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A53380 A display of tyranny, or, Remarks upon the illegal and arbitrary proceedings, in the courts of Westminster, and Guild-Hall London from the year, 1678, to the abdication of the late King James, in the year 1688, in which time, the rule was, quod principi placuit, lex esto : the first part. Oates, Titus, 1649-1705. 1689 (1689) Wing O35; ESTC R16065 100,209 272

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Richard Pagget John Serle John Haines Esquires The King's Counsel were Sr Creswell Levens The Attorney General Mr Ward The evidence of this practice subornation was very clear and full particularly Mr Bedloe witnessed that Reading had often treated with him about mincing his Evidence for the bringing off the Lords and Sr Henry Titchborne and gave him Money at several times and did draw up a Paper of what Bedloe should Swear and did carry it to the Lords in the Tower to be viewed and corrected by them Mr Speke testified that Bedloe had from time to time informed him how the Treaty was carried on that upon the 29 th of March 1679. Mr Speke and VViggins Bedloe's Servant being concealed in his Chamber Mr Reading came and in the first place asked whether any body could hear their discourse and being assured that he was secure and secret he told Mr Bedloe upon his demand what the Lords in the Tower said and what my Lord Stafford said that as to my Lord Stafford he should be sure of the Estate in Gloucester-shire which had been promised to be setled upon him for my Lord had ordered him to prepare a blank Deed which within ten days after his Discharge should be perfected and the rest of the Lords did assure him that after they were acquitted in proportion to the service he did them in lessening of his Evidence he should have a plentiful Reward That Bedloe did then demand to have something under their hands but Reading said that they think that not convenient but I do take their Words and you must take mine and then promised to go to the Lords in the Tower against Munday to prepare and bring him the Instructions from them for his Evidence Mr Speke added that upon the Munday morning he was to watch and see the Delivery of the Paper and did see Reading put it into Bedloe's hand in the painted-Chamber who immediately delivered it to Mr Speke This Paper was all of Mr Reading's writing and being read in Court was found to contain the purport of the Evidence to be given against the Lords and was so ordered that the whole was only hear-say and could no way touch them Wiggins agreed with Mr Speke in the Evidence given of the Transactions between Mr Bedloe and Mr Reading in Mr Bedloe's Chamber Reading coming to make his Defence offered nothing against the credit of the Witnesses but did in effect confess all they had testified and the whole matter charged in the Indictment and in truth he was the greatest witness against himself as was well observed after he was found guilty by the Right Honourable Sr Robert Atkyns then one of the Judges of the Common-Pleas but soon after thrust out for non-Compliance with Sr Francis North then Chief Justice and is now most deservedly Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer and Speaker of the House of Lords The Jury having brought him in guilty he was fined 1000 l. adjudged to a years Imprisonment and to be set in the Pillory upon the munday following for the space of one hour in the Palace-Yard in VVestminster When the late King James ascended the Throne he was a particular Favourite and his Suffering in this matter was well rewarded It may not seem impertinent to present the Reader upon this occasion with so much of Captain Bedloe's solemn Death-Bed Declaration as the Lord Chief Justice North allowed the World to see His Lordship was pleased to acknowledge that he took Captain Bedloe's Examination upon Oath at Bristol upon the 16 th of August 1681. And that he declared that the Duke of York had been so far engaged in the Plot that there was no part that had been proved against any Man that had suffered but he was to the full guilty of it all but what tended to the Kings Death from the trouble whereof the Jesuites had undertaken to deliver the Duke And his Lordship added that Mr Bedloe told him he lookt upon himself as a dying Man and that he must shortly appear before the Lord of Hosts to give an account of all his Actions and that because many persons had made it their business to baffle and deride the Plot He did for satisfaction of the World there declare upon the Faith of a dying Man and as he hoped for Salvation that whatever he had testified concerning the Plot was true and that he had many Witnesses to produce who would make the Plot as clear as the Sun. That the Jesuites had resolved the King's Death and would spare him no longer than he continued to be kind to them And that they resolved to set up an Head for their Cause here whatever came of it and said that if they should slip the opportunity they then had they should never have such another Notes upon the Tryal of Thomas Knox and John Lane