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A48790 Memoires of the lives, actions, sufferings & deaths of those noble, reverend and excellent personages that suffered by death, sequestration, decimation, or otherwise, for the Protestant religion and the great principle thereof, allegiance to their soveraigne, in our late intestine wars, from the year 1637 to the year 1660, and from thence continued to 1666 with the life and martyrdom of King Charles I / by Da. Lloyd ... Lloyd, David, 1635-1692. 1668 (1668) Wing L2642; ESTC R3832 768,929 730

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Loyal Martyrs because though dying Anno 1640. yet was afterwards fetched out of the Bed of Honour in which the Church had laid him and his Grave made among Hereticks and Pestilent Fellows It was one Branch of Arch-bishop Laud's Charge that he preferred this Professed Arminian to be President of a Colledge in the University Dean of a Cathedral in the Church And he could not have escaped that accepted these preferments He was reckoned a good man of old that new hated And you shall see from a sober person to whom we owe this relation what a good man this is whom the Conspiracy reviled Reviled indeed but basely for when the Arch-bishop answered That he thought Doctor Jackson Learned Honest and Orthodox It was replyed That though Learned and Honest he was an Arminian Bonus vir Cajus sejus in hoc tantum malus quod Christianus A man you will see of whom that Age was not worthy He was descended from a very worthy Family in the Bishoprick of Durham his life seemed to be Consecrated to Vertue and Liberal Arts from his very Child-hood He had a natural propensity ●o Learning from which no other recreation or imployment could divert him he was first designed by his Parents to be a Merchant in New-castle where many of his near Friends and Aliance lived in great wealth and prosperity but neither could that temptation lay hold upon him Therefore at the instance of a Noble Lord the Load Eure he was sent to the Vniversity of Oxford for which highly esteemed favours he returns his solemn thanks in the very first words and entrance of one of his books He was first planted in Queens Colledge under the Care and Tuition of the propound Doctor Grakanthorn● and from thence removed to Corpus Christi Colledge who although he had no notice of the Vacancy of the Place till the day before the Election yet he answered with so much readiness and applause that he gained the Admiration as well as the Suffrages of the Electors and was Chosen with full consent although they had received Letters of Favour from great Men to another Scholar A sure and honourable argument of the incorruptedness of that place when the peremptory Mandamus of the pious Founder nec prece nec pretio presented with the merits of a young man and stranger shall prevail more then all other solicitations and partialities whatsoever This resolution hath been often assured unto me from one of the Electors yet living Master Iohn Hore of West-hendred a man of reverend years and goodness There was now a welcome necessity laid upon him to preserve the high opinion which was conceived of him which he did in a studious and exemplary life not subject to the usual intemperance of that age Certainly the Devil could not find him idle nor at leisure to have the suggestions of Vice whispered into his Ear. And although many in their youthful times have their deviations and exorbitances which afterwards prove reformed and excellent men yet it pleased God to keep him in a constant path of vertue and piety He had not been long admitted into this place but that he was made more precious and better estimated by all that knew him by the very danger that they were in suddenly to part with him For walking out with others of the younger company to wash himself he was in eminent peril of being drowned The depth closed him round about the weeds were wrapt about his Head He went down to the bottom of the mountains the Earth with her Bars was about him for ever yet God brought his soul from corruption Jonah 2. 5 ● That like Moses from the Flags for the future good of the Church● and government of the Colledge where he lived there might be preserved the meekest man alive or like Ionas There might be a Prophet revived as afterwards he proved to forewarn the people of ensuing destruction if peradventure they might repent and God might revoke the judgments pronounced against them and spare this great and sinful Nation It was a long and almost incredible space of time wherein he lay under water and before a Boat could be procured which was sent for rather to take out his Body before it floated for a decent Funeral then out of hopes of recovery of Life The Boat-man discerning where he was by the Bubling of the Water the last signs of a man expiring thrust down his hook at that very moment which by happy providence at the first essay lighted under his arm and brought him up into the Boat All the parts of his body were swollen to a vast proportion and though by holding his head downward they let forth much water yet no hopes of life appeared Therefore they brought him to the land and lapped him up in the Gowns of his Fellow-Students the best Shrowd that Love or Necessity could provide After some warmth and former means renewed they perceiv'd that life was yet within him conveyed him to the Colledge and commended him to the skill of Doctor Channel an eminent Physician of the same House where with much care time and difficulty he recovered to the equal joy and wonder of the whole Society All men concluded him to be reserved for high and admirable purposes His grateful Acknowledgments towards the Fisher-man and his Servants that took him up knew no limits being a constant Revenue to them while he lived For his thankfulness to Almighty God no heart could conceive nor tongue express it but his own often commemorating the miracle of Divine Mercy in his deliverances and resolving hereafter not to live to himself but to God that raiseth the dead Neither did he serve God with that which cost him nothing I must rank his abundant Charity and riches of his Liberalities amongst the Vertues of his first years as if he would strive with his Friends Patron and Benefactors Vtruum illi largiendo an ipse dispergendo vinceret whether they shall be more bountiful in giving or he in dispersing or that he was resolved to pay the ransome of his life into God's Exchecquer which is the bodies of the poor His heart was so free and enlarged in this kind that very often his Alms-deed made him more rich that received than it left him that gave it His progress in the study of Divinity was something early because as he well considered the journey that he intended was very far yet not without large and good provisions for the way No man made better use of Humane Knowledge in subserviency to the Eternal Truths of God produced more testimonies of Heathens to convert themselves and make them submit the rich Presents of their Wise-men to the Cradle and Cross of Christ. He was furnished with all the learned Languages Arts and Sciences as the praevious dispositions or beautiful Gate which led him to the Temple but especially Metaphysicks as the next in attendance and most necessary handmaid to Divinity which was the Mistress where all
Master of Arts Bachelor and Doctor of Divinity and Bishop of Exeter adorning as well as deserving his Advancements When King Iames that most learned Prince was pleased to honor the University of Cambridge by his Presence and to make Exercises of Scholars the best part of his Entertainment this person then a young man was one of those who were chosen by the University to adorn the reception of the King The part he performed was Iocoserious of Praevaricator a mixture of Philosophy with Wit and Oratory This he discharged to the admiration more than the mirth of the King and other learned Auditors who rejoyed to see such a luxuriance of wit was consistent with innocency that jesting was confined to conveniency and mirth married with that Modesty which became the Muses Among his learned and accurate performances in publick I cannot observe that when he took the Degree of Bachelor of Divinity the Text upon which he chose to Preach his Laine Sermon was Prophetick and preparatory to his after-sufferings Phil. 1. 29. Vobis autem datum c. To you it is given on the behalf of Christ not only to believe in him but to suffer for his sake Which eloquent and pious Sermon he afterwards was to fullfil indeed Quod docuit verbo confirmavit exemplo He made his Doctrine good by his practice taking up the Cross of Christ and following him He was preferred to be Prebend of the Collegiat Church of Eli by the favor and love of the then Bishop of that Seat Dr. Felton a very holy and good man he had also a good Living at Barlow not far from Cambridge a Country Village where he condescended bringing out new and old out of his treasure in his Preaching and Cathechising to ordinary capacities He oft deplored the disuse and want of Catechising After that this great Lamp was set and shined in a Sphere more proper and proportionate being chosen Master of Katherine-hall Here it was wonderful to see how the Buildings the Revenues the Students and the Studiousness of that place increased by the Care Counsel Prudence Diligence and Fame of Dr. Brownrig who had such an eye to all that he oversaw none frequenting the Studies and examining even younger Scholars that they might be incouraged in Learning and Piety He kept up very much as good Learning and good Manners so the honor of Orthodox Divinity and orderly Conformity He kept to the Doctrine Worship Devotion and Government in the Church of England which he would say he liked better and better as he grew older If any out of scruple or tenderness of Conscience was less satisfied with some things no man had a more tender heart or a gentler hand to heal them if worthy ingenious and honest He would convince though not convert Gainsayers and if he could not perswade them yet he would pity and pray for them drawing all with the silken cords of humanity the bands of a mans love He could endure differences among Learned and Godly men in Opinions especially sublime and obscure without distance in affection He thought that Scripture it self in some points was left unto us less clear and possitive that Christians might have wherewith to exercise both Humility in themselves and Charity towards others He very much venerated the first worthy Reformers of Religion at home and abroad yet was he not so addicted to any one Master as not freely to use his own great and mature judgement He hoped every good man had his Retractions either actual or intentional though all had no time to write them as St. Austin did He had the greatest Antipathy against those unquiet and pragmatick Spirits which affect endless Controversies Varieties and Novelties in Religion to carry on a Party and under that Skreen of Religion to advance their private Interests in publick Designs For the Liturgy though he needed a set Form as little as any yet he had a particular great esteem of it 1. For the Honor and Piety of his Martyrly Composers 2. For its excellent matter and prudent method 3. For the good he saw in it to all sober Christians the want of which he saw was not supplyed by any Ministers private Praying and Preaching Not that the Liturgy is unalterable but he judged all such alterations ought to be done by the publick Spirit As for Bishops he was too Learned a man to doubt and too honest to deny the Univerval Custom and Practice of the Church of Christ in all Ages and places for fifteen hundred years according to the pattern at least received from the Apostles who without doubt followed as they best knew the minde of Christ. He was by the favor of K. Charles and the great liking of all good men made Bishop of Exeter Anno 1641. Whereupon a certain man said he wondred Dr. Brownrig would be made a Bishop whom he had heard sometime declare his judgment against Episcopacy This being related to the Bishop he with some passion replyed I never thought much less said as that person hath falsly av●rred I thank God I took the Office of a Bishop with a good Conscience and so I hope by Gods mercy I shall both maintain and discharge it And howsoever this excellent Bishop enjoyned not the benefit of the Kings favour and munificence as to his Bishoprick or any other Preferment after the Troubles of the times yet he was ever most unmoveable royal respects of Fidelity Gratitude Love and Obedience Accordingly when O. P. with some shew of respect to him demanded his judgement in some publick Affairs The Bishop with his wonted Gravity and Freedom replyed My Lord the best counsel I can give is that of our Savior Render unto Caesar the things that be Caesars and unto God the things that be Gods With which free Answer O. P. was rather silenced then satisfied This grave Personage when forced to retire was useful to those that were worthy of him and knew how to value him either as a Bishop or a Divine or a Counsellor or a Comforter or a Friend Among those that gave him a Liberal and Noble entertainment Thomas Rich Esq of Shunning in Berk-shire desorveth with honor to be thus Registred that he was the especial Friend of Bishop Brownrig Indeed none could be hospitable to him gratis he always paid for his entertainments by his many excellent Discourses He was alwayes when in health as chearful as far as the Tragedies of the times gave leave as one that had the continual Feast of a good Conscience and as content as if he had a Lords Estate All diminutions and indignities which some men put upon so Worthy and so Venerable a Person he digested into patience and prayers Thus he was in some degree conformable to the Primitive Bishops which were poor and persecuted yea to the great Bishop of our Souls who for our sake made himself of no reputation About a year before he dyed he was invited with much respect and civility to the
