Majesty sought for his Good-will sending the Lord Mountague the Lord Cobham Sr. Thomas Chamberlain Knight Mr. Maun and others and they were but hardly used some of them were offered great indignity and Mr. Mauns Son forced by strength to do a kind of Pennance He comforted the Queens Enemies he giveth Colour of Wars he Chargeth the Queen that her Subjects have aided his Rebels in the Low Countries with the countenancing Mounsieur with many at Cambray with sending her Nobility with him into the Low Countries with the Actions of Sr. Francis Drake with assistance of the Low Countries Of the purpose of the Combined Princes Their shew is to deal with the King of Navar to extirpate him but their drift is to ruinate Religion not only there but to set upon and to work the ruin of it here also Wherein the King of Spain and Guise are now very busie Their Malice is the more for the executing the Scottish Queen● But their hope is the less The King of Spain his Designments are to invade England and Ireland His Preparations Three hundred sixty Sail of Spain Eighty Gallies from Venice and Genoua one Galliass with six hundred armed Men from the Duke of Florence Twelve thousand Men maintained by Italy and the Pope Six thousand by the Spanish Clergy twelve thousand by his Nobility and Gentlemen of Spain It is reported that ten thousand of these be Horsemen I think it not all true but something there is We must look to the Papists at home and abroad It hath touched us in the Blood of the Nobility and the Blood of many Subjects They practice to frame Subjects against all Duty and bring in Doctrine of Lawfulness and Merit to kill the Queen and have sent their Instruments abroad to that purpose Notwithstanding things stood thus yet the Parliament having made so many Laws thought convenient to make but one Law this Session against the Papists which was not made Provisory of any new Remedy against them but to enforce the Execution only of a former Law. It is entitled An Act for the more speedy and due Execution of certain Branches of the Stat. 23. Eliz. intitled An Act to retain the Queens Majesties Subjects in their due obedience 29. Eliz. cap. 6 Rast Stat. 2. Part. f. 338. An Act to enforce the Execution of 23. Eliz. By which Act For the avoiding all Frauds and Delays in hinderance of the Execution of the said Act it is provided that certain assurances made by Papists shall be void against the Queen That the Conviction shall be at the Kings Bench or at the Assizes or general Goal Delivery and certified into the Exchequer The twenty pounds a month for not going to Church is to be paid into the Exchequer every Easter and Michaelmas Term In default of Payment the Queen may take all the Goods and two parts of the Lands and Leases of the Offenders The indictment sufficient tho it mentions not the Parties being within the Realm Vpon Proclamation made if the party renders not his Body he stands Convicted no forfeiture if the party submits or dies Assurances made bona fide not to be impeached nor Lands for Life or in the Wives right after the Offendors Death Thus did the Plots and Conspiracies of the Papists from time to time force the State to make either New Laws against them or else Laws for the more effectual executing the old for the truth of the Plots and Conspiracies before mentioned I shall here insert the very words of the Secular Priests in their important Considerations as hereunto followeth The Secular Priests Confession of the Plots before-mentioned Collect. f. 45. Babingtons Plot. We might add the notable Treasons of Mr. Anthony Babington and his Complices in the Year 1586. Which were so apparent as we were greatly abashed at the shameless Boldness of a young Jesuit who to excuse the said Traitors and qualifie their offences presumed in a kind of supplication to Her Majesty to ascribe the Plotting of all that mischief to Mr. Secretary Walfingham the Treachery also of Sr. William Stanley the year following 1587. in falsifying his Faith to Her Majesty and in betraying the trust Committed unto him by the Earl of Leicester who had given him the honourable Title of Knighthood as it was greatly prejudicial to us that were Catholicks at home Stanley's Treason so was the defence of that Disloyalty made by a
* Allen before named worthy Man but by the perswasions as they think of Parsons greatly disliked of many both Wise and Learned And especially it was wondred at a while until the Drift thereof appeared more manifestly in the year 1588 that the said worthy Person laid down this for a ground in justifying the said Stanley viz. that in all Wars which may happen for Religion every Catholick Man is bound in Conscience to employ his Person and Force by the Popes Direction viz. how for when and where either at home or abroad he may and must break with his Temporal Soveraign Let us now see what was further doing by the Pope and the Papists against the Protestant Queen and the Protestant Religion in England in the Year 1588 and we shall doubtless see very good reason for making the Statute of 35 Eliz. Ca. 2. which was the last Law that was made against them in Queen Elizabeths time The Pope some Religious Persons in Spain and several English Fugitives The Pope plotting again Camb. Annal. f. 402. Baker's Chron. f. 374. had called back the Spaniard to his former Designs for the Conquest of England which had been interrupted by the Portugal Wars earnestly exhorting him that seeing God had given him Success in laying Portugal and the East-Indies to his Dominions he would do something which should be acceptable to God and becoming the Grandeur and Majesty of the Catholic King that nothing could be more then the propagating and enlarging the Church of God which could not be more gloriously nor more meritoriously done then by the Conquest of England re-planting the Roman Catholic Religion and abolishing Heresie there They suggested that this War would be just because it was necessary as also because it was for the Maintainance of Christs Religion in regard That the Queen of England being excommunicate persisted contumaciously against the Church of Rome supported his Rebels in the Netherlands annoyed the Spaniards by continual Depredations suppressed and sackt his Towns in Spain and America and had very lately put the Queen of Scots to Death violating thereby the Majesty of all Kings That it would be no less profitable than just for so he should add to his Empire those three Kingdoms quell the Rebellion in the Low Countries secure his Voyages to the Indies without the Expence of Convoys To prove this they suggested that the Spanish Navy did far exceed the English in Number Largeness of Ships and Strength especially considering the Addition of the Portugal Fleet that England had no Forts nor defences that it was unprovided of Commanders Souldiers Cavalry and Munition bare of Wealth and Friends that there were many Papists who would presently joyn with him that so great was the Strength of Spain and so unmatchable their Valour that none durst oppose them and confidently assured themselves of Victory That this Opportunity was offered by God himself a Peace being then concluded with the Turk and the French embroiled in a Civil War That the Conquest of England would be far easier than the Netherlands in respect the Cut from Spain to England was much more short and convenient than from Spain to the Netherlands That in order to the Conquest of the Netherlands it was necessary first to conquer England and that England being once conquered the Low-Countries must of necessity be subdued The Spanish King being perswaded to believe all this resolves on the Attempt The Contrivance of the Spanish Invasion Camb. Annal f. 403 404. and the next thing considered was in what Way and Means to effect it And the Method agreed on was to do it with a well-provided Army from Spain and the Low-Countries to be landed by a powerful Navy at the Thames Mouth in order to surprize the City of London by a sudden Assault this being resolved on the Preparation was made which was so great throughout all Spain Italy and Scicily that the Spaniards themselves were amazed at it and named it the Invincible Armada Their Cause the Armada and Army they recommended to the Pope and to the Prayers of the Catholics to God and the Saints and set forth a Book in Print for a Terror wherein the whole Preparation was set down The Prince of Parma also in the Netherlands by the Spanish Kings Command built Ships and many Flat-bottomed Boats and other great Preparations in the Sea Towns of Flanders he had an Army of an hundred and three Companies of Foot and four thousand Horse amongst which were one thousand English Fugitives who of all others were least esteemed neither was * Sir William Stanley before named Stanley who had the Command of them nor others who offered their Service and Council once heard but for their unnaturalness to their Country they were debarred from all access and as most inauspicious Persons worthily and with Detestation rejected The Spanish Navy in the whole consisted of one hundred and thirty Ships whereof Galliasses and Galleons seventy two in which were Souldiers nineteen thousand two hundred and ninety Camb. Annal. f. 410. Baker's Chron. f. 374. The Number of the Armada Marriners eight thousand three hundred and fifty Gally Slaves two thousand and eighty great Ordinance two thousand six hundred and thirty for the greater Holiness of their Action twelve of their Ships were called the twelve Apostles the chief Commanders were Don Alphonso Duke of Medina and John Recalde a great Sea-man Sixtus Quintus Curseth Queen Elizabeth Foulis Hist li. 7. ca. 6. f. 350. Camb. Annals f. 410. Sixtus Quintus the Pope that he might not seem to be wanting in so good a Cause did not only assist with his (a) Ant. Cicarella in vità Sexti V. Allen sent into the Netherlands to carry on the Design Treasure but his Papal Curse to boot whereby he excommunicated the Queen dethroned her absolved her Subjects from all Allegiance and published his Croisado in Print as it were against Turks and Infidels wherein out of the Treasure of the Church he granted plenary Indulgences to all that gave their Help and Assistance with this goodly Stuff William Allen a little before made a Cardinal an English-man and an old Traitor to the Queen was sent into the Netherlands the better to encourage the English Romanists to Rebellion Allen pulls out his Papal Tool which he forgeth into a Pamphlet in the English Language which he prints at Antwerp calling it The Declaration of the Sentence of Sixtus Quintus Their Methods And as a farther Interpretation of the Papal Intent and the better to ingage the English to Rebellion he joyns a second Part to it called An Admonition to the Nobility and People of England And that the Reader may better understand the Honesty of the Paper take the Sum of it thus Em. Meteram Hist Belg. lib. 15. p. 473 474. Sam. Purchas Pilgrims vol. 4. l. 10. c. 11. p. 1895 1896. It begins with Calling the Queens Government impious and unjust her self an
Vsurper Obstinate and Impenitent and so no good to be expected unless she be deprived Therefore Pope Sixtus Quintus moved by his own and his Predecessors Zeal and the vehement Desire of some principal English-men hath used great Diligence with divers Princes especially with the Spanish King to use all his Force that she might be turned out of her Dominions and her Adherents punished And all this for good Reasons Because she is an Heretick Schismatick is excommunicated by former Popes is Contumacious Disobedient to the Roman Bishop and hath taken to her self the Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction over the (a) No such thing Souls of Men. Because she hath against all Law and Right usurped the Kingdom seeing none forsooth must be Monarchs of England but by the Leave and Consent of the Pope Because she hath committed many Injuries Extortions and other Wrongs against her Subjects Because she hath stirred up Sedition and Rebellion between the Inhabitans of Neighbouring Countries Because she hath entertained (b) What did the Pope and Spaniard do Fugitives and Rebels of other Nations Because she sent and procured the (c) A Slanderous Vntruth Turk to invade Christendom Because she persecuted the English Romanists Cut of the (d) And very justly as appears by the Relation before given Queen of Scots and abolished the Roman Religion Because she hath rejected and excluded the Antient Nobility and promoted to Honour obscure People (e) A damn'd Lye. and also useth Tyranny Wherefore seeing these Offences some of them rendring her uncapable of the Kingdom others unworthy to live His Holiness by the Power of God and the Apostles reneweth the Censure of Pius V. and Gregory XIII against her excommunicates and deprives her of all Royal Dignity Titles Rites and Pretences to England and Ireland declares her illegitimate and Vsurper of the Kingdom and absolves all her Subjects from their Obedience and Oaths of Allegiance due to her So he commandeth all under Pain and Penalty of Gods Wrath to yield her no Obedience Aid or Favour whatsoever but to employ all their Power against her and to Joyn themselves with the Spanish Forces who will not hurt the Nation nor alter their Laws nor Priviledges only punish the wicked (f) Protestants he means Hereticks Therefore by these Presents we declare that it is not only Lawful but Commendable to lay Hands on the said Usurper and other her Adherents and for so doing they shall be well rewarded And lastly to all these Roman Assistants is liberally granted a Plenary Indulgence and Remission of all their Sins The Queen to defend her self set forth a good Fleet of Ships Queen Elizabeths Preparation to defend her self Camb. Annal. f. 405. under the Command of Charles Lord Howard of Effingham Lord High Admiral and Drake Vice-admiral she prepared two Armies one of one thousand Horse and twenty two thousand Foot under the Command of the Earl of Leicester The other of thirty four thousand Foot and two thousand Horse under the Command of the Lord Hunsdon And the Nation being jealous of the Papists the Queen was perswaded to commit divers to Wisbich Castle but could not be prevailed upon to execute any one not so much as a Priest notwithstanding the severe Laws then in being against them and this great Preparation made against her for the Conquering of England and the bringing in of Popery The Papists seeing such Preparations made by the Queen A Trick of the Spaniards Camb. Annals l. 3. f. 407 408 409 410. set on foot a Treaty for Peace and in February Commissioners went into Flanders and the 12 th of April 1588 the Spanish Commissioners met the English near Ostend and the Treaty was carried on by the Spanrards with design if possible to make England secure and so to surprise them for they dallied with the English till the Spanish Fleet was come upon the Coast of England and the Thundring of the Ordinance was heard from the Sea. The 21 st of May 1588. the Spanish Fleet set sail out of Tayo The Spanish Fleet at first disperst by Tempest Camb. An. from 411. to 418. The Fleets engage The Spaniard beaten and was totally scattered and disperst by a very great Tempest but being come together again the 12 th of July the whole Fleet set Sail again and the 21 st both Fleets engaged and after four several Sea-fights the First the 21 st the Second the 23 d. the Third the 25 th and the Last on the 27 th or 28 th of July thy Spanish Fleet the last Day of the same Month was driven Northwards and machischeir Escape by Flight This great Armada which had been three Years in Rigg●●g and Preparing with infinite Expence was within a Months space four times fought with and at the last overthrown with the Slaughter of many Men not an Hundred of the English being missing and but one Ship lost and after it had been driven round about all Brittain by Scotland the Orcades and Ireland grievously tossed and very much distressed impaired and mangled by Storms and Wrecks and indured all manner of Miseries at length returned Home with Shame and Disgrace The Prince of Parma never joyned them for which he was sufficiently reviled by the Spaniards As for Cardinal Allen he was born in Lancashire of good Parentage Foulis Hist l. 7. cap. 6. f. 351 352. Camb. Annals f. 490. Bakers Chron. f. 381. was bred up at Oxford in Oriel Colledge where he was Proctor was prefered to a Cannonship in York In Queen Elizabeths Days he quitted England became a Pensioner to the Spaniard to carry on whose Designs against his Queen and Country he was very industrious for which Service Sixtus V. created him a Cardinal 1587. and he died at Rome 1594. Oct. 16. He hath told us himself who were the chief Promoters of this Invasion as Mr. Foulis tells us and quotes for it Quodlibets Pag. 40 41 57. his own Words as he relates it are these The King of Spain at length as well by his Holiness's Authority and Exhortations as by his own unspeakable Zeal and Piety moved also not a little by my humble and continual Suit together with the afflicted and banished Catholicks of our Nation of all and every Degree who have been by his special Compassion and Regal Munificency principally supported in this our long Exile hath condescended at last to take upon him this so holy and glorious an Act c. And then proceeds to encourage nay and threaten too the English to take up Arms against their Queen and to joyn with the Spaniards and other Invaders If you will avoid the Popes the Kings and other Princes high Indignation let no Man of what Degree soever obey abet aid defend or acknowledge her c. Adding That otherwise they should incur the Angels Curse and Malediction and be as deeply excommunicated as any because that in taking her part they should fight against God against their Lawful King (a)