for a Conspiracy to Defame and Scandalize Dr Otes and Mr Bedloe thereby to discredit their Evidence about the Popish Plot At the Kings-Bench Bar at VVestminster upon the 25 th of November 1679. The Judges then upon the Bench were Sr VVilliam Scroggs Lord Chief Justice Sr Francis Pemberton and Sr Thomas Jones THe unlucky miscarriage of Reading's attempt to corrupt the King's Evidence or to overthrow the credit of their Testimony deterred not others from prosecuting so pious a work for that is instantly succeeded by the cursed Conspiracy of Knox and of Lane and Osborne the one lately the other at that time a Servant to Dr Otes but Justice overtook them as the following Scheme of their Tryal shews The Indictment being read upon their pleading not guilty the following Jury was sworn Sr John Kirke Kt. John Roberts Thomas Harriot R. Waterhouse Henry Johnson Thomas Earsby Simon Middleton Joseph Ratcliffe Hugh Squire James Supple Francis Dorrington Richard Cooper Esq. The King's Counsel were Mr Attorney General Mr Solicitor General Mr Serjeant Maynard Sr Francis VVinnigton Mr VVilliams Mr Thomas Smith Mr Trenchard For Knox Mr Saunders Mr VVithens and Mr Scroggs For Lane Mr Holt assigned by the Court. The Indictment opened by Mr Trenchard was that whereas Colman Ireland Pickering and Grove conspired to destroy the King and change the Religion Established by Law to introduce Popery and were thereof Convicted Attainted and Executed And whereas the Lord Powis Lord Arundel of VVardour and others were accused of those Treasons and Impeached for the same in Parliament c. The Defendants knowing Mr Otes and Mr Bedloe had given Information of these Treasons to stifle the Evidence and scandalize them did conspire to represent them as wicked Persons and of no credit And the Indictment further sets forth that Knox with the agreement of Lane and Osborne caused Letters to be wrote with contrivance to accuse Otes and Bedloe that they had conspired falsly to accuse the E. of Danby And that Otes had attempted to commit Sodomy with Lane that to effect those wicked designs Knox gave several sums of Money to Osborne and
Sr John Peak Sr John Chapman Sr Sym. Lewis Sr John Mathews Sr Benj. Newland Sr William Dodson Sr John Buckworth Lt. Colonel John Steventon Thomas Cowden Edward Beaker John Wallis John Nicolls William Parker Henry Loads Peter Aylworth John Short Richard Aily Benj. Skut Humphrey Stroud William Carpenter Remarks upon the Tryal of Alderman Cornish at the Old-Bayly upon Munday the 19th of October 1685. Before the Lord Chief Justice Jones the Lord Chief Baron Justice Wythens Justice Levins Justice Streete Baron Gregory and Jenner the Recorder WHen the Reader remembers what part this Eminent and Worthy Citizen acted in the mighty Struglings between Christianity and Popery English Liberties and Tyranny he will not be surprised to see him overwheml'd when by the Aid of the worst of men the Banks of our Security were broken down and the Torrent of Popery and Arbitrary Power carried all before it That from the time of the discovery of the Popish Plot the Conspirators did with indefatigable Industry apply themselves to shift it off to the Protestants is most undoubtedly and beyond contradiction true This alarming the City and it being well known that the Lives Liberties Estates of English-men against Arbitrary Attempts upon them Lay in Tryals by Juryes The Citizens in the Year 1680 rouz'd out of the Lethargy in which they had long lain and bethink themselves how to secure substantial honest Juryes knowing that that could only be accomplished by proper Sheriffs They pitched upon and elected Mr Bethel and Mr Cornish to serve in that Office By so doing and by a like Election of Mr Pilkington now deservedly Lord Mayor and Mr Shute in the succeeding Year 1681 the Popish design of murdering Protestants under colour of Law was Post-poned until the Ancient Right of Electing Sheriffs was ravish'd from the City in the year 1682. However the Conspirators impatient of delay made their attempt in the Sheriffalty of Mr Bethel Mr Cornish The Earl of Shaftesbury and divers others are now clapt up upon pretence of a Plot and an experiment is made upon Mr Stephen Colledge a Man of great Honesty and who wanted nothing but a Figure to make him every way valuable But these Sheriffs not furnishing a Jury to cut him off The Earl of Shaftesbury and the rest who were imprisoned are reserved for the next Sheriffalty When they hoped tho' as Heaven would have it without ground to get Sheriffs and by them Juryes for their purpose And the Conspirators being enraged at the disappointment and baffle put upon them by an honest City-Jury in the Case of Mr Colledge They hurry that poor man to Oxford and there by most unpresidented illegal Practices basely murder him Further it cannot be forgotten that the honest endeavour of these worthy Sheriffs Mr Bethel and Mr Cornish to have the Sham-Plot of Fitz. Harris throughly searched into did greatly contribute to their future Sufferings The mentioning this Wretch forces a Remembrance of the Stratagems then used to