remember another His industry was great in the mornings attending his Philosophy and in the afternoons Collecting Materials for such subjects as he would receive satisfaction in his body strong his natural and artificial memory exact his fancy slow though yet he made several sallies into Poetry and Oratory both to relieve his severer thoughts and smooth and knit his broken and rough stile made so by the vast matter it was to comprehend being taught by Ben Iohnson as he would brag to rellish Horace but judgment sure his nature communicative A good Herald as appears by his Titles of Honor a great Antiquary as he shewed by his Marmora Arundeliana on Drayton's E●dmerus his many ancient Coins and more modern rich in his Study and in his Coffers a skillful Lawyer discovered by his Observat on Fleta tenures Fortesne modus tenendi Parliamentum and his Arguments being the readiest man in the kingdom in Records well seen in all learning as is evident in his History of Tyths comprehending all Jewish Heathen and Christian learning on that subject his Mare Clausum against Grotius his Mare Liberum containing all the Laws Customs and Usages of the World in that point his Vxor Hebraica de Synedriis Lex naturae secundum consuetudines Hebraick being Monuments of his insight in the Jewish learning his books de Diis Syris being an instance how well he understood how the Heathen Fables was the corruption of Sripture-truth and how the Gentile Learning might be made subservient to Christian Religion his Book of Tyths Printed 1616. gave offence for the Preface of it disparaging the Credit of our Clergy in point of learning and for the Matter prejudicing their interest in point of profit though answered by Sir Iames Temple for the legal and historical part Mr. Nettles of Queens Colledge Cambridge a great Talmudist for the Judaical part by Mr. Mountague and Dr. Tilsley Archdeacon of Rochester for the Greek and Latine learning with the Ecclesiastical History the fiercest storm saith one that fell on Parsonage Barns since the Reformation but he omitted that 28. Ianu. 1618. before four Bishops and four Doctors of Law and a Publick Notary he tendred his submission and acknowledgment for his presumption in that Book under his Hand in these very words My good Lords I Most humbly acknowledge my error which I have committed in publishing the History of Tithes and especially in that I have at all by shewing any Interpretation of holy Scriptures by medling with Counsels Fathers or Canons or by whatsoever occurres in it offered any just occasion of Argument against any right of maintenance of Iure Divino of the Ministers of the Gospel beseeching your Lordships to receive this ingenuous and humble acknowledgment together with the unfeigned protestation of my grief for that through it I have so incurred both his Majesties and your Lordships displeasure conceived against me in behalf of the Church of England Iohn Selden Which his submission and acknowledgment being received and made an Act of Court was entred into the publick Registrie thereof by this Title following viz. Officium dominorum contra Joh. Seldenum de inter Templo Lond. Armiger I am loath to think that the Play Ignoramus Acted at Cambridge 1614. to make some sport with Lawyers was the occasion of this History published 1616. to be even with Divines but apt to think that the latitude of his minde tracing all parts of Learning did casually light on the Rode of this Subject handling it as he did all others with great freedom according to the Motto written in all his books 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The foresaid Submission was accompanied with an humble Letter afterwards with his own hand to Bishop Laud wherein many expressions of his contrition much condemning himself for Writing a book of that nature and for Prefacing such a book with insolent reflections of that kinde And this Letter seconded with an Apology in Latine to all the world to clear himself from the least suspition of disobedience to Government or disassection to the Church and that Apology backed with a Dedicatory Epistle to Archbishop Laud expressing great reverence to his Function and an honorable respect to his Person for his great design for the advancement of Universal Learning and the truly Catholick Religion whereupon the recommended him for Burgess to the University of Oxford in the Long Parliament which and an intimate acquaintance with the honorable Io. Vanghan Esq of Troescod to whom he Dedicated some of his Books and Bishop Vsher who Preached at his Funeral he reckoned the greatest honors of his life He was outed that Parliament to use his own words by those men that deposed his Majesty Dr. Mathew Grissith born in London bred in Brazen-nose Colledge in Oxford Lecturer at St. Dunstans in the West under Dr. Donnes inspection whose favourite he was Minister of Maudelins Fish-street London by his donation For telling the Citizens that they sent in their Bodkins Thimbles c. to furnish out the Cause as the Children of Israel did their Ear-rings and Jewels only these had a Calf for theirs whereas they were likely to have a Bull for theirs and for a Sermon at St. Pauls about the peace of Ierusalem Sequestred Plundered Imprisoned in Newgate and forced to fly to Oxford whence he returned continuing Prayers and other Ordinances in London according to the Established Laws of the Church of England during the Usurpation enduring seven violent Assaults five Imprisonments the last of which was at Newgate 1659. for a Sermon Called fear God and honor the King Preached at Mercers-Chappel pardon one big with his Loyalty if he Longed for his Majesties Restauration before the Design of it was ripe he died Minister of the forsaid Maudlin Parish Lecturer of the Temple London and Rector of Bladon in Oxford-shire where he departed Octob. 14. Anno Aetatis 68. Domini 65. having broken a Vein in the earnest pressing of that necessary point Study to be quiet and follow your own business and ventured his Life at Bazing-house where his Daughter manly lost hers To whom I will subjoyn his neighbor Mr. Chostlen of Fryday-street Assaulted in his house Sequestred Plundered Imprisoned first in one of the London Compters and afterwards in Colchester-Goal And gentile Mr. Bennet of St. Nicholas Acons who as Bishop Vsher would say he Preached Perkins so long till he was able to imitate him Preached Seneca and St. Bernard so much till they attained a sententiousness as happy as theirs and art of Preaching that is of Collecting Composing and Delivering their discourses by having those things whereof they themselves had onely some imperfect confused Notion fully and clearly represented to their view from the discoveries that other men have made after much study and experience Dr. Tho. Howel born at Nanga-March near Brecknock in Brecknock-shire bred Scholar and Fellow of Iesus Colledge in Oxford smooth and meek in his Conversation and his Sermons by both gliding
the Bishop indulged and Sir Iohn prosecuted though both at last suffered by them Sir Iohn hardly seven times in these Wars escaping for his life at his House in Northampton-shire whence coming to hide himself in London he dyed in the Bell-Inn in St. Martins lane London sundry losses by plunder having paid after for composition 628 l. Sir Henry Martin born in London bred in New-Colledge Oxford the smallness of whose Estate was the improvement of his Parts being left but 40 l. a year which made him a Student where as he would say 80 l. would have made him a Gentleman pleading in his Chamber by Bishop Andrews advice who directed him to the study of the Civil Law the important Causes transmitted to him weekly from Lambeth he attained to a great faculty in amplifying and aggravating extenuating any thing at the Court wherefore he became an eminent Advocate in the High-Commission no Cause coming amiss to him who was not now to make new Armor but to buckle on the old not to invent but to apply Arguments to his Client and was made Judge of the Prerogative for Probate of Wills and of the Admiralty in Causes concerning Forreign Trade whence King Iames would say pleasantly of him That he was a mighty Monarch in his Jurisdiction over Land and Sea the living and the dead in the number of which last he was for fear and grief 1642. Dr. Thomas Eden born at Ballington-Hall in Essex Fellow and Master of Trinity-Hall in Cambridge where he always concurred with the old Protestants in his Votes in censuring extravagant Sermons c. and joyned issue with them in his suffering only he that was so excellent an Advocate for others pleaded so well for himself that he was permitted to dye in Cambridge where he bestowed 1000 l. since nothing was left him to live on elsewhere his Places of Chancellor of Ely Commissary of Sudbury and Westminster Professor of Law in Gresham-Colledge being Sequestred as he did 1646. leaving Sir Iames Bunce a great Agent and sufferer for his Majesty being twelve years banished his Executor on this score being an utter stranger to him Sir Iames asking the Doctors advice about a ●lause in a Will wherein he was Executor and being told by him that it was capable of a double sense replyed Tell me what you think in your Conscience is the very minde of the Testator which I am resolved whatever it cost me to make good Dr. Cowel observed of Dr. Eden that had a happy name which commends to a Favourite that might be easily pronounced Dr. Morrison and Dr. Goad both of Kings great Civilians and great sufferers the first a great friend of Bishop Williams the second of Bishop Laud at first the Faction was not perfect in the art of persecution being more loose and favourable in their language of Subscriptions but afterwards grew so punctual and particular therein that the persons to whom they were tendered must either strangle their Consciences with the acceptance or lose their Estates for the refusal thereof Sir Richard Lane a Gentleman not lost in the retiredness of a good judgment but being able to expose his merit as well as gain it by a quick fancy sending before a good Opinion of himself to make way for his Person with this Caution That he took care he should not sink with two great an expectation Whence in an Assembly wherein they used to Epithet every man with reference to their most obvious defects or vertues he was called Tho. Wary and with good reason he keeping his converse as among Superiors within the compass modesty and reverence so among equals within the Rules of a sweet and honest respect it being he said both to command our own Spirits and endear our friends a great art not to be too familiar or presume too much on the goodness of other natures upon that of a mans own besides that he thought it injustice to give our familiars the froth of our Parts reserving the more solid part for strangers though he exposed not his good humors but upon an equal Theatre a mans esteem rising not from shewing himself but from keeping himself regular and equal as well in mean and common as in great and extraordinary actions pretending to nothing he had not left being discovered albeit when once men have a good opinion they seldom take pains to disabuse themselves he might be suspected in what he had and being sure of Correspondents knowing that a single interest or abilities would sink under Court-affairs He was preferred the Princes Sollicitor and Attorney in the best times and his Father Keeper of the Seal in the worst not parting from his Majesty till he did with his own soul dying with a good Conscience abroad with more comfort than if he had dyed with a good Estate at home having discharged his place under a distressed Soveraign with much courage as well as skill leaving this opinion behind that Projectors of new Engines were not to be too much encouraged in a populous Country since by easing many of their labor they out more of their livelihood and so though beneficial to private persons are pernicious to the publick to which what imployeth most is most advantageous Sir Iohn Bennet as much persecuted by the Parliament as by the High-Commission THE Life and Death OF Dr. WILLIAM JUXON Lord Arch-bishop of Canterbury BOrn at Chichester in Sussex and bred in St. Iohns Colledge in Oxford whereof he was Fellow and President his deep and smooth parts as appears by his Speeches and Poetry on publick Occasions particularly on King Iames his death exceeding his years and yet his modesty and other vertues so exceeding as to hide his Parts had not he been discovered for Preferment by the Perfume of his worth as the Roman Gentleman was by the sweet Odour of his Cloaths for punishment Bishop Laud had taken great notice of his Parts and Temper when he was Fellow with him but greater of his Integrity and policy when a stickler in the Suit about President-ship of the Colledge against him When observing him a shrewd Adversary he thought he might be a good Friend being though Doctor of Law yet a great Master of Divinity all hearing him Preach with great pleasure and profit so much he had of Paul and Apollos of learned plainness and an useful elaborateness when he preached saith one that heard him Of Mortification Repentance and other Christian Practicks he did it with such a stroke of unaffected Floquence of potent Demonstration and irresistible Conviction that jew Agrippaes Festaes or Felixes that heard but must needs for the time and fit be almost perswaded to be penitent and mortified Christians Dr. Laud finding him shining in each place he was as the Divine Lights in their Orbs without noise his Birth so Gentile that it was no disgrace to his Parts though not so Illustrious but that his Parts might be an Ornament to him his Vertues so modest that they
the old Religion against what he supposed the new in his Under him the Welch at Brentford made good the Greek Proverb with right Brittish valour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that flieth will fight again those who being little better than naked cannot be blamed for using swift heels at Edgehill must having resolution to arm their minds as soon as they had armour to cover their bodies be commended for using as stout arms as any in this fight which cost the Family though Sir Thomas died not long after 2000 l. 5. Sir Evan Lloyd of Yale a sober Gentleman and one of the first that waited on his Majesty at Wrexam for which he suffered deeply several times till his Majesties Restauration by whom he was made Governour of Chester a City of which it is said that it was more honour to keep a Gate in it than to command a whole City elsewhere seeing East Gate therein was committed formerly to the Earl of Oxford Bride Gate to the Earl of Shrewsbury Water Gate to the Earl of Derby and North Gate to the Major He died as soon as he was invested in his Government 1663 4. Godfrey Lloyd Charles Lloyd and Tho. Lloyd were Collonels in the Kings Army and Coll. Rob. Ellis a vigilant sober active and valiant Commander 240 l. Sir Francis Lloyd Caerm 1033 l. Walt. Lloyd Lleweny Carding Esq 1033 l. 6. Col. Anthony Thelwall a branch of the Worshipful Family of the Thelwalls of Plasyward near Ruthin in Denbighshire known for his brave Actions at Cropredy where his Majesty trusted him with a thousand of the choicest men he had to maintain as he did bravely the two advantagious Villages Burley and Nelthorp and at the second Newberry fight where he did wonders with the reserve of Sir G. Lisles Tertia and had done more had he not been slain for not accepting of Quarter Not long after Daniel Thelwall of Grays-Inn Esq paid 540 l. composition Io. Thelwall of Pace-Coch Denb Esq 117 l. The Right Honorable Thomas Wriothsley Earl of Southampton Knight of the Garter Lord High Treasurer of England and Privy-Counsellor to both Kings Charles I. and II. bred in the strictest School and Coll. Eaton by Windsor and Magdalen Colledge in Oxford to a great insight into general and various Learning and in the Low-Countries and France to a great happiness in Experiences and Observations in the Affairs of War Trade and Government the result of which and his retired studies by reason of the troubles of the Age and the infirmities of his body much troubled with the Stone with a sharp fit whereof he died 1667. was as King Charles the First who conversed with him much in his Closet called it and King Charles the Second who came often with the Counsel to his House and Bed side found it Safe and clear Counsel a sober and moderate Spirit the reason together with the general opinion of his great integrity and unblemished reputation he was so much reverenced and courted by the Parliament as they called it and so often imployed in seven Publick Messages and three solemn Treaties between the King and Parliament a serious temper and deep thoughts understanding Religion well he was reckoned the best Lay-Divine by his Polemical and Practical Discourses after the Kings death in England and practising it better Prayers Sermons and Sacraments being performed in no Family more solemnly than in his house private preparations before the monethly Communion used no where more seriously than that of all that belonged to his noble retinue in his Closet his stipends to the poor Clergy and Gentry in the late times were constant and great near upon besides what he sent beyond Sea 1000 l. a year his charity to the Poor of each place where he had either his residence or estate Weekly Monethly Quarterly and Yearly above 500 l. a year among those few Ministers reduced into distress by the late fire he bestowed besides particular largesses and a resolution to take them if unprovided to any Preferments that should fall in his Gift an 100 Pieces in Gold giving always his Livings to the choicest men recommended to him by the Fathers of the Church whose judgements he much relied upon in those Cases in the Kingdom he reckoned it certainly a more blessed thing to give than receive when besides his great Hospitality during his life and his manifold and large Benefactions at his death he gave away so much for publick good and as I am told received not one farthing all the while either as Lord Treasurer or Privy Counsellor for his own private advantage He was one of the Honorable Lords who offered his life to save his Majesty pleading that he had been the Instrument of his Government and hazzarded it to bury him His Composition was 3466l in Money and 250 l. a year in Land taken from him and his losses in the War 54000 l. Sir Walter VVrotsley not VVriothsley of VVrotsley Stafford 1332 l. 10 ● with 15 l. per annum Land taken from him Sir Frederick Cornwallis Treasurer of the Houshold Comptroller and Privy Counsellor to his Majesty whose old Servant he had been and his Fathers and Uncles before him at his Restauration and made Baron Cornwallis of Eye in Suffolk at his Majesties Coronation The Temple of Honor being of right open to him in time of Peace who had so often hazzarded himself in the Temple of Vertue in the time of War particularly at Copredy-bridge where the Lord Willmot twice Prisoner was rescued once by Sir Frederick Cornwallis and the next time by Sir R. Howard Sir F. being as the last Pope said of this a Man of so chearful a spirit that no sorrow came near his heart and of so resolved a mind that no fear came into his thoughts so perfect a Master of Courtly and becoming Raillery that he could do more with one word in Jest than others could do with whole Harangues in Earnest a well-spoken man competently seen in modern Languages of a comely and goodly Personage died suddainly of an Apoplectical fit Ian. 7. 1661. Pope Innocent being in discourse about the best kind of death declared himself for suddain death suddain not as unexpected that we are to pray against but suddain as unfelt that he wished for To him I may adde Sir Will. Throgmorton Knight Marshall to his Majesty who died 166● A Gentleman of an Ancient Family to whom a great spirit was as Hereditary as a great Estate who did much service to his Majesty in England and was able to do more to him and his Friends in Holland where he was formerly a Souldier and then an Inhabitant worth is ever at home and carry●th its welcome with it wherever it goeth who had lost his life sooner with a Bullet got into his body had not he done as they say Mr. Farnaby the Grammarian did who coming over from the Dutch Camp poor and wounded at Billingsgate met with a poor Butterwoman of whom he bought as
