Selected quad for the lemma: king_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
king_n worthy_a year_n zeal_n 51 3 7.6100 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A57919 Historical collections of private passages of state Weighty matters in law. Remarkable proceedings in five Parliaments. Beginning the sixteenth year of King James, anno 1618. And ending the fifth year of King Charls, anno 1629. Digested in order of time, and now published by John Rushworth of Lincolns-Inn, Esq; Rushworth, John, 1612?-1690. 1659 (1659) Wing R2316A; ESTC R219757 913,878 804

There are 22 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

which your self shall discover And you shall advertise me of whatsoever you shall understand the learn governing your self in all occurrents with that wariness and discretion as your zeal to my service doth assure me of These were the Arts of Spain to corrupt divers in the Court of England Buckingham and his Dependants followed the Kings inclinations The Duke of Lenox Marquis Hamilton and William Earl of Pembroke disliking the Kings course did not contest with him but only intimated their dissent It was said of Gondomar That when he returned into Spain he gave in his Account of Disbursments for Pensions given in England amongst others To Sir Robert Cotton 1000 l. a person of great Integrity and one who was ever averse to the House of Austria Which Sir Robert getting notice of by the English Agent then in Spain demanded reparation which was obtained but with a salvo to the Ambassadors honor the error being said to be committed by a Dependent upon the Ambassador and not by himself The King being jealous of uncomptrolled Soveraignty and impatient of his Peoples intermedling with the Mysteries of State had fallen into a great dislike of Parliaments and for many years before had given way to Projects and Monopolies And many of his Ministers perhaps fearing an enquiry into their own actions might suggest to him that he might better furnish himself by those ways and the Match now in treaty then by Subsidies usually accompanied with the redress of Grievances Nevertheless he was now minded to call a Parliament conceiving it might be of special use For he observed the affections of the People to be raised for the Recovery of the Palatinate and then concluded that those affections would open their purses to the supply of his wants and the Treaty with Spain would effect the business without the expence and troubles of War and the good accord between him and his people would quicken the Spaniard to conclude the Match And accordingly Writs were issued forth to assemble them the 30. of Ianuary In the calling of this Parliament he recommended to his Subjects the choice of such Members as were of the wisest gravest and best affected people neither superstitious nor turbulent but obedient Children to this their Mother-Church In the mean while in Germany the Protestant Union continually declined by the gradual falling away of the several partakers The Elector of Saxony reduced the remainder of Lusatia The Province of Moravia upon the approach of Buquoy seeing the Count de Latiere came not in to their succor prayed that they might enjoy their Priviledges in matter of Religion and be received into the Emperors grace and favor which submission was well received at Vienna Likewise the States of Silesia failing of assistance from the Elector Palatine were constrained to make their peace Then the Palatine propounded to the Elector of Saxony an Overture of Peace declaring That he took the Crown upon him to preserve the Protestants in the free exercise of their Religion The Saxon replied That he had no way to make his Peace but to renounce the Kingdom of Bohemia and the Provinces Incorporate and to beg the Emperors pardon Afterwards the Elector Palatine goeth to Brandenburgh and then to Segenburgh where there was an Assembly of Princes and States Protestant to oppose the exploits of Spinola In the mean while Count Mansfield stirs in Bohemia pillages several Towns and the Goods of all those that cryed God save King Ferdinand The relation of England to these affairs of Foreign States had caused a general liberty of discourse concerning matters of State which King Iames could not bear but by Proclamation commanded all from the highest to the lowest not to intermeddle by Pen or Speech with State-concerments and secrets of Empire either at home or abroad which were no fit Themes or Subjects for Vulgar persons or Common meetings On the Thirtieth day of Ianuary the Parliament began to sit and the King came in person and made this Speech MY Lords Spiritual and Temporal and you the Commons Cui multiloquio non deest peccatum In the last Parliament I made long discourses especially to them of the Lower House I did open the true thoughts of my heart but I may say with our Saviour I have piped to you and you have not danced I have mourned and you have not lamented Yet as no mans actions can be free so in me God found some spices of vanity and so all my sayings turned to me again without any success And now to tell the reasons of your calling and this meeting apply it to your selves and spend not the time in long Speeches Consider that the Parliament is a thing composed of a Head and