present his discovery of the Authors of his Trayterous Libel and of the design for which it was framed That that matter might not be pryed into by the Magistrates of London he is removed from Newgate to a most close Confinement in the Tower Then he being Impeached in the Oxford Parliament in March 1680 to hinder the Examination of it there that Parliament is dissolved Quickly after he is tryed and condemned in the Court of Kings-Bench Then tho' a Papist he is left solely to the management of Dr H. of the Tower and without controversie was held to the last Moment of his Life under the hope and expectation of a Pardon if he would confess or to speak more properly say as he was directed But being deluded and his Mouth stop'd The Doctor in his Name emits to the World a Mock Confession inconsistent in it self and most notoriously void of truth but most wickedly contrived to render these Sheriffs and also those worthy Gentlemen Sr Robert Clayton an Alderman and Sr George Tr●by Recorder of London infamous and odious to the highest degree and all this with design to create a belief of a Protestant Plot particularly the Doctor 's Paper charged the Sheriffs that they came to Pitz. Harris in Newgate with a Token from the Lord Howard which he knew to be true and told him nothing would save his Life but discovering the Popish Plot and gave him great encouragement from the Lord Howard that if he would declare that he believed so much of the Popish Plot as amounted to the introducing the Roman Catholicks or if he would find out any that would criminate the Queen or the Duke or make so much as a plausible story to confirm the Plot that the Parliament would restore him to his Father's estate with the profits thereof since his Majesty's Restoration How idle false groundles and villanous soever this Story was it highly irritated the Conspirators against these Gentlemen About this time God for the Scourge of the Nation had sent into the City that common Nusance to Mankind a Race of blind sensless Creatures who hardly deserved to be called Men and therefore took to themselves the Name of Tories These Animals seeming to delight in Fetters of Iron rather than Chains of Gold were the Champions for Arbitrary and Despotick Power They set themselves to betray the Rights and Liberties of the City and to bring all Free-born Englishmen to live at the Will of an Absolute Prince These by Addresses of Thanks for the Violation of the Laws and of Abhorrence of those who endeavoured to maintain them invited the Conspirators to attempt the overthrow of the Antient Priviledges and Government of London Nay their Solicitation Backt with assurance of a Surrender procured the bringing a Quo Warranto against the City Charters But the Wretches failing their Principals herein as they ever did in all things but Noisy Huzza's and a Committee of Aldermen and Commoners true English-Men being appointed to guard the City Franchises against the Quo Warranto Attack New Measures must be taken hereupon The Tories now perceiving that their Quo Warranto must pass the Formalities of Westminster-Hall witb bended Knees supplicate the aid of that Tool of State Secretary Jenkins He readily espouses them and having the Ascendant of Sr John Moor at this time most unluckily Lord Mayor directs him to constitute Mr North and Mr Rich Sheriffs of the City which he as obsequiously as daringly undertakes Many worthy Citizens whose names deserve eternal remembrance boldly withstood these Arbitrary Illegal Attempts Amongst them Mr Bethel and Mr Cornish were not the last and they felt with the first the rage of the Conspirators and their Adherents Their honest innocent and peacable appearing to Vote for the Election of Sh●riffs in 1682. according to the undoubted right of the Citizens was termed a Riot and in Mr Cornish's Tryal now before us a Branch of the Plot. and most certainly is was the greatest Plot and Treason
unfortunate in his private Concerns yet he was not blemished in his Credit That Baines then told him if he would not go to Whitehall the Marshal had a Habeas Corpus to carry him and so they parted That about four in the afternoon the Marshal came with Booth and Baines and compelled him to go to Whitehall That there Secretary Jenkins and my Lord Conway did strictly examine him about the Lord of Shaftesbury and what he knew of any design against the King who told them he knew nothing That the King then came and honoured the Infornant by saying that he knew him well and that he had served his Father and him faithfully and he hoped he would not decline his Obedience to which the Informant answering that he deserved not to be suspected the King told him that he had not had an opportunity to serve his Friends but hoped he might and promised to consider the Informants Sufferings but told him that what kindness was intended him was not with a design to invite him to speak a word but truth it self and then demanded what he knew of a design against his Person and Government that he thereupon told the King that he knew nothing of any Plot or Design against his Majesty or