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A96700 England's vvorthies. Select lives of the most eminent persons from Constantine the Great, to the death of Oliver Cromwel late Protector. / By William Winstanley, Gent. Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698. 1660 (1660) Wing W3058; Thomason E1736_1; ESTC R204115 429,255 671

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Masculine Petition of the eleventh of September 1648. so much owned by petitions out of several Counties yea and by the Officers of the Armies large Remonstrance from Saint Albones the sixteenth of November 1648. page 67.68 69. the subtance of all which I thou the aforesaid John Lilburne meaning conceive is contained in the printed sheet of paper signed by my fellow prisoners Mr. William Walwin Mr. Richard Overton and Mr. Thomas Prince and my self dated the first of May 1649. and intituled The Agreement of the free people of England which false scandalous and traiterous Book called the Agreement of the people of England tends to the alteration and subversion of the Government aforesaid the principles of the aforesaid Agreement I meaning your self the said John Lilburne hope and desire you the friends of the aforesaid John Lilburne meaning will make the final centre and unwavering standard of all your desires hazards and endeavours as to the future settlement of the peace and Government of this distressed wasted and divided Nation the firme establishing of the principles therein contained being that onely which will really and in good earnest marry and knit the interest what ever it be that dwels upon them unto the distressed or oppressed Commons of this Nation Not to instance the particular application how these and his other Books were stigmatized more at large in the Indictment as also his traiterous intents purposes and designs to their extent displayed The Indictment being reading and the noise of the people in the Hall great the prisoner said he could not hear and had some few lines before read over to him Master Lilburne therefore prayed the people to hold their peace Gentlemen I beseech you be quiet speaking to the people Lord Keeble replyed Quiet you your self we will quiet them for you The Cryer said If any man can give any Evidence to my Lords the Justices of Oyer and Terminer against Mr. John Lilburne let him come in and he shall be heard Master Lilburne desired to be heard to speak two or three words Lord Keeble said It is not a fit time you shall be heard in your due time but hear what the witnesses say first Master Lilburne replyed He conceived he was much wronged in saying that he pleaded not guilty for he pleaded no such plea I appeal to the Court and to all that heard me whether I pleaded any such plea for before I pleaded the Court became engaged to me to take no advantage of my ignorance of the formalities of the Law and promised to give me as much priviledge as my Lord Duke of Hambleton and others enjoyed before the Court of Justice By your favours said he I pleaded conditionally and now I make my absolute Plea to the Indictment which was this that he excepted against the matter and form of it in matter time and place and humbly craved Counccel to assign and plead to the errors thereof He beseecht them to hear him a few words Sir with favour he humbly craved liberty to speak a few words he said I shall keep me close to that which is my right and my duty and that is to the matter of Law in my Indictment There are many things put into the Indictment by the Testimonies of Witnesses now sworn that are pretended to be acted in several Countries whether that be according to Law or no I do not know whether you will judge it so or no but sure I am if either those express Statutes that I have already cited to the Jury or the third part of Cooks Institutes be Law I ought not to be tryed for Treason but by a Jury of the next Neighbour-hood in the self-same County the fact is pretended to be committed in and therefore it is very questionable to me whether my Indictment be legal for that it chargeth me with facts of treason committed in three several Counties and that being matter of Law I desire Counsel to argue that point in the first place There are also a great many other exceptions I have to make against the Illegality of the Indictment and having particularized one I humbly crave that which is my right by Law that I may have Counsel assigned to me you have said you will do what shall become ingenious and understanding men and just Judges in it and therefore I crave leave according to my undoubted Right to have Counsel assigned to plead in matters of Law to the insufficiency of the Indictment and particularly to that point I have nominated There are also a great many things arise out of the matter of fact that will be points of Law likewise and some of them appear to be so there were never two clear and positive witnesses to one fact sworn against me but to most of the particular Treasons there is but one a piece and I cannot yield tha to be legal but questionable in the Law which I desire Counsel to dispute I know not any of all the Books fixed upon me but the Out-cry that hath two plain witnesses to it and yet it is not sworn that I am the Author of it the state of the first is this that I was at the Printers before the Copy was taken away and that I gave one of those Books to a Souldier to sum up the Notes of the matter of fact that thereon hath been endeavoured to be proved is too hard a task to be done by me immediately and therefore I conceive it but just for you to assign me Counsel to agree with the Counsel against me what are the points of fact upon the proof from which the points of Law are to be deducted and whatever you that call your selves my Judges may think of this yet I hope and verily believe that these my honest fellow Citizens that are the Gentlemen of my Jury who have thereby as men the issues of my life and death in their hands and will think it but a just and rational motion and request and therefore before them again I desire to have Counsel assigned to plead in Law to the errours of the Indictment and also to the Law arising upon the fact this with a larger priviledge was granted by one of your own brother-Judges to Major Rolfe last year as his right by Law and I do again appeal to Mr. Justice Nichols then one of Rolfes Counsel for the truth of this I pray speak Sir is it not true but the Judge sitting as if he had neither life nor soul Mr. Lilburne further said I hope Sir it doth not enter into your thoughts presently to put me to an undigested extemporary answer to so large an Indictment as that is that hath been read against me that it is possible for any mans brain if it were as big as the biggest Magazine in London to carry it in his head and Sir I hope you do not conceive that my memory is of a greater largeness then the greatest Magazine in this City you engaged unto me when I
Lord amongst others being one that gave his fatal Vote for the passing that Bill In those great differences betwixt the King and Parliament he constantly and faithfully adhered to his Majesty contributing very much to his aid both in purse and person and at such time as the King was secured in the Isle of Wight some hopes being given of his restauration to his former dignity by the coming in of Duke Hamilton with a potent Army as also of Langhorns Powels and Poyers declaring themselves for his Majesty together with the rising of the Countries in several places to the same unhappy purpose he with a selected number of his friends associates and servants joyned himself with the Lord Goring Sir Charles Lucas and others who with a great Party were up in Arms in Essex and having valiantly defended Colchester for the space of three moneths against a potent enemy sated with success were at length as I have already discoursed in the Life of Sir Charles Lucas for want of provision forced to yield both it and themselves the superior Officers to mercy the common Souldiers with the loss of their flying Garments the Townsmen to pay the mulct of fourteen thousand pounds which was above a thousand pounds a moneth for the time that they held out the Siege And for the Articles of agreement which the Cavaliers had made with General Fairfax they could not but imagine that they had ascertained their lives yet notwithstanding upon their surrender as hath been mentioned Sir Charles Lucas and Sir George Lisle were shot to death which to all discerning men must needs seem strange and unusual though the General in his Letter to the Parliament calls it Military Execution upon which the House debated and sent to the General to explain his Letter of the 29. of September His head Quarters were then at Saint Albanes from whence they had this answer That the General doth not take upon him to conclude but waving the business leaves them to the Civil Power and so in effect to Tryal for life The Lord Capel and divers others were committed to the Tower where whilest he remained he endeavoured an escape and had effected it had he not been betrayed by a second Banister a Water-man whom the Noble Lord intrusted himself with who ignominiously for the lucre of a little money