How cometh Philip to be lawful King of England against their Country and notwithstanding withstanding all they should do they should but defend her bootless to their own present Destruction and eternal Shame What Mr. Foulis relates out of Clark a Secular Priest is so remarkable with relation to this Invasion that I cannot omit it saith he and quotes his Author As for the Jesuits you shall hear what (c) C. W. A Reply to Father Parson's Libel f. 64 65. Clark the Priest saith who with Watson suffered afterward for Treason against King James First It is most certain that all the World had very admirable Expectance of that Army and the Jesuits more than any Secondly It is plain by the Cardinals Book if (d) They would hint to us as if Parsons were the Compiler of the Admonition but its certain that Allen was the Author of it and Parsons with the other Romanists confess Allen to be the Author it were his writen as a Preparative to that Account that he was made Cardinal on purpose for that Exploit and to have been sent hither presently upon the Spaniards Conquest But Father Parsons saith that he laboured to set forward at that time the Cardinals Preferment if you will believe him which maketh it evident à primo ad ultimum that Father Parsons was a Dealer in that Account Thirdly It is certain that the Jesuits in Rome were great with the Spanish Ambassador Leger there and had great recourse unto him when the Matter was on foot doth not this then urge them to be Concurrers thereunto Fourthly It is likewise most certain that the English Jesuits in Rome appropriated certain Pallaces in London to themselves to fall unto their Lots when the Matter was in handling to wit Burghley-House Bridewel and another which I have forgot makeing themselves cock sure of their already devoured Prey This all the Students that lived in the (e) Viz. The English Colledge at Rome Colledge at that time will witness with ●e now would I demand of you what reasons they might have to be their own Carve● 〈◊〉 if they had not some Interest in that Affair Fifthly We know that they were more forward in Rome concerning this Matter than the Cardinal or any other insomuch as at the first News of the Spaniards coming down into the narrow Seas they would have had Te Deum sung in the Colledge for joy of Victory if the Cardinal had not stayed it And to conclude Doth not the posting of Father Parsons into Spain presently after the Overthrow of this Army for further dealing with the Spaniard for the time to come and his better information in English Affairs and Father Holt posting into the Low-Countries for the like Purpose to keep the Spaniard still in hope of future times that this Mishap might not withdraw him from ever enterprizing the like afterwards shew that they were Dealers in the former Doubtless all these Circumstances cannot but sufficiently prove it that they were in the Judgment of wise Men. Foulis Hist l. 7. cap. 7. f. 354. This Grand Invasion of the Spaniards so contrived and carried on by the Pope Spaniard English Fugities Priests and Jesuits being ruined and brought to nought England might now afford it self some ease her Enemies not being able on a sudden to recruit their great Losses this Defeat in a manner breaking their Back and cracking the Credit of Philip. But as by degrees he recovered so by the Instigation of the English Fugitives was he perswaded to carry on the same ill Will towards the Queen of England Camb. Annals f. 457. Bakers Chron. f. 379. the first step that is set is to send over English Priests who crept every day privately into England in great Numbers from the Seminaries of Rome France and Spain for the Spaniard had lately founded a Seminary for the English at Validolid who laboured to draw the Subjects from their Obedience to the Queen and to unite them to the Spaniards Party which being discovered the Queen put out a Proclamation that none should harbour any man whatsoever but upon Enquiry first made who he was whether he came to Prayers in the Church upon what Means he lived where he dwelt the Year before and other like Circumstances that they who could not answer these Interrogatories should be sent to Commissioners appointed in every Shire least the Common-wealth should receive any Damage Notwithstanding this Proclamation and the severity of the Laws one Hesket who was set on by Sir William Stanley before named undertook to persuade Ferdinand Lord Strange who a little after by the Death of his Father Henry Heskets Plot to depose the Queen and set up the Lord Strange Fowlis Hist l. 7. c. 7. f. 354. Camb. Annals l. 4. f. 477. became Earl of Darby to depose the Queen and take upon him the Title of the Crown making pedegrees for him drawing his pretended right from Mary his great Grand-mother Daughter to Henry the 7 th And for a better encouragement they gave him large promises of assistance of Men and Mony from the Spaniard but withal threatning him with assured destruction unless he would undertake the design and conceal it but the Earl far contrary to their expectation discovers Hesket who confessing all is executed This failing we have another more dangerous Lopez his Treason against Queen Eliz. Camb. Annals l. 4. f. 484. Fowlis l. 7. c. 7. f. 354. Bakers Chron. f. 381. set on by persons of the highest Rank but it seems not unworthy the basest Action of whom any Religion might be justly ashamed As a Prologue to this we may understand that Don Sebastian the forward King of Portugal having ruined himself in the Affrican Expedition and his great Uncle Cardinal Henry succeeding him in the Kingdoms and Dying unmarried several made claim to the Portugal Crown Amongst the rest Don Antonio Prior of Crato natural Son to Lewis Brother to Henry To him being a Portuguese many of the People bare an affection so that at last the rest let their Titles sleep and the quarrel only remained between Philip the II. of Spain and this Antonio But Philip having the longest Sword under the Conduct of Alva wan the Kingdom so that Antonio was forced to flee for refuge to our Queen Elizabeth who afforded him some assistance and favour by which means and protection many Portuguese Ship't themselves for England where they were received as friends with all respect and honour Amongst the rest was Roderigo Lopez a Jewish Physician whom the Queen entertained in her own Service making him Physician to her Houshold and Stephano Ferreira de Gama with Emanuel Loisie These three were enticed by the Spaniard to undertake the Murther of the Queen for which they were promised great rewards but Lopez was to be the main instrument Lopez confessed that of late years he had been allured to do service secretly to the King of Spain which he did by means of one
Genserick and Henricus with their Arian Hereticks alluding to the State. Here we think both him and divers others that have written to the same effect very greatly to blame Sure we are that the general Cause of Religion for the which both we and they contend as oft we have said getteth no good but hurt by it and contrary to the Old saying be he never so bad yet let him have Justice tho some hard Courses have been taken by the State against us yet hath it not by many degrees been so extream as the Jesuits and that Crue have falsely written and reported of it nor indeed as they deserved Afterwards they inveigh against the Spanish Invasion against Parsons for a Book he writ and against him and Creswel for another they writ they go on thus Whilst the said Invasion was thus talked of and in preparation in Spain a shorter course was thought of Heskets Plot. it might have had success Mr. Hesket was set on by the Jesuits 1592. or thereabouts with Father Parsons consent or knowledge to have stirred up the Earl of Darby to Rebellion against Her Highness Cullen Not long after good Father Holt and others with him persuaded an Irish-man one Patrick Collen as he himself confessed to attempt the laying his violent and villanous hands upon Her Majesty Shortly after in the Year 1593. that Notable Stratagem was Plotted the whole State knoweth by whom for Dr. Lopez the Queens Physician to have Poysoned her Lopez for the which he was Executed the Year after This wicked designment being thus prevented by Gods providence the said Traiterous Jesuit York and Williams Holt and others did allure and animate one York and Williams to have accomplished that with their Bloody hands that the other purposed to have done with his Poyson we mean Her Majesties destruction Hereunto we might add the late Villanous attempt 1599. of Edward Squire animated and drawn thereto as he confessed by Wallpool that pernicious Jesuit Walpool But we must turn again to Father Parsons whose turnings and doublings are such as would trouble a right good Hound to Trace him For in the mean time that the said Traytors one after another were Plotting and Studying how best they might compass Her Majesties Death they cared not how nor by what means he the said Father Parsons so prevailed with the King as he attempted twice in two sundry Years his new Invasion meaning to have proceeded therein The Spaniard designed a Second Invasion not with such great preparation as he did at the first but only to have begun the same by taking some Port Westward Towards which he came so far onward as Silley with his Fleet. At both which times God who still hath fought for her Majesty and this Realm did notably prevent him by such Winds and Tempests as the most of his Ships and Men perished in the Sea as they were coming hitherward Furthermore the said good Father in the midst of all the said Trayterous enterprizes both at home and abroad devised and set forward by him and his Companions was ploding amongst his Papers and playing the herauld how if all his said wicked designments failed he might at the last Intitle the King of Spain and consequently the Infanta his Daughter to the Crown and Kingdom of England To which purpose he framed and after published a Book wherewith he acquainted the Students in those Seminaries in Spain and Laboured nothing more then to have their subscriptions to the said Infanta's Title therein promissing unto her their present Allegiance as unto their lawful Soveraign and that when they should be sent into their Country they should perswade the Catholics there to do the like without any further Expectation of the Queen of Englands Death As Mr. Charles Paget affirmeth in his Book against Parsons They confess in these words That the Jesuitical designments beyond the Seas Collect. 53 54. together with certain Rebellions and Traiterous attempts of some Catholics at home have been the cause of such Calamities and troubles as have happened to us far less we think then any Prince living in Her Majesties Case and so provoked would have inflicted upon us And after they tell us that divers of their Communion have owned so much I shall conclude this Reign with these words of theirs which fully justifie the making the Laws that were made in it We are fully persuaded in our Consciences and as Men besides our Learning Collect. 55 56 57. who have some experience that if the Catholics had never sought by indirect means to have vexed Her Majesty with their designments against her Crown if the Pope and King of Spain had never plotted with the Duke of Norfolk If the Rebels in the North had never been heard of if the Bull of Pius the V. had never been known if the said Rebellion had never been justified If neither Steukly nor the Pope had attempted any thing against Ireland if Gregory the Thirteenth had not renewed the said Excommunication if the Jesuits had never come into England if the Pope and the King of Spain had not practised with the Duke of Guise for his attempt against Her Majesty if Parsons and the rest of the Jesuits with other our Country-men beyond Seas had never been agents in these Traiterous and Bloody designments of Throckmorton Parry Collen York Willians Squire and such like if they had not by their Treatises and writings endeavoured to defame their Soveraign and their own Country labouring to have many of their Books Translated into divers Languages thereby to shew more their own disloyalty if Cardinal Allen and Parsons had not published the Renovation of the said Bull by Sixtus Quintus if thereunto they had not added their scurrillous and unmanly Admonition or rather most Prophane Libel against Her Majesty if they had not sought by false persuasions and ungodly Arguments to have allured the Hearts of Catholics from their Allegiance if the Pope had never been urged by them to have thrust the Kingdom of Spain into that Barbarous Action against the Realm if they themselves with the rest of that generation had not laboured greatly with the said King for the Conquest and Invasion of this Land by the Spaniards who are known to be the cruelest Tyrants that live upon the Earth If in all their Proceedings they had not from time to time depraved irritated and provoked both Her Majesty and the State with these and other such like their ungodly and unchristian practices But on the contrary if the Popes from time to time had sought her Majesty by kind Offices and gentle Persuasions never ceasing the prosecution of those and such-like courses of humanity and gentleness if the Catholics and Priests beyond the Seas had laboured continually the furtherance of those most Priest-like and Divine allurements and had framed their own proceedings in all their words and writings accordingly if we at home all of us both Priests and