Goverment that the King seemed not to be satisfied but still pressed hard upon him and he not being able to give any satisfactory answer to the questions put to him by the King his Majesty told him if he would say as he hoped to be saved he knew nothing of any design against his Person he would believe him which the Informant did say in those very words at which the King seemed to wonder That then he was left to Secretary Jenkins who used such Arguments as he thought fit And then he was carried into another Room before the King the Lord Chancellour Lord Hallifax and Lord Hide the two Secretaries and Chief Justice Pemberton and Examined there Graham Burton and Baines being present That the Chancellour was sharp upon him with several Questions which the Informant could not answer and would not believe but that he must be guilty of knowing great things against the Lord Shaftesbury That thereupon the Informant told him if they would not take his Word he would declare his Knowledge upon Oath if they brought the Lord Shaftesbury to Tryal and that without any hopes of Gain or Advancement upon which the Chancellour told him there were two sorts of Advancement and he need not give himself that trouble for he himself was like to come to Tryal before the Lord Shaftesbury That then the Chancellour demanded of the Informant whether he had not a Commission for the new Service against the King which being denyed he told the Informant that he was to have a Troop of Fifty Men and that Booth who stood by gave that Information and was Listed under him which Booth affirmed 〈…〉 true and that he had made Oath of it that the Informant knowing his Innocence was unconcerned and told the Council if they had such another Witness they might do his Business The Information of Gervas James Gentleman THat Captain Wilkinson upon the 11 th of October 1681. and daily afterwards acquainted him with the Treaties and Transactions between him and Bains Booth and Graham and the other persons mentioned in the fore-going Information and that they were in substance the same with what is therein set forth the Informant at Captain VVilkinson's request and for his own satisfaction having kept a daily journal during the said Treaties The Information of Mrs Susannah Wilkinson Wife of Captain Wilkinson THat upon the 12th of October 1681 she found her Husband at VVeaver's House with Booth and Baines who were very largely treating him with Wine That her Husband stepping out Booth told her that he was a most obstinate man and desired her to perswade him to be guided by him and said the King would do more for her Husband then ever the Ld. of Shaftesbury would and was sensible of his Service and Sufferings And if her Husband would be perswaded by him the said Booth to appear against the Ld. of Shaftesbury he should have 500 l. per annum settled upon him and his Heirs forever That upon the 14th of October 1681 she being with her Husband at the King's Bench-Prison Booth came and desired her for God's sake to perswade her Husband to be ruled by him and that if he would he might be a happy man and the Duke of York would settle 500 l. a Year in Ireland upon him and his Heirs Having in the fore-going Abstract shown what mighty Temptations honest Captain VVilkinson withstood I shall now intimate something of the manner how the Irish VVitnesses were corrupted and wrought upon to Swear against my Lord of Shaftesbury Mr Robert Boulter of London Stationer and Mary Cox of Stoke-Newington in Middlesix Spinster upon the 8 th of July 1681. gave Information in writing upon Oath before Sr John Fredrick a Justice of the Peace for London That upon the 7 th of June 1681. Bernard Dennis told them that David Fitz. Gerald had made him great proffers to retract his Evidence about the Popish Plot. Bryan Haynes made Oath before the Council the 5 th of October 1681. that David Fitz. Gerald one of the King's Evidence about the end of last February told him that he had possessed the King that the late Plot was a Presbyterian Plot and invented by the Earl of Shaftesbury to extirpate the Family of the Stewarts and turn England into a Common-wealth or set the Crown upon the Earl's Head. That Fitz. Gerald did diverse times tamper with the Deponent to retract his Evidence concerning the Popish Plot and that Fitz. Gerald told him that he wanted but John Macnamar to come in and joyn with him and he would have the Earl of Shaftesbury's Head off and Sham the whole Popish Plot. This Information of Bryan Haynes is still extant and certified to the World by Mr Blathwayte then one of the Clerks of the Council in these Words A true Copy of a Paper remaining at the Council Board attested in pursuance of an Order in Council dated the 5 th of October 1681. William Blathwaite Now Is it not a most astonishing thing and not to be believed in the next Age that the King's Council should without blushing produce these very Men Dennis Haynes Macnamar c. as Witnesses against this Noble Lord and that Mr Secretary Jenkins and Mr Blathwaite and Mr Gwin Clerks of the Council could stand in the Court and hear them give their Evidence without Exclamation But they may say as the Poet hath it Aetas Parentum peior Avis Nos tandem protulit Progeniem Vitiosorem Notes upon the Tryal of Mr Stephen Colledge at Oxford upon an Indictment for High Treason the 17 th of August 1681. THe Conspirators having been disappointed of many 〈◊〉 hopeful Plot and to this time not getting one to bear They now resolve to content