a Body The Monarch and the Two Estates It was first a Monarchy then after a Parliament There are no Parliaments but in Monarchical Governments For in Venice the Netherlands and other Free Governments there are none The Head is to call the Body together And for the Clergy the Bishops are chief for Shires their Knights and for Towns and Cities their Burgesses and Citizens These are to treat of difficult matters and to counsel their King with their best advice to make Laws for the Commonweal And the Lower House is also to petition their King and acquaint him with their Grievances and not to meddle with their Kings Prerogative They are to offer supply for his Necessity and he to distribute in recompence thereof Justice and Mercy As in all Parliaments it is the Kings office to make good Laws whose fundamental cause is the Peoples ill manners so at this time that we may meet with the new Abuses and the incroaching Craft of the times Particulars shall be read hereafter As touching Religion Laws enough are made already It stands in two points Perswasion and Compulsion Men may perswade but God must give the blessing Iesuites Priests Puritans and Sectaries erring both on the right hand and left hand are forward to perswade unto their own ends and so ought you the Bishops in your example and preaching But Compulsion to obey is to bind the Conscience There is talk of the Match with Spain But if it shall not prove a Furtherance to Religion I am not worthy to be your King I will never proceed but to the glory of God and content of my Subjects For a Supply to my Necessities I have reigned Eighteen years in which time you have had Peace and I have received far less supply than hath been given to any King since the Conquest The last Queen of famous memory had one year with another above a Hundred thousand pounds per annum in Subsidies And in all my time I have had but Four Subsidies and Six Fifteens It is Ten years since I had a Subsidy in all which time I have been sparing to trouble you I have turned my self as nearly to save expences as I may I have abated much in my Household expences in my
real from things fictitious or imaginary Whereof I shall not at all repent if I may but prove an ordinary Instrument to undeceive those that come after us If you demand why my Collections commence so early and start at such a distance of time so remote I must answer That it was at first in my purpose to begin with the Parliament which met Nov. 3. 1640. But after I had perused ordered and compared my Printed and Manuscript-Relations of the First Year of that Parliament I found they pointed at and were bottomed upon some Actions of the late King in dissolving four preceding Parliaments And thereupon the zeal I had to clear the truth of the Differences between the King and Parliament forced me to a longer Adventure especially seeing the Essay had been very imperfect and but a meer fragment if I had only writ the Death and not the Life of a Prince who in the first Speech that ever he made in his first Parliament did reflect upon some passages in a former Parliament that advised his Father to break off the two Treaties with Spain touching a Marriage and Restitution of the Palatinate and so engaged the Father in a War which the Son was by him left to prosecute And this Consideration put me upon a further enquiry concerning the aforesaid Treaties the causes and grounds of the War in the Palatinate and how far the same concerned England and the oppressed Protestants in Germany And finding those proceedings to have their rise in the Year 1618. in which Year the Blazing-Star appeared I resolved that very Instant should be the Ne plus ultra of my Retrospect I allow and accept it as a good Memento which I meet with in a late Author That most Writers now adays appear in Publique not crook-backed as it is reported of the Iews but crook-sided warped and bowed to the right or to the left For I have heartily studied to declare my self unbiassed and to give an instance That it is possible for an Ingenuous man to be of a Party and yet not partial If any one engaged on the King's side come forth in Print with the like moderation fairness and indifferencie without heat and personal reflections our Posterity may be confident of a full discovery of Truth which is every honest mans desire and expectation And besides the Vertues and Reasons of men concerned may shine and give satisfaction even to those who are not of the same Judgment I pretend onely in this Work to a bare Narrative of matter of Fact digested in order of time not interposing my own Opinion or interpretation of Actions I infuse neither vinegar nor gall into my Ink If I mention a Charge or Impeachment it relates also to the Defence that was made by the Accused And though in these latter times Titles Names and Dignities are altered yet I use the Language of that Time of which I write speaking as the then Parliaments spake and not robbing any man of the Honor or Epithite which they then pleased to give him If I speak of any transactions which I my self did not see or hear I do so with all the caution imaginable having first consulted Records conferred with Persons of unquestionable esteem interessed in the very actions or perused their known hand-writings of those times