discovered him not long after this his misfortune this honourable Lord together with the Earl of Holland Duke Hamilton the Earl of Norwich and Sir John Owen was brought to a Tryal before a High Court of Justice in Westminster Hall where for the brevity to omit the particulars after a formal Tryal they were all condemned the Earl of Norwich and the undaunted Welchman Sir John Owen whom they made march on Foot to his Tryal were reprieved It hath been reported that the Earl of Norwich who was ever pleasantly conceited was sent to by a dear friend of his the day after his Reprieve to know what he conceived as concerning the danger of his condition who returned this answer That he thought in all haste to have put off his Doublet but now he had leisure to unhook his Breeches But to return to our enterprise to furnish this Landskip rather then History of this honourable person concerning his deportment before and after the time of his condemnation when he was to encounter and look grim death in the face by way of introduction to a larger discovery of his Christian fortitude I shall set down the Copy of a Letter written by a reverend Doctor who knew the passages thereof as may be clearly perceived by the tenour of it SIR I hope this paper will finde you upon recovery you have my daily and hearty prayers for it not so much for your own sake for I doubt not but it would be much better for you in regard of your self to be dissolved and to be with Christ but in the behalf of the Church your Friends and poor Family to which notwithstanding be assured God will be merciful howsoever he disposeth of you either for this life or for a better But if you live as I pray and hope you will you shall do very well to write the Life and Death of that noble Lord and blessed Martyr who professed at his death That he dyed for the fifth Commandment and to dye in the defence and for the Testimony of any Divine truth is truly and properly to be a Martyr That which I can contribute towards this work is to communicate some few observations I made of him and from him before and after his condemnation I was several times with him and alwayes found him in a very chearful and well composed temper of minde proceeding from true Christiun grounds and not from a Roman resolution onely as his enemies are pleased to speak of him he told me often it was the good God he served and the good Cause he had served for that made him not to fear heath adding he had never had the temptation of so much as a thought to check him for his engagement in this quarrel for he took it for his Crown and Glory and wished he had a greater ability and better fortune to engage in it After his condemnation and the afternoon before his suffering we were a great while in private together when bewailing with that sense which became a true and not despairing penitent the sins of his life past the greatest he could remember was his voting my Lord of Straffords death which though as he said he did without any malice at all yet he confessed it to be a very great sin and that he had done it out of a base fear they were his own words of a prevailing party adding that he had very often and very heartily repented of it and was confident of Gods pardon for it Then he told me he had a great desire to receive the Blessed Sacrament so he called it before he dyed the next morning asking what Divine of the Kings party I would recommend to him I replyed that though many were more worthy yet none would be more willing to do that service then my self which he accepting very kindly told me he durst not desire it for fear it might be some danger to me After this and some conference in order to his preparation both for his viaticum and his voyage the Sacrament and his death he desired me to pray with him which after I had performed and promised to be with him by seven the next morning I left him for that time to his own devotions The next day I was there at the time assigned and after some short conference in order to the present occasion he desired me to hear him pray which he did for half an hour in an excellent method very apt expressions and most strong hearty and passionate affections First confessing and bewailing his sins with strong cries and tears then humbly and most earnestly desiring Gods mercy through the merits of Christ onely
Prisoner at the Bar presented before the Court here take your Jury of Life and Death if therefore Master Lilburne you will challenge them or any of them you must challege them before that they go to be sworn Cryer Every man that can inform my Lords the Justices and the Atturney General of the Commonwealth against Master John Lilburn Prisoner at the Bar of any Treason or Fellony committed by him let them come forth and they shall be heard for the Prisoner stands upon his deliverance and all others bound to give their attendance are upon pain of forfeiture of their Recognizance to come in Master Lilburne desired to be heard a few words the Judge told him he must talk in his legal time and take legal exceptions and then he should be heard till midnight Master Lilburne desired to be heard he said he did not know the faces of two men that were read to him therefore he desired that he might have time to consider of them Judge Keeble told him that he ought not to have it Master Lilburne desired the Judge that he would at least vouchsafe him to have some friends by him that are Citizens of London that knew them to give him information of their quality and conditions without which he said they might as well hang him without a Tryal Mr. Sprat or Master Robert Lilburn challenged one of the Jury which the Judge excepted against and commanded the Fellow in the white cap should come out there pull him out Master Lilburne replied that they did not deal civilly according to their own Law and now there was a full noise the whole cry was to pull down the Stag of the Petition of Right The Jury being called he excepted against several persons of the Jury six lived about Smithfield one in Gosling-Street two in Cheapside two in Broad-street one in Friday-street After his particular exception Master Broughton proceeds and reads his Indictment Hold up thy hand John Lilburne Thou standest here indicted of High Treason by the name of John Lilburn late of London Gentleman for that thou as a false Traytour not having the fear of God before thine eyes but being stirred and moved up by the instigation of the Devil didst endeavour not onely to disturb the peace and tranquility of this Nation but also the government thereof to subvert now established without King or House of Lords in the way of a Commonwealth and a free State and happily established and the Commons in Parliament assembled being the supream Authority of this Nation of England to disgrace and into a hatred base esteem infamy and scandal with all the good true and honest persons of England to bring into hatred that is to say that thou the said John Lilburne on the first day of October in the year of our Lord 1649. and on divers other dayes and times both before and after in the Parish of Mary the Archess in the Ward of Cheap London aforesaid of thy wicked and devillish minde and imagination falsely malitiously advisedly and trayterously as a false Traytor by writing and imprinting and openly declaring that is to say by a certain scandalous poysonous and trayterous writing in paper entituled A salva libertate and by another scandalous poysonous and trayterous Book entituled An Impeachment of High Treason against Oliver Cromwel and his son-in-law Henry Ireton Esquires late Members of the late forcibly dissolved House of Commons presented to publick view by Lieutenant Collonel John Lilburn close Prisoner in the Tower of London for his real true and zealous affection to the liberties of this Nation and by another scandalous poysonous and trayterous Book imprinted and entituled An Out-cry of the yong men and Apprentices of London or an inquisition after the lost fundamental Laws and Liberties of England directed August 29. 