Justice he hath endeavoured to take off the credit of our Witnesses and he would have you believe that he is a very good Protestant though he does the Papists work I think it a great piece of arrogance for him to take upon him the Title of a Protestant when he hath abused that title by such unsuitable Practices I cannot but reflect upon the condition of this Man whose onely hope is that you should now forget your selves and become as ill as he is But as that cannot be presumed so I shall not need to say any more to you After the making of very long Speeches to the Jury by Sr George Jeffryes and also by the Lord Chief Justice North to the same effect with the Solicitor's The Prisoner minded the Lord Chief Justice that he had omitted to mind the Jury of several material things evidenced for him but his Lordship answered That he had repeated to them as much as he could remember And so the Jury having been for a short time sent out and returning it being about three in the Morning they brought in the Prisoner Guilty The Lord Chief Justice North coming to pronounce Sentence said I think the Court were all very well satisfied with the Verdict and the Jury did according to Justice and Right I thought it was a Case that as you made your own defence small proof would serve the turn to make any one believe you Guilty and so he was sentenced to dye as a Traytor At the place of Execution upon the 31st of August 1681. he behaved himself with great Courage and Constancy and expressed himself to this effect He professed in the presence of the Living God That he was so far from being Guilty of those Treasons falsly sworn against him by the wretched and mercenary Men Dugdale Turbervile Smyth and Haynes that he never spoke so much as one single word of those Treasons to them or either of them or ever heard them spoke till sworn in the Court. He declared that Haynes had discovered to him that the Parliament was to be destroyed at Oxford and that Fitz. Gerald and his party had a design to murder the Earl of Shaftesbury and that they did endeavour to bring Macnamar over and said that then it would be well with them And they would not be long before they had Shaftesbury's Life That as for what Arms he and others had they were for their own defence in case the Papists should make any attempt by way of Massacre He took it upon his Death that he was never engaged in any manner of Plot or Conspiracy against the King the Laws or Government or knew of any except that of the Papists That if it had been true that he was to have seized the King he knew not of so much as one single Person that was or would have stood by him in that attempt That Masters was unjust in what he swore in omitting the material part of the discourse about the Parliament of 1640 for when Masters cursed them and the last Westminster-Parliament and charged the Parliament of 1640 with beginning the War and cutting off the King's Head he denyed both and told Masters that the Papists begun that War and that the death of the King was the fatal consequence of it That Sr William Jennings also did him wrong for his words were that he had lost the first Blood for the Parliament and wish'd it might be the last That he was reported to be a Papist but he declared he detested Popery and that he had lived and dyed a Protestant That Secretary Jenkins my Lord Killingworth and Mr Seymour when they committed him did interrogate him to many things that he should be privy to against the King Mr Sevmour saying that Colledge did know the Lord of Shaftesbury the Lord Howard and Mr Ferguson were also engaged but that he answered were it to save his Life he could not accuse a Man of them nor any other Person whatsoever That upon the 23d of August the Messenger who brought him the message of his Death told him he might save his Life if he would confess who was the Cause of his coming to Oxford and upon what account And that he answered him that he came voluntarily of himself rode his own Horse spent his own Money and neither was invited nor had dependency on any Person whatsoever and had only one Case of Pistols and a Sword and that had the Papists offered to have destroyed the Parliament as was sworn they would that he was there to have lived and dyed with them That when he had said this to the Messenger though the very truth he found it was not that he wanted and so left him with a Curse He concluded I dye by the Hands of the Enemies of the great God his Christ his Servants his Gospel my Country to which I willingly submit and earnestly pray mine may be the last Protestants Blood that murdering Church of Rome may shed in Christendom And that my Death may be a far greater Blow to their