MEMOIRES OF THE LIVES ACTIONS SUFFERINGS DEATHS OF THOSE NOBLE REVEREND AND EXCELLENT PERSONAGES That SUFFERED By DEATH SEQUESTRATION DECIMATION Or otherwise FOR THE Protestant Religion And the great PRINCIPLE thereof ALLEGIANCE To their SOVERAIGNE In our late Intestine Wars From the Year 1637 to the Year 1660. and from thence continued to 1666. WITH THE LIFE and MARTYRDOM OF King CHARLES I. By Da Lloyd A. M. sometime of Oriel-Colledge in Oxon. LONDON Printed for Samuel Speed and sold by him at the Rainbow between the two Temple-gates by Iohn Wright at the Globe in Little-Britain Iohn Symmes at Gresham-Colledge-gate in Bishops-gate-street and Iames ●ollin● in Westminster-Hall MDCLXVIII To the RIGHT HONOURABLE Sir Henry Bennet LORD ARLINGTON Principal Secretary of State to His Majesty and one of the Lords of His Majesties most Honourable PRIVY COUNCIL May it please your Honour IN this Collection which is humbly addressed to your Lordship as one of the most eminent surviving Instances of that Loyalty it treats of is contained Remarques and Observations upon above a thousand Persons in which number may be accounted no less than two hundred Peers and Prelates becoming the Excellency of that Royal Cause most Sacred in the two Branches thereof Government and Religion As the Slave in the Historian gathered up the scattered Limbs of his Great but Conquered and Murthered Lords burning them on some vulgar pile and repositing their Ashes in some poor room till more equal times should erect them a becoming Monument Covering them with a Pyramid or inclosing them in a Temple So I from the perishing and scattered Pamphlets and Discourses of these times have Collected some choice Memorials of those Heroes who deserved not to be forgotten in that Kingdom whereof I am a Subject and that Church whereof I am a Member which Collection may serve for a just though brief account of the great actions and sufferings of these Worthies till time shall produce a better History more lasting than its self that shall be a reproach to the weakness of Stone and Marble History saith my Lord Bacon which may be called just and perfect History is of three kinds according to the object it propoundeth or pretendeth to represent for it either representeth a time a person or an action The first we call Chronicles the second Lives and the third Narrations or Relations Of these although the first be the most compleat and absolute kind of History and hath most estimation and glory yet the second excelleth it in profit and use and the third in verity and sincerity For History of Times representeth the magnitude of Actions and the publick faces and deportments of Persons and passeth over in silence the smaller passages and motions of men and matters But such being the Workmanship of God as he doth hang the greater weights upon the smallest wyars Maxima eminimis suspendens It comes therefore to pass that such Histories do rather set forth the pomp of business than the true and inward resorts thereof But Lives if well written propounding to themselves a Person to represent in in whom actions both greater and smaller publick and private have a commixture must of necessity contain a more true native and lively representation I do much admire that the vertues of our late times should be so little esteemed as that the writing of Lives should be no more frequent for although there be not many Soveraign Princes or absolute Commanders and that States are most Collected into Monarchies yet there are many worthy Personages that deserve better than dispersed Reports and barren Elogies There are Pyramids erected for the Maccabees those great sufferers for a good Cause at Modinum in Palestine the bottom of which contain the bodies of those Heroes and the tops serve for Sea-marks to direct Marriners sayling in the Mediterranean towards the Haven of Ioppa in the Holy-Land not unlike whereunto for the use and service thereof is this following Volume partly to do justice to those Worthies deceased and partly to guide and Conduct their Posterity to the same happiness by steering their course according to the honourable patterns of their Lives and the resolved manner of their Deaths being moreover useful intimations to oppressed vertue when neither Law nor Government can neither encourage or support and successful and prosperous Vices which neither is able either to suppress or restrain yet is History able to do Right to the one and Justice on the other History that holds a Pen in one hand that can set the most neglected and despicable goodness eternally beyond injury and being the greatest awe over great Villains on this side Hell a scourge in the other that shall give the most powerful and domineering Villany perpetual wounds beyond a remedy a fair warning to all men that have any sense of fame or honour to take as great care of their deportment before their death as the Roman Gladiators did of their postures before their fall Neither am I without competent hopes that it will be a cosiderable pleasure to those worthy Persons still surviving their former sufferings to see the Kings friends in a body in an History as once they saw them in the Field and be able upon the view to make a judgement what Families and Persons are fit to be employed and entrusted what deserving men have been neglected and who may be encouraged and rewarded without doubt many will with great satisfaction look on this Catalogue as K. Charles I. did on Essex his Army at Edge-hill when he gave his reason for his long looking upon them to one that asked him What he meant to do This is the first time that I saw them in a body And the rather because though not mentioned themselves as being alive Nec tanti est ut memorentur perire Nor is it worth their while to dye that they may be remembred yet by this poor attempt may guess that when other means prove ineffectual Monuments of Wood being subject to burning of Glass to breaking of soft Stone to mouldring of Marble and Mettal to demolishing their own Vertues and others Writings will Eternize them If any Persons are omitted as possibly in so great a variety there may be some or mistaken or but briefly mentioned be it considered that the Press like Time and Tide staying for no man and real Informations though diligently and importunately sought after comming in but slowly we were forced to lay this Foundation and intend God willing if an opportunity shall serve to compleat or at least more amply adorn the Structure One of the greatest Encouragements whereunto will be your Lordships gracious acceptance of this weak but sincere Endeavour of My Lord Your Lordships Most humble and devoted Servant David Lloyd THE TABLE A. ALderman Abel Fol. 633 Mr. Adams 507 Sir Thomas Ailesbury 699 Dr. Ailworth 541 Fr. L. D'Aubigney Lord Almoner 337 Dr. Jo. Maxwel A. B. of St. Andrews 643 Col. Eusebius Andrews 561 Dr. N. Andrews 530 Sir
and council such Irish as could not endure the strictness and civility of his government In fine such whose frauds and force were met with by his prudence and prowess He whom three Kingdomes agreed against in their Faction indeed so excellent a Personage was not to be ruined but by the pretended hatred of the whole Empire He whom the Mercenary Lawyers and Orators represented so monstrously appeared so innocent that some of his very Enemies said in much anger you may be sure that their Charge of Misdemeanors proved no other than a Libel of Slanders and the disingaged and honest part of the Nation with as much pleasure to find so great faults reflected on the unhappiness of great Ministers whose parts and trust must be their crimes whose happy councils are envied and unsuccesseful though prudent ones severely accused When they err every one condemneth them and their wise advices few praise For those that are benefited envy and such as are disappointed hate those that gave them The Faction thus baffled by his Abilities and Innocence and run down by Master Lane the Princes Atturneys Argument for with much ado they allowed him Master Lane Recorder Gardiner Master Loe and Master Lightfoot for Council though in point of Law in such matters as they would allow them to plead in viz. That these words in the Statute of 25. Edw. 3. Because particular Treasons could not be then defined therefore what the Parliament shall declare to be Treason in time to come should be punished as Treason being the words of a declarative and penal Statute ought to be understood literally and that this Salvo was Repealed 6. Hen. 4. when it was Enacted that nothing shall be esteemed Treason but what is literally contained in the Statute 25. Edw. 3. drew up the Bill of Attainder a Law after the Fact with a shameful Caution that the unparallel'd thing should not be drawn into a Precedent so securing themselves who really designed that alteration of Government they falsly charged him with from the return of the same Injustice on themselves which they Acted on him A Bill that they Passed in two days so eager were they of bloud and so fearful of delays and sober consideration notwithstanding the generous dissent of a fifth part of the Commons men of honest hopes who disdained to administer to the lusts of the Faction in the bloud of so much innocent Gallantry though with the hazard of their lives being Posted and Marked out to the fury of the Rabble And by the Midwifery of a Tumult of 5 or 6000. people instigated and directed by unquiet Members of the House of Commons that were seen amongst them to the great dishonour of their persons and places forced upon as many of the Peers as would or durst Sit and that was scarce a third part in whose thin house after the King had so frankly declared three things May. 1. in the Earles behalf before both House viz. 1. That he was never advised to bring the Irish Army into England 2. That no man ever durst create in him the least jealousie of his English Subjects Loyalty 3. That no man ever dared to move him to alter the least much less all the Laws of England It scarcely Passed after so many hideous Riots raised by the Pulpit Demagogues Sunday May 2. by seven Voices And when brought to his Majesty who had earnestly intreated them by all the Franke Concessions he had made to them that Parliament not to press him in so tender a point and though the Tumults without and the Sollicitations within several Courtiers looking on the Earl as the Herd doth on an hurt Deer hoping his blood would be the lustration of the Court ran high the Gracious King being loath to leave so faithful and brave a man a Sacrifice to popular rage there stuck until 1. The Judges upon whose judgment the Bishops when sent for advised his Majesty to rely in matter of Law they being sworn to declare the Law equally between the King and his People pronounced him guilty of Treason in the general though they confessed he was not so in any particulars the point his Majesty pressed much upon them 2. The Parliament City and Country importuned him his very followers tyring him with that Maxime the weaknesse whereof● many of them lived to see and suffer Some talk of a Paper-promise the King gave him wherein was write upon Better one man perish though unjustly than the people be displeased or destroyed And the Parliament wearying him with that clamor rather than reason that their Vote though against his Judgement should satisfie his Conscience 3. The Earl offered himself a Victime like Hurtius for the Kingdomes Peace and the Kings Safety in this Letter to his Majesty The Earl of Strafford's Letter to the King May it please your Majesty IT hath been my greatest grief in all these troubles to be taken as a person who should indeavour to represent and set things amisse between your Majesty and your People and to give council tending to the disquiet of the three Kingdomes Most true it is that mine own private condition considered it had been a great madnesse since through your gracious favour I was so provided as not to expect in any kind to mend my fortune or please my mind more than by resting where your bounteous hand had placed me Nay it is most mightily mistaken for unto your Majesty is well known my poor and humble advises concluded still in this that your Majesty and your people could never be happy till there were a Right Understanding betwixt you and them no other means to effect and settle this happinesse but by the counsel and assent of the Parliament or to prevent the growing evils upon this State but by intirely putting your self in your last resort upon the Loyalty and good Affection of your English Subjects Yet such is my misfortune this truth findeth little credit the contrary seemeth generally believed and my self reputed as something of separation between you and your people under a heavier censure than which I am perswaded no Gentleman can suffer Now I understand the minds of men are more incensed against me notwithstanding your Majesty hath declared that in your Princely Opinion I am not guilty of Treason nor are you satisfied in your Conscience to Passe the Bill This bringeth me into a very great streight there is before me the ruin of my Children and Family hitherto untouched in all the branches of it with any foul Crimes Here is before me the many Ills which may befal your Sacred Person and the whole Kingdom should your self and the Parliament part lesse satisfied one with another than is necessary for the preservation of King and People Here are before me the things most valued most feared by mortal man Life or Death To say Sir that there hath been no strife in me were to make me lesse than God knoweth I am and mine infirmities give