People had possest our Souls in meekness and humility honoured Her Majesty born with the infirmity of the State suffered all things and dealt as true Catholic Priests If all of us we say had thus done most assuredly the State would have loved us or at least born with us where there is one Catholic there would have been ten There had been no Speeches amongst us of Racks and Tortures nor any cause to have used them for none were ever vexed that way simply for that he was either Priest or Catholic but because they were suspected to have had their hands in some of the said most Traiterous designments None of Her Majesties Enemies durst so really have attempted her State and Kingdom we had been in better friendship with those that seek now most to oppose themselves against us and to all Men as we are persuaded Bonus odor Christi odor vitae ad vitam Whereas by following the said new violent Spirits quasi turbae impellentes parietem we are become odor Mortis ad mortem non solum iis qui pereunt sed etiam iis qui salvi fiunt And therefore let us all turn over the Leaf and take another course then hitherto we have done CHAP. VIII K. Ja. I. AND now a Man might reasonably suppose that after the first Plottings of the Papists with the Guises the French King and the Pope on behalf and by the instigation of the Queen of Scots after Harding Saunders and S. P. busily exercising their Episcopal Power in England in 1568 after Ridolph's exciting Queen Elizabeth's Subjects to Rebellion sent hither by Pope Pius Quintus for that purpose after the Rebellion in the North fomented by Morton sent hither by the same Pope to that end headed by the Earls of Northumberland and Westmorland who were incouraged thereto by a Letter from the same Pope After Dacres his Rebellion in Cumberland after the Earl of Ormonds Brethren the Bo●telers Rebellion in Ireland after Pope Pius Quintus his Bull declaring the Queen Excommunicate and her Subjects absolved from their Allegiance after the Earl of Twomonds Rebellion in Ireland after Storys Treason ●ir Edward Coke Attorny General to King James ●e First in o●ening the fact ●f the Gun-Powder-Plot at ●he Tryal of ●arnet the Je●ite mentions ●●ese Treasons ●nd Conspira●es The Rela●tion of the ●ryal was Prin●●d Anno ●606 which ●eing taken ne●ce of whilst ●hings were ●resh in memo●y gives the ●reatest confir●ation to the ●ruth of them after the Spaniards the Pope and the Guises contrivances to kill the Queen and set up Mary Queen of Scots and introduce Popery after I say these things had occasioned the making the 13 Eliz. cap. 12 And after Stukelys Plot to invade Ireland and England at once After Fitz Morris his Rebellion in Ireland carried on after his Death by Desmond after another conspiracy in Ireland for the destruction of the Protestant Relligion after the erecting Seminarys abroad for the educating and bringing up Priests to be sent hither to alienate the Hearts of the Subject from their Soveraign and the Actual sending of Campian Parsons and others into England for that purpose who were detected in their attempts to compass such their wicked designs and Executed for Treason after I say these things had raised a greater jealousy of the Papists in the State and caused them to make the 23 El. cap. 1. And after Somervills Conspiracy to kill the Queen after Francis Throgmortons Conspiracy to depose the Queen by Foreign Force after a further design of the Pope the Spaniard and the Guises for invading England in order to destroy the Protestant Religion after Parry's Treason all which Conspiracies and Treasons extorted from the State the 27 Eliz. cap. 1. and 2. after Gilford Savage Babington and others design to kill the Queen and set up Mary Queen of Scots who was at the Bottom of this design her self and promised to reward the Actors in it for which she was Tryed Condemned and Executed after Staffords Conspiracy and Yorks Plot which Treasons occasioned the making the 29 Eliz. cap. 6. and after the Pope and the Spaniards design in 1588. to invade England and thereby destroy the Protestant Religion with its defender by a Force by them called the Invincible Armada and this begun and carryed on by English Priests and Lay-Papists after Heskets Plot to depose the Queen and set up the Lord Strange After Cullens Conspiracy to murther the Queen after Lopez his Conspiracy to poison the Queen for which the Spaniard was to pay 50000 Crowns which Treasons did as it were compel the State to make the 35 Eliz. cap. 2. for confining Papists with in five Miles of their dwelling I say after all these Plots Conspiracies Treasons and open Rebellions invented begun and carryed on by the Papists and all with so little Success and after their own Confession of the whole to be true and their own advice to turn over a new Leaf a man might reasonably suppose that they should have ceased any further Attempts by Treason Rebellion Plot or Conspiracy to introduce the Popish Religion into England But such is the inveterate Malice and implacable Hatred of the Pope and all that are of the Communion of the Church of Rome if I may call it a Church that even before the peaceable James the First of England and the Sixth of Scotland was placed upon the Throne by the unanimous consent of all the Protestant Subjects of England as appears by the Act of Recognition made in the first year of his Reign there were several Plots for the taking away his Life and in one Plot even Watson and Clark two secular Priests of the Romish Church the former whereof joyned with Bluet the Secular Priest in writing the Impot●nt considerations before mentioned wherein they acknowledge all the Plots Conspiracies Treasons and Rebellions before mentioned to have been committed by Papists but insinuate it to be done by the instigation of the Jesuits are found in a Plot against the said King James and Executed for it but before I mention any thing of that Plot I shall give a short Account of what designs were on foot against the said King James his Life before his accession to the Crown Queen Elizabeth being old and weak and as they thought The Papists plot against James the First before his coming to the Crown could not live long the Papists thought it needless to make any more attempts against her person least her death should anticipate their quickest Designs But she and the Kingdom having their Eye upon the said King James being a Protestant to succeed her their main drift was to prevent him if possible from succeeding Queen Elizabeth In order to this in the Year 1601. there was one Francis Mowbray Mowbray's Plot against King James the First Fowlis Hist. li. 10. cap. 1. f. 498. Son to the Laird Barnbowegal who had lived some while in the Infanta's Court at Brussels he they say
undertook to take this rub out of the way by killing the King to which purpose he went for Scotland but took England in his way At London one Daniel an Italian Fencing Master discovers the Plot to the Queen she seized them and sent them into Scotland Mowbray supposed Guilty is cast into Edenburgh Castle whence thinking one Night to escape out of a Window by his Bed sheets they proved too short and he fell upon the Rocks and so dyed his Body was hanged for sometime then quartered 1601. and set upon the Gates and several places of the City This Design failing another is in hand in Italy A design to poyson King James the First Ferdinando I. the Grand Duke of Tuscany by the intercepting some Letters discovereth a Plot to poyson the said King James The Duke by what reasons induced is not material but 't is conjectured in hopes to convert him rather pervert him to the Romish Religion resolved to discover and prevent it At this time one Mr. Henry Wotton sojourned in Florence 1602. and was well acquainted with Seigniour Vietta the Dukes Secretary upon whose Commendations Wotton is pitched on to be the Messenger The Letters and excellent Antidotes against Poyson such as were not then known in Scotland were delivered to him who disguised under an Italian Garb and Name of Octavio Baldi hasteth into Scotland cometh to the King discovereth himself and the Conspiracy and after some stay returneth to Florence he was afterwards Knighted by King James As the Popes are never without Designs for promoting some of their Nephews The Pope designs to exclude King James the First so Clement the VIII the then Pope in these Designs against the said King James his succeeding Queen Elizabeth was not wanting intending the Crown of England for some of his friends and perceiving that some in England English Papists to be sure were tampering to promote the Interest of the Lady Arabella in this case he thought it best to deal warily he was very desirous that the Duke of Parma should wear the Crown of England but finding that this was not feasible by reason Arabella's Interest was too strong for him he steers another course and thinks of Cardinal Farnese who being unmarried might take to Wife Arabella and so unite Forces and Interests to carry the Crown To carry on this design it was advised that all the Romanists in England should unite that their Cause might not suffer by any dissentions about this Succession amongst themselves a good Caution may hence be given to all Protestants in England that they do not divide upon their present Majesty's King William and Queen Mary's accession to the Crown who under God are the preservers of the Protestant Religion amongst us for vis unita fortior and nothing but division can hurt us to promote this union the Romish Clergy who then had and still have a great awe and authority over the Layety were exhorted by the Pope to be all of a Mind as to this Succession and to press it home upon the Layety that so the Layety might not be divided To which purpose it was concluded that there should be an Arch Priest who should have a Jurisdiction over the rest who are to ●it according to his Rules and Directions and in these designs Father Parsons who was not yet advanc'd according to his merit was a main stickler and contriver the Pope also had drawn up some Bulls and sent to his Nuncio in the Netherlands to Divulge and spread them abroad at convenient times wherein he declared that not any though never so near in blood should after Queen Elizabeths death be admitted to the Crown but such an one as would not only tollerate the Roman Religion but would swear to promote and resettle it and that in the mean time Cardinal Farnese might in this Island have the greatest vogue the Pope made him Protector of England as Pope Pius V. had before made Mary Queen of Scots Queen of England to carry on the same design as he was of other Countrys Nay rather then fail the same Pope had formerly exhorted the French and Spaniards to unite invade England and divide it between them nor did they neglect to instigate the Family of the Pools to have a Right Divers other Attempts were made by Winton Desmond and other Priests and Jesuits to exclude King James the First but all proved abortive as did the Treasons plotted against him after his Accessions to the Throne Queen Elizabeth's death Camb Annals f. 651. Bakers Chron. f. 403. On the 24th of March 1603. the Virgin Queen Elizabeth of every Glorious Memory exchanged her corruptible for an incorruptible Crown after she had Reigned Forty four Years and Four Months and in the Seventieth Year of her Age of whom her Successor gave this Character that she was one who in wisdom and felicity of Government surpassed all the Princes since the days of Augustus King James the First Proclaimed Camb. Annals f. 661. Bakers Chron. f. 403. A Conspiracy against him She being dead some few hours after King James was Proclaimed King of England the First of Scotland the Sixth and no sooner is he set upon his Throne even before he could well get the Crown upon his Head but we find a Plot laid against his Life for though the Papists could not keep him from the Throne they were resolved if possible that he should not sit long there This Plot I must confess is prima facie of a strange Complection but when 't is well viewed if we look upon the Majority of the Persons concerned we shall find them to be Romish Priests and Lay Papists and therefore if a thing may take its denomination from the greater part this may sure and we may safely call it a Popish Conspiracy for although some Protestants were inveigled into it Yet they were the smaller number and at that time under a discontent (a) Bakers Chron. f. 404. VVilsons History of Great Brittain f 4. which oftentimes carries Men beyond the Principles of their Religion and to do things contrary to the Rules of right Reason Whither their discontent was well grounded or not is not my purpose to enquire but taking it for granted they were Male-contents I shall now give an account of who were Actors in this Design and what the Design it self was The Names of the Conspirators Fowlis Hist li. 10. cap. 1. f. 499. VVilsons Hist. f. 4. Bakers Chron. f. 404. The main Actors in this Conspiracy were William Watson and Clark who had both writ against the Jesuits for their Treasons and Conspiracies Sir Griffin Markham Count Aremberg Ambassador from the Arch Duke of Austria Mathew de Lawrency a Merchant but an Instrument employed by Aremberg all zealous Papists Sir Edward Parham a Papist Bartholomew Roskesby and Anthony Coply Papists Henry Brook Lord Cobham and George Brook his Brother who seemed to be Protestants Thomas Lord Grey of Wilton a Protestant
The Oath of Secrecy by Word or Circumstance the Matter that shall be proposed to you to keep Secret nor desist from the Execution thereof till the rest shall give you leave After this was done every Man betakes himself to the part assigned him some to provide Money other Materials and others a place to lay the Materials in The place pitched upon for placing the Materials in was Cellars under the Parliament House which Thomas Piercy had hired for that purpose the Materials were thirty six Barrels of Gun-Powder provided in Flanders carried into the Cellar from Lambeth in the Night covered over with Wood and Coals and all provided at the Charge of the English * Sr. Everard Digby 1500 l. Mr. Francis Tresham 2000. l. Piercy 4000 l. besides others Papists who promised themselves the extirpating this Northren Heresie as they called it and introducing in its Room Popish Superstition and Idolatry as we call it and the Divines of our Church have proved it to be to the Conviction of all 〈◊〉 who will not Wilfully shut their eyes against the Light. Things being thus prepared they looked upon the King and Prince Henry as already made a Sacrifice to attone the See of Rome for the revolt that England had made from her and Percy had undertaken for the slaying the Duke of York Charles the First that there might be no ingredient in the Sacrifice wanting to make it acceptable but because it was thought necessary for a Colour to their Bloody designs to preserve the Succession the Lady Elizabeth must be spared and made Queen Foulis Hist l. 10. cap. 2. f. 507. and the Odium of blowing up the Parliament cast upon the Puritans They designed the Accomplishment of this unparallel'd Cruelty on the 5 th of November 1604. when the King and both Houses of Parliament were to meet and that very day they appointed a great Hunting Match at Dunsmore Heath near Comb the Lord Harringtons House in Warwickshire where the Lady Elizabeth was upon which pretence divers Papists were to meet well Armed in order to seize and secure her with intention to marry her to a Papist and by that means to introduce Popery To carry on their Design of fixing this Plot upon the Puritans Foulis Hist l. 10. cap. 2. f. 508. they framed a Proclamation which they got printed and ready for publishing upon the Sign given which they supprest and burnt upon the Discovery though some of them by chance came to light and were seen and read by Dr. Parker Dean of Lincoln Sir William Ellis Recorder of the said City and others And that they might gain the greater Credit with the People in this Contrivance Keys Brother-in-Law to Mr. Pickering had a few days before either borrowed or bought the Swift-horse well known in London and thereabouts of Mr. Pickering of Tich March Grove in Northamptonshire a noted Puritan whom they also designed to kill upon which Faux having fired the Match and Touch-wood leading to the Train was to escape as they bore him in Hand But O Horrid Impiety their Design was to kill him as soon as he had imbrued his Hands in so much Innocent Blood just as he was to mount the Horse as being Pickerings Man which the People would easily believe seeing the Horse was so well known to them and the Multitude once perswaded of this would be more facile to joyn with them under notion of doing Justice upon such supposed Traitors and Wretches They also consulted how to keep the Romish Lords from going that Day to Parliament the better to strengthen their Cause by their Preservation But in the heighth of all their Hopes and Expectations a Discovery is made thus The Manner of the Discovery some of them supposed by Monteagle to be Piercy but Bishop * Answer to Sir Anthony VVeldon's Court of King James p. 73. M. S. Goodman saith it was Tresham who writ the Letter having a great Affection to the said Lord Monteagle Son and Heir to the Lord Morley had a mind to preserve him from the intended Slaughter So one Evening a Letter Sealed is delivered in the Street the Strand by an unknown Fellow to one of the Lords Foot-men charging him to deliver it with Care to his Lord. Monteagle opens it finds it without Date and Subscription writ with a very bad Hand and in a Stile he knew not what to make of The Letter was this My Lord OVT of the Love I bear to some of your Friends I have a care of your Preservation Foulis Hist l. 10. cap. 2. f. 508. Wilson's Hist f. 30. therefore I would advise you as you tender your Life to devise some Excuse to shift off your Attendance this Parliament for God and Man have concurred to punish the Wickedness of this time And think not slightly of this Advertisment but retire your self into your Country where you may expect the Event in Safety for though there be no Appearance of any stir yet I say they shall receive a terrible Blow this Parliament and yet they not see who hurts them This Councel is not to be contemned because it may do you good and can do you no harm for the Danger is past as soon as you have burned this Letter and I hope God will give you the Grace to make good use of it to whose Holy Protection I commend you Monteagle wondred at the Letter and its Delivery and thinking it might relate to some Mischief thought it his Duty to make it known so away he goeth to White-Hall shows it to the Earl of Salisbury then Secretary of State who tells some other of the Privy Council of it and the King being returned from his Hunting at Royston they delivered it to him His Majesty having seriously considered it and all other Circumstances concluded that it might relate to some Design to blow up the Parliament and in this Jealousie ordered the Rooms and Vaults about the House to be searched which was done the Night before the Session when in the aforesaid Cellar under the Lords House were found the Barrels of Powder and at the Door standing Guido Faux booted and Spurred with a large dark Lanthorn now to be seen in Oxford Library with Matches Tinder-Box and other Materials for his Design Faux was presently carried to Court and examined where he appeared sturdy and scornful maintaining the Design to be lawful that James was not his King because an Heretic was sorry that the Plot failed and that he had not blown up the House with himself and those that were sent to search affirming that God would have had the Plot concealed but it was the Devil who revealed it at last Faux himself confest all that he knew of the Treasons Thus far discovered the King suspecting some Commotions or Risings sent with all speed to prevent them by timely Notice by Lepton and others This was that Mr. John Lepton of Yorkshire who rid so often betwixt London and York