1649. in an Epistle to the private Souldiers of the Army especially all those that signed the solemn Engagement at New-Market Heath the fifth of June 1647. but more especially the private Souldiers of the Generals Regiment of Horse that helped to plunder and destroy the honest and true hearted Englishmen trayterously defeated at Burford the fifteenth of May 1649. And also by another scandalous poysonous and traiterous Book intituled The legal fundamental liberties of the people of England revised asserted and vindicated didst publish that the Government aforesaid is tyranical usurped and unlawful and that the Commmons Assembled in Parliament are not the Supreme Authority of this Nation and further that thou the said John Lilburne as a false Traitor God before thine eyes not having but being moved and led by the instigation of the Devil endeavouring and maliciously intending the Government aforesaid as is aforesaid well and happily established thou the said John Lilburne afterwards that is to say the aforesaid first day of October in the year of our Lord 1649. aforesaid and divers other dayes and times as well before as after at London aforesaid that is to say in the Parish and Ward aforesaid London aforesaid maliciously advisedly and traiterously didst plot contrive and endeavour to stir up and to raise force against the aforesaid Government and for the subverting and alteration of the said Government and to do those wicked malicious and traiterous advisement to put in execution c. and thou the said John Lilburne afterwards that is to say the aforesaid first day of October in the year of our Lord 1649. aforesaid and divers dayes and times as well before as after at London aforesaid that is to say in the Parish and Ward aforesaid of thy depraved minde and most wicked imagination in and by the aforesaid scandalous poysonous and trayterous book Intituled An impeachment of high Treason against Oliver Cromwel and his son-in-law Henry Ireton Esquires late Members of the late forcible dissolved House of Commons presented to publick view by Lieutenant Collonel John Lilburne close prisoner in the Tower of London for his real true and zealous affection to the Liberties of his native Countrey falsly maliciously advisedly and traiterously didst publickly declare amongst other things in the said Book those false scandalous malicious and traiterous words following but my true friends meaning the friends of the said John Lilburne I meaning the foresaid John Lilburne shall here take upon me the boldness considering the great distractions of the present times to give a little further advice to our friends aforesaid from whose company or society or from some of them hath been begun and issued out the most transcendent clear rational and just things for the peoples liberties and freedoms That the foresaid John Lilburne hath seen or read in this Nation as your notable and excellent Petition of May the 20th 1647. burnt by the hand of the common-hangman recorded in my book called Rash Oaths Unwarrantable page 29 30 31 32 33 34 35. with divers Petitions of that nature and the Petition of the 19th of January 1648. recorded in the following discourse page 45 46 47 48. and the
of Lauderdale Duke Hamilton General of the Scotch Army who afterwards dyed of his wounds the Earl of Rothe the Earl of Cornwarth the Earl of Shrewsbury Packington Cunningham and Clare Knights The Lord Spine and Sinclear the Earl of Cleaveland of Kelley and Collonel Greaves six Collonels of Horse thirteen of Foot nine Lieutenant Collonels of Horse eight of Foot six Majors of Horse thirteen of Foot seven and thirty Captains of Horse seventy and three of Foot fifty five Quartermasters eighty nine Lieutenants of Foot Major General Biscotty Major General Montgomery the Lieutenant General of the Ordnance the Adjutant General of the Foot the Marshal General the Quartermaster General the Conductor General of the Baggage seventy six Standards ninety nine Ensigns all which were hung up in Westminster Hall for successive Parliaments to understand what vigour of spirits they by their influence can infuse into those they please to authorize onely the want of the allay of their ambitions often works them high where it is impossible to set limits to generous mindes To continue the other Appendixes to this victory there were also taken nine Ministers nine Chyrurgions one hundred fifty and eight Colours and all the Cannon and Baggage generally the Royal Standard the Kings Coach and Horses the Royal Robe the Coller of the Order of the Garter thirty of his domestique Servants and that admirable Poet his Secretary Fanshaw Several other persons were also afterwards taken in the remotest Countries as Major General Massey who being committed to the Tower afterwards made an escape Major General Middleton Lieutenant General David Lesley and several others insomuch as that it may be said the gleanings of this victory were as considerable as the whole harvest it self Many of the common Souldiers were transported into the Barbadoes and other Plantations this mercy extended to them in saving their lives causing much gain to accrew thereby unto the Common-wealth in selling the poor heathenish Highlanders to the Plantations I shall onely end these sad transactions with what Mr. Wharton chronologized in these words since English Hoggs eat our dear Brethren up He onely reflects on the half graves were made for them in Tuttle Fields Of all this long list two onely suffered death viz. Sir Timothy Featherstone Knight and the Earl of Darby who on the 15. of October following was beheaded at Bolton in Lancashire being conducted thither by sixty Foot and eighty Horse about two of the Clock he was brought forth to the Scaffold which was built at the Cross part of it with the Timber of his own house at Latham there was not above an hundred lookers on besides Souldiers presently after his coming upon the Scaffold there happened a great tumult the occasion thereof not being certainly known in appeasing of which there were some cut many hurt and one childe killed The Earl was no eloquent orator and the tumult put him out of his speaking what he intended at last after some silence made he began as followeth Since it hath pleased God by this untimely death to shorten my dayes I am glad it is in this Town where some have been made believe I was a cruel person that I might vindicate my self from this aspersion it was my desire the last time I came into this Countrey to come hither as to a people that ought to serve the King as I conceive upon good grounds it was said that I was accustomed to be a man of blood but it doth not lie upon my conscience I was wrongfully bely'd I thank God I desired peace I was born in honour and I shall dye honourably as I suffer for my Sovereign I had a fair estate good friends and was respected and did respect those that were ready to do for me I was ready to do for them I have done nothing but as my generous predecessors acted to do you good It was the King that called me in and I thought it my duty to wait upon his Highness to do him service Here he was disturbed by the noise of the people after some pause he said I intended to have exprest my self further but I have said I have not much more to say to you but as to my good will to this Town of Bolton I can say no more but the Lord bless you I forgive you all and desire to be forgiven of you all for I put my trust in Christ Jesus Looking about him he said I did never deserve this hard measure Honest friends you that are Souldiers my life is taken away after quarter given by a Councel of War which was never done before Walking up and down the Scaffold he said The Lord bless you all the Son of God bless you all of this Town of Bolton Manchester Lancashire and the rest of the kingdom and God send that you may have a King again and Laws I dye like a Christian and a Souldier Gods and my Sovereigns Souldier Causing his Coffin to be opened he said I hope when I am imprisoned here armed men shall not need to watch me Looking upon them that were upon the Scaffold he said What do you stay for it is hard that I cannot get a Block to have my head cut off Speaking to the Executioner he said Thy coat is so troublesome and cumbersome that I believe that thou canst not hit right the Lord help thee and forgive thee Other words he used which to avoid prolixity I willingly omit At last submitting his neck to the Block he had his head severed from his body with one blow his sorrowful Son who was a sad spectator of this woful tragedy out of a pious care and filial duty conveyed his Corps back with him that night to Wiggan and afterwards gave them honourable burial Not long before at London was Collonel Eusebius Andrews apprehended who having formerly practiced the Law changed his Gown into a Coat of Armour and ventured his life in the Kings service having received a Commission from the King of Scots for the raising men in England he was tryed in Westminster Hall at the High Court of Justice then again newly erected being the first unfortunate Gentleman that hanselled the Court. To pass over the large particulars of tryal he was acknowledged by all that were understanding Auditours of his Plea that he behaved himself like to a right English man spoke as good sound and as honest sense as any person before him upon such limitations as he was confined too he shewed himself an excellent Oratour an expert Lawyer and a person of strong and clear reason he acknowledged himself guilty as to the power of that present Government that his life was at their disposal He was condemned and the 22. of August 1650. brought to the Scaffold on Tower-hill where he expressed himself to the people in these his last words Christian Gentlemen and People your business hither to day is to see a sad spectacle a man to be in a moment unman'd and cut off in the prime