Speaking about going to Law his opinion was that it was better to buy Love than Law for one might have a great deal of Love for a little whereas he could have but a little Law for a great deal He would frequently say that was not well which ended everlastingly ill and that a man was never undone till he was in hell This was a Speech which he often used that if it were lawful to envy any he would envy those that turned to God in youth whereby they escape much sin and sorrow and were like unto Iacob that stole the blessing betimes He died praying heartily for the King and declaiming as heartily against the Rebellion that would make such a breach in this State and be such a scandal to this Church as the Child unborn should rue and bewail Anno Christi 1645. Aetat suae 96. Hic Jacet faceta virtus pietasque pacisica Quae totam duobus verbis absolvit vitam Nempe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sustine abstine THE Life and Death OF BARON TREVOR WE remember when Oratory and Faction had attained here the same heighth that a Learned Man observeth they had attained at Rome together for Speeches and Sedition are inseparable companions It was reckoned a quaint strain upon Mr. Prynne Bastwick and Burtons sufferings to say That it seemed to many Gentlemen a spectacle no less strange than sad to see three of several professions the noblest in the kingdom Divinity Law and Physick exposed at one time to such ignominious punishment forsooth And truly we are at present under a great doubt whether it was a more sad or a more pleasant sight to see so many eminent men of all these and other ingenious professions act so chearfully and suffer so patiently for that Government which those before-mentioned endeavoured first to disgrace and at last to overthrow First debauching men from their love and reverence to Superiors by exposing them to scorn and contempt and next from their duty to them by opposing and fighting them There went immediately before a very Reverend Divine that in the midst of many discouragements zealously discried the resistance of the Supream and Lawful power as against Conscience And now he is followed by a worthy Lawyer that eagerly opposed any thing that tended to it as against Law Sir Thomas Trevor was born Iuly the 6. 1586. a day memorable in that Family for the birth of six successives principal branches of it born upon it with this remarkable occurrence That whereas most other Children are born to this sad world crying he was observed to smile almost as soon as born an argument of the chearful temper he was of until he died His Temper lead him to the active ways of a Souldier or a Courtier but his judgment carried him to the more studious employment of a Lawyer wherein he promised great proficiency from that towardliness at School that never deserved correction and success in the University that never failed of applause in both such strong parts that his Master would say of him This Boy hath not the patience to stay at the words in Authors he is so inquisitive after the thing And his Tutor That he had a strange Natural Logick Saint Rumbald I write what I read not what I believe as soon as he came out of his Mothers womb falling into the Churches bosome cried three times the first minute of his life I am a Christian made a confession of his Faith desired to be Baptized chose his God-fathers his Name and his Font. This the fable the moral shall be the early seriousness of this person seriousness and devotion being of Vives his opinion that a pious Youth resisting its own temptations and allaying its own heat makes a comfortable and a serviceable Age neither sad with a mans own remembrances of younger follies nor useless by the disgrace of others observing of them Many men are lost in their more reduced years by reason of the scandal of their younger ones Though the light when grown pours fuller streams it s yet more precious in its virgin beams and though the third and fourth may do the cure the eldest tear of the Balsome is most pure One of Seneca's few men you have here Qui consilio se suaque disponunt caeteri eorum more qui fluminibus innatant non eunt sed feruntur And the rather was he pious because he would say often that sentence of Cicero Pietas justitia quaedam est adversus deos pietate sublata fides etiam societas humani generis una excellentissima virtus justitia imo omnis probitas tollitur And because he observed that the difficulties of this study was not to be overcome without the quietness of heart and composedness and calmness of mind that all men aim at and good men only injoy Happy was the mixture of heat and moisture in his head the later serving his memory and judgment and the former his apprehension and fancy that at once pierced into the depth and look round all the little circumstance of Cases to which his wary distrust patient consideration and slow conclusion and determination contributed much being used to say That we could not have too little faith as to any thing proposed to us in this world nor too much for the things offered us in reference to another World Comparing the failures of his memory to the fluxes of his body both arguing the weakness of the retentive faculty there being seldom a discourse wherein with Curio the Orator in Tully he either added not some head he had not thought on or omitted a point he had he finding true that passage of Seneca Res est ex omnibus partibus maxime delicata memoria in quam primum senectus incurrit frigido jam incalescente exarescente cerebro His smooth contexture of Discourse and flowing speech his command of himself and temper seldom either disordering himself or disturbing his Argument with perturbation of mind although disturbance would heat him sometimes to an improvement of his Eloquence insomuch that as it was reported of Severus Cassius that would do best ex tempore his Antagonists were afraid to anger him who had most wit in his anger as much as Aristotle observeth others designed to provoke their Adversaries that they might interrupt them So weighty though not bold his Assertions so choice though not nice his Speech for the niceness of words breaks the weight of Arguments so plain his dealing so becoming and grave his Carriage and Address and so intire his Reputation that besides several reposed in him by several Noblemen he was made Solicitor to King Charles the I. when King by the wise King Iames upon the Earl of Pembroke and Bishop Williams recommendation and in the first year of the said King made Serjeant and preferred Kings Serjeant Sir Iohn Walter then and he giving Rings with this Inscription Regi Legi servire Libertas and the same year one of the
Barons of the Exchequer in which place he was tender of two things the Churches and the Kings Rights having never as we heard taken Fee when a Pleader either of an Orthodox Minister or of a Kings Servant The first Books of the Law he would recommend to young Students was the Historical as the years and tearms of Common-law permitting Finch Dodderidge Fortescue Fulbeck and others that writ of the nature of the Law among which Books the Register is authentique Speculum Iustitiariorum is full and satisfactory Glanvill de Legibus consuetudinibus Regni Angliae is useful and practical the Old Tenures tried and approved Bracton methodical rational and compleat Britton learned and exact though his Law in some cases be obsolete and out of date Fleta deep and comprehensive Fortescue sinewy and curious Stuthams Abridgement well contrived and of ready use Littletons Tenures sound exact and the same thing to us Common Lawyers that Iustinians Institutes is to Civil Lawyers Littleton being deservedly said not to be the name of a Lawyer but of the Law it self Fitz-Herberts Abridgement and Natum brevium elaborate and well-digested Collections Doctor and Student A good account of the nature grounds and variety of Laws Stamfords Pleas of the Crown and Prerogative weighty smart and methodical Rastals Book of Entries and the Lord Brooks's Abridgement commended by my Lord Cook as good repertories of the year-books of the Law Theobalds Book of Writs sound and full the next explanatory Books were the next in which kind Cooks Works and Ploydens Commentaries pass for Oracles and Mr. Lambards Books for the most exquisite Antiquities and in the third place Reports among which those of Cook and Crook are profound fundamental and material those of Popham Hobart Owen Hutton Winch Lea Hetley Leonard Brownlow Bulstrode Yelverton Bridgeman are sinewy clear pertinent useful and approved and especially a man must have the Year-books and Statutes His Counsel to the King was with the like freedom as these directions to the young Gentlemen and his Judgment on the Bench with as much faithfulness as either The English in a year of great mortality amongst them had their children born without their cheek-teeth This Judge especially in sad times and in a sad case would have all Pleadings without biting his Nature was pitiful and ingenuous insomuch that he might be called as Tostanus was The Patron of Infirmities His Discourse was always charitable either to excuse their failings or mitigate their punishments The favour he shewed others he found not himself His concurring with his Brethren about Ship-money being aggravated with the most odious circumstances and punished with the severe usage of a Prison a Fine and the loosing of his Place a great argument certainly of his Integrity that in a searching Age he that had been Judge near upon twenty years could be found guilty of no fault but avowing the Law according to his Judgement and being of opinion That the King in case of danger whereof he was Iudge might tax the Nation to secure its self An opinion so innocent that Justice Hutton himself who went to his grave with the reputation of an honest Judge would protest he could heartily wish true it being as much for the Interest of the Nation as it seemed to him against the Law of it So legal that Baron Denham though he was sick and could not debate it with his Brethren and something scrupulous that if he had been there he could not have agreed with them yet it appears his dissent was not from his apprehension of the injustice of the Tax called Ship-money in general but from some particular irregularity in the proceeding with Mr. Hampden in particular as appears from this Certificate dated May 26. 1638. directed to the Lord Chief Justice Brampston May it please your Lordship I Had provided my self to have made a short Argument and to have delivered my Opinion with the Reasons but by reason of want of rest this last night my old Disease being upon me my sickness and weakness greatly increased insomuch as I cannot attend the business as I desire and if my opinion be desired it is for the Plaintiff Iohn Denham And this reason added to it That he thought His Majesty could not seize on any Subjects Goods without a Court-Record c. And so harmless that it was but twenty shillings that Hampden paid with all this ado after Monarchy and Liberty was brought to plead at the Bar. And Judge Crook himself who was one that dissented from his Brethrens opinions about Shipmoney though he had once subscribed it by the same token that the People would say at that time That Ship-money might be had by Hook it should never be had by Crook would say of Hampden That he was a dangerous man and that men had best take heed of him Remarkable here the difference between His Majesties temper and the Parliaments they punished five of the Judges for that very liberty of opinion which they themselves asserted under the notion of Liberty of Conscience that voted against their Sentiments severely The King entertained those two that voted against his Judgement and Interest too with respect the one dying with a Character from his Master of an upright man and the other being dismissed upon his own earnest Petition with the honour of having been a good Servant as is evident from this humble Petition of his to His Majesty To the Kings Most Excellent Majesty The humble Petition of Your Majesties humble Servant George Crook Knight one of the Iustices of Your Bench Humbly ●heweth THat he having by the Gracious Favour of Your Majesties late Father of blessed Memory and of Your Majesty served Your Majesty and your said late Father as a Judge of Your Majesties Court of Common-Pleas and of Y●ur Highness Court called the Kings-Bench above this sixteen years is now become very old being above the age of 80 years and by reason of his said age and dullness of hearing and other infirmities whereby it hath pleased God to visit him he findeth himself disabled any longer to do that Service in your Courts which the Place requireth and he desireth to perform yet is desirous to live and die in your Majesties Favour His most humble Suit is That your Majesty will be pleased to dispence with his further Attendance in any your Majesties Courts that so he may retire himself and expect Gods good pleasure And during that little remainder of his life pray for your Majesties long Life and happy Reign George Crook And this Gracious Answer of his Majesty to him The KINGS Answer UPon the humble Address by the humble Petition of Sir George Crook Knight who after many years Service done both to Our deceased Father and Our Self as Our said Fathers Serjeant at Law and one of His and Our Judges of Our Benches at Westminster hath humbly besought Us by reason of the Infirmity of his old Age which disableth him to continue
for Prisoners to require● to the last whereof it was excellently well answered Prisoners sir I am not an ordinary Prisoner Reasons are not to be heard against Jurisdiction Shew me replyed the good King that Iurisdiction where Reason is not to be heard Flinging the Reply with this parting Memorial Well remember that the King is not suffered to give in his Reasons for the Liberty and Freedom of all his Subjects How pathetically he did Conjure them by all that was dear unto them to let him offer his Reasons in the Painted Chamber before the Lords and Commons leaving with them these weighty considerations That they should think long before they Resolved of great matters suddenly a little delay might give peace to the kingdom whereas a hasty Iudgment may bring on that trouble and perpetual inconvenience that the Child unborn may repent it Re-inforcing them with this great period I do require you as you will answer it at the dreadful day of Iudgment that you will consider it once again These noble circumstances together with those ignoble ones of their consulting about Hanging and Quartering him or Beheading him in his Robes Their proceeding after a wretched Harangue of B's alledging the Treasons of former times as presidents for this and wresting Law and History as their Preachers did the Scripture to the Sentence to which sixty seven Mechanick Regicides expressed their Assent by standing up their consultation about the time and place of executing that Sentence and the warrant sealed by forty eight of them we are the more brief in because they are so excellently published in a Royal Volume already Printed 1662. for Mr. Richard Royston his Majesties Bookseller and his Fathers faithful Servant who underwent as many dangers in publishing the Defences of the Royal Cause as others in maintaining the being of it Now they would not suffer him to live yet they let him not quietly dye envying him even his very solitudes which they disturbed with irreligious intrusions and interruping his Devotion as if they intended the loss of his soul as well as his life with two things he was equally averse to Impertinent Talk and Tobacco Much ado had the best of Princes to gain the priviledge of the worst Malefactor 1. To see his Children and Relations for the satisfaction of his minde Or 2. His Chaplain Bishop Iuxon to settle his Conscience the latter of whom being permitted to come not till eight of the Clock on Saturday night the incomparable Prince enjoying in the midst of tumults a calm serenity being full of his own Majesty and having a greater power over his temper than his enemies had over his person bespeaks him thus My Lord that you came no sooner I believe was not your fault but