provide and furnish the Horses and partly in Pensions to be employed upon some such as were to be prepared for that Service all which the said Thomas VVinter did relate to the said King of Spain who the said Kingdoms of England and Spain then standing in Hostility took that Offer in very good part saying that he would respect and account of the Catholicks of England meaning the Papists as of his own Castilians and thereupon agreed that he would make Invasion and set foot in England about the Spring then next following and would by way of Exchange send over unto the Papists of England one hundred thousand Crowns to be paid at two several Days agreed upon all which particulars are extant in the Confession of some of the chief Offenders at which time sundry Papists of England did extraordinarily furnish themselves by the traiterous and wicked Perswasions and Means of sundry Iesuits both with Horse and Armour But before these things could be effected Almighty God called the said late Queen to his mercy Immediately after whose decease that is to say in the same Month of March wherein she departed out of this World Christopher Wright late of London Gentleman was imployed by the said Robert Catesby Francis Tresham Henry Garnet and others into Spain to Negotiate with the said King of Spain by the means of the said Creswel the Iesuit and others to proceed in that Invasion which the said Thomas Winter had before Negotiated with him And afterwards on the two and Twentyeth day of June in the first Year of your Majesties Reign over this Realm of England Sir William Stanley Kt. Hugh Owen Esq William Baldwin Iesuit and others did by and with the Traiterous procurement and consent of the Offendors aforesaid from and out of Handers in the parts beyond the Seas under the Government of the Arch-Duke Traiterously employ and send Guy Fauks sate of London Genelman unto the said King of Spain to Negotiate with him on the behalf of the said Papists of England for Invasion to be had against this Realm of England to the same effect as was committed to the said Christopher Wright as is aforesaid And the said Guy Fauks and Christopher Wright though they had all the furtherance of the said Creswel the Iesuit that he could give yet finding no such entertainment with the said King who as by the sequel appeareth grew into detestation with the said Propositions and Negotiations as they expected or desired But being wholly disappointed of all their hopes concerning that Matter the said Robert Catesby and divers other Persons within this Realm did send over the said Thomas Winter into the said Country of Flanders to procure the said Guy Fauks a Natural Born Subject of this Realm and yet a most Traiterous desperate and cloudy minded Person then serving as a Souldier in the Low-Countries to come over into this Realm and by and with the Traiterous conspiracy and consent of the said Henry Garnet Oswald Tesmond John Garrard and other Iesuits and Thomas Pearcy late of London Esq John Wright late of London Gent. the said Christopher Wright Francis Tresham Robert Winter late of Huddington aforesaid Esq John Grant late of Norbrook in the County of Warwick Esq Ambrose Rookwood late of Staningfeild in the County of Suffolk Esq Everard Digby late of Gorehurst in the County of Buckingham Kt. Robert Keys late of London Gentlman and Thomas Bates late of London Yeoman to undertake the Execution of the most wicked Barbarous execrable and abominable Treason that ever could enter into the Heart of the most wicked Man by blowing up with Gun-Powder the House of Parliament at such time as your most excellent Majesty and your dearest Consort the Queen and the most Noble Prince Henry together with the Lords Spiritual and Temporal the Iudges of the Realm and the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of Parliament should be in said Parliament-House Assembled for which most Traiterous and Barbarous purpose there were secretly laid in a Vault or Cellar under the Parliament-House Thirty six Barrels of Gun-Powder or thereabouts to the utter overthrow and subversion of the whole State of this flourishing and renouned Kingdom If God of his infinite Mercy had not most Miraculously by your Majesties blessed direction Discovered the same in finding out the said Barrels of Gun-Powder in the said Vault or Cellar but few hours before the time appointed for the Execution thereof All which most Heinous Horrid and Damnable Treasons are most manifest and apparent by the voluntary confession and acknowledgments of the Offenders themselves Of which most Barbarous Bloody and detestable Treason for Conspiring and preparing to blow up the Parliament-House with Gun-Powder The said Robert Winter Thomas Winter Guy Fauks Robert Keyes Ambrose Rookwood John Graunt and Thomas Bates have been lately indicted and during this present Sessions of Parliament Arraigned convicted by Verdict and thereupon attainted And the said Sir Everard Digby Kt. hath likewise been indicted and during this present Sessions of Parliament Convicted and Attainted by his own confession of Record upon his Arraignment according to the Laws of this your Majesties Realm as by the Records of their several Indictments and Attainders it doth and may more plainly appear and for the which Offences the said Sir Everard Digby Robert Winter Thomas Winter Guy Fauks Ambrose Rookwood John Graunt Robert Keyes and Thomas Bates have suffered pains of Death according to their demerits And the said Robert Catesby Thomas Piercy John Wright and Cristopher Wright were Slain in open Rebellion by them and others the said most wicked Traytors moved and stirred within divers Parts and Counties of this Realm shortly after the Discovery of their most detestable and Damnable Treason in Conspiring and preparing to blow up the said Parliament-House as aforesaid and the said Hugh Owen doth of purpose and for fear of condign punishment according to his demerit reside and kéep himself beyond the Seas by means whereof he cannot in respect of such his voluntary absence be Arraigned and publickly by due Tryal of Law upon apparent Testimony and proof against him be proceeded with for such his hainous and abominable Treasons and the said Francis Tresham being one of the said most detestable Traitors and being apprehended and imprisoned in the Tower of London having by sundry his Examinations confest himself a principal Traytor in all the said most abominable Treasons Dyed in the Tower during the time of his said imprisonment and before he could be Indicted of the said Treasons They therefore desired that the King of his blessed care and disposition to and for the continuance of Gods true Religion and Service and for that preservation and safety of his Person the Queen the Prince and the rest of the Royal Progeny and for the intire Love and Affection that his Majesty had always thent●fore born and did then bear to the Common-wealth and safety of this Realm of England to the end that all others might then
continue your daily Plotting of so Tragical Stratagems against Recusants It is ordered that none of these Five knoweth who the other Four be for the better preventing the discovery of the rest if so any one by attempting and not performing should be apprehended It is also already agreed who shall first attempt it by shot and so who in order shall follow In accomplishing of it there is expected no other than assurance of Death yet it will willingly be embraced for the preventing of those general Calamities which by this your transcendent Authority and Grace with His Majesty are threatned unto us And indeed the difficulties herein are more easily to be digested since Two of the intended attempters are in that weak estate of Body that they cannot live above three or four Months The other Three are so distressed in themselves and their Friends as that their present griefs for being only Recusants do much dull all aprehensions of Death None is to be blamed in the true censuring of Matters for the undertaking hereof Nor are they to be blamed for it for we protest before God we have no other means left us in the World since it is manifest that you serve but as a Match to give Fire unto his Majesty to whom the worst that we wish is that he may be as great a Saint in Heaven as he is King on Earth for intending all mischiefs against the poor distressed Catholics Thus giving your Lordship this charitable admonition the which may perhaps be necessary hereafter for some others your inferiours at least in grace and favour if so they run on in their former inhumane and unchristian rage against us I cease putting you in mind For 't is true and Spiritual Resolution that where once True and Spiritual Resolution is there notwithstanding all dangers whatsoever the weak may take sufficient revenge of the great Your Lordships well admonishing Friends c. A. B. C. c. It may be your Lordship will take this but as some forged Letter of some Puritans thereby to incense you more against Recusants But we protest upon our Salvation it is not so Neither can any thing in humane likelihood prevent the effecting thereof but the change of your Course towards Recusants This Letter at the beginning affords fair seeming to detest the Gun-Powder-Plot as Watson did the Popish Treasons in Queen Elizabeths time and was hanged for Treason in the beginning of the Reign of King James but little credit is to be given to what they say if it be considered that the very design of it is to apoligize for Murther and that they therein assert that although they Murther Privy Counsellors yet the Murtherers may be good men nor are they to be blamed for it for it is a true and spiritual resolution What influence this Letter had the sequel will evince for the said Oath was immediately confirmed by Act of Parliament and the Papists injoyned to take it in the Circumstances and upon the Penalties in the Act for that purpose mentioned the sum and substance of which Act followeth it is Intitled An Act for the better discovering and repressing of Popish Recusants The Preamble of the Act runs thus 3. Jac. 1. c. 4. Rast Stat. f. 591. Papists must receive the Sacrament and take the Oath of Allegiance c. upon pecuniary mulcts if neglected FOrasmuch as it is found by daily Experience that many His Majesties Subjects that adhere in their hearts to the Popish Religion by the infection drawn from thence and by the Wicked and Divelish Councel of Iesuits Seminaries and other like Persons dangerous to the Church and State are so far perverted in the point of their Loyalty and due Allegiance to the Kings Majesty and the Crown of England as they are ready to entertain and Execute any Treasonable Conspiracies and Practices as evidently appears by that more then barbarous and horrible Attempt to have blown up with Gun-powder the King Queen Prince Lords and Commons in the House of Parliament Assembled tending to the utter Subversion of the whole State lately undertaken by the instigation of Iesuits and Seminaries and in Advancement of their Religion by their Schollars Taught and Instructed by them to that purpose which Attempt by the only goodness of Almighty God was discovered and defeated And where divers Persons Popishly affected do nevertheless the better to cover and hide their false Hearts and with the more safety to attend the opportunity to execute their mischievous Designs repair sometimes to Church to escape the Penalty of the Laws in that behalf provided Then for the better discovery of such Persons and their Evil affections to the Kings Majesty and to the State of the Realm to the end that being known their Evil Purposes might be the better prevented It was enacted that every Papist that Conforms shall Yearly receive the Sacrament upon twenty pounds Forfeiture upon the first Years neglect forty pounds the second sixty pounds the third and so forwards sixty pounds Yearly until he or she shall have received it That Papists their Children of Nine Years and Servants shall be once a Year presented at the general or Quarter Sessions Which presentments are to be recorded at the Sessions That the Iustices of Assize and Goal Delivery and Iustices of Peace shall hear and determine the Offence That Proclamation shall be made at the Assizes or Sessions for the Offender to render his body to the Sheriff Bayliff or Keeper of the Goal of the Liberty before the next Assizes or Sessions c. And if the Offender doth not he stands Convicted and forfeits twenty pounds a Month for every Month contained in the Indictment whereon he his Convicted That every Conviction shall be certified into the Exchequer that the King may refuse twenty pounds a Month and take two parts of the Papists Lands save their Mansion House That the Kings two parts shall not be Leased to Papists Noblemen and Noblewomen are excepted That the Oath of Allegiance shall be tendred to all Persons of the Age of Eighteen Years or above Convicted or Indicted for Recusancy for not going to Church for not receiving the Sacrament or that pass through any Country Shire or Liberty and unknown Who refuse taking this Oath incur a Premunire except Women covert who are to be Committed to the Common Goal without Bail or Mainprize till they take the Oath No Indictment or other Proceedings against the Papists shall be discharged or reversed for default of Form but Conformity discharges all Proceedings whatever Felony in any that go beyond Seas to serve any Forreign Prince c. or being there shall voluntarily serve such Prince not first having taken the Oath Felony in any Gentleman or Person of higher Degrée or any that is or hath born Office in Camp Army or Company of Souldiers to go beyond the Seas voluntarily to serve a Foreign Prince or shall voluntarily serve any Prince unless he first enters into Bond