and where I make mention of any Letters or Passages scattered in print I first well weighed the same and out of whose Closets they came and found many of them concredited before I inserted them And lastly where I doubted I perfected my Intelligence by Forein correspondencies fetching my satisfaction in divers particulars out of Germany Spain and Italy Here you will have an intermixture of Secrets of State useful for States-men and of matters of Law which may be of some use not only to the Professors of it but to every Englishman for though few profess the Law yet all live by it for it hedges in and upholds the Rights Liberties and Properties The matters of Law are not all bound up in one bundle but you will finde them dispersed in interlocutory Speeches and Discourses some of them in Historical Narrations and lastly in Polemical Debates and Arguments taken by a Gentleman then a young Student of the Law which you will finde in an Appendix placed at the end of the Book and I hope the Reader will not think his minutes ill bestowed in reading of them though out of place A great part of the Work is filled up with remarkable Transactions in Parliament and the Course and Proceedings thereof wherein you will finde not onely great wit and wisdom but choice Eloquence and excellent Orators Diggs Wentworth Phillips Elliot Glanvile and others not much inferior to the Roman Demagogue I durst not presume to contract them to an Epitomie or Abridgement lest by essaying that I might trespass too much upon the Soil of other mens Inventions and Judgements or prejudice Truth or the Persons whose natural Off-springs they are Here you have Debates Siftings and Consultations of each House apart and also by Conferences each with other Alterius sic Altera poscit opem Domus consultat amicè and Resolutions of Parliaments and some Laws which were the ultimate productions of these Councels and Debates I have but a word to say to my good and worthy Friends of the Army and it must be by way of Apology that this Treatise contains not what may be expected by them from me the Relation of the Motions Actions and Atchievements of the Army which I acknowledge was the first thing in my thoughts and intentions But upon further consideration I thought it necessary to look somewhat backwards that we may the better understand the Causes and Grounds which brought the late War upon us before we set forth the Actions of the War In the former we may see the vigilancy and care of our Ancestors to secure and uphold our Liberties and Properties and to transmit the same in as much purity as might be to their Posterity in the latter which are the Actions of the War you shall see their Courage and Magnanimity setting a higher value upon the Rights and Liberties of the Nation then upon their own Lives Whom therefore when I come in order of time to mention and shall also have occasion to magnifie for their perseverance in maintaining and defending those Laws and Liberties so redeemed with the price of their blood against Arbitrary wayes and courses how joyfull shall I be to employ my Pen to Chronicle such of their Names to Posterity who justly merit that Character as worthy of Double Honor. In the second Part of my Collections which is to follow according to the entertainment which this findes abroad I shall write with the more confidence because I did personally attend and observe all Occurrences of moment during the Eleven years Interval of Parliament in the Star-Chamber Court of Honor and Exchequer-Chamber when all the Judges of England met there upon extraordinary
highly displeased with some of the Commons House whom he called Ill-tempered spirits Sir Edward Cook Sir Robert Philips were committed to the Tower Mr. Selden Mr. Pym Mr. Mallery to other Prisons and Confinements Order was given for the sealing up the locks and doors of Sir Edward Cooks Chambers in London and in the Temple for the seising of his Papers and the Council debating about the General Pardon that should have passed this last Parliament had consulted about the ways of excluding him from that benefit either by preferring a Bill against him before the publication of the Pardon or by exempting him by name whereof they said they had presidents Likewise Sir Dudley Diggs Sir Tho. Crew Sir Nathaniel Rich and Sir Iames Perrot for punishment were sent into Ireland joined in Commission with others under the Great Seal of England for the enquiry of sundry matters concerning his Majesties service as well in the Government Ecclesiastical and Civil as in point of his Revenue and otherwise within that Kingdom Proclamations had formerly issued out against the Peoples too liberal speaking of matters above their reach Which at this time occasioned Letters from the Council to the Judges of the next Assises taking notice of licentious and undutiful speeches touching State and Government notwithstanding several Proclamations prohibiting the same which the King was resolved no longer to let pass without severest punishment and thereupon required the Judges to give this in Charge in their several Circuits and to do exemplary Justice where they find any such Offenders The King still walked in his beaten path of Sollicitations and Treaties after the constant bad success of his former