now you are come because these Rogues pursue my bloud you and I must consult how I may best part with it Indeed all the while he did all things becoming a Christian obliged by his calling to suffer not reflecting that he was a Prince to whom such usages were unusual born to command Since they could not keep the Bishop from coming to him they disturbed him both the next day Ian. 28. in Reading Divine Service and Preaching on Rom. 2. ult and at other times at Saint Iames's with scoffs and unnecessary and petulant disputes which he either answered irrefragrably or neglected patiently and at White-hall with the noise of the work-men that prepared the Scaffold he being brought thither on purpose Ian. 28. at night to dye often by every stroke of the Axe upon the Wood before he should dye once for all by one stroke of it upon himself Neither do they only disturb but either out of fear or design tempt him too with unworthy Articles and Conditions which being levelled at his Honor and Conscience as their other malices were at his Life After hearing one or two of them read to him he resolved not to sully the splendor of his former virtues with too impotent a desire of life His Soul composed to Religion as all others were to sorrow for the villany of the Actors in this Tragedy and their own sins especially their credulity and fear of the horrid consequence there being a dreadful calm all over the City that was neither tumult nor quiet all Sermons Prayers and Discourses full of horror and all Congregations overwhelmed with tears applied its self to such duties of Religion as Reading Praying Confession of Sins Supplication for Enemies Holy Communions and Conferences and such offices of humanity as sending Legacies to his Wife and exile Children and exhorting those at home admitted to him Ian. 29. to this purpose his last words to them being taken in writing and communicated to the world by the Lady Elizabeth his Daughter a Lady of most eminent endowments who though born to the supreamest fortune yet lived in continual tears and died confined at Carisbrook whither her Father was cheared in the Isle of Whight to this effect● A true Relation of the Kings Speech to the Lady Elizabeth and the Duke of Glocester the Day before his Death HIs Children being come to meet him he first gave his Blessing to the Lady Elizabeth and bad her remember to tell her Brother Iames when ever she should see him that it was his Fathers last desire that he should no more look upon Charles as his eldest Brother only but be obedient unto him as his Soveraign and that they should love one another and forgive their Fathers Enemies Then said the King to her Sweet-heart you 'l forget this No said she I shall never forget it whilst I live and pouring forth abundance of tears promised Him to write down the particulars Then the King taking the Duke of Glocester upon his knee said Sweet-heart now they will cut off thy Fathers head upon which words the Child looking very stedfastly on him Mark Child what I say They will cut off my head and perhaps make thee a King But mark what I say you must not be a King so long as your Brothers Charles and Iames do live for they will cut off your Brothers heads when they can catch them and cut off thy head too at last and therefore I charge you do not be made a King by them At which the Child sighing said I will be torn in pieces first which falling so unexpectedly from one so young it made the King rejoyce exceedingly Another Relation from the Lady Elizabeths own Hand WHat the King said to me Ian. 29. 1648. being the last time I had the happiness to see him he told me he was glad I was come and although he had not time to say much yet somewhat he had to say to me which he had not to another or leave in writing because he feared their Cruelty was such as that they would not have permitted him to write to me He wished me not to grieve and torment my self for him for that would be a Glorious death that he should dye it
To be disabled for ever after from Preaching at Court 6. To be for ever disabled of having any Ecclesiastical Dignity in the Church of England 7. To be uncapable of any secular Office or Preferment 8. That his books are worthy to be burned and his Majesty to be moved that it may be so in London and both the Universities According to the third Branch of this Censure he was brought to the Bar Iune twenty three and injoyned this Submission on his knees I do here in all sorrow of heart and true repentance acknowledge those many errors and indiscretions which I have committed in preaching and publishing the two Sermons of mine which I called Religion and Allegiance and my great● fault in falling upon this Theam again and handling the same rashly scandalously and unadvised in my own Parish-Church in St. Giles in the Fields the fourth of May last past I humbly acknowledge these three Sermons to have been full of dangerous Passages Inferences and scandalous Aspersions in most part of the same And I do humbly acknowledge the just proceedings of this honorable House against me and the just Sentence and Judgement passed upon me for my great offence And I do from the bottom of my heart crave pardon of God the King this Honorable House and the Common-weal in general and those worthy Persons adjudged to be reflected upon by me in particular for those great offences and errors And according to the first he was imprisoned in the Tower untill that Parliament was dissolved and then in recompence of his Sufferings and Services he was preferred 1. To the Rich Parsonage of St●mon-Rivers in Essex then void by Bishop Mountague his Fellow-sufferers Preferment Iuly 16. with a Dispensation to hold it with the Vicarage of St. Giles 2. To the Deanery of Worcester May. 1633. And 3. To the Bishoprick of St. Davids Dec. 1635. with a pardon drawn Ian. 1628. according to His Majesties Pardon of Grace to his Subjects at his Coronation with some particulars for the pardoning of all errors committed either in speaking writing or printing whereby he might be hereafter questioned How afterwards he was apprehended 1640. suddenly confined severely fined heavily plundered violently and persecuted from place to place continually that for the two last years of his Life not a week passed over his head without either a Message or an Injury he desired God not to remember against his Adversaries and adjured all his Friends to forget Onely the faults alledged against him must not be forgot for besides the aforesaid Sermons first warranted by a Bishop for the Press as containing only the same points delivered with offence from the Pulpit which Serjeant Heal delivered with applause in a Parliament who said That he marvelled the House stood so much either at the granting of a Subsidy or time of payment when all we have is her Majesties and she may lawfully at her pleasure take it from us and that she had as much right to all our Lands and Goods as to any Revenue of the Crown and that he had Presidents to prove it and to be suffered for once and the old demurrer is Deus non punit in id idem he was charged I. with Popish Innovations by which you are to understand his care to reduce the Cathedrals he belonged to to order and decency As for instance it is reckoned as his fault that he gave the Archbishop of Canterbury Sept. 24. 1635. this account concerning his Services in the Church of Worcester 1. An Altar-stone of Marble erected and set upon four Co●umes 2. The Wall behinde the Altar covered with Azure Coloured stuffe with a White silk lace down each seam 3. The Altar it self adorned with a Pall an upper and lower front 4. A perfect Inventory taken of all Ornaments Vestments and Implements of the Church as well sacra as focalia divers Vestments and other Ornaments of the Church as Copes Carpets Fronts c. being turned into Players Caps Coats and imployed to that use by the direction of Mr. Nathaniel Thomkins burnt and the Silver extracted put into the treasury of the Church 5. The Kings Scholars being forty usually coming tumultuously into the Chore ordered to come in Bimatim and to do reverence towards the Altar II. He was accused for conversing with Papists whereof many in his Parish loved his Company which was no more than his prudent civility to gain them by his worth and addresses to him who were reported to have gained him to them when all that knew him understood well that like the Lapwing he fluttered furthest from his nest having at once the closest and therefore the smoothest way of conveying his Design and Project III. He was looked upon as sociable and jovial whereby you must understand a good nature ready to communicate its self in instruction to the ignorant in free discourses to the wise in civil mirth and a becoming chearfulness among his friends usually saying at his Table that there were three things requisite to one good Meal to pray heartily to eat heartily and in a sober way to laugh heartily In an orderly Hospitality among his rich Neighbours and Charity among his poor ones especially the modest whose craving he expected not but prevented some grounds will rather burn than chap though otherwise he was as severe in reducing disorderly Beggars as he was pittiful in relieving impotent and unfortunate Expectants usually saying That King Edward the sixth was as Charitable in granting Bridewell for the punishment of Sturdy Rogues as in bestowing St. Thomas Hospital for the relief of the poor and helpless Liking the Picture of Charity drawn with Honey in the one hand to feed Bees and a Whip in the other to drive away Drones In a frakness and freedom among his Tenants whose thriving he consulted as much as his own esteeming three particulars the honor of a Church 1. Punctual Discipline 2. An Exemplary Clergy And 3. Improving Tenants King William Rufus not so tender in other sacred points as he was conscientious in this had two Monks come to him to buy an Abbots place who outvied each other in the sums they offered while a third Monk stands by and saith nothing to whom the King said what wilt thou give for the place Not a Penny answered he for it is against my Conscience Then quoth the King thou of the three best deservest the Place and thou shalt have it Three Tenants at one time standing in competition about a considerable Lordship to be Let by the Doctor one offering a great Fine and a small Rent the second proposing a small Fine and a great Rent and the third no Fine and a good reasonable Rent with the improvement of the Vicarage and the Church Nay said the Doctor this is my Tenant that comes not to ensnare me with great overtures for my self but to treat with me upon fair proposals for the Church expecting nothing from him but his prayers to God for the
Sickness to prepare for death some years before he died he did so inure himself to devotion That all th● days of his appointed time he waited until his change should come expecting at all times that which might come at any time and must come at one time than which nothing more certain nothing more uncertain He died at Venice 1646. Marmora Arundeliana Quae nec annorum series nec fl●mma vorax toti minitans rogum orbi Ne● popularium rabies abolere queant Virtutes nempe aere perenniores In Piam memoriam Thomae Comitis Arundeliae Surriae ex saecunda nobilitatis stirpe maxima nempe Howardorum familia oriundi Thoma jam nobiliori Cui generosa mens rerum hominum peritissima ad Intimae rationis potius quam exteriorum morum Normam composita ●ui verbum juramentum erat jus fas vitae duces Sancti pectoris recessus more Imperatorio pauca dixit sed for●ia nobilio●i beatus Laconismi utpote ●ui quot verba tot sententa quot sententiae ●ot sacrament● in vicinium tam potens ipse quam in ipsum Rex mensa magnus elimosinis ne vel Insimo injuria notus sed summis beneficio Illius familia collegium erat ubi disciplinam vivebant bonae Indolis Iuvenes non luxum THE Life and Death OF Sir FRANCIS CRAWLEY THIS Gentleman who with Zorastes laughed at his birth and death was born at Lutton in Bedford-shire the very same day and hour as it was computed that Ploiden died at London the very reason why his Father recommended so earnestly and he embraced so willingly the study of the Law than which no study more knotty he would say to the Novices that were first admitted to it none more pleasant to the Ancients that had experience in it wherein he profited as he might have done in any profession since very happy in those two qualities Secrecy and Celerity the two great wheels of considerable performances improving faster than fame the wings of industry surprizing men beyond those of fame His deterity in Logick in the University promised him an able Pleader at the Inns of Court It was his observation that the fashioning of a Mans Head to the minute subtilties of a Sophism opened and fitted it to entertain the distinct and least circumstances of a Case He wore a signet Ring wherein was Ingraven his famous Ancestors Picture with better success than Sc●pio Alsricanus did that which carried his Fathers Face which was taken off by the people of Rome because he was unworthy to wear his Fathers Portaiture that did not follow his Pattern it being not fit his Picture should go without his Virtue One part of his time he spent with his Acquaintance and the other with his Books the one bringing him to practice as the other enabled him for it He studied the English Nobility and Gentry for his pleasure observing their Alliance in Heraldry and for his profit noting their correspondence in Interest being as able to put suitable Persons together to make a Party as any Herald was to put Kindred together to frame a Pedigree His Study was like his Converse rather well contrived than toilsom his Art not his Drudgery his soft and fair went far in Labyrintho properantes ipsa velocit as Implicat He is not the likeliest man to run out of a Maze that runs fastest He was as rich in his observations of his own age no remark being missed in his Table-book as he was in his History of Former Ages Happy in himself more in his Relations especially those he called his Blessings as if peculiar to him his good Wife and excellent Children of whom he was loving not fond One point of his devotion was remarkable that he never met a person subject to infirmities but in stead of deriding them in the other man he blessed God that he had not occasion to grieve for them in himself And another of his instructions to those about him notable that it s not the least a man skillful to have so much command of him● self as to be contented to submit to the commands of others The Courtesies he bestowed were gifts never remembred by him those he received loans never forgotten The Discourse he loved was that which had left of other mens vices and most of their virtues without censure of Superiors scorn of Inferiors vain-glory or a supercilious reservednesse when men are rather Riddles than Company in the persons themselves Liberal he was of every thing especially of good advice covetous of doing good He would hardly receive an ill opinion of any and more hardly expresse it He dispensed Justice to his friends not as a friend but as a friend answering when it was told him that that was not the way to be rich That it would never repent him for being the poorer for doing justice He neither incouraged an ill-inclined person by overmuch mildnesse nor discouraged a well-inclined one by extream severity He could pardon a man that he caught in a mistake for it was a common frailty commending in him the acknowledgment of it as a great virtue the noblest thing that St. Augustine did was his Retractation but reject him that stood in it as a hopelesse wretch a man he called not constant but obstinate it being more to justifie a fault than to fall into it His Apparel was neither mimically in fashion nor ridiculously out neither vain nor singular His short divertisement fitted him for business rather than rob●bed him of time he would say to his Sons That they who make recreation a business will think business a toil To be without an estate and not want to want and not desire to manage well a great estate and to bear a mean to be sensible and patient not to grow great by corruption nor to grow proud with greatnesse not to ebbe and flow with a mans condition and to be neither supercilious nor dejected to take the changes of the world without any change in a mans self not to defer death but sweeten it to be neither loath to leave the world nor afraid to give account for it were qualities that he admired in others and lived to be Master of himself He never commended a man to his face but before others to create in them a good opinion of him nor dispraised any man behind his back but to himself to work in him a reformation of himself avoiding the appearance of evil left he should do ill unawares or hear ill undeservedly He could not with patience hear what was unseasonable or unsavory arguing want of goodnesse or judgment Speak well was his rule or say nothing so if others be not bettered by thy silence they will not be worse by the discourse Being more intent upon knowing himself than letting others know him he found that the greatest part of what he knew not was the least of what he knew He was as careful that others should be