they thought to have destroyed And yet so far hath both my Heart and Government been from any bitterness as almost never one of those sharp additions to the former Laws have ever yet been put in Execution And that ye may yet know further for the more convincing these Libellers of wilful Malice who impudently affirm that this Oath of Allegiance was devised for deceiving and intrapping of Papists in point of Conscience The truth is that the Lower-House of Parliament at the first framing of this Oath made it contain that the Pope had no Power to Excommunicateme which I caused them to reform only making it to conclude That no Excommunication of the Popes can warrant my Subjects to practice against my Person or State denying the deposition of Kings to be in the Popes lawful Power As indeed I take any such Temporal violence to be far without the Limits of such a spiritual Censure as Excommunication is So careful was I that nothing should be contained in this Oath except the profession of Natural Allegiance and Civil and Temporal obedience with a Promise to resist all contrary uncivil violence This Oath now grounded upon so great and just occasion set forth in so reasonable Terms and ordained only for making a true distinction between Papists of quiet dispotion and in all other things good Subjects and other Papists such as in their hearts maintained the like violent bloody Maxims that the Powder Traytor did * And here I can't but take notice that the very design of the Oath of Allegiance was to make a distinction between Papists of unquiet and turbulent and of quiet and peaceable Minds and had not in its original any influence upon the Protestants nor did at the time of making concern them and that after Protestants were enjoyned to take it the same was intended to no other purpose then to difference them from Papists and therefore the taking the new Oaths to their present Majesties cannot but be well consistent with the former Oath of Allegiance especially if it be considered that the late King is himself a Papist So that it is evident King James thought the said Plots Treasons Conspiracies and other unbecoming and undutiful words and practices was ground sufficient to make the said Law. And doubtless The Powder-Treason justifies the State in making another Act of Parliament the same Session Intitled An Act to prevent and avoid danger which may grow by Popish Recusants The preamble of which Act making it further to appear that the Powder-Treason was the occasion of making this Law I shall here insert the Preamble verbatim and then the substance of the Act. WHereas divers Iesuits 3 Jac. 1. ca. 5. Rast Stat. f. 597. Papists banished the Court and the City of London upon a pecuniary Mulct Seminaries and Popish Priests dayly do withdraw many of his Majesties Subjects from their true Service of Almighty God and the Religion established within this Realm to the Romish Religion and from their Loyal obedience to his Majesty and have of late scretly perswaded divers Recusants and Papists and encouraged and embol●ned them to commit most damnable Treasons tending to the overthrow of Gods true Religion the destruction of his Majesty and his Royal Issue and the overthrow of the whole State and Common-wealth if God of his Goodness and Mercy had not within few hours before the intended time of the Execution thereof revealed and disclosed the same wherefore to discover and prevent such secret and damnable Conspiracies and Treasons as hereafter may be put in use by such evil disposed Persons if remedy be not therefore provided Then the Law provides That the discoverer of Iesuites or Priests or harbourers of them shall have the third Part of all that is recovered against them so as the same exceeds not One hundred and Fifty Pounds and Fifty Pounds only where it exceeds the sum of One hundred and Fifty Pounds No Papist shall come to Court upon the Penalty of a Hundred Pounds for every default Papists not to come into London nor ten Miles compass of the same upon forfeiture of One hundred Pounds Papists confined to their Houses or Places of above and not to remove above five Miles from thence Not to Travel without Licence how Licence to be obtain'd and no License to be given to enable them to the contrary but such as are prescribed by this Act His Majesty Three of the Privy-Council Four Iustices of the Peace with the Privity may License and assent of the Bishop Lieutenant or Deputy Lieutenant under Hand and Seal the cause of removing must be inserted in the Warant and Oath made of the truth of it Papists disabled from Practicing as Lawyers Common or Civil c. All Papists convict are disabled from practising as a Counsel Clark Attorney or Sollicitor Advocate or Proctor as Physician using the Trade of an Apothecary from being Iudge Minister Clark or Steward of or in any Court or keeping any Court or being Town Clark or other Minister or Officer in any Court from bearing any Office or Charge as Captain Lieutenant Corporal Serjeant Antient Bearer or other Officer in Camp Troop Band or Company of Souldiers from being Captain Master Governour or bearing any Office or Charge A Man having a Wife a Papist Convict is disabled from exercising any public Office or Charge Feme Covert Convict looses part of her Joynture c. of or in any Ship Castle or Fortress and forfeits one hundred pounds for every Offence besides the disability No Popish Recusant Convict nor any having a Wife being a Popish Recusant Convict shall exercise any public Office or Charge in the Common-wealth but are utterly disabled Feme Covert Convict looses two parts of her Ioynture and Dower is disable● from being Executrix or Administratrix to her Husband and to have any Part of his Goods or Chattels A Popish Recusant Convict is disabled as an Excommunicate Person But notwithstanding it he may sue for or concerning only such of his or her Lands c. or the issues thereof which are not to be seized or taken into the Kings Hands his Heirs or Successors by force of any Law for or concerning his or her Recusancy or any part thereof Every Man that is a Papist covict Marrying contrary to the Orders of the Church of England is disabled from being Tenant by the courtesie if any Lands c. of his Wives and if she hath no Lands forfeits a hundred Pounds a Woman Papist convict so marrying is disabled to Claim Dower Papists must Marry according to the usage of the Church of England Papists must Bapt. according to the usage of the Church of England Their Children must not be sent beyond Seas Papists shall not present to Livings Popish Books inhibited Papists to be disarmed Ioynture and Widows Estate and Franck Bank in customary Lands Papists must baptize their Children according to the Rites of the Church of England upon a hundred Pounds
Spaniards gives the overture of the Match Rushw Col. part 1. f. 4. The King having had thoughts of a Match for Prince Charles with France and the Duke of Savoy having been before him and prevailed for his Son the Prince of Piedmount The Spaniard giving the overture of a Match King James embraceth it and Articles of Religion between the King of England and Spain were agreed on which were these c. Articles of Religion agreed upon between the Kings of England and Spain That the Popes Dispensation be first obtained by meer Act of the King of Spain That the Children of this Marriage be not constrained in Matters of Religion nor their Title prejudiced in case they prove Catholics That the Infanta's Family being Strangers may be Catholics and shall have a decent place appointed for all Divine Service according to the use of the Church of Rome and the Ecclesiasticks and Religious Persons may wear their own proper Habits That the Marriage shall be Celebrated in Spain by a Procurator according to the instructions of the Councel of Trent and after the Infanta's Arival in England such a Solemnation shall be used as may make the Marriage valid according to the Laws of this Kingdom That she shall have a competent number of Chaplains and a Confesser being Strangers one whereof shall have Power to Govern the Family in Religious Matters But none of the People of England but were averse to this Match except the Papists whose interest indeed it was to carry it on After the Bohemians had chosen the Count Palatine King of Bohemia he craved advice of his Father in Law King James touching the acceptation of that Royal dignity But before he could receive his advice he was prevailed upon to accept it Count Palatine chose King of Bohemia Wilsons Hist f. 132. Rushw Col. 1. part f. 12. because the emergency of the Cause would admit of no delay and afterwards sent to King James to excuse it When this important business of the Count Palatines accepting the Crown of Bohemia was related in the Kings Councel to evince of what advantage it was to the Protestant Cause I shall here insert Arch-Bishop Abbots Letter to Sir Robert Nauton the Kings Secretary the Arch-Bishops infirmities not permitting him at that time to attend the Councel That God hath set up this Prince his Majesties Son in Law Arch-Bishop Abbot's Letter touching the Count Palatines accepting the Crown of Bohemia as a mark of Honour throughout all Christendom to propagate the Gospel to help the oppressed that for his own part he dares not but to give advice to follow where God Leads apprehending the Work of God in this and that of Hungary that by Peece and Peece the Kings of the Earth that gave their Power to the Beasts shall leave the Whore and make her desolate that he was satisfied in Conscience the Bohemians had just cause to reject that Bloody Man who had taken a course to make that Kingdom not Elective in taking it by the donation of another the slighting of the Viscount Doncaster in his embassage gave cause of just displeasure and indignation therefore let not a Noble Son be forsaken for their sakes who regard nothing but their own ends our striking in will comfort the Bohemians Honour the Palsgrave strengthen the Princes of the Vnion draw on the United Provinces stir up the King of Denmark and the Palatines two Vncles the Prince of Orange and the Duke of Bovillon together with Termoville a rich Prince in France to cast in their shares The Parliament is the Old and honourable way for raising of Money and all that may be spared is to be returned this way and perhaps God provided the Jewels that were laid up in the Tower by the Mother for the preservation of the Daughter who like a Noble Princess hath professed that she will not leave her self one Jewel rather then not maintain so Religious and Righteous a Cause certainly if countenance be given to this Action many brave Spirits will offer themselves therefore let all our Spirits be gathered up to animate this business that the World may take notice that we are awake when God calls By this Letter it plainly appears that it was the Arch-Bishops Opinion that it tended much to the promoting the Reformation that the Count Palatine should accept the Crown of Bohemia and the Crown of England should stand by him in it and whoever reads the most impartial writers of those times will find that the Spanish Match which was then a foot and Popish Councels at home was the true Cause of the loss of the Palatinate and the ruine of that Protestant Prince and how could things be expected otherwise so long as Gondamor had so far the ascendant of the King that when the Earl of Essex solicited the King after the War was begun to send more Forces Gondamor obstructed it whatever he desired was done and few or none were well respected at Court but Spanish * Wilsons 144. Rushw 1. part f. 18. vide the private instructions to the Spanish Ambassador sent into England Pentioners under whom the Papists flourished After the Palatinate was lost the King outwardly seemed willing to assist towards the Recovery of it and therefore proposes it first to the Privy Councel and afterwards called a Parliament which was to meet the thirteenth of January in the 18 th Year of his Reign proposing to himself that the People for regaining the Palatinate would open their Purses which he might make use of and that a good agreement Between him and his People would induce his Brother of Spain to be more Active and so he should have supply from the one and dispatch from the other i. e. Mony and the Spanish Match were the ends he aimed at let the Palatinate Sink or Swim 't was no matter This the Jesuits and Seminary Priests knew well enough and therefore they Wilsons Hist. f. 151. rangeing up and down like Spirits let loose did not now as formerly creep into Corners using close and cunning Artifices but practised them openly having admission to our Councellors of State. And when Secretaries and such as manage the intimate Councels of Kings are Jesuits and Clients to the Pope there can be no tendency of affection to a contrary Religion or Policy Yet these were the Men that carried all before them at Court And the Protestant interest must needs flourish under such Ministers of State especially if it be considered that England was not only Man'd with Jesuits all Power now failing to oppose them but the Women also began to practice the Trade Women Jesuitrices calling themselves Jesuitrices This Order was first set on foot in Flanders by Mrs. Ward and Mrs. Twitty two English Gentlewomen who Cloathed themselves in Ignatian Habit and were Countenanced and Supported by Father Gerrard Rector of the English Colledge at Leige with Father Flack and Father More Their design was to Preach the Popish
Doctrine to their own Sex in England i. e. to Alienate their Hearts from their Soveraign if he be not of their Religion or will not at least connive at it to engage them in Plots Conspiracies and Treasons for the destroying Heretical i. e. Protestant Kings and Heresie that is Protestantism that they do or should defend This project took so as any thing doth that tends to promoting Mother Church that in a short time this Mrs. Ward by the Popes indulgence who will indulge any thing that tends to destroy what he calls Heresie became the Mother General of no less then two Hundred English Damsels of good Birth and Quallity whom she sent abroad to Preach This Story and many other Jesuitical exploits are more particularly related in Wadsworths Spanish Pilgrim to which I refer the Reader The Parliament meet Wilsons Hist f. 193. Rushw Coll. 1 pt f. 23. On the 30 th of January 1620. the Parliament met according to the Summons and notwithstanding the King 's smooth Speech to them they petitioned him for the due Execution of the Laws against Jesuits Seminary Priests and Papists which evidences that there was either none or at least a very slender Execution of those Laws They rip up Grievances They rip up many Grievances that the People had groaned under during the Intervals of Parliament by Monopoly Patents and otherwise punished the great Managers of them with exemplary Punishments and to make the Redress of these Grievances pass the more easily with the King they gave him two Subsidies which was very acceptable to him The Parliament adjourned without taking care of the Palatinate or Protestant Religion Rushw Coll. 1 pt f. 35. Wilsons Hist f. 164. He having got this Supply when the Parliament had sate about four Months he sent them word by the Lord Treasurer that he would have them adjourn as being more expedient than a Prorogation that he had redressed Corruption in Courts of Justice by his Proclamation called in the Patents of Inns of Osteries and of Gold and Silver Thread and cherished the Bill against Informers and Monopolies but not a word of Care taken to recover the Palatinate or putting the Laws in execution against the Papists The Commons take it amiss which the King resents and on the fourth of June 1621. in the ninteenth Year of his Reign Wilson saith till February he declared for an Adjournment till November following and that he will in the mean time of his own Authority redress Grievances The House of Commons immediately before this Recess taking to heart the Miseries of the Palatinate and knowing how much the Protestant Religion was concerned in it resolved that the drawing back in so good a Cause should not be charged on their Slackness and therefore made the Declaration following with an universal Consent The Commons Declaration touching the Palatinate Rushw Coll. 1 pt f. 36. Wilsons Hist f. 164. THE Commons assembled in Parliament taking into most serious Consideration the present State of the Kings Children abroad and general afflicted Estate of the true Professors of the same Christian Religion professed by the Church of England in foreign Parts and being touched with a true Sense and Fellow-feeling of their Distresses as Members of the same Body do with unanimous Consent in the Name of themselves and the whole Body of the Kingdom whom they represent declare unto His most Excellent Majesty and to the whole World their hearty Grief and Sorrow for the same and do not only joyn with them in their humble and devout Prayers to Almighty God to protect his true Church and to avert the Dangers now threatned but also with one Heart and Voice do solemnly protest That if His Majesties pious Endeavours by Treaty to procure their Peace and Safety shall not take that good Effect which is desired in Treaty wherefore they humbly beseech His Majesty not to suffer any longer Delay that then upon Signification of His Majesties Pleasure in Parliament