the Trial was January 6. engrossed and read and the manner referred to the Commissioners who were to try him in the Painted Chamber Munday the 8. of January a Proclamation resolved to be made in Westminster Hall the Commissioners to sit the next day to which intent Mr. Denby the younger a Serjeant at Arms to the Commissioners rid into the Hall the Drums of the Guard beating without the Palace and in like manner at the Old Exchange and in Cheapside Jan. 9. The Commons Vote the Title in Writs of Caroli dei gratia c. to be altered that great Seal be broken and ordered a new one with the Arms of England and the Harp for Ireland with this word The great Seal of England and on the reverse the Picture of the House of Commons with these words In the first year of Freedom by Gods Blessing 1648. Now there was a new Tribunal erected there being appointed 150 Judges or Tryers that so in number they might represent the people who are improved to covenant hear Judge and Execute Charles Stuart King of England of these there were of several sorts of persons six Earls of the upper House the Judges of the Kingdom Commanders of the Army Members of the Commons Lawyers men of several Trades and Professions The Presbyterian Ministers now too late disclaim against the prosecutions and the English Nobility offer themselves pledges on the the Kings behalf but all too late and now the penitent Scots with their predecessor repent themselves of their Silver and in a Declaration express their dislike The High Court of Justice was framed in the upper end of Westminster Hall betwixt the then Kings Bench and the Chancery Saturday Jan. 20. the King was brought from St. James through the Park in a Sedan to White Hall thence by Water with guards to Sir John Cottons House at the back end of Westminster Hall The Judges met in the Painted Chamber attending the President Bradshaw in his Scarlet Robe the Sword born before him by Collonel Humphry the Mace by Serjeant Denby the younger and twenty men for his guard with Partizans himself sits down in a Crimson Velvet Chair of State fixed in the midst of the Court with a Desk before him and thereon a Cushion of Crimson Velvet the seats of each side benches covered with Scarlet Cloath the Partizans divided themselves on each side O yes and silence made the great Gate of the Hall was opened for any one to enter Collonel Tomson brought forth the Prisoner the Serjeant with his Mace received him to the Bar where was placed a red Velvet Chair the King looks sternly on the Court where he spyes one person who had received signal favours from him at the sight of whom as I received it from one in the Court he laid his hand on his breast and pronounced to himself scarce audibly Caesars words Et tu Brute after which he sat down not shewing the least regard to the Court but presently rises and looks downwards on the guards and multitudes of the spectators The Act of parliament for the Tryal of Charles Stuart King of England was read over by the Clerk one Phelps who sat on the right side of the Table covered with a Turky Carpet placed at the feet of the President upon which lay the Sword and Mace The several names of the Rolls of Tryers were called over and eighty answered to their names in the charge the King is accused in the name of the People of England of Treason Tyranny and of all the Murthers and Rapines that had happened in the War they imposed all the weight of the accusation on this that he raised War against the Parliament A great many people looking on with groans and sights deploring the condition of their King The President stood up and said Sir you have heard your Charge containing such matters as appear by it and in the close it is prayed that you answer to your Charge which this Court expects The King whilest he heard this Charge with a majestick countenance and a smile in answer to the President asks the new judges by what Auhority they did bring to Tryal a King their most lawful Sovereign against the Publick Faith so lately given him when he commenced a Treaty with the Members of both Houses By what saith he emphatically lawful Authority for saith he I am not ignorant that there are on foot every where every mans unlawful powers as of Thieves and Robbers in the High Way he bids them onely declare by what authority they had arrogated this whatsoever power to themselves and he would willingly answer to the things objected which if they could not he advised them to avert the grievous crimes from their own heads and the kingdom whatsoever they did he resolved not to betray the charge committed to him by God and confirmed by ancient descent The President rejoynes that he was called to an account by authority of the people of England by whose election he was admitted King The king replyed the Kingdom descended to him in no wise elective but hereditary above a thousand years that he stood more apparently for the Liberties of the People of England by refusing as unlawful and arbitrary authority then the Judges or any other asserting it That the authority and power of the people was shewed in Parliamentary Assemblies but that here appeared none of the Lords who to the constituting of a Parliament ought to be there and which is more some King ought to be present but that neither the one nor the other nor both the Parliament Houses nor any other judicature on earth had any authority to call the King of England to an account much less some certain Judges chosen onely by his Accusers masked with the authority of the Lower House and the same proculated Howbeit he willed them again that they would at least produce this their Authority and he would not be wanting to his defence forasmuch is was the same offence with him to acknowledge a Tyrannical Power as to resist a lawful one The president often interrupting the Kings Speech told him that they were satisfied with the●r authority as it is upon on Gods authority and the kingdom in doing justice in this their present work The Munday after the Court met in the Painted Chamber where it was resolved that the king should not be suffered to argue the Courts Jurisdiction but that the President should tell him that the Commons in Parliament had constituted that Court whose power was not to be disputed that if he refuse to answer it shall be accounted a contumacy to the Court that if he answer with a Salvo his pretended Prerogative above the Court he shall be required to answer positively yea or no that he shall have a copy of his Charge till he own the Court and delare his intentions to answer on his second Tryal Sollicitor Cook moves that the Prisoner may make a positive answer or that the Charge may
be taken pro Confesso and the Court ot proceed to Justice The President repeats in brief the passages of the last day and commands the King to answer to the Articles of the Charge unless he had rather hear the Capital Sentence against him The king persists to interrogate concerning the Cause and sayes That he less regards his life then his Honour his Conscience the Laws the Liberties of the people all which that they should not perish together there were weighty reasons why he should not prosecute his defence before the Judges and acknowledge a new form of Judicature for what power had ever Judges to erect a Judicature against the King or by what Law was it granted sure not by Gods Law which on the contrary commands obedience to Princes nor by Mans Laws the Laws of our Land sith the Laws of England enjoyn all Accusations to be read in the Kings Name nor do they indulge any power of judging the most abject Subject to the Lower or Commons House neither lastly their Power flow from any Authority which might be pretended extraordinary delegated from the people seeing ye have not askt so much as every tenth man in this matter The President interrupting his Speech rebukes the Kings and bids him be mindeful of his doom affirming once more that the Court was abundantly satisfied of their Authority nor was the Court to hear any reasons that should detract from their power But what sayes the King or where in all the world is that Court in which no place is left for reason Yes answered the President you shall finde Sir that this very Court is such a one But the King presses that they would at least permit him to exhibit his reasons in writing which if they could satisfactorily answer he would yield himself to their Jurisdiction Here the President not content to deny grew into anger demanding the Prisoner to be taken away The King replied no more to these things then Remember sayes he this is your King from whom you turn away your ear in vain certainly will my Subjects expect Justice from you who stop your ears to your King who is ready to plead his Cause The Saturday after the 27. of January before they assembled sixty eight of the Tryers answered to their names The President in a Scarlet Robe and as the King Came the Souldiers cryed out for Execution of Justice The King speaks first and desires to be heard a word or two but short and yet wherein he hopes not to give just occasion wherein to be interrupted and goes on A sudden Judgement sayes the King is not so soon recall'd But he is sharply reproved of contumacy The President profusely praises the patience of the Court and commands him now at length to submit otherwise he shall hear the sentence of of death resolved upon by the Court against him The King still refuses to plead his Cause before them but that he had some things conducible to the good of his people and the peace of the Kingdom which he desires liberty to deliver before the Members of both Houses But the President would not vouchsafe him so much as this favour least it should tend he said to the delay