maintain it the most precious Jewel that was ever shewn or seen in Lumbard-street all Ministers are Gods Husband-men but some of them can only plough in soft ground whose shares and coultres will turn edge in a hard point of Divinity no ground came amiss to Mr. Shute whether his Text did lead him to Controversial or positive Divinity having a strain without straining for it of native Eloquence like the Paracelsian who could draw Oil out of the slints of Controversies He spake that which others studied for he was for many years and that most justly highly esteemed of his Parish till in the beginning of our late Civil Wars some began to neglect him distasting wholsome Meat well dressed by him meerly because their mouths were out of taste by that general distemper which in his time was but an Ague afterwards turned to a Feaver and since is turned to a Frensie in our Nation I insist thereon the rather for the comfort of such godly Ministers who now suffer in the same nature wherein Mr. Shute did before indeed no Servant of God can simply and directly comfort himself in the offerings of others as which hath something of envy therein yet may he do it consequently in this respect because thereby he apprehends his own condition herein consistent with Gods love and his own Salvation seeing other precious Saints taste with him of the same affliction as many godly Ministers do now-a-days whose sickles are now hung up as useless and neglected though before these Civil Wars they reaped the most in Gods harvest Mr. Shute dyed Anno Domini 1640. and was buryed with great Solemnity in his own Church Mr. Vdall preaching his Funeral Sermon Since his death his excellent Sermons are set forth on some part of Genesis and pity it is there is no more extant of his worthy endeavors It must not be forgotten how retiring a little before his death into the Countrey some of his Parishoners came to visit him whom he chearfully entertained with this expression I have taught you my dear stock for above thirty years how to live and now in a very short time how to die he was as good as his word herein for within an hour he in the prefence of some of them was peaceably dissolved This famous man with his Brothers 1. Nathamel bred in Christ Colledge in Cambridge an excellent Scholar and solid Preacher though nothing of his extant besides Corona Charitatis a Sermon at the Funeral of Mr. Fishbourne living many years at St. Mildreds a painful and careful Minister and dying 1638. Dr. Holdsworth most excellently preaching his Funeral Sermon on this ●ext We have this our treasure in Earthen vessels 2. Robert Minister of Lyn. 3. Thomas Minister of Chester and Timothy lately Minister at Exeter are a Confutation of the slander raised upon Clergy-mens Children it being a question whether they were more happy in their good Father called commonly the Reverend Vicar of Gizlewich or he in so eminent Sons Great though not equally set in conveniently distanced Candlesticks One in Cambridge they are the words of a Cambridge man being demanded his judgement of an excellent Sermon at the University-Church returned that it was an uncomfortable leaving no hope of imitation for such as should succeed him In this sense must we allow these men uncomfortable men though the sweetest tempered men in the world possessing such as shall follow them in time with a despair to equal them in eminence Thus much of this good man is dispersedly publick already by others something must be added by us who have sate under his Ministry twenty four years being Baptized Chatechized and Marryed by him the title of whose Acquaintance and Friends we as ambitiously affect as Fulke Lord Gr●vill did that of being Sir Philip Sidneys Friend when he ordered his Memorial should be That he was Servant to Queen Elizabeth Privy-Counsellor to King James and friend to Sir Philip Sidney One he was that would not suffer us to spend our whole time to know what we should be but to be as careful to be what we knew bidding us beware of the Ricket-Christianity in head-notions and Paralletick Religion in lip-labors that bid us follow our Places to discharge our Consciences as well as to improve our state rather to do good than grow rich injoyning one of us to give judgment and not sell it and taking nothing to do an unjust thing and give nothing to injoy it No sin so great he thought as that we felt little as little want of feeling is a symptom of dying only the misery is they that loose feeling in regard of sin cannot do so in respect of punishment the less the occasion of sin the greater the nature of it He did endeavor to sweeten Religion by his own conversation and perswade others to do so to remove the old calumny and the new scandal Spiritus Calvinianus est spiritus Melancholicus study rather to make thy self fit for employment was his rule than to think thy self so adding against buying of places that they that grew great by buying continued so by selling if a man buys a place he deserves not he wrongs others if that he deserves himself measure your Wealth by your minde not Estate was his Citizens rule and your expence by your Estate and not his by your Estate lest while you fear to be thought mean you become so Let your thoughts be such to your selves that you need not be ashamed to have God know them this was a rule in Devotion and words such to God as you need not be afraid men should hear them that the one may not do you harm by an ill habit nor the other to others by an ill example It was his own comfort that he was inwardly sincere and others benefit that he was outwardly exemplary his discourse wherein he would neither undertake nor talk much was rather profitable than curious not for applause to hear well but for use to do well He asserted the utmost of Christian Liberty being sensible with Cardan that there was no Superstition so dangerous as theirs that avoided Superstition but practised the least of it not going to the farthest point of lawfulness because as the East West-Indies meet in a point that lay upon the borders of unlawfulness and he that will do all that he may may do what he ought not he measured his promises by his ability and his performances though to his prejudice by his promises an honest man doth not promise more than he means nor a wise-man more than he is able though a great Scholar his greatest knowledge he reckoned that of himself and though an able man yet valued it his greatest ability that he conquered himself he did good as privately as others do evil Good counsel like charity begins at home he that will do good upon others must be good himself otherwise it is an easier matter to give good counsel than to follow it He would condemn
Empire it ●lourisheth in a too universally dilated Learning being not faithful to the settlements either of Policy or Religion it being no less ready to discover blemishers in the one than incongruities in the other Sophisters saith my smart Author like the Country of the Switz being as able upon the least advantage proposed to engage on the wrong side as on the right As to go no further this excellent Personage being among the Demagogues that had been for twelve years silenced and were now to play the prize in Parliament and shew their little twit-twat but tedious faculties of speaking makes the bitterest Invectives against the Governors and Government of the Church that ever was penned in English which though designed by him its thought to allay the fury of the Faction by some compliance with it carryed things beyond the moderation and decency of that Assembly which he made too hot for himself retiring in cooler thoughts as many more that like Brutus could not lay the storms he had raised to Oxford where his Pen was more honorably employed in detecting the fundamental of Rome their Infallibility and countermining the main props of Westminster their Hypocrisie this as Secretary the other as Student in both laying open the little pretensions whereby the poor people were insnared in their Civil and Religious liberties Much was the gall always in his Ink and very sharp his Pen but even flowing and full his style such as became him whose Learning was not an unsettled Mass of reading that whirled up and down in his head but fixed observations that tempered with solid prudence and experience were the steady Maxims of his soul fitted for all times and occasions he having sate as some Noble mens Sons use to do formerly in the House of Lords behind the Chair of State from his very Childhood and owning a large heart capable of making that universal inspection into things that much becomes a Gentleman being a Master of every thing he discoursed of Insomuch that his general knowledge husbanded by his wit and set off by his Meine and Carriage attracted many to come as far as to see him as he professed he would go to see Mr. Da●llee which rendred him no less necessary then admirable at Court until his Curiosity engaging him at Newbury he was strangely slain there dying as he lived till then between his Friends and his Enemies to the Kings great grief who valued him because he understood his Parts and Services in the Treaty at Oxford where he was eminent for two things the continuing of Propositions and the concealing of Inclinations though no man so passionate for his design as never enduring that hope that holds resolution so long in suspence but ever allaying it with that fear that most commonly adviseth the best by supposing the worst His usual saying was I pitty unlearned Gentlemen in a rainy day He was Father to Henry Lord Faulkland whose quick and extraordinary parts and notable spirit performed much and promised more having a great Command in the Countrey where he was Lord Lieutenant a general respect in the House where he was Member a great esteem at Court with his Majesty and his Royal Highness the Duke of York where he was both Wit and Wisdom When there was the first opportunity offered to honest men to act he laid hold of it and got in spight of all opposition to a thing called a Parliament By the same token that when some urged he had not sowed his wilde Oats he is said to reply If I have not I may sow them in the House where there are Geese enough to pick them up And when Sir I. N. should tell him he was a little too wilde for so grave a service he is reported to reply Alas I am wilde and my Father was so before me and I am no Bastard as c. In which contention he out-did the most active Demagogues at their own weapon speaking when Major Huntington and his followers were for the Long-Parliament Sir I. N. L. S. were for the Secluded Members my Lord carryed all the County for an absolute Free Parliament which he lived to see and act in so successfully that he was Voted generally higher in Trust and Services had he not been cut off in the prime of his years as much missed when dead as beloved when living A great instance of what a strict Education for no man was harder bred a general Converse and a Noble Temper can arrive unto and what an Orator can do in a Democracy where the affections of many is to be wrought upon rather then the judgements of few to be convinced A Golden tongue falling under a subtile head under such a constitution hath great influence upon the whole Nation Vi sparsos heroum cineres tumulosque dividuos aeternitati vindicet Monumentum hoc aere perennius memoriae posteris sacrum Condidit L. M. Q. G. Walters tres ultimos Faulklandiae comites extremos jam an helantis naturae conatus lege attende mirare primum prudentiae Civilis normam secundum rectae rationis mensuram tertium ingenii exemplar Ideum Hactenus homines natura genuit nunc Heroas Provectiori mundo Ingenium Crevit Triumviratus animi vi magna Praegrandi spiritu eruditione omni faria Intra fidem supra opinionem ubi viataro et spera ad summa collimani ut mediocria assequaris tot nempe habes in Heroibus nostris documenta quot gesta THE Life and Death Of the most Illustrious JAMES Duke of RICHMOND A Noble person little understood and therefore not easily described modestly reserving himself from men when he sincerely approved himself unto God Great in his Ancestors honor greater in his own virtue and greatest of all in that like the Star he wore the higher he was the less he desired to seem affecting rather the worth than the pomp of nobleness Therefore his courtesie was his nature not his craft and his affableness not a base servile popularity or ambitious insinuation but the native gentleness of his disposition and his true valor of himself He was not a stranger to any thing worth knowing but best acquainted with himself and in himself rather with his weaknesses for Caution than his abilities for Action Hence he is not so forward in the Traverses of War as in Treaties of Peace where his honor enobled his Cause and his moderation advanced it He and my Lord of Southampton managing the several overtures of Peace at London Oxford and Vxbridge with such honourable freedom and prudence that they were not more deservedly regarded by their friends than importunally courted by their enemies who seeing they were such could not be patient till they were theirs though in vain their Honors being impregnable as well against the Factions kindness as against their power At Conferences his conjectures were as solid as others judgments his strict observation of what was past furnishing him for