they shall be ready to the utmost of their Powers both with their Lives and Fortunes to assist him so as that by the Divine Help of Almighty God which is never wanting unto those who in his Fear shall undertake the Defence of his own Cause he may be able to do that with his Sword which by a peaceable Course shall not be effected Soon after this the King was plyed from Spain and Rome The King plied for Favour to Papists to enlarge his Favours to Popish Recusants and it could not be otherwise expected so long as there was any thoughts of so near an Alliance between Spain and England The Parliament met again the twentieth of November The Parliament meet and because the House of Commons found that though the King declared for War he pursued Peace and resolved to close with Spain They resolved to try the Kings Spirit by the following Petition and Remonstrance wherein they laid open the Distempers of those Times with their Causes and Cures The Causes they told him were these The Vigilance and Ambition of the Pope A Remonstrance by the Parliament against Popery Wilson f. 167. Rushw Coll. 1 pt f. 40. and his Son the Spanish Prince The Devilish Doctrines of the Romish Church The distressed Estate of the Protestants abroad The disasterous Accidents to his a The Count Palatines Family Children abroad The strange Confederacy of the Popish Princes to subvert the Protestant Religion here The great Armies raised by the Spaniard The Papists Expectations of the Spanish Match Foreign Princes interposing for Favour to Papists here The Papists open Resort to Foreign Ambassadors Their Concourse to London and their Conventicles there The Education of their Children in Seminaries The Grants of their Forfeitures to Persons who take little or nothing of them The printing Popish Books The Swarms of Priests and Jesuits The common Incendiaries of all Christendom disperst in all parts of the Kingdom The growing Mischiefs to Church and State they told him were these The Popish Religion is incompatable with ours and draws with it an unavoidable Dependance on Foreign Princes It opens a wide Gap for Popularity to any who shall draw too great a Party b We have lately seen the Truth of this verified when the Papists from Connivance actually got a Toleration and that with an Equality and had got the Superiority and subverted our Religion had not God in his Providence interposed it hath a restless Spirit and will strive by these Gradations If it get but a Connivance it will press for a Toleration if that should be obtained they must have an Equality from thence they will aspire to Superiority and will never rest till they get a Subversion of the true Religion The Remedies proposed were That the King would take his Sword into his Hand that he would therewith assist the Protestants abroad not to rest upon a War in these Parts only but give a Diversion otherwise That this War
brought their Designs about and the Palatinate was irretrievably lost they broke off the Match and left the King and Prince in the Lurch Right Popish Jugling After this Treaty was dissolved the King thinks of a Match with France The French Match Rushw Coll. 1 pt f. 114. A Parliament called and the Lord Kensington was sent Ambassadot into France to feel the Pulse of that Court touching it and gives an Account that it would be accepted soon after which a Parliament was called to meet the twelfth of February in the 21 st year of this King 1623. and now the King is of the Mind to take the Parliaments Advice about his Sons Match as he told them and is grieved for the Increase of Popery if after all the foregoing Passages it be to be believed and promises a great deal and porforms never a whit And here I cannot omit what Wilson saith speaking of this Parliaments Petition against Papists and the Kings Answer both which he hath printed at large f. 272.273 274 275. to which I refer the Reader If the King saith he had seriously and really considered the very last Clause of this Petition wherein the Glory of God and the Safety of his Kingdoms so much consisted as the Parliament wisely express and foresee and which the King saith is the best Advice in the World and which he promised so faithfully to observe in the next Treaty of Marriage for his Son it might perhaps have kept the Crown upon the head of his Posterity But when Princes break with the People A good Caution for all Christian Princes and States in those Promises that concern the Honour of God God will let their People break with them to their Ruine and Dishonour And this Maxim holds in all Powers whether Kingdoms or Common-wealths as they are established by Justice so the Justice of Religion which tends most to the Glory of God is principally to be observed The Parliament followed the Chase close The Parliament displaceth Papists and bolted out divers of the Nobility and Gentry of Eminency popishly affected that had earthed themselves in Places of high Trust and Power in the Kingdom as if they meant to undermine the Nation Their Names Wilson saith were these Francis Earl of Rutland the Duke of Buckinghams Wives Father Sir Thomas Compton Their Names VVilson's Hist f. 276. that was married to the Dukes Mother and the Countess her self who was the Cynosure they all steered by the Earl of Castle-haven the Lord Herbert after Earl of Worcester the Lord Viscount Colchester after Earl of Rivers the Lord Peter the Lord Morley the Lord Windsor the Lord Eure the Lord Wotton the Lord Teinham the Lord Scroop who was Lord President of the North and which they omitted the Earl of Northampton Lord President of Wales who married his Children to Papists and permitted them to be bred up in Popery Sir William Courtney Sir Thomas Brudnell Sir Thomas Somerset Sir Gilbert Ireland Sir Francis Stonners Sir Anthony Brown Sir Francis Howard Sir William Powel Sir Francis Lacon Sir Lewis Lewkner Sir William Awbury Sir John Gage Sir John Shelly Sir Henry Carvell Sir Thomas Wiseman Sir Thomas Ge●rard Sir John Filpot Sir Thomas Russel Sir Henry Beddingfield Sir William Wrey Sir John Counwey Sir Charles Jones Sir Ralph Conyers Sir Thomas Lamplough Sir Thomas Savage Sir William Mosely Sir Hugh Beston Sir Thomas Riddall Sir Marmaduke Nivell Sir John Townesend Sir William Norris Sir Philip Knevet Sir John Tasborough Sir William Selbie Sir Richard Titehborn Sir John Hall Sir George Perkins Sir Thomas Penrodduck Sir Nicholas Saunders Knights besides several Esquires popishly addicted either in their own Persons or by means of their Wives too tedious to be expressed here and these were dispersed and seated in every County who were not only in Office and Commission but had Countenance from Court by which they grew up and flourished so that their Exuberancy hindred the Growth of any Goodness or Piety their Malice pleased to drop upon Soon after which the Parliament was adjourned after they had made thirty five publick Acts and seventy three private ones but nothing was done with relation to the Papists Rushw Coll. 1 pt f. 154 155. VVilson f. 277. saith the King desired this Match above all Earthly Blessings The King admiring the Alliance of mighty Kings though of a contrary Religion desired the Match with France unmeasurably notwithstanding his Promise to the Parliament which the French perceived and though they were very forward before yet now abated of that Forwardness And whereas they were at first very modest in their Demands in favour of the Papists yet now inlarged those Demands and strained the King to the Concession of such Immunities as he had promised the Parliament he would never grant In August 1624. this Match was concluded and in November the Articles were sworn unto by King James Prince Charles and the French King the Articles concerning Religion were not much short of those for the Spanish Match Papists encouraged by the Treaty with France Rushw Coll. 1 pt f. 154. The Papists formerly daunted by the Breach of the Spanish Match were now again revived by the Marriage Treaty with France And at this time upon the Death of William titular Bishop of Calcedon most of the English Secular Priests did petition the Pope that another Bishop might be sent over into England there to ordain Priests give Confirmation and exercise Episcopal Jurisdiction Among others Matthew Killison and Richard Smith were presented And though the Regulars were opposite to the Seculars in this Matter yet those of the Order of St. Benedict joyned with the Seculars and Rudesin Barlo the President of the English Benedictines of Doway wrote a Letter in their Behalf at the Congregation at Rome named of the Propagation of the Faith. Dated the 12 th of December 1624. In which Letter was this Passage That there were above sixty Benedictine Monks in England and that it is not to be doubted said he for that it is already seen the good Success under the first Bishop that another Bishop being constituted there would be more joyful Fruits within two Years in the English Mission than hitherto hath been for sixty years now lapsed But not long after the Episcopal party of the Romish Church prevailing Pope Vrban the VIII created Richard Smith Bishop of Calcedon and sent him into England with Episcopal Authority over the Priests within the English Dominions The Close of this Kings Reign Rushw Coll. f. 155. And now I am come to the Close of this Kings Reign for after he had notwithstanding all his connivance at the Papists out of either Ambition or Cowardise recommended the Protection of the Church of England to the then Prince of Wales Charles the First advised him to love his Wife but not her Religion and exhorted him to take special care of his Grand-Children the Children of the Elector Palatine by his Daughter
and to employ the Power he left him to restablish him in the Estate and Dignitys of his Father on the 27th of March in the Twenty third Year of his Reign he gave up the Ghost From what Account I have given of Matters relating to the making the Penal Laws and the Reasons of not putting them in Execution in this Kings Reign I gather these things 1. That there is no heed to be taken to any promises made Advice given nor Oaths taken by Papists for if the Interest of the Popish Religion Intervenes the Promises Advice yea even the Oaths themselves must give way and 't is Meritorious too 2. That when it is to serve the Popish Interest they are allowed to deny the plainest truths although confest by Men in Articulo Mortis at the very point of Death 3. That whenever they are detected of any Conspiracy or Treason they immediately set their Wits to work to throw the odium of it upon some sort of Protestants or other nay sometimes they make it an essential part of the Conspiracy it self 4. That when they found themselves lost as to more private Conspiracies they involved Christendom in War to destroy the Protestant Interest upon the Colour of the Elector Palatines having Usurped the Crown of Bohemia notwithstanding he was legally Elected and made use of the Cowardise of King James to carry on that Design 5. That they want not Arts to deceive even Protestants themselves if they look not narrowly to them so much can they transform themselves into the likeness of Truth 6. That the loss of the Palatinate the differences between King James the first and his Parliaments the Spanish Treaty and at last the compleating the French Match were all carried on by Popish Intregues and to serve the Popes turn Certainly then there was good reason for the making the Penal Laws in this Kings Reign and the Parliament are greatly justified in pressing an Execution of them which had it been granted a Man may with good reason believe all the Civil Wars in the succeeding Reign had been prevented And this might lead me to show the share the Popish Party had in the beginning managing and carrying on that unhappy and ever to be lamented War but my design being only to show the reasonableness of making the Penal Laws against the Papists and there being but one Law made against them in this unfortunate Princes Reign I shall only give the grounds of making that Law and pass on to the Reign of his Son King Charles the Second CHAP. IX K. Ch. I. King Charles 1. His Accession to the Crown Bakers Chron. f. 451. Rushw Coll. 1 Pt. f. 165 167 170. KIng James the First being dead King Charles the First was immdiately Proclaimed he buried his Father the 7th of May 1625. The 13th of June in the same Year the Match between him and the French Kings daughter was consummated here in England A Chappel at Sommerset House was built for the Queen and her Family with conveniences thereunto adjoyning for Capuchin Fryers who were therein placed and had permission to walk abroad in their Religious Habits Thence forwards greater multitudes of Seminary Priests and Jesuites repaired into England out of foreign Parts then before The Parliament meet The 18th day of June the Parliament opened they after the usual Proceedings at the first sitting down Petitioned the King concerning Religion and against Papists he by his Answer gave them assurance of his real performance of what they desired in every particular Papists Pardon'd contrary to promise Rushw Coll. 1 Pt. f. 280. But notwithstanding this soon after his Majesty granted a Pardon to one Alexander Baker a Jesuite and unto ten other Papists which was gotten as there was information given by the importunity of some Foreign Ambassador and passed by immediate Warrant and was recommended by the Principal Secretary of State without the payment of the ordinary Fees. And divers Copys of Letters and other Papers found by two Justices of Peace in the House of one Mary Estmonds in Dorsetshire were stifled by the Secretarys means The Commons upon these passages made observations First that the Pardon was dated the very next day after his Answer to their Petition Secondly That the Pardon dispensed with several Laws as 21. and 27. Eliz. and 3. Jac. provided to keep the Subjects in due obedience Thirdly That the Pardon was signed by the Principal Secretary of State. The Commons therefore declared that these actings tended to the prejudice of true Religion his Majesties dishonour the discountenancing of Ministers of Justice the grief of the good People the animating of the Popish Party who by such Examples grew more proud and insolent and to the discouragement of the High Court of Parliament The Petition concerning Religion and the Kings Answer take as they are printed in Rushworths Collection First Part f. 281. To the King 's Most Excellent Majesty Most Gracious Sovereign IT being infallibly true that nothing can more establish the Throne and assure the Peace and Prosperity of the People then the unity and sincerity of Religion we your most humble and Loyal Subjects the Lords Spiritual and Temporal and Commons of this present Parliament assembled and hold themselves bound in Conscience and Duty to represent the same to your Sacred Majesty together with the dangerous consequences of the increase of Popery in this Land and what we conceive to be the principal cause thereof and what may be the Remedies The Dangers appear in these Particulars 1. In their desperate ends being both the Subversion of the Church and State and the restlessness of their Spirits to attain these ends the Doctrine of their Teachers and Leaders perswading them that therein they do God good Service 2. Their evident and strict dependency upon such Foreign Princes as no way affect the good of your Majesty and this State. 3. The opening a way of popularity to the Ambition of any who shall adventure to make himself head of so great a Party The Principal Cause of the increase of Papists 1. The want of the due Execution of the Laws against Jesuits Seminary Priests and Popish Recusants occasioned partly by the Connivency of the State partly by defects in the Laws themselves and partly by the manifold abuse of Officers 2. The interposing of Foreign Princes by their Ambassadors and Agents in favour of them 3. Their great Concourse to the City and frequent Conferences and Conventicles there 4. The open and usual resort to the House and Chappels of Foreign Ambassadors 5. the Education of their Children in Seminaries and Houses of their Religion in Foreign Parts which of late hath been greatly multiplied and enlarged for the entertaining of the English 6. That in some places of your Realm your People be not sufficiently Instructed in the Knowledge of the true Religion 7. The Licentious Printing and Dispersing of Popish and Seditious Books 8. The Employment of Men ill affected in Religion in