and retardation of Justice To which the King replies It were better to sustain a little delay of a day or two then to precipitate a Sentence which will bring perpetual Tragedies upon the Kingdom and miseries to Children unborn If sayes he I sought occasion of delay I would have made a more elabourate contestation of the Cause which might have served to protract the time and evade at least the while a most ugly sentence but I will shew my self a defender of the Laws and of the Right of my Country as to chuse rather to dye for them the Martyr of my People then by prostituting of them to an arbitrary power go about to acquire any manner of liberty for my self but I therefore request this short liberty of speaking before a cruel Sentence be given for that I well know 't is harder to be recall'd then prevented and therefore I desire that I may withdraw and you consider They all withdraw the King into Cottons House and the Tryers into the Court of Wards and in half an hour return The President as he had begun so he proceeds into a premeditated Speech to hasten Sentence which the King offers reason to forbear whilest he might be heard before his Parliament and this he requires as they will answer it at the dreadful day of Judgement and to consider it once again But not prevailing the President goes on wherein he aggravates the Contumacy of the King and the hatefulness of the cimes he asserts Parliamentary Authority producing Examples both Domestick and Forreign c. his Treasons he stiles a breach of Trust to the Kingdom as his Superiour and is therefore called to an account minimus majorum in Judicium vocat his murthers are many all those that have been committed in all the War betwixt him and his people are laid to his charge all the innocent blood which cannot be cleansed but by the blood of him that shed the blood So then for Tyranny Treason Murther and many other crimes he wishes the King to have God before his eyes and that the Court calls God to witness that mearly their Conscience of Duty brings them to that place of this employment and calls for Gods assistance in his Execution The King offered to speak to these great Imputations in the Charge but he was told that his time was past the Sentence was coming on which the President commanded to be read under this form Whereas the Commons of England have appointed them an High Court of Justice for the Trial of Charles Stuart King of England before whom he hath been three times convented and at the first time a Charge of High Treason and other Crimes and Misdemeanours were read in the behalf of the Kingdom of England c. To which Charge he the said Charles Stuart was required to give his answer and so exprest several passages at his Tryal in refusing to answer for all which Treasons and Crimes the Court doth adjudge that the said Charles Stuart as a Tyrant Traytor Murtherer and Publique Enemy shall be put to death by the severing his Head from his Body This Sentence sayes the President now read and publisht is the Act Sentence Judgement and Resolution of the whole Court to which the Members of the Court stood up and assented to what he said by holding up their hands The King offered to speak but he was instantly commanded to be taken away and the Court brake up After the Sentence the King was hurried away mockt and reviled by the Souldiers they puft their Tobacco in his face no smell being more offensive to his father and him such as saluted him they bastinadoed one that did but sigh God have mercy they cane'd they intrude almost into his Closet hardly permitting him
Arbitrary wayes but we will try you by the rules of the good old Laws of England and whatsoever priviledge in your Tryal the Laws of England will afford you claim it as your Birth-right and Inheritance and you shall enjoy it with as much freedom and willingness as if you were in Westminster Hall to be tryed amongst your own Party and this we will do for that end that so at London your friends shall not have any just cause to say we murthered you with cruelty or denied you the benefit of the Law in taking away your life by the rules of our own wills Nay further said he Captain Lilburne it is true I am a Judge made by my Sovereign Lord the King according to his right by Law and so in a special manner am his Servant and Councellour and am to act for his good benefit and advantage And yet notwithstanding it is by the known Laws of this Land my duty to be indifferent and free from partiallity betwixt my Master and you the Prisoner and I am specially bound unto it also by my Oath and therefore you shall have the utmost priviledges of the Law of England which is a Law of Mercy and not of Rigour and hath the life of a man in tenderest and highest estimation and therefore it is the duty of a Judge by Law to be of counsel with the Prisoner in things wherein by his ignorance he falls short of making use of the benefit of the Law especially when he is upon the Tryal of his life Yea and to exhort him to answer without fear if he perceive him daunted or amazed at the presence of the Court Yea it is my duty to carry my self with all fairness and evenness of hand towards you and wherein that there shall seem any mistakes to appear in circumstances of Formalities to rectifie you For 't is my duty to help you and not to use any boisterous or rough language to you in the least to put you in fear or any wayes prevent the freedom of you defence and according to the Laws of England this is my duty and this is the Law And accordingly he gave me liberty to plead to the errors of my Indictment before ever I pleaded not guilty yea and also became willing to assign me what Councel I pleased to nominate freely to come to prison to me and to consult and advise with me and help me in point of Law This last he did immediately upon my pleading to the Indictment before any Fact was proved all which is consonant to the declared Judgement of Sir Edward Cook that great Oracle of the Laws of England whose Books are published by speciall Orders and Authority of Parliament for good Law who in his 3. part Institutes Chapt. Of High Treason fol. 29.34 compared with fol. 137.230 asserts the same Truly Sir I being now come before you to answer for my life and being no professed Lawyer may through my own ignorance of the practick part of the Law especially in the Formalities Nisities and Puntillio's thereof run my self with over-much hastiness in snares and dangers that I shall not easily get out of And therefore being all of a sudden bid to hold up my hand at the Bar I cannot chuse but a little demur upon it and yet with all respect to you to declare my desirableness to keep within the bounds of Reason Moderation and Discretion and so to carry my self as it doth become a man that knows what it is to answer for his life And therefore in the first place I have something to say to the Court about the first Fundamental liberty of an English man in order to his Tryal which is that by the Laws of this Land all Courts of Justice alwayes ought to be free and open for all sorts of peaceable people to see behold and hear and have free access unto and no man whatsoever ought to be tryed in holes or corners or in any place where the Gates are shut and bar'd and guarded with armed men and yet Sir as I came in I found the Gates shut and guarded which is contrary both to Law and Justice Sir the Laws of England and the Priviledges thereof are my Inheritance and Birth-right And Sir I must acquaint you that I was sometimes summoned before a Committee of Parliament where Mr. Corbet and several others have had the Chair and there I stood upon my right by the Laws of England and refused to proceed with the said Committee till by special order they caused their Doors to be wide thrown open that the people might have free and uninterrupted access to hear see and consider of what they said to me although I think the pretence that I am now brought before you for be the very same in substance that I was convened before Mr. Corbet for which was about Books and I am sure there I did argue the case with him and the rest of the Committee soundly out in Law proving that they were bound in Law and Justice freely to open their Doors for the free access of all sorts and kindes of Auditors And I did refuse as of right to proceed with them till by special order they did open their Doors For no tryal in such cases ought to be in any place unless it be publick open and free and therefore if you please that I may enjoy that Legal Right and Priviledge which was granted unto me by Mr. Miles Corbet and the rest of that Committee when I was brought before them in the like case that now I am brought before you which priviledge I know to be my right by the Law of England I shall as it becomes an understanding Englishman who in his actions hates deeds of darkness holes or corners go on to a tryal But if I be denyed this undoubted priviledge I shall rather dye here then proceed any further And therefore foreseeing this beforehand and being willing to provide against all jealousies of my escape the fear of which I supposed might be objected against me as a ground to deny me this my legal right and therefore beforehand I have given my engagement to the Lieutenant of the Tower that I will be a faithful and true prisoner to him He enlarged himself as to other particulars but these being the most material as to the relation of some passages of his Life I thought it necessary to insert them He having these requested freedoms granted him from Judge Keble his tryal went on which because of it self it is a large printed volume I shall onely hint at some things not to be omitted in it After he had ended his Speech Judge Keble told him that his requests were granted bid him look behinde him the Doors were open Mr. Prideaux the Atturney General excepted against the favour done him of the liberty of his Speech as at the beginning of his arraignment he had denyed to hold up his hand he further expressed that the Commission for the Tryal