Mediations For at the very time when he treated of Peace his Son in law was despoiled of his Hereditary patrimony by the Emperors commandment who after the suspension of the Ban or Proscription commanded the taking up of Arms again in the Lower Palatinate the Upper Palatinate being already subdued Which misery King Iames acknowledged to be the fruit of his own patience delays and doubtfulness Nevertheless he ceaseth not to pursue the favor of an implacable Enemy He wrote to the Emperor Ferdinand declaring his earnest endeavors to appease the Bohemian War and his ardent zeal for Peace from the beginning and expressed the Terms which he had prescribed to his Son in law As That he shall for himself and his Son renounce all pretence of Right and Claim to the Crown of Bohemia That he shall from henceforth yield all constant due devotion to the Imperial Majesty as do other obedient Princes Electors of the Empire That he shall crave pardon of the Imperial Majesty That he shall not hereafter any manner of way demean himself unfittingly toward the Imperial Majesty nor disturb his Kingdoms and Countries And that he shall upon reasonable Conditions reconcile himself to other Princes and States of the Empire and hold all good correspondence with them And he shall really do whatsoever like things shall be judged reasonable and necessary King Iames requested of the Emperor the acceptance of these Conditions as a notable testimony of his Imperial Majesties goodness and grace which he said should be by himself acknowledged in all willing service and unfeigned friendship to the Emperor himself and the most renowned House of Austria But if these his just Demands and well-willed Presentations shall not find acceptance or be slightly waved by some new tergiversation or a pretence of that long and tedious way of Consultation with the Princes of the Empire he is resolved to try his utmost power for his Childrens relief judging it a foul stain to his Honor if he shall leave them and their Partizans without counsel aid and protection The Emperor replied and confessed That in this exulcerate business so much moderation and respect of justice and equity hath shined forth in the King of Great Britain that there is not any thing that he should refuse to render thereunto reserving his Cesarean authority and the Laws of the Empire Yet that Person whom it most concerns hath given no occasion by the least sign of repentance to a condescension to this Treaty of Pacification For he is still so obstinate as by continual machinations by Iagerndorf and Mansfeld and other cruel disturbers of the publique peace to call up Hell rather then to acquiesce in better counsels and desist from the usurped Title of a Kingdom Howbeit in favor of the King of Great Britain he shall consent to a Treaty to be held at Bruxels wherein he would devolve his power upon the Illustrious Elizabetha Clara Eugenia Infanta of Spain The appointment of the Treaty at Bruxels was accepted by King Iames whither he sent his Ambassador Sir Richard Weston Chancellor of the Exchequer In the mean while misfortune and misery over-ran the Palatinate The Enemy having prevailed in several grand encounters proceeded to subdue the Country without regard to the Treaty of Peace at Bruxels Which was more easily effected the Commotions in Hungaria Bohemia Silesia Moravia being now ended in a Treaty of Peace between the Emperor and Bethleem Gabor the Emperor having made use of the Palsgrave's submission and resignation of the Crown of Bohemia to accelerate this Treaty About this time Philip the Third King of Spain departed this life and the Lord Digby was sent Extraordinary Ambassador into Spain as well to condole his death as ●o advance the Match and by all means possible to bring it to a final conclusion To which end he was accompanied with Letters from his Majesty and the Prince to that King as also a private Letter to Don Baltazar de Zuniga MOst Serene and Potent Prince Kinsman and dearly beloved Friend when we heard of the Death of your Majesties Father Philip the Third with whom we had great Amity and by our Amity managed very important Matters which he being dead could not but of necessity be interrupted It was no less grief to us then if he had been our own natural and most intimate Brother Which grief we have certified both to your Majesty by our Letters as was fitting and intimated to our people in a solemn and due manner And thus far we have satisfied our selves but in the next place we must also give Custom its due For which end we send unto your Majesty our Publick Ambassador and Messenger of this our Grief the Baron John Digby our Counsellor and Vice-Chamberlain adjoyning unto the rest of his Instructions this our wish That your Serenity may rule your Fathers Kingdoms which you have received under a most prosperous Star with his and your Ancestors Prudence and that we may really finde that love which alway passed between your Father of most happy memory and us propagated with the same candor unto you his Successor the which we also hope Given at our Pallace of Theobalds Mar. 14. 1621. Your Majesties most Loving Brother I. R. Jacobus c. Serenissimo