understood he the interest of all his places and resolutely he maintained them What saith he shall the Liberties of Westminster he infringed when the chief Favorite is Steward and the Lord Keeper D●an and I the Contemptible man that must be trampled on When he was in trouble what passion what insinuation what condescension hath he at command when Petitioned to how quickly he looked through men and business how exactly would he judge and how resolutely conclude without an immediate intimation from his Majesty or the Duke Many eyes were upon him and as many eyes were kept by him upon others being very watchful on all occasions to accommodate all emergencies and meet with all humors always keeping men in dependance on the Duke according to this intimation of his Cabal 287. Let him hold it but by your Lordships favor not his own power A good way had he been constant to it the neglect whereof undid him for designing the promotion of Dr. Price to the Bishoprick of Armagh he moved it to the Duke who told him it was disposed of to Dr. Vsher. Whereupon he went his own way to advance that man and overthrew himself for then his Lord let him feel what he had threatned my Lord Bacon when he advanced him That if he did not owe his Preferment always to his favor he should owe his fall to his frown The peremptoriness of his judgment rendred him odious his compliance with Bristol suspected and his Sermon at King Iames's Funeral his tryal rather than his Preferment obnoxious His spirit was great to act and too great to suffer It was prudence to execute his Decrees against all opposition while in power it was not so to bear up his miscarriages against all Authority while in disgrace A sanguine Complexion with its Resolutions do well in pursuit of success Flegm and its patience do better in a Retreat from micarriages This he wanted when it may be thinking fear was the passion of King Charles's Government as well as King Iames he seconded his easie fall with loud and open discontents and those discontents with a chargeable defence of his Servants that were to justifie them and all ●●th that unsafe popularity invidious pomp and close irregularity that laid him open to too many active persons that watched him Whether his standing out against Authority to the perplexing of the Government in the Star Chamber in those troublesome times his entertainment and favor for the Discontented and Non-Conformists his motions for Reformation and Alteration in twelve things his hasty and unlucky Protestation in behalf of the Bishops and following actions in England and Wales where it s all mens wonders to hear of his M●ruit su● 〈…〉 had those private grounds and reasons that if the Bishop could have spoken with the King but half an hour he said would have satisfied him the King of Kings only knoweth to whom he hath given I hope a better account than any Historian of his time hath given for him But I understand better his private inclinations than his publick actions the motions of his nature than those of his power the Conduct of the one being not more reserved and suspicious than the effects of the other manifest and noble for not to mention his Libraries erected and furnished at St. Iohns and Westminster his Chappel in Lincoln Colledge the Repairs of his Collegiate Church his Pensions to Scholars more numerous than all the Bishops and Noble-men besides his Rent Charges on all the Benefices in his gift as Lord Keeper or Bishop of Lincoln to maintain hopeful youth according to a Statute in that Case provided Take this remarkable instance of his Munificence that when Du Moulin came over he calleth his Chaplain now the Right Reverend Father in God Iohn Lord Bishop of Coventry and Litchfield and telleth him he doubted the good man was low wishing him to repair to him with some Money and his respects with assurance that he would wait upon him himself at his first leisure The excellent Doctor rejoyceth that he could carry him no less than twenty pounds The Noble Bishop replyed he named not the summe to sound his Chaplains minde adding that twenty pounds was neither fit for him to give nor for the Reverend Forreigner to receive Carry said he an hundred pounds He is Libelled by common fame for unchaste though those that understood the privacies and casualties of his Infancy report him but one degree removed from a Misogonist Though to palliate his infirmities he was most compleat in Courtly addresses The conversableness of this Bishop with Women consisted chiefly if not only in his Treatments of great Ladies and Persons of honor wherein he did personate the compleatness of Courtesie to that Sex otherwise a Woman was seldom seen in his house which therefore had alwayes more Magnificence than Neatness sometimes defective in the Punctilio's and Niceties of Daintiness lying lower than Masculine Cognizance and as level for a Womans eye to espy as easie for her hand to amend He suffereth for conniving at Puritans out of hatred to Bishop Loud and for favoring Papists out of love to them yet whatever he offered King Iames when the Match went on in Spain as a Counsellor or whatever he did himself as a Statesman such kindness he had for our Liturgy that he translated and Printed it at his own Cost into Spanish and used it in the Visitation of Melvin when sick to his own peril in the Tower and such resolution for Episcopacy that his late Majesty of blessed Memory said once to him My Lord I commend you that you are no whit daunted with all Disasters but are zealous in defending your Order Please it your Majesty replyed the Archbishop I am a true Welshman and they are observed never to run away till their Generall first forsakes them no fear of any flinching while your Majesty doth countenance our Cause His Extraction was Gentile and Antient as appeared from his Ancestors estate which was more than he could purchase without borrowing when at once Lord Keeper Bishop of Lincoln and Dean of Westminster His minde great and resolute insomuch that he controuled all other advices to his last to his loss in Wales and daunted Sir Iohn Cook as you may see in his Character to his honor in England His Wariness hath these Arguments 1. That he would not send the Seal to the King but under Lock and Key 2. That being to depute one to attend his place at the Coronation of King Charles the First he would not name his Adversary Bishop Laud to gratifie him nor yet any other to displease the King but took a middle way and presented his Majesty a List of the Prebendaries to avoid any exception referring the Election to his Majesty himself 3. That he proposed a partial Reformation of our Church to the Parliament to prevent an utter extirpation by it 4. That he exposed others to the censure of the Parliament 1625.
his Devotion in behalf of the Nation now under its great Crisis and hopeful method of Cure But on the fourth of April a sharp Fit of the Stone seized him which put him who at other times would say I am not dying yet into such apprehensions of his danger that he told the mournful Spectators of his agonies That he should leave them in Gods hands who would so provide that they should not finde his removal any loss adding That they should turn their prayers for his recovery into intercessions for his happy change I pray said he very passionately let some of your fervor be employed that way Being pressed to make it his own request to God that he might be continued to serve the Church he allowed this a part of his devotion viz. That if his life might be useful to any one soul he besought Almighty God to continue him and by his grace to ennable him to employ that life he so vouchsafed industriously and successfully Adding for the Church that sincere performance of Christian duties so much decayed to the equal supplanting and scandal of that holy Calling that those who professed that Faith might live according to the rules of it and to the form of Godliness superadd the power of it restraining the ex tempore irregularities of his friends ejaculations with that grave saying Let us call on God in the voice of his Church But now through the long suppression of Urine the bloud being grown Thin and Serous and withal Eager and Tumultuous through the mixture of Heterogeneous parts this excellent person fell to a violent bleeding whereat the standers by being amazed he said chearfully It was a mercy and that to bleed to death was one of the most desireable passages out of this world and found no ease but that the pain of the Humors stoppage relieved the Stone the Lethargy that and the Flux of Bloud the Lethargy which variety of tortures exercised not only his patience but his thankfulness too crying out in his greatest extreamities Blessed be God blessed be God He made his Will with chearfulness the oversight whereof he intrusted with his intimate and approved friend Dr. Hen●hman now Lord Bishop of London and received the Sacrament April 20. and 22. then Good-friday and Easter-day being very much concerned that he could not be with the Congregation and saying very passionately Alas must I be Excommunicated So far was he from their opinion who in their most healthful days make this not their Penance but their election and choice April 25. he bled with greater violence than before beyond all remedy by applications or revulsives until the torrent ceased the fountain being exhausted and the good Doctor became so weak so cold and so dispirited that he had strength enough only to persevere in his Devotions which he did to the last moment of his life a few minutes before his death breathing out those words which best became his Christian life Lord make haste The same day that commenced the Nations happiness the Convention of a Free-Parliament concluded his life just when it was like to be most comfortable to himself and serviceable to the Church As if this great Champion of Religion and pattern of all virtue were reserved for exigence and hazzard for persecution and suffering for he resigned his pure and active soul to him that gave it April 25. 1660. HIS CHARACTER A Soul that dwelt nobly in a strong and comely Body whose Proportions were just and graceful his Face was serene and majestick his Eye quick and sprightful his Complexion clear and florid and the whole Man abating the redness of his Hair which yet elsewhere might be an advancing to him a beauty delicate but vigorous and patient of the severest toil and hardship never approaching the fire never subject to any infirmities save Feavers wherein yet his temperance relieved him until immoderate study altered his constitution Nobly was his soul seated and noble it was and just to the promise of his outward shape 1. His Sight was admirably quick and distinct His Ear was accurate and he naturally able to perform his part to a Harpsicon or Theorbo in the relieved intervals of his day labours and night studies 3. His Elocution was free and graceful prepared at once to charm and command his audience when impaired at his Country charge reduced by his late sacred Majesty with equal skill and candor to its natural modulation 4. His Invention was rich and flowing outgoing his dexterous Amanuensis and overflowing his Periods an hours meditation at night until he observed that prejudicial to his sleep and then in the morning suffced for two Sermons a Sunday 8. or 9. hours dispatched most of his small Tracts as that touching Episcopacy drawn immediately upon my Lord of Salisbury late of Winchesters motion in a friends Chamber who professeth that sitting by all the while he remembreth not that he took off Pen from Paper till he had done five sheets having amidst his other diversions been frequently his own days work● His Memory was more faithful to things than to words it being harder with him to get one Sermon by heart than to Pen twenty 6. His speech was so happy that being defective only in its redundance his late Sacred Majesty the greatest Judge and Master of English Rhetorick in this later Age ennobled him and it with this Character That he was the most Natural Orator he ever heard 7. His judgment was strong in his Writings piercing in business equally able to unravel the designs of others and model his own though as the excellent Author of his life observeth the finding out the similitudes of different things wherein the fancy is conversant is usually a bar to the discerning the disparities of similar appearances which is the business of discretion and that store of notions which is laid up in Memory assists rather confusion than choice upon which ground the greatest Clerks are frequently not the wisest men yet the incomparable Doctor owned at once the highest phansie and the deepest judgment Great his natural abilities greater his acquired through the whole Circle of the Arts accurate and Eloquent he was in the Tongues exact in Ancient and Modern Writers well versed in Philosophy better in Philology Learned in School-Divinity a Master in Church Antiquity made up of Fathers Councels Ecclesiastical Historians and Lyturgicks Eminent indeed his Intellectuals more eminent his Moralls for 1. His temper though sanguine which he observed a Providence was chaste to an Antipathy against the very appearances of wantonness twice his Houshold cares inclined him to a Marriage yet he forbore the first time out of respect to the Lady for whom a better Fortune had a kindness and the second time upon St Paul and St. Ieromes advice for the present exigence ever since espousing what he preserved inviolate unto his death the more eminent perfection of spotless Virgin chastity 2. His appetite was
Ireton By what authority and being answered By a Vote of a Council of War grounded on an Order of Parliament by which Order all that were found in Arms were to be proceeded against as Traytors Replied Alas you deceive your selves make us Tray●ors you cannot but we are Conquered and must be what you please to make us and desired time to prepare himself till the morrow Which being refused telling them he desired it not out of any desire of life or fear of death for said he I scorn to ask my my life at your hands but settle his Soul and Estate He told them he should be quickly ready as after a most heavenly Prayer he was saying He had often looked death in the face and now they should see he durst dye Adding when he had pulled down his Hat opened his Breast the dwelling of Courage and Loyalty and set his Hands to his Side I am ready for you now Rebels do your worst whereat being shot in four places he fell down immediately dead THE Life and Death OF Sir GEORGE LISLE SIR George Lisle an honest Booksellers Son great streams run sometimes from muddy Springs that having Trailed a Pike in the Low Countries by keeping good Society and improving Company Ever as he would say consorting with those most by whom he might accomplish himself best By generous pleasing and naturally bounteous disposition by his great skill above his years gained by observation in the modern and ancient Militia excelling in the Command of Foot as Sir Charles Lucas did that of Horse By the great sense he had of Honor and Justice was admitted into Inferior Commands in England where his Valor without Oftentation his Just and Chearful Commands without a Surly Imperiousness rendred him so infinitely beloved and observed by his Souldiers that with his Discipline and Courage he led as in a Line upon any services through the greatest danger and difficulty that he was preferred to a Superior in which capacity he had one quality of an obliging and knowing Commander that never to the hour of his death would he Engage his Souldiers in that Action wherein he would not hazard his own person as at the last Newbery Fight before his Majesties face who then Knighted him for it leading his men in his Shirt both that they might see his Valor and it being Night discern his Person from whom they were to receive direction and courage at Brambdean-heath where he gained and kept an advantageous Hill against all Wallers Army at the first Newbery Fight where he Commanded the Forelorn-hope at Nazeby where he and the Lord Bard led the left-hand Tertia of Foot and at the two Garrisons he held with the last surrendring them with Oxford He was approved and admired for his Judgement Direction Dispatches and Chearfulness Virtues that had special influence upon every common Souldier especially in his three great Charges in each whereof he came to the Butt●end of the Musquet for the first whereof his Word was The Crown for the second Prince Charles and for the third The Duke of York resolving to have gone over all his Majesties Children as long as he had a Man to fight for them or there was a Rebel to fight against them Being in most of the Sallies in Colchester and having three times scowred the Leaguer with so much hazard that he was twice taken Prisoner but rescued he was to second Sir Charles Lucas as 〈◊〉 always desired to imitate him saying over his Corps How soon is a brave spirit expired we shall be together presently Dispatching some Tokens to his friends in London and expostulating with them that his life should be taken away in cold-bloud when he had saved so many of theirs in hot and praying for his Majesty and the Kingdom he entertained grim death with a sprightly countenance and heroick posture saying Now then Rebels and Traytors do your worst It will be Embalming enough to these deserving persons that King Charles the First upon the news of their death wept Monument enough that the very Parliament was amazed at it Epitaph enough that a great Man and a great Traveller too protested