use of to Nebucadnezzar that endeavoured to destroy Daniel by his prerogative as he was to be thrown into the Lions Den making this application that if they would not allow him councel to consult with to make a Plea for his life it was a vain thing for him to spend any more words Judge Keble the afterwards President of the High Court of Justice replyed Mr. Lilburne this language is but the sparks of that venemous heat that is within you and they may burst out to prove you guilty before us and in our presence if so be that you are charged with without any other proof or proceedings for you may do it I tell you that you may do it where you stand therefore take heed what you say Mr. Lilburne replyed Sir I have cast up my account and I know what it can cost me he blest God he had learnt to dye having alwayes carryed his life in his hand for about twelve years together Judge Keble replyed he should not now lay it down if he did not destroy or cast away the Common-wealth but if he went about to destroy the Common-wealth the Common-wealth would destroy him Master Lilburne replyed he desired nothing but councel and to produce his witnesses Mr. Prideaux the Atturney General answered that if Master Lilburne had these concernments granted to him it would be a president for all future times by means of which there would be no ends of Tryals in criminal cases and that it was a wonderful strange thing to him that when the prisoner had pleaded the usual way that they did not immediately proceed to Tryal He did desire that Master Lilburne might be dealt with all legal just and fair preceedings of the Court he did desire accordingly the proceedings of the Common-wealth be so too that Master Lilburne may be without delay according to the Law proceeded against for his notorious Treasons Judge Keble immediately said well Mr. Lilburne the Court is very tender not to take up any of your time you have heard what was declared to you there that Master Atturney hath made Process against you returnable to morrow at seven of the Clock and therefore to spend more time would be your loss and dammage the Sheriffs of London are to take care to return the Jury to morrow morning and therefore the Court doth adjourn till seven of the Clock to morrow in the morning in the mean time they commit the prisoner at the Bar to the Lieutenant of the Tower again a prisoner Judge Keble said that he had more favour then any prisoner in England ever had for by the Laws of England in matters of Treason whereof Master Lilburne is indicted he ought to have been Tryed presently and immediately and because all the world shall know with what candor and justice the Court doth proceed against him we deferred time till to morrow morning which is the Courts extraordinary favour and the doors are wide open that all the world may know it Mr. Lilburne said Sir I can shew you a hundred presidents to the contrary to disprove what you say Judge Keble bids adjourn the Court Mr. Lilburne humbly thanked the Judges for their extraordinary favour and so the Curtains were drawn for that day the Court having adjourned till the next morning the Prisoner was remanded to the Tower The 26. of October the Friday following he was brought to the Bar with his Brother Collonel Robert Lilburne his Sollicitour Master Sprat and some other of his friends being hardly admitted Judge Keble saying your Brother shall not stand by you there I will onely have one hold your Papers and Books and the rest not to trouble you therefore let them come out of the Court. Master Lilburne pleaded for his Councell instancing Major Rolfes Tryal at Oxford about his intent to poison the King where he had Councell allowed him to which Judge Keble subtlely answered Mr. Lilburne when you come to Tryal you shall see there will be no need of Councel the Court will be instead of Councel to you nay the Court if they see matter of Law for Councel though you do not ask it they will give it you and therefore set your heart at rest for if there be any thing Rational in Law that we can spy out as well as your Councel wee 'l help you in it Master Lilburne answered Sweet Sir I pray but one word more if you deny me what the Law affords me and that which hath been granted to the Law by Cavalier Judges yea and by your fellow Judges who are now in power at this day the Lord deliver me from standing in need of you to be my Councellours Sayes Keble we are upon our lives as well as you Master Liburne replied No by your Favor not in so eminent a manner Judge Keble replied we are upon our lives and our souls to all eternity Master Lilburne desired to be heard one word Judge Keble said he would hear no more Upon which Master Prideaux desired the Court would proceed and not prolong time being he had pleaded not guilty and had confessed someting Lilburne replied No sir you do me wrong and abuse me I never confessed any thing neither did I plead not guilty he said his Plea was conditional grounded on their promises not to take any advantages of his ignorance in their Formalities Judge Keble exasperated at his obstinacy cried out Go on be silent Master Lilburn desired that at least they would let him hear the grand Jury speak for he understood from some of themselves that they never found him guilty but do conceive themselves wronged by some words yesterday that passed from some of the Judges he desired to hear them speak Judge Keble desired him to be rational a word he often used and that he would be silent and hear the Court he told him he could lose no more time to hear him he bid the Crier call the Jury the Crier called and Master Lilburne earnestly prest to be heard but could not Master Lilburne desired to see their faces Judge Keble warned Master Sprat Johns Sollicitour not to talk to the Prisoner he said he might stand and hold the Books but he should not come near the Prisoner to talk to him as he had done the day before Master Lilburne said that the Law allowed a stander by to speak in the Prisoners behalf at the Bar much more to whisper to him but more especially if he were his Sollicitour The Crier called the names Miles Petty William Wormwell John Sherman Thomas Dainty Ralph Ely Edward Keiser Edward Perkins Ralph Packman Francis Woodall William Commins Henry Hauson Roger Jenkenson Joshua Hammond Richard Allen Richard Nevil John Main Henry Jooley Arthur Due Roger Sears John Mayo Henry Jooley Arthur Due Roger Sears The Cryer said you good men of the City appear Stephen Jues John Sherman Ralph Ely Roger Jenkenson Roger Sears John Mayo Nicholas Murren The Clerk of Court sayes to the Jury here is your
of his years taken from further opportunities of doing good either to himself his friends the Common-wealth or more especially as to my continued services to my Creatour Truly if my general known course of life were but enquired into I may modestly say there is such a moral honesty upon it as some may be so sawcy as to expostulate why this great judgement is fallen upon me but know I am able to give them and my self an answer and out of this breast am able to give a better accompt of my Judgement and Execution then my Judgers themselves or you are able to give It is Gods wrath upon me for sins long unrepented of many judgements withstood and mercies slighted therefore God hath whipped me by his severe Rod of Correction that he might not lose me I pray joyn with me in prayer that it may not be a fruicless Rod that when by this Rod I have laid down my life by his staff I may be comforted and received into Glory I am very confident by what I have heard since my sentence there is more exceptions made against proceedings against me then I ever made My Triers had a Law and the value of that Law is indisputable and for me to make a question of it I should shame my self and my discretion In the strictness of that Law something is done by me that is applicable to some clause therein by which I stand condemnable The means whereby I was brought under that interpretation of that which was not in my self intended malitiously there being testimony given by persons whom I pitty so false yet so positive that I cannot condemn my Judges for passing sentence against me according to Legal Justice though Equity lieth in the higher breasts As for my Accusers or rather Betrayers I pitty and am sorry for them they have committed Judas crime but I wish and pray for them with Peters tears that by Peters