Bloody Cause than I either have or could have been by my Life The Lord God Almighty save England from Popery and Slavery bless the City of London and unite all good Protestants in the Nation Amen Amen Notes upon the Tryal of Nathaniel Thompson the Popish Printer William Paine Brother of the famous Nevil Paine and John Farwell upon the 20 th of June 1682. before the Lord Chief Justice Pemberton upon an Information for Writing and Publishing Libels importing that Sr Edmundbury Godfry Murdered himself THe Conspirators from the very first discovery resolved that the Popish Plot should be turned to a Presbyterian Plot pursuant thereto the credit of the Evidence especially from the time of the Dissolution of the Oxford-Parliament in the beginning of the year 1681. had been with matchless Impudence and Virulence traduced and run down by the scriblings of L'Estrange and of Heraclitus ridens and the Intelligences of this Thompson now before us so that by this time a multitude were infected with the poison of their Works and seduced into a belief that the Popish Plot was a Sham nothing but a thing raised by the Protestants against the Papists however it still remained upon them to wipe off the Blood of that Martyr the worthy Sr Edmundbury Godfry which was more then One Thousand Witnesses against them and now they judging matters to be ripened for it with effronted fore-Heads set to the Work as will appear by what follows The Information against these notorious Criminals Thompson Paine and Farwell was to this effect That they well knowing that Green Berry and Hill were Convicted Attainted and Ex●…uted for the Murther of Sr Edmundbury Godfry and that Prance Bedloe Brown Curtis Skillarne and Cambridge were Witnesses for the King against them and that by the Coroners Inquest taken upon view of the Body it was found that he was Strangled and Choaked they to subvert and elude the due course of
Mr Solicitor had shortened his Labour by the pains he had taken to sum up the Evidence to them which he concluded he had without doubt done with all faithfulness to his Master He then proceeds to blacken the Defendant with all the foul Language that Malice could suggest and tells his old Friends of the Jury whose acquaintance with him disposed them to credit him that the Popish Plot was a sham and that under the pretence thereof another black and bloody Conspiracy was carried on Then he magnifies the evidence against the Defendant both from the number of the St Omers Sparks no less then twenty but also their harmony and he affirms that against the credit of their Testimony there was no objection really made but only Impudence that the Defendant had produced but two positive Witnesses that they were likewise positive in their contradiction of one another that they swore according as their humour led them and not according to any remembrance they had of the thing and that he rather believed it because the third Witness Page gave an evidence contrary to both of them how notoriously false these malitious Suggestions are will evidently appear upon the perusal of what these three honest and plain-dealing Witnesses swore Then he comes to the Defendants fourth Witness Mr Walter and positively affirms that he says nothing to the matter for that it did plainly appear the time which he speaks of was about a year and a half before the five Jesuits Tryal which must be in 1677 before the Defendant went to St Omers Mr Solicitor told the Jury that Mr Walter spoke of a year and a quarter before the discovery of the Plot had that been true it had run it back to the year 1677 and to a time before the Doctor went to St Omers His Lordship makes Mr VValter to speak of about a year and a half before the Jesuits Tryal which runs it back to December 1677 and then the King 's celebrated Witnesses and Mr VValter are agreed but Mr Vvalter speaking for himself says the time was near a year and a quarter before the Tryal of the Jesuits which brings us to April 1678. Though the Chief Justice and Solicitor were not agreed in this matter yet they would not quarrel about it provided the understanding Jury would credit either of them against Mr Walter and so serve the turn they aimed at the baffling the credit of the Popish Plot and not allow this Witness to be serviceable to the Vindication of Dr Otes Upon the following day after this Tryal Dr Otes was tryed upon an Indictment for another supposed Perjury but that prosecution being of the Complexion with what is here presented I shall not trouble the Reader with any thing further upon this subject then to present him with the Names of the Jury viz. Sr Thomas Vernon Nicholas Charlton Esq Tho. Langham Esq Thomas Hartop Francis Griffith John Kent George Tory Ano. Hen. Loades Tory Also John Midgley John Pelling Thomas Short and George Peck The Juries having according to the direction of that Man of Blood Jeffryes brought in the Defendant guilty of both the Perjuries Comes the Abhorrer of Parliaments the tender-hearted good natured Protestant Judge VVythens to pronounce the Sentence This very Person Wythens being