That he saw many dye but never any with more Souldier or Christian-like resolution THE Life and Death OF ARTHUR Lord CAPEL Father to the Right Honorable ARTHUR Earl of ESSEX HIS privacy before the War was passed with as much popularity in the Country as his more publick appearance in it was with Valor and Fidelity in the Field In our too happy time of Peace none more Pious Charitable and Munificent In these more unhappy of our differences none more Resolved Loyal and Active the people loved him so well that they chose him one of their Representatives and the King esteemed him so much that he sent for him as one of his Peers in Parliament wherein the King and People agreed in no one thing save a just kindness to my Lord Capel who was one of those Excellent Gentlemen whose gravity and discretion the King said He hoped would allay and fix the Faction to a due temperament guiding some mens well-meaning zeal by such rules of Moderation as are best both to preserve and restore the health of all States and Kingdoms keeping to the dictates of his Conscience rather than the importunities of the People to what was just than what was safe save only in the Earl of Straffords Case wherein he yielded to the publick necessity with his Royal Master but repented with him too sealing his Contrition for that miscarriage with his blood when he was more troubled for his forced Consent to that brave Persons Death than for loosing his own Life which he ventured through the first War and by his Engagement in the second For after the Surrender of Oxford he retired to his own house but could not rest there until the King was brought home to his which all England endeavouring as one man my Lord adventured himself at Colchester to extremity yielding himself upon condition of Quarter which he urged by the Law of Armes That Law that as he said on the Scaffold governeth the World and against the Law of God and Man they are his own words for keeping the Fifth Commandement dying on the Scaffold at Westminster with a courage that became a clear conscience and a resolution befiting a good Christian expressing that judicious piety in the Chamber of Meditation at his Death that he did in his Book of Meditations in his Life a piety that as it appeared by his dismission of his Chaplain and the formalities of that times Devotion before he came to the Scaffold was rather his inward frame and habit than outward ostentation or pomp from the noble Sentiments whereof as the Poet not unhappily alluding to his Arms. A Lion Rampant in Field Gules between three Crosses expresseth it Our Lyon-like Capel undaunted stood Beset with Crosses in a Field of Blood As one that affrighted death rather than
his preferment and a Papist afterwards though he was the same godly and orthodox man always he died 1649. dividing his estate equally between his relations to whom he was obliged in nature and distressed Ministers for whom he had compassion as a fellow● sufferer of whom I may say as it was of Dr. Reynolds that it must be a good heart that kept so good a head employed rather in rescuing old truths than in broaching new errors Dr. Iohn Richardson extracted of an ancient and worshipful Family in Cheshire brought up in Dublin and made Bishop of Ardah in Ireland peculiar for a very grave countenance and his being extraordinary textuary by the same token that they who would not let him Preach on the Scripture in the late times desired his help to Comment upon it for his is the painful Comment in the larger Annotations upon Ezekiel Many the gifts in these times bestowed upon him and much in Almes his deep poverty abounding to the riches of liberaliy as our Saviour relieved others though living upon others relief himself when living and considerable his Legacies especially to Dublin-colledge when dead which happened in the year of our Lord 1653. and of his age 74. being observed never to have desired any preferment but to have been sought for to many it being his rule to discharge his present place well knowing that God and good men use this method viz. to make those who have been faithful in a little Rulers over much as he was to the great benefit of the places he came where being as good and dexterous a Lawyer as Clerk he compounded Differences discharged Annuities and Pensions set up Presidents of Frugality built Houses that he long Inhabited not Dido being feigned in love with Aeneis when dead many years to salve the Anticronism it is said it was with his Picture truly I never saw this Reverend Prelates Picture but I was in love with him for his Portracture sake in Paper as I am with God for his Image sake in him Mr. William Lyford Bachelor of Divinity born and bred in Piesmer in Berk-shire preferred first Fellow of Magdalen-colledge to which he restored in way of Legacy what he had taken for the resignation of his Fellowship to his great grief many years in a way of bribe and thence by the favour of the Earl of Bristol who had a great value for him Minister of Sherburne where he divided 1. His people to two parts 1. The weak which he Catechised and Principled in the Doctrines of the Church for many years before the wars whereof he drew a Scheme since 2. The strong whom he confirmed by his exact Sermons his modesty visible in his comely countenance and the meekness and prudence of his spirit in his courteous behaviour 2. His time into nine hours a day for Study three for visits and conferences three for prayers and devotion two for his affairs and the rest for his refreshment 3. His estate into one third part for the present necessity of his family another third part for future provision and the third for pious uses and his Parish into twenty eight parts to be visited in twenty eight days every month leaving knowledge where he found ignorance justice where he found oppression peace where he found contention and order where he found irregularity planting true Religion apart from all fond Opinions the reason why though I have heard at a solemn Assembly 1658. at Oxford him charactered for a man of an upright life great gravity and severity by the same token that it was wondred there that so holy a man so much acquainted with God as he was should doat so much these are their own words on such sapless things as a King Bishops Common-prayer and Ceremonies and he to win them over used much their more innocent Phrases Expressions and Method yet he suffered much from the Faction in his Name and Ministry dying 1653. Mr. William Oughtred a native Scholar and Fellow of Eaton bred in Kings-colledge Cambridge and his Mathematical Studies wherein by Study and Travel he so excelled that the choicest Mathematicians of our age own much of their skill to him whose house was full of young Gentlemen that came from all parts to be instructed by him leading him to a retired and abstracted life preferred onely by Thomas Earl of Arundel to Albury in Surrey where having a strong perswasion upon principles of Art much confirmed by the Scheme of his Majesties return in 1660. sent his Majesty some years before by the Bishop of Avignon that he should see the King restored he saw it to his incredible joy and had his Dimittis a month after Iune 30 1660. and the 86. year of his age Much requested to have lived in Italy France Holland when he was little observed in England as facetious in Greek and Latine as solid in Arithmetique Astronomy and the sphere of all Meatures Musick c. exact in his stile as in his judgment handling his Cube and other Instruments at eighty as steadily as others did at thirty owning his he said to temperance and Archery principling his people with plain and solid truths as he did the world with great and useful Arts advancing new Inventions in all things but Religion Which in its old order and decency he maintained secure in his privacy prudence meekness simplicity resolution patience and contentment Dr. Richard Stuart a Gentleman of a great extraction and good education born at Pate-shull in Northamptonshire near N●●vesby to Navelshy in the midst of England where was born Mart●● de Pate-shull who being a Divine was the best Lawyer of his time and Chief Justice of the Common-pleas As he being a Lawyer bred Fellow of All-souls and almost being a little person of great faculties all soul himself in Oxford was one of the best Divines of his time made successively Dean of Chichester Provost of Eaton Dean of Saint Pauls and Westminster Prolocutor to the Convocation 1640. at Westminster Clerk of the Closet to the Kings Charles I. and II. a great Champion of the Protestant Religion at Paris where he Preached the excellent Sermon of Hezekia's Reformation in vindication of ours and a discreet propagator of it having with that publick spirited man Sir Georg-Ratcliffe gone very far in making an accommodation between the Iansenists and the Reformed a sit man for such a noble design considering the moderation of his principles his breast being a Chancery for Religion the Sweetness of his Temper the Acuteness and Depth of his Reason the Charm of his Rhetorick and Fancy he having been formerly upon all occasions as great a Poet and Orator as he was then a Divine and the full Smartness of his Stile Vir to give him the Elogy of his Country-man Holcot in divinis Scripturis cruditissimus saecularium rerum hand ignarius Ingenio praestans clarus eloquio declamator quoque concionum egregius He ordered this Inscription on his Grave
abolishing Kingly Government so much as to drink in her house bidding him be gone to his Masters for his wages Sir Thomas Soams and Alderman Chambers who repented heartily that ever he had any thing to do with Fowks in opposing the Kings Customs for absenting themselves and justifying their conscientious refusal of the latter Oaths from former were then degraded in the City and forced to retire out of it Alderman Culham whom I think they used to call the Queens Knight and Alderman Gibs by attending their own Affairs in the Country escaped the snares laid for their Consciences in the City Sir George Whitmore was till his death 1658. as great a support to and sufferer for his Majesties Government in his habitation at Middlesex as Sir Thomas Whitmore at Auley in Shrop-shire his Conscience having cost him who being very aged would say that he could serve his Majesty only with his Purse 15000 l. as Sir Thomas his Allegiance besides Plunders Decimations and infinite troubles did 5000 l. many Orthodox Ministers and distressed Gentlemen were his Pensioners during his life more his Legates at his death when he bestowed as much money in Charitable uses on the City as he brought to it Having been a great instrument to promote the repair of Pauls begun in his Mayrolty 1631. a great Benefactor towards the repair of other Churches Men these for shew as the Mulberry-tree the most backward of any to put forth leaves and the most forward in bringing forth fruit of good works for sincerity Sir Iohn Gair Lord Mayor of London 1646. when he lost his liberty hazarded his Estate yea and his life in the defence of the City and in it of the Kingdom A Gentleman of very discerning judgment impartial intigrity pressing the Parliament to do what they fought for that is bring home the King and though of a tender disposition yet of a resolute severely just spirit being wont to say that a foolish pity is cruelty deserving the testimony given him at his death that his place did not so much honor him as he his place Zealous was he in his attendance in the Houses of prayer in that way of Worshipping the God of his Fathers which the Faction called Popery and the Papists Heresie all his life and very bountiful towards the repair of them when he dyed singular was his Reverence in hearing Gods word and affectionate his respect to the dispensers of it and that not in Complement but relief of those whom he thought Orthodox and found necessitous to whom besides many particular and liberal Supplies by his own hand he bequeathed an 100 l. by his Executors A faithful friend and a just dealer he must needs be in his publick commerce among men being so sincere in his private Communion and secret Devotion with God to which he often retyred professing to the Right Worshipful Sir Robert Abdy his Son-in-law O how glad he was of his frequent wakings in the night since thereby he had opportunity to praise his God and pray for the settlement of this miserably distracted Church and Kingdom He dyed at his house Iuly the 20 th 1649. and was buryed at St. Katharine Creechurch August 14. following having left 500 l. for the yearly Cloathing of the poor of Plymouth where he was born 200 l. to Creechurch Parish where he lived besides various other Gifts to several Hospitals Releasing of Prisoners and the like and 500l given Christs-Hospital when he was President of it Being of opinion that he must do in his life what should comfort him at his death for when his friends that stood by him on his death-bed minded him of making his peace with God he answered That old Age and Sickness were no fit times to make peace with Heaven blessing God that his peace was not then to make Sir George Stroud of Clarkenwell a Gentleman that performed good service to his Majesty in time of Peace whereof he was one of the Conservators in Middlesex and therefore much trusted by him in the time of War when he was one of the Commissioners of Array for London by the one much restraining the lewdness of the Suburbs for the filthiness of London as of Ierusalem is in its skirts by the other endeavouring to suppress the tumults Pity it was he should suffer many thousands loss for his Loyalty besides tedious Imprisonments who gave so many hundreds away in Charity in weekly Contributions to the Parishes of St. Sepulchres St. Iames Clerken-well c. while he lived there and in yearly allowance to those Parishes in the Suburbs and to the Hospitals and Prisons in London A devout man that made Conscience of preparing himself for the highest Comfort as well as Mystery of our Religion the holy Eucharist and therefore left 6 l. a year for a monethly Sermon on the Friday before the first Sunday in the moneth at Clerken-well where he is buryed to prepare others A very great Patron to Orthodox men in the late troubles as the Heir of his Estate and Vertues is of sober men since In a word he was Sir Iulius Caesars friend and second in Piety and Charity Sir Paul Pindar first a Factor then a Merchant next a Consul and at last an Ambassador in Turky whence returning he repaired the Entry Front and Porches of St. Pauls Cathedral to the Upper Church Quire and Chancel enriching them with Marble Structures and Figures of the Apostles and with Carvings and Gildings far exceeding their former beauty to the value of 2000 l. an action so Christian that King Iames would say It was the work of a good man for which and his great skill in Trade he made him one of his great Farmers of the Custom-house and he in gratitude laid out 17000. pound more upon the South Isle of that Church in the beginning of King Charles his Reign and lent his Majesty 3000 l. besides 9000 l. he gave him to keep up the Church of England in the latter end of his Reign A Projector such necessary evils then countenanced and he a Clergy-man too informed King Iames how to get himself full Coffers by raising first Fruits and Tenths under-rated forsooth in the Kings books to a full value The King demands the Lord Treasurer Branfields judgment thereof he said Sir you are esteemed a great lover of Learning you know Clergy-mens Education is Chargeable their ●referment slow and small let it not be said that you gain by grinding them other ways less obnoxious to just censure will be found out to furnish your occasions The King commended the Treasurer as having only tryed him adding moreover I should have accounted thee a very Knave if incouraging me herein But he sends for Sir P. Pindar and tells him he must either raise the Customs or take this course Sir Paul answered him nobly That he would lay 30000 l. at his feet the morrow rather than he should be put upon such poor projects as