repentance they may escape Judas his punishment and I wish other people so happy they may be taken up betimes before they have drunk more blood of Christian men possibly less deserving then my self It is true there have been several addresses made for mercy and I will put the obstruction of it upon nothing more then upon my own sin and seeing God sees it fit having not glorified him in my life I might do it in my death which I am contented to do I profess in the fear of God particular malice to any one of State or Parliament to do them a bodily injury I had none For the cause in which I had long waded I must needs say my engagement or continuance in it hath laid no scruple upon my Conscience it was on Principles of Law the knowledge whereof I profess and on principles of Religion my Judgement satisfied and Conscience rectified that I have pursued those wayes which I bless God I finde no blackness upon my conscience nor have I put it into the Bead-roll of my sins I will not presume to decide controversies I desire God to honour himself in prospering that side that hath right with it and that you may enjoy peace and plenty beyond all you possess here In my Conversation in the world I do not know where I have an enemy with cause or that there is such a person whom I have to regret but if there be any whom I cannot recollect under the notion of Christian men I pardon them as freely as if I had named them by name I freely forgive them being in free peace with all the world as I desire God for Christs sake to be at peace with me For the business of death it is a sad sentence in it self if men consult with flesh and blood But truly without boosting I say it or if I do boast I boast in the Lord I have not to this minute had one consultation with the flesh about the blow of the Axe or one thought of the Axe more then as my passport to Glory I take it for an honour and I owe thankfulness to those under whose power I am that they sent me hither to a place however of punishment yet of some honor to dye a death somewhat worthy of my blood answerable to my birth and qualification and this courtesie of theirs hath much helped towards the pacification of my minde I shall desire God that those Gentlemen in that sad Bead-roll to be tryed by the High Court of Justice that they may find that really there that is nominal in the Act an High Court of Justice a Court of High Justice high in its Righteousness though not in its severity Father forgive them and forgive me as I forgive them I desire you now that you would pray for me and not give over praying till the hour of my death not till the moment of my death for the hour is come already the instant of time approaches that as I have a great load of sins so I may have the wings of your prayers to help those Angels that are to convey my soul to Heaven and I doubt not but I shall see my Saviour and my gallant Master the King of England and another Master whom I much honoured my Lord Capel hoping this day to see my Christ in the presence of the Father the King in the presence of him my Lord Capel in the presence of them all and my self there to rejoyce with all other Saints and Angels for evermore After the uttering of these and many the like words declaring his faith and confidence in God with as much undaunted yet Christian courage as possibly could be in man he exposed his neck to the fatal Axe commending his soul into the hands of a faithful and merciful Creatour through the meritorious Passion of a gracious Redeemer and having said Lord Jesus receive me the Executioner with one blow severed his head from his body For such a collateral design not long after one Master Benson was executed at Tyburne one that had some relations to Sir John Gell who was tried for the same Conspiracy with his man Sir Johns former services to the Parliament being his best and most assured intercessours for his life and at that time were more then ordinary advantages to him And now being entered into this Tragical Scene of blood I shall in the next place give you an account of the beheading of Sir Henry Hide He was by the Scots King commissionated as Ambassadour to the Grand Signior at Constantinople and stood in competition with Sir Thomas Bendish then Ambassadour for the English for his place whereupon they had a hearing before the Vizier Bassa the result whereof was that Sir Thomas Bendish should dispose of the said Sir Henry Hide as he thought good who was to the same purpose sent to Smyrna thence into England and there condemned and executed before the Royal Exchange in London March 4. 1650. I have inserted his Speech which reflects on his Transactions this unfortunate Gentlemans end
name of God Almighty promise and swear that to the uttermost of my power I will uphold and maintain the true Reformed Protestant Christian Religion in the purity thereof as it is contained in the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testament to the uttermost of my power and understanding and encourage the Profession and Professours of the same and that to the utmost of my power I will endeavour as Chief Magistrate of these three Nations the maintenance and preservation of the Peace and Safety and just Rights and Priviledges of the People thereof and shall in all things according to our best knowledge and power govern the people of these three Nations according to Law These Ceremonies being performed a Herald of Arms by sound of Trumpet proclaimed him Lord Protectour of England Scotland Ireland and the Dominions thereto belonging hereupon the Trumpets sounded again and the people after the usual manner gave several acclamations with loud shouts crying God save the Lord Protectour His Higness had scarce accepted of these Honours but as if the ill affected would not let him breath yet another Plot is discovered Collonel Edward Sexby is said to have conspired against the Lord Protector for which he was committed to the Tower where having continued about half a year he died But to reflect a little back Mazarine that great Minister of State on which hinge all the grand Affairs of France turn perfects a Peace with England the Protector having no regard to those advantages that Spain might render him as to Commerce the places of Hostage which she proffered to put into his hands as Gravelin Dunkirk and others he was swayed with other Interest which he best understood himself to prefer an Alliance and League with France before all those advantages except his civillity induce't him which seldom had such power over him to look more lovingly upon France as the weakest at that time being abandoned by some of her Allies as quite disordered by an Intestine War in her own Bowels her Navigation totally ruined as the Pirates of Dunkirk had blockt up all her Sea Ports whereas the English scowred those Seas chast away the Pyrates and reduced the Mounsieur and Diego by their successes to their so likely advantageous peace Indeed as one writes it was a high generosity since the English caused the French to lose Graveling and Dunkirk to help France again to take those places In the mean space was not here rare bandying of Interests France having thus perfected a Peace with England they joyntly resolve to unite against the Spaniard hereupon Sir John Reynolds with six thousand Foot was sent into Picardy to joyn with the French Cavalry which compleated as gallant an Army as had been seen in France for many years together These joyntly besiege and take Mardike a strong Fort of the Spaniards in Flanders whereof Major General Morgan took possession for the English as the earnest of further Conquests which the Spaniards attempting for to regain were twice repulsed with very great loss But the joy of these Successes was mitigated by the death of Admiral Blake who as he got his Honour by the Sea died on it and that within sight of Plimouth He was a man who had deserved of his Countrey and might justly be stiled the Neptune thereof His Body was brought with a Naval pomp by water from Greenwich to Westminster being a suitable Ceremony to his employment and was there buried in Henry the Sevenths Chappel Upon whom an Ingenuous person bestowed this Epitaph Here lies a man made Spain and Holland shake Made France to tremble and the Turks to quake Thus he tame'd men but if a Lady stood In 's sight it rais'd a Palsie in his bloud Cupids Antagonist who in his life Had Fortune as familiar as a VVife A stiff hard Iron Souldier for he It seems had more of Mars then Mercury At Sea he thundered calm'd each raging wave And now he 's dead sent thundring to his Grave Soon after was St. Venant taken by the English the Lord Henry Cromwel made Deputy of Ireland Sir John Reynolds Collonel VVhite and some other Officers drowned upon Goodwin Sands as they were coming out of Flanders into England One writes that the subtilty of discovering of Plots though but in the Embrio or before they are hatcht in the time of peace is the most succinct way of letting of blood March 24. the last day of the year accounted for 1657. a great Conspiracy was again discovered in London several Regiments ' as was said being enrolled who on the first day of May in the night time should have set fire on several parts of the City and whilest the confusion and horrour thereof had seized all men they should have made a general masacre of all who opposed them Hereupon several persons were apprehended as Doctor Hewet Sir Henry Slingsby Collonel Asbton c. and a High Court of Justice erected for the tryal of them and first they began with Sir Henry Slingsby the Articles charged against them will in part discover themselves in their several speeches made just before their deaths In short they were both condemned Dr. Hewet professing himself to be ignorant of such Law though amongst the most learned Divines few of them were more knowing in the Gospel being taken in three defaults upon formalities of the Court was proceeded against as mute June 8. 