Counsel for Knox did declare openly in the Court of King's Bench that Dr Otes had served the Nation too well to be vilified in that Court. previous to it he tells the Defendant That no Christian 's Heart can think of the innocent Blood which was shed by his Oath without bleeding That every knowing Man believed and every honest Man grieved for it He proceeds God be thanked our Eyes are now opened You had not one Word to justifie your self from that great and heinous Perjury you were accused of transcendant Impudence The Judgment of the Court inter alia is You shall upon Wednesday next be VVhipt from Algate to Newgate Vpon Friday you shall be VVhipt from Newgate to Tyburn by the Hands of the common Hangman This I pronounce to be the Judgment of the Court upon you and I must tell you plainly If it had been in my power to have carried it further I should not have been unwilling to have given Judgment of Death upon you I shall sum up all with the sense of the present House of Commons upon this whole proceeding which take in this Vote Martis 11th die Junij 1689. Resolved That the Prosecution of Titus Otes upon two Indictments for Perjury in the Court of King's Bench was a design to stifle the Popish Plot and that the Verdicts given thereupon were corrupt and that the Judgments given thereupon were cruel and illegal Notes upon the Tryal of Nathaniel Reading Esq for attempting to stifle the King's Evidence as to the horrid Popish Plot upon Wednesday the 24th of April 1679. before the Lord Chief Justice North c. THe Conspirators against our Religion Laws and Liberties being struck with astonishment and the Imprisoned and Impeached Traytors with no small Terror at the most providential and happy accession of Captain William Bedloe's Testimony to the discovery made by Dr Otes of the hellish Popish Plot in which he had stood single much discouraged we do quickly find their thoughts at work how to remove this newly acquired Witness Their way of taking off Sr Edmundbury Godfrey having so highly dis-served their Cause that is not to be again practised therefore the resolution taken in the present case is to tamper with and buy off Captain Bedloe they pitched upon Mr Reading to carry on this Intrigue whose parts and principles did very well qualifie him for such an undertaking but Mr Bedloe being above the reach of very powerful Temptations he very honestly detected the villainous Attempts upon him and the Suborner was brought to Justice as follows The Indictment sets forth the Plot against the King the Government and the Protestant Religion and that Colman Ireland and Grove were tryed condemned and executed for the same That several Lords viz. the Earl of Powis Lord Viscount Stafford Lord Bellasis Lord Arundel of Wardour Lord Petre and also Sr Henry Titchbourn stand impeached of the said Treason That Reading well knowing these things and to obstruct and stifle them and to retard the prosecution of Justice against the Lord Powis Stafford Bellasis Petre and Sr Henry Titchbourn did on their part the 29th of March last solicit suborn and endeavour to perswade Mr VVilliam Bedlooe whom he knew to have given Information of those Treasons against the said Persons to lessen stifle and not to give in evidence the full truth against them and to give such evidence as he should direct and to that purpose did give him fifty six Guineas and promised him other great Rewards to the hindrance and suppression of Justice The Jury were these Sr John Cutler Thomas Cass Joshua Galliard Rains. Waterhouse Edw. Willford Mathew Bateman Tho. Henslow Walter Moil Thomas Earsby
snivelled at and overthrown by a Company of such Whining Fellows Do you think to sham People into Offices No I tell you Villany was the Foundation of it and Knavery the Superstructure Neither Bethel nor that very Fellow that stands there Cornish would have taken the Oaths and Sacrament till they found it would contribute to the design of subverting the Government then these Rascals could qualifie themselves for an Office only to put the Kingdom into a Flame Mr Gilbert Nelson then testified That upon the holdling up of the Hands at the Election of Sheriffs the 24 th of June 1682. there were upon the view most for Mr Papillon and Mr Dubois and that upon the casting up the Poll Books there was the greatest number for Mr Papillon Mr Wightman added that in the Poll-Books there were 2400. and odd for Mr Papillon and Mr Dubois Mr Leonard Robinson added that by the Hands the majority was much more for Mr P. and Mr D. than for the other two and the Sheriffs did so declare their opinion and a Poll being demanded and granted after it was closed in the Evening the Sheriffs declared the Numbers upon the Hustings Mr P. and Mr D. had above two thousand and Mr North and Mr Box some hundreds under two thousand Mr Baker testified that the Action was brought by the advice of Mr Wallop Mr Pollexfen and Mr Thompson Then the Chief Justice comes to sum up the Evidence and after a most tedious Introduction proceeds to discharge his Spleene thus Come Gentlemen it is best to be plain Tho' it is true