See of Rome confer any Ecclesiastical function whatsoever toward or upon your Majesties natural Subjects within your Dominions Answ This is fit to be ordered according as is provided and it shall be so published by Proclamation 8. That your Majesties learned Councel may receive Order and Commandment to consider of all former Grants of Recusants Lands that such of them may be avoided as are made to the Recusants use or interest out of which the Recusant receiveth any benefit which are either void or voidable by the Law. Answ The King will give Order to his learned Councel to consider of the Grants and will do according as is desired 9. That your Majesty will be likewise pleased strictly to command all your Judges and Ministers of Justice Ecclesiastical and Temporal to see the Laws of this Realm against Popish Recusants to be duly executed and namely that the censure of Excommunication be declared and certified against them and that they be not absolved upon publick satisfaction by yielding to Conformity Answ His Majestys leaves the Laws to their course and will order in the point of Excommunication as is desired 10. That your Majesty will be pleased to remove from Places of Authority and Government all such Persons as are either Popish Recusants or according to direction of former Acts of State to be justly suspected Answ ' This his Majesty thinks fit and will give order for it 11. That present order be taken for disarming all Popish Recusants legally convicted or justly suspected according to the Laws in that behalf and the Orders taken by his late Majesty's Privy Councel upon reason of State. Answ The Laws and Acts in this Case shall be followed and put in due Execution 12. That your Majesty be also pleased in respect of the great resort of Recusants to and about London to command forthwith upon pain of your indignation and severe Execution of the Laws that they retire themselves to their several Countrys there to remain confined within five Miles of their Places Answ ' For this the Laws in Force shall be forthwith Executed 13. And whereas your Majesty hath strictly commanded and taken Order that none of the natural born Subjects repair to the hearing of Masses or other Supersttious Services at the Chappels or Houses of foreign Ambassadors or in any other places whatsoever we give your Majesty most humble thanks and desire that your Order and Commandment therein may be continued and observed and that the offenders herein may be punished according to the Laws Answ The King gives consent thereto and will see that observed which herein hath been commanded by him 14. That all such insolencies as any that are Popishly affected have lately Committed or shall hereafter commit to the dishonour of our Religion or to the wrong of the true Professors thereof be exemplarily Punished Answ ' This shall be done as is desired 15. That the Statute of 1 Eliz. for the payment of twelve pence every Sunday by such as shall be absent from Divine Service in the Church without a lawful excuse may be put in due Execution the rather for that the penalty by Law is given to the Poor and therefore not to be dispensed withal Answ It is fit that this Statute be Executed and the Penalties shall not be dispensed withal 16. Lastly that your Majesty would be pleased to extend your princely care also over the Kingdom of Ireland that the like courses may be there taken for the restoring and establishing of true Religion there Answ His Majesties Cares are and shall be extended over the Kingdom of Ireland and he will do all that a Religious King should do for the restoring and establishing of true Religion there And thus Most Gracious Soveraign according to our duty and zeal to God and Religion to your Majesty and your safety to the Church and Common-wealth and their Peace and Prosperity we have made a Faithful Declaration of the present Estate the Causes and Remedies of this encreasing disease of Popery Humbly offering the same to your Princely care and wisdom The Answer of your Majesties Father our Late Soveraign of Famous Memory upon the like Petition did give us great comfort of Reformation but your Majesties most Gracious Promises made in that kind do give us confidence and assurance of the continual performance thereof in which comfort and confidence reposing our selves we most Humbly pray for your Majesties long continuance in all Princely felicity Rushw Coll. 1 pt 191. The 10 th of August the King sends to the Commons to have a present supply and promises to let them meet again in Winter and redress their greivances then they insist to have both go on together The Parliament dissolved but withal make a most submisive Declaration of their affection and duty to him Which notwithstanding he by Commission 12 August 1625. dissolved them Rushw Coll. 1. pt f. 191.192 The King soon after issued out a Proclamation to call home Papists Children and soon after Disarmed the Papists but as this was pleasing so his Letter soon after sent to the Leivetenants for the loan of Money upon Privy Seals and other things of the like kind were as distastful to the People A Parliament called Papists proceeded against But these Courses not having the wisht for success and the King being pressed with his own necessities summoned a Parliament to meet in February and enjoyned the Arch-Bishops and Bishops in both Provinces to proceed by Examination and other Church censures with the utmost severity against the Papists and those more especially who were Popishly affected and did encourage and advance the growth of Popery and issued out a Proclamation to confine Convicted Papists to their dwelling Houses or within five Miles thereof On Candlemas Day he was Crowned and at the time of his Coronation took the Coronation Oath in manner following Sir says the Arch-Bishop will you grant and keep K. Charles 1. Crowned The Coronation Oath Rushw Coll. 1. part f. 200. Arch-Bishop and by your Oath confirm to the People of England the Laws and Customs to them granted by the Kings of England your Lawful and Religious Predecessors and namely the Laws Customs and Franchises granted to the Clergy by the Glorious King St. Edward your Predecessor according to the Laws of God the true Profession of the Gospel established in this Kingdom agreeable to the Prerogative of the Kings thereof and the ancient Customs of the Realm I Grant and Promise to keep them Sir Will you keep Peace and Godly Agreement according to your Power both to God The Kings Answer the Holy Church the Clergy and the People I Will keep it Sir Will you to your Power cause Law Justice and Discretion to Mercy and Truth to be executed to your Judgment I Will. Sir Will you grant to hold and keep the Laws and Rightful Customs which the Commonalty of this your Kingdom have and will you defend and uphold them to
but confidently appealed to Time and Success to prove who took their Measures rightest When it happened what I foresaw came to pass the good Father was a little surprised to see all the great Men mistaken and a little one in the Right and was pleased by Sir William Throckmorton to desire the Continuance of my Correspondence which I was mighty willing to comply with knowing the Interest of our King and in a more particular manner of my more immediate Master the * * James the Second Duke and his most Christian Majesty to be so inseparably united that it was impossible to divide them without destroying them all Upon this I shewed that our Parliament in the Circumstances it was managed by the timerous Councels of our Ministers who then governed would never be useful either to England France or Catholic Religion but that we should as certainly be forced from our Neutrality at their next Meeting as we had been from our active Alliance with France the last Year That a Peace in the Circumstances we were in was much more to be desired than the Continuance of the War and that the Dissolution of our Parliament would certainly procure a Peace For that the Confederates did more depend upon the Power they had in our Parliament than upon any thing else in the World And were more encouraged from them to the continuing of the War So that if they were Dissolved their measures would be all broken and they consequently in a manner necessitated to a Peace The good Father minding this Discourse somewhat more then the Court of France thought fit to do my former urg'd it so home to the King that his Majesty was pleased to give him Orders to signifie to his R. H. my Master that his Majesty was fully satisfied of his R. H's good intention towards him that he esteemed both their Interests but as one and the same That my Lord Arlington and the Parliament were both to be lookt upon as very unuseful to their Interest That if his R. H. would endeavour to dissolve this Parliament his most Christian Majesty would assist him with his Power and Purse to have a new one as should be for their purpose This and a great many more Expressions of kindness and confidence Father Ferryer was pleased to Communicate to Sir William Throckmorton and commanded them to send them to His Royal Hhighness and withal to beg his Royal Highness to propose to his most Christian Majesty what he thought necessary for his own Concern and the advantage of Religon and his Majesty would certainly do all he could to advance both or either of them This Sir William Throckmorton sent to me by an Express who left Paris the Second of June 1674. Stilo novo I no sooner had it but I Communicated it to his R. H. To which his R. H. commanded me to Answer as I did on the twenty ninth of the same Month That his R. H. was very sensible of his most Christian Majesties Friendship and that he would Labour to cultivate it with all the good Offices he was capable of doing for His Majesty That he was fully convinced that their Interests were both one That my Lord Arlington and the Parliament were not only unuseful but very dangerous both to England and France That therefore it was necessary that they should do all they could to dissolve it And that his R. H's opinion was that if his most Christian Majesty would write his thoughts freely to the King of England upon this Subject and make the same proffer to his Majesty of his Purse to dissolve this Parliament which he had made to his R. H. to Call another he did believe it very possible for him to succeed with the Assistance we should be able to give him here And that if this Parliament were dissolved there would be no great difficulty of getting a new one which would be more useful The Constitutions of our Parliaments being such that a new one can never hurt the Crown nor an old one do it good His R. H. being pleased to own these Propositions which were but only General I thought it reasonable to be more particular and come closer to the Point we might go the faster about the work and come to some issue before the time was too far spent I laid this for my Maxim The dissolving of our Parliament will certainly procure a Peace Which Proposition was granted by every Body I conversed withal even by Monsieur Rouvigny himself with whom I took Liberty of conversing so far but durst not say any thing of the Intelligence I had with Father Ferryer Next that a Sum of Money certain would certainly procure a Dissolution this some doubted but I am sure I never did For I knew perfectly well that the King had frequent Disputes with himself at that time whether he should dissolve or continue them And he several times declared that the Arguments were so strong on both sides that he could not tell to which to incline but was carried at last to the continuance of them by this one Argument if I try them once more they may possibly give me Money if they do I have gained my Point If they do not I can dissolve them then and be where I am now So that I have a possibility at least of getting Money for their continuance against nothing on the other side But if we could have turn'd this Argument and said Sir their Dissolution will certainly procure you Money when you have only a bare possibility of getting any by their continuance and have shewn how far that bare possibility was from being a Foundation to build any reasonable hope upon which I am sure His Majesty was sensible of And how much 300000 Pounds Sterling certain which was the Sum we propos'd was better than a bare possibility without any reason to hope that that could ever be Compassed of having half so much more which was the most he design'd to ask upon some vile dishonourable Terms and a thousand other hazards which he had great reason to be afraid of if I say we had had Power to have argued this I am most Confidently assured we could have Compassed it for Logick in our Court built upon Money has more powerful Charms than any other sort of reasoning But to secure his most Christian Majesty from any hazard as to that Point I propos'd His Majesty should offer that Sum upon that Condition and if the Condition were not perform'd the Money should never be due If it were and that a Peace would certainly follow thereupon which no Body doubted His Majesty would gain his Ends and save all the vast Expences of the next Campaign by which he could not hope to better his Condition or put himself into more advantagious Circumstances of Treaty then he was then in But might very probably be in a much worse considering the mighty opposition he was like to meet with and the uncertain Chances of
Sessions then we are now I pray God we do not loose ground By my next which will be er'e long I shall be able to tell your Reverence more particularly what we are like to expect In the mean time I most humbly beg your Holy Prayers for all our undertakings and that you will be pleased to Honour me so far as to esteem me what I am entirely and without any reserve The Examination of Capt. William Bedlow taken upon Oath before the Lord Chief Justice North at Bristol on Monday the 16th of August 1680. Bedlows Examination before the then Lord Chief Justice North taken immediately before his death THe Examinant saith that the Duke of York hath been so far engaged in the Plot as he hath seen by Letters in Cardinal Barbarines's Secretarys Study that no part hath been proved against any Man already that hath suffered but that to the full those Letters have made him guilty of it all but what tended to the Kings death And at Rome I asked Father Anderton and Father Lodge two Jesuites what would the Duke do with his Brother when he was King and they answered me they would find a means for that they would give him no trouble about it Then I told them I believed the Duke loved his Brother so well he would suffer no violence to be done to him they said no if the Duke could be brought to that as he had been Religiously to every thing else they might do their work their other business was ready and they might do it presently But they knew they could not bring him to that point but they would take care for that themselves they had not begun with him to leave him in such scruples as that But they would set him in his Throne and there he should reign blindfold three or four days * * According to the old Game the Protestants must hear the odium of the Papists villanies for they had settled some they should pitch the action upon should clear their Party And then he should fly upon them with the Sword of Revenge And this Examinant doth further adds that the Queen is not to this Examinants knowledge nor by any thing that he could ever find out any way concerned in the Murther of the King But barely by her Letters consenting and promising to contribute what Money she could to the introducing the Catholic Religion nay 't was a great while and it made her weep before she could be brought to that The Narrative of Sir Francis North Lord Chief Justice of the Common-Pleas at the Council-board AT my first coming to Mr. Rumsey's House where I was to Lodge at Bristol upon Monday the 16th day of August in the Afternoon being the first day of the Assizes Sir John Knight came to me and said That Mr. Bedlow lay dangerously ill of a Fever and had little hopes of Life and desired that I would give him a Visit that he might impart something of great consequence to me before his death I told him I would give him a Visit that Night after Supper about Nine a Clock if I might be satisfied of two things first that there was no infection in his distemper Secondly that the time would not be inconvenient but he might discourse to me without prejudice to his Condition After