1658. was the day appointed for their beheading Sir Henry Slingsby first mounting the stage spake in effect as followeth That he stood condemned by the Court of Justice as contriving and endeavouring to withdraw divers Officers of the Garrison of Kingston upon Hull from their duty and perswading them to a surrendring and yielding up of that Garrison and one that held correspondence with some beyond sea to that end That it was true he had conference upon that account with the Officers of that Garrison and that he gave Major Waterhouse a Commission signed Charles R. But that it was but an old one that had lain by him though he thought fit to make use of it to the Major Many passages he said there were which he would not insist on that some friends of his had made application to his Highness for the saving his of life but it seems it was thought fit not to be granted and therefore he submitted and was ready to dye c. Having uttered these and the like words he took off a Ring from his Bandstrings wherein instead of a Seal engraven was the Picture of the late King exactly done and giving it to a Gentleman that stood by him he said Pray give this to Harry Then he addrest himself to prayer wherein he continued some time taking leave of his friends he submitted his neck to the Block and had his head severed from his body at one blow by the Executioner This at one blow by the Executioner the Reader may observe hath been very often repeated in this Volume His Tragick Scene being
live or dye and the time when Recovery or Death is to be expected according to the judgement of Hypocrates and Hermes Trismegistus to which is added Mr. Culpepers censure of Urines 54. Culpeper's last Legacy left to his Wife for the publick good being the choicest and most profitable of those secrets in Physick and Chyrurgery which whilest he lived were lockt up in his brest and resolved never to be published till after his death 55. The Yorkshire Spaw or the vertue and use of that Water in curing of desperate Diseases with directions and Rules necessary to be considered by all that repair thither 56. Most approved Medicines and Remedies for the diseases in the body of man by A. Read Doctour in Physick 57. The Art of simpling an Introduction to the knowledge of gathering of Plants wherein the definitions divisions places descriptions differences names vertues times of gathering temperatures of them are compendiously discoursed of also a discovery of the lesser World by W. Coles 58. Adam in Eden or Natures Paradise the History of Plants Hearbs and Flowers with their several originall names the places where they grow their descriptions and kindes their times of flourishing and decreasing as also their several signatures anatomical appropriations and particular physical vertues with necessary Observations on the Seasons of planting and gathering of our English Plants A Work admirable useful for Apothecaries Chyrurgeons and other Ingenuous Persons who may in this Herbal finde comprized all the English Physical Simples that Gerard or Parkinson in their two voluminous Herbals have discoursed of even so as to be on emergent occasions their own Physicians the Ingredients being to be had in their own Fields and Gardens Published for the general good by W. Coles M. D. 59. The Compleat Midwives Practice in the high and weighty concernments of the body of Mankinde the second Edition corrected and enlarged with a full supply of such most useful and admirable secrets which Master Nicholas Culpeper in his brief Treatise and other English Writers in the Art of Midwifry have hitherto wilfully passed by kept close to themselves or wholly omitted by T. Chamberlaine M. P. illustrated with Copper Figures 60. The Queens Closet opened incomparable Secrets in Physick Chyrurgery Preserving Candying and Cookery as they were presented to the Queen by the most experienced persons of our times many whereof were honoured with her own practice Elegant Treatises in Humanity History Romances and Poetry 61. Times Treasury or Academy for the accomplishment of the English Gentry in Arguments of Discourse Habit Fashion Behaviour c. all summed up in Characters of Honour by R. Brathwait Esq 62. Oedipus or the Resolver of the Secrets of Love and other natural Problems by way of Question and Answer 63. The admirable and most impartial History of New England of the first Plantation there in the Year 1628. brought down to these times all the material passages performed there exactly related 64. The tears of the Indians the History of the bloody and most cruel proceedings of the Spaniards in the Island of Hispaniola Cuba Jamaica Mexico Peru and other places of the West-Indies in which to the life are discovered the tyrannies of the Spaniards as also the justness of our War so successfully managed against them 65. The Illustrious Shepherdess The Imperious Brother written originally in Spanish by that Incomparable Wit Don John Perez de Montalbans translated at the requests of the Marchioness of Dorchester and the Countess of Stafford by E. P. 66. The History of the golden Ass as also the Loves of Cupid and his Mistress Psiche by L. Apuleius translated into English 67. The Unfortunate Mother a Tragedy by T. N. 68. The Rebellion a Comedy by T. Rawlins 69. The Tragedy of Messalina the insatiate Roman Empress by N. Richards 70. The Floating Island a Trage-Comedy acted before the King by the Students of Christs Church in Oxon by that Renowned Wit W. Strode the songs were set by Mr. Henry Lawes 71. Harvey's Divine Poems the History of Balaam of Jonah and of St. John the Evangelist 72. Fons Lachrymarum or a Fountain of tears the Lamentations of the Prophet Jeremiah in Verse with an Elegy on Sir Charles Lucas by J Quarles 73. Nocturnal Lucubrations with other witty Epigrams and Epitaphs by R. Chamberlain 74. The Admirable ingenuous Satyr against Hipocrites Poetical with several other accurately ingenuous Treatises lately Printed 75. Wits Interpreter the English Parnassus or a sure Guide to those admirable Accomplishments that compleat the English Gentry in the most acceptable Qualifications of Discourse or Writing An Art of Logick accurate Complements Fancies Devices and Experiments Poems Poetical Fictions and A la mode Letters by J. C. 76. Wit and Drollery with other Jovial Poems by Sir J. M. M. L. M. S. W. D. 77. Sportive Wit the Muses Merriment a new Spring of Drollery Jovial Fancies c. 78. The Conveyancer of Light or the Compleat Clerk and Scriveners Guide being an exact draught of all Presidents and Assurances now in use as they were penned and perfected by diverse Learned Judges Eminent Lawyers and great Coveyancers both Ancient and Modern whereunto is added a Concordance from King Richard the Third to this present 79. Themis Aurea The Laws of the Fraternity of the Rosie Cross in which the occult Secrets of their Philosophical Notions are brought to light written by Count Mayerus and now Englisht by T. H. 80. The Iron Rod put into the Lord Protectors hand a Prophetical Treatise 81. Medicina Magica tamen Physica Magical but Natural Physick containing the general Cures of Infirmities and Diseases belonging to the Bodies of Men as also to other animals and domestick Creatures by way of Transplantation with a Description of the most excellent Cordial out of Gold by Sam. Boulton of Salop. 82. J. Tradiscan's Rarities publisht by himself 83. The Proceedings of the High Court of Justice against the late King Charles with his Speech upon the Scaffold and other proceedings Jan. 30. 1648. 84. The perfect Cook a right Method in the Art of Cookery whether for Pastry or all other manner of Al a Mode Kick-shaws with the most refined wayes of dressing flesh fowl or making of the most poinant Sawces whether after the French or English manner with fifty five wayes of dressing of Eggs by M. M. Admirable Vseful Treatises newly Printed 85. The Expert Doctors Dispensatory the whole Art of Physick restored to practice the Apothecaries shop and Chyrurgions Closet opened with a Survey as also a correction of most Dispensatories now extant with a Judicious Censure of their defects and a supply of what they are deficient in together with a learned account of the vertues and quantities and uses of Simples and Compounds with the Symptomes of Diseases as also prescriptions for their several cures by that renowned P. Morellus Physician to the King of France a Work for the order usefulness and plainness of the Method not to be parallel'd by any