a Man may lawfully sue for such an Office and it is no offence yet it looks somewhat extraordinary 't is for some strange purpose or other It is notoriously known that for several Years the Government has been beset and which is a baser thing than ever was thought of or acted in the highest times of Villany the very Methods of Justice have been corrupted and all to serve the main design of subverting the Government Gentlemen this is so black a Wickedness that no honest Man that has any sense of Loyalty Religion or common Justice but must tremble at the very thoughts of it When we see such Fellows as are common Reproaches to the Government shall get into Office to make Ignoramus Juryes When men begin to take Oathes to sanctifie Villany what shall we say And all this you all of you Gentlemen know to be true Was it not more safe to conspire the death of the King his Brother than to give the least frown upon one of these snivelling Saints Did not we know that Men were sanctified to be Jury-men that before were never thought fit to be trusted with the common Society of honest Men Mr Papillon knows all this to be true eminently When pack'd Jurys were grown to that heighth that when seven or eight Witnesses swore down-right Treason The Traytor could not by these Men so much as be accused by an Indictment To that stupidity in Villany were things brought by these Fellows So far were the proceedings in Courts of Justice tainted that cropp'd Hair and a demure Look were the best signs of a good Evidence Gentlemen There was not a pursuit of right in this case It was a designed piece of Villany on purpose to affront the Government nay to destroy it and if he were ten thousand times Mr Papillon I would tell him so It is plain Gentlemen that the design from the beginning to the end was to cause a tumult and confusion in the City in order to put that damned hellish Conspiracy for destroying the King and his Brother and every man that was honest and loyal in execution This Gentlemen is plain English We all know Mr Papillon to be a wealthy Man one that had rather have minded his Affairs than the expensive Office of Sheriff but that something was to be done to wreak a damned Malice and Revenge upon the Government This I tell him openly and let him and his party make their Remarks upon it as they please There was questionless a devilish Malice fixed in his heart and mind and he wanted an opportunity to effect it and he thought it best for his own security to take this course and nothing else was in it Alack-a-day as Mr Pilkington said I am for the preservation of the Liberties and Properties of the Subject but I find the City is strangely run down in their Rights and Priviledges I will rather take a troublesome Office than let all run thus and immediately sets himself a Cock-a-hoop as if there were none to take care of the City but himself He and Mr Bethel and Mr Cornish forsooth are the only Men of the times the Men Men for the Liberties of the Subject and the Rights of the City Gentlemen the Government is infinitely concerned in this Case that puts a weight upon your enquiry into the damages your severity in this Case will deter all People from entring into Clans and Cabals to affront the Government That I may not further nauseat the Reader with the foul Language venomous Malice of this Insolent arrogant and intolerable Slanderer I shall transcribe no more of his virulent discourse though he run on to a strange length at a most wicked and infamous rate of Falshoods and Defamations against the best Men of the City without any manner of colour for the truth of what he said The Jury thus directed found for the Plantiff and assessed Damages to 10000 l. The Chief Justice said Gentlemen you seem to be Persons that have some sense upon you and consideration for the Government and I think have given a good Verdict and are to be greatly commended for it By this extravagant and most unrighteous Verdict was this upright and Wise Citizen Mr Papillon drove into Exile till Heaven vouchsafed him with the Nation a most Miraculous and happy deliverance by the glorious Vndertaking of our now Soveraign then Prince of Orange That it may not be forgotten how this Plantiff Sr William Pritchard came to be Lord Mayor I shall subjoyn the Account of the Poll taken when he was brought on Sr Thomas Goold had 2257 Votes Alderman Cornish had 2227. Sr William Pritchard had but 2144. Sr Henry Tulse had 236. Being conscious that in the foregoing Account of the Tryal of the pretended Guildhall Riot I forgot to intimate to the Reader that Lieutenant Colonel Quiney had a Warrant for what he did tho' he did not condescend to show it to such Men as Sr Robert Clayton and the other Aldermen upon whom he put the Indignity before mentioned to do him right and to shew that though he might act too headily 't was not upon his own Head I shall in this place insert the Names of those who ordered him and the Forces he then commanded to that Post They were The Lord Mayor Sr John Moore Sr George Waterman Sr James Edwards Sr Will. Pritchard Sr Hen. Tulse Sr James Smith