a little while two Physitians came to me and assured me that there was no danger of Infection and that the time I had appointed would be most proper for commonly he took his repose in the Afternoon and at nine a Clock he would in all probability be refreshed and fit to Discourse with me thereupon I declared my resolution of going and desired the company of the two Sheriffs and my Brother Roger North and appointed my Marshal William Janes to go with me to him As we were upon the way Mr. Crossman a Minister in that City told me Mr. Bedlow had desired him to come with me to him I said it was very well and I should be glad of his Company whereupon we went altogether and being come into the Room where Mr. Bedlow lay I saluted him and said I was extream sorry to find him so ill I came to visit him upon his own desires I did imagine he had something to impart to me as a Privy Counsellor and therefore if he thought fit the Company might withdraw He told me that needed not yet for he had much to say which was proper for the Company to hear and having saluted the Sheriffs and Mr. Crossman he discoursed to this purpose That he looked upon himself as a dying man and found within himself that he could not last long but must shortly appear before the Lord of Hosts to give an account of all his actions and because many Persons had made it their business to baffle and deride the Plot he did for the satisfaction of the World there declare upon the Faith of a dying Man and as he hoped for Salvation that whatever he had testifyed concerning the Plot was true And that he had wronged no Man by his Testimony but had testifyed rather under that over what was truth That he had nothing lay upon his Conscience upon that account That he should appear chearfully before the Lord of Hosts which he did verily believe he must do in a short time He said he had many Witnesses to produce who would make the Plot as clear as the Sun and he had other things to discover which were of great importance to the King and the Country Hereupon he making some pause I told him the Plot was so evidently made out that no reasonable Man no Protestant I was sure could doubt of the Truth of it but he ought not to have concealed any thing that concerned the King so highly he ought to discover his whole knowledge in Matters of Treason that Traytors may be apprehended and secured who otherwise may have opportunity to execute their Treasonable Designs To this he reply'd that much of that which he had not discovered was to coroborate his former Testimony that he had concealed nothing that was necessary to the Kings preservation That he thought it not fit to accuse more Persons till he had ended with those whom he had already accused He expressed great grief and trouble at the the Condition of this poor King and Country so he termed them whom he knew at that time to be in eminent Danger from the Jesuites who had resolved the Kings death and he was sure they would spare him no longer then he continued to be kind to them he said he was privy to their Consultations at Salamanca and Valadolid where they used to observe the favourable Conjuncture they had to introduce their Religion into England which consisted in their having a Head he must be set up what ever came of it and if they let slip that opportunity they should never have such another for without a Head they could do nothing he said further he knew the
without any evasion equivocation or mental reservation whatsoever and without any dispensation already granted me for this purpose by the Pope or any other Authority or Person whatsoever or without any hope of any such dispensation from any Person or Authority whatsoever or without thinking that I am or can be acquitted before God or Man or absolved of this Declaration or any Part thereof although the Pope or any other Person or Persons or Power whatsoever should dispence with or annul the same or declare that it was null and void from the beginning The same Oaths and Declarations to be made in every succeeding Parliament in full House that all members of Parliament not swearing and declaring as aforesaid and Popish Recusants convict are forbidden the Kings and Queens presence That if any Member of the House of Peers or Commons do any thing contrary to this Act or shall offend in any of the Cases aforesaid such Member should be thenceforth judged a Popish Recusant Convict and should be disabled to hold or execute any Office in any of his Majesties Dominions and likewise to sit and ●ote in either House of Parliament or make his Proxy in the House of Peers or in prosecute any suit in Law or Equity or to be Guardian to a Child or Executor or Administrator to any Person and uncapable of any Legacy Deed or Gift and should fofeit for every willful offence against this Act the sum of Five hundred Pounds to be recovered by whomsoever would sue for the same and to be prosecuted in any of his Majesties Courts where no Essoin Protection or Wager of Law should lye that either House of Parliament may cause any of their Members to swear and subscribe as aforesaid and upon their sitting without taking the same they should be adjudged disabled in Law to all intents whatsoever to sit or vote in the said Houses during that Parliament That the Places of Members of the House of Commons disabled to vote should be void and new Writs issue out for new Elections that the King and Queens sworn Servants should swear as aforesaid and subscribe the Declaration and that if after refusal of the same they presumed to come into their Majesties presence they should be disabled to hold any place and incur the Penalties aforesaid Nothing contained in this Act to relate to the Subjects of the King of Portugal being in the Queen Dowagers service not exceeding the number of eighteen at one time That during the taking the Oaths all proceedings in Parliament should cease and the Oaths c. and Names of the Persons who should take them should be entred in Parchment Rolls and for every such entry not above the sum of Twelve pence to be paid This Act not to extend to such who come into the King or Queens presence being Licensed by six Privy-Counsellors upon some urgent occasion therein to be expressed and such License not to exceed Ten days at a time and not above Thirty days in a Year That all offenders against this Act that shall take the said Oaths c. shall be discharged and freed from all Penalties and Incapacities incurred thereby but such freedom and discharge not to extend to restore any such person to any office or place filled upon voidance by this Act nor to any other Officer till after the Expiration of one Year from taking the said Oath c. nor to discarge the said forfeiture of Five hundred Pounds as aforesaid nothing in this Act to extend to the then Duke of York Thus I have given an Historical Account of the making of these Laws and of the Laws themselves and as they were highly reasonable in their Making so certainly it is as highly reasonable to continue them if the attemps of the Popish party under King James the Second be duly weighed which were carried so far that the Protestant Religion had been inevitably destroyed with the Professors thereof had not we been redeemed out of their hands by the Conduct and Valour of his present Majesty to whom under God we owe our Deliverance and therefore can never sufficiently express our gratitude He hath given sufficient Testimony of his Zeal for the Protestant Religion and therefore it is reasonable to believe that he will readily concur to the Making any Laws that shall be thought fit to preserve it I know of but one and that is Castration of all Priests and Jesuites when ever they are found here and breeding up the Children of Papists in the Protestant Religion Which I humbly offer to the Consideration of the Parliament for I believe this will terrify them more than Gallows or Galleys And how necessary it is for this Kingdom to rid themselves of this Vermin every one sees but they that are either Papists or so blinded with hopes or expectations of the late Kings return that they neither can nor will see And now methinks I hear some of the Church of England tell me I have shewn the reasonableness of the Laws against the Papists but have not said one word in vindication of the Laws against the Dissenters who have been as violent against the Church of England as ever the Papists were and the Laws against them are equally as just To this I give this Answer that I ways alwas of Opinion that the differences between the Church of England and the Dissenters have been made and carried on by the Papists And I wish there were not too much truth in it that the Papists influenced the Counsels when the Laws were made against the Dissenters I am sure a very Learned Pen * Dr. Sherlock of the Church England own'd the putting them in severe Execution the last seven or eight years to have proceeded from Popish Councils And I doubt not but the severe usage of the Church of England by the Dissenters when in Power was promoted by the same Party Since therefore the Papists can transform themselves into all shapes to promote differences amongst Protestants in order to their Ruine it can't certainly but be honest Policy for the Protestants in order to the preservation of the whole to unite against them as the common Enemy And therefore as we who are Lawyers never love to go to Law especially with one another so the Protestants in England under the denomination of the Church of England and Dissenter being now pretty even as to severities on both hands let them no more quarrel but shake hands and be friends which will tend more to the preservation of the true Religion amongst us than all the Laws that can be made FINIS
his submission having most religiously vowed his Fidelity and Obedience to the Queen pardoned He having at the earnest solicitations of Saunders an English Priest and Allen an Irish one both of them Doctors in Divinity gotten a little Money of the Pope the Authority of a Legate granted to Saunders a consecrated Banner and Letters of recommendation to the Spaniard went to Spain and thence into Ireland where he landed the first day of July with those two Romish Priests three Ships and a small body of men who were all soon disperst and Fitz Morris slain There is one story relating to this Rebellion that for the Cruelty of it I can't let pass As soon as the Lord Deputy had certain intelligence of Fitz-Morris his being landed he commanded the Earl of Desmond and his Brothers jointly by Henry Davil an English Gentleman and a stout Souldier and very familiar with the Desmonds that they should forthwith assault the Fort which when they shifted off as a thing full of Danger Davil departed in order to obey the Deputy's Commands and John Desmond followed after him at Trally a small Town he overtook him at his Inn and in the dead of the night having corrupted his Host broke into his Chamber with certain Cut-Throats having their Swords drawn where Davil slept securely with Arthur Carter Lieutenant to the Marshal of Munster a stout old Soldier but being awakened with the noise when he saw John Desmond in the Chamber with his Sword drawn he raised himself up saying what 's the matter my Son for so he was wont familiarly to call him I will no longer be thy Son says he nor shalt thou be my Father thou shalt dye and therewithal they slew both him and Carter that lay with him stabbing them in many places after that Davil's Lackey by interposing his naked body had done the best he could for a while to defend his Master and had receiv'd some wounds then he slew all Davil's Servants one after another who were lodged here and there in several Chambers and so returning all begored with Blood he boasted amongst the Spaniards of the Murther And let this said he be a pledge to you of my faithfulness towards you and the * They were then ingaged in a Conspiracy for the Subversion of the Protestant Religion Desmond carries on the Rebellion Camb. Annals f. 238 239 240. Baker's Chron. f. 355. Cause you are ingaged in This Fact Sounders commended as a sweet Sacrifice in the sight of God. This may be a warning to all Protestants how they enter into any familiar Friendship with Papists or trust them seeing when they butcher them they think they do God good Service and offer up their Blood to him as an acceptable Sacrifice and seeing that 't is their avowed Principle that no Faith is to be kept with Hereticks as they esteem Protestants of all perswasions to be This Rebellion ended not with John Fitz-Morris but was after his death carried on by John Desmond and notwithstanding the Earl of Desmond had promised Drury then Lord Deputy his fidelity and obedience to the Queen and bound himself by Oath that both himself in person and his would serve her against the Rebels yet he afterwards pulled off his Vizzard and openly went over to the Rebels and the Lord Deputy dying and the Council of Ireland having made Sir William Pelham Justicer of Ireland he admonished the Earl of Desmond and demanded the delivery up of Saunders the Foreign Souldiers and the Castles of Carigo Foyle and Asketten but he refusing was Proclaimed a Traytor and guilty of High Treason for having dealt with Foreign Princes for the Conquest and Destruction of his Native Country reliev'd Saunders and James Fitz-Morris Rebels harboured the Spaniards which escaped out of the Fort at Smerwick hanged up divers faithful Subjects displayed the Pope's Banner against the Queen and brought Foreigners into the Realm And then the Lord Justicer committed the prosecution of the whole War to Ormond which he prosecuted so vigorously that this Desmond and his Brethren were forced to lurk and hide their heads yet they added so much Popish Impudence to their former base Treachery and Perfidiousness that they signified to the Lord Justicer in a long Letter that they had undertaken the protection of the Catholick Faith i. e. Popery in Ireland and that by Authority from the Bishop of Rome and direction of the Catholick King i. e. the King of Spain and therefore they do kindly advise him to joyn with them in so pious and meritorious a Cause for the Salvation of his own Soul O horrid Impiety To make the committing Treason Rebellion Murder Rapine and all manner of Cruelties to be the direct way to Heaven Camb. Annals f. 241 and 256. Another Conspiracy in Ireland for the destruction of the Protestant Religion Arthur Lord Grey in the year 1580 being made Lord Deputy of Ireland after a great deal of blood spilt happily supprest that Rebellion which he had no sooner done but another dangerous Conspiracy was detected and crusht in the Bud for divers of Noble Families in Lemster most of them descended of English Blood partly out of Affection to the Romish Religion and partly out of hatred against the new English had conspired together to surprize the Lord Deputy with his Houshold to take the Castle of Dublin at unawares where all the Provision for War lay and to put the English in Ireland every man to the Sword And so close they were in carrying on their Conspiracy that they never confer'd or discoursed about it more than two and two together But amongst so many that were privy to it it came at last to light and was by the Execution of a few timely prevented Colledges framed abroad f●r breeding up Seminary Priests to be sent hither to alienate the hearts of the Queens Subjects from her Camb. Annals f. 244 245. Baker's Chron. f. 356. These Plots and Conspiracies not answering the Designs of the Papists To the intent that they might the more effectually carry on their Treasons and Conspiracies for the future in order to the Extirpation of the Protestant Religion out of the Queen's Dominions and the introducing Popery in its room They thought it very necessary to alienate the Hearts of the Queen's Subjects from her by the secret and crafty insinuations of Priests and Jesuits and that they might be furnisht with enough for that end even of the Queens own Subjects certain English Priests who had fled into the Netherlands for their Treasons committed here by the procurement of the Romish Party formed themselves into a Collegiate Form of Government at Doway and to these the Pope allowed a yearly Pension But Tumults arising in the Low Countries and the English Fugitives being commanded by the King of Spain's Deputies to depart from thence other the like Colledges for the training up of the English Youth were erected one at Rheimes by the Guises and another at Rome by Pope