to this Crown for it will be a thing necessary for them to do so And those even against their own Religion will foment and assist the Hereticks for hatred to us Without doubt they will follow the other party onely to leave your Majesty with that blemish which never hath be●aln any King of these Dominions The King of England will remain offended and enraged seeing that neither interest nor helps do follow the Alliance with this Crown as likewise with Pretext of particular resentment for having suffered his Daughter and Grand-children to be ruined for respect of the said Alliance The Emperor though he be well-affected and obliged to us in making the Translation at this time as businesses now stands the Duke of Bavaria being possessed of all the Dominions although he would dispose all according to our Conveniencies it will not be in his power to do it as your Majesty and every body may judge and the Memorial that the Emperors Ambassador gave your Majesty yesterday makes it certain since in the List of the Soldiers that every one of our League is to pay he sheweth your Majesty that Bavaria for himself alone will pay more then all the rest joyned together the which doth shew his power and intention which is not to accommodate matters but to keep to himself the Superiority of all in this broken time the Emperor is now in the Dyet and the Translation is to be made in it The Proposition in this estate is by considering the means for a Conference which your Majesties Ministers will do with their Capacities Zeal and Wisdom and it is certain they will herein have enough to do For the difficulty consists to finde a way to make the present estate of affairs straight again which with lingring as it is said Both the power and time will be lost I suppose the Emperor as your Majesty knoweth by his Ambassador desires to marry his Daughter with the King of Englands Son I do not doubt but he will be likewise glad to marry his Second Daughter with the Palatines Son Then I propound that these two Marriages be made and that they be set on foot presently giving the King of England full satisfaction in all his Propositions for the more strict Union and Correspondency that he may agree to it I hold for certain that all the Conveniences that would have followed the Alliance with us will be as full in this and the Conveniencies in the great Engagement are more by this for it doth accommodate the matter of the Palatinate and Succession of his Grand-children with Honor and without drawing a Sword and wasting Treasure With this Interest the Emperor with the Conveniencies of the King of England and the Palatinate the onely means in my way of understanding to hinder those great dangers that do threaten may accommodate the business and not sever himself from the Conveniencies and Engagements of Bavaria and after I would reduce the Prince Elector that was an enemy to the obedience of the Church by breeding his Sons in the Emperors Court with Catholick Doctrine The Business is great the Difficulties greater perchance then have been in any other case I have found my self obliged to present this unto your Majesty and shall shew if you command me what I think fit for the disposing of the things and of the great Ministers which your Majesty hath I hope with the particular Notes of these things and all being helped with the good zeal of the Conde Gondomar it may be God will open a way to it a thing so much for his and your Majesties service Such Consultations had the Catholick King in his Cabinet-Council whilst he pretended so much zeal to a Closure with England Insomuch that King Iames professed to have taken great contentment in the Dispatches of the Earl of Bristol as full and satisfactory And though the Order sent to the Archduchess for the Relief of Anheim arrived too late yet he acknowledged it to be an argument of that Kings sincere intentions But the Kings hopes were still deferred and these Delays were palliated by the stop of the Dispensation till the Pope were further satisfied in the time of the Childrens education under the Mothers government and the exemption of Ecclesiastical persons from all Secular jurisdiction And the Spaniards did not spare to stretch the Kings ductile spirit For he was willing to stand obliged by a private Letter that the Children should be kept under the Mothers wing till the age of Nine years but he desired for Honors sake that no more then Seven might be exprest in the Publique Articles But this Enlargement would not satisfie He must come up to the allowance of Ten years which was the lowest of all to be expected and so he was brought at length to wave his Honor and to insure this Concession by a Publique Ratification And for the Exemption of Ecclesiasticks from the Secular power thus far he yielded That the Ecclesiastical Superior do take notice of the offence that shall be committed and according to the merit thereof either by Degradation deliver him to Secular Justice or banish him the Kingdom Bristol's importunate Negotiation procured this Answer from the King of Spain First touching the Marriage being desirous to overcome all difficulties that might hinder this union he had endeavoured to conform himself with the Resolutions given by the King of Great Britain to the Popes Propositions and had dispatched a Post to Rome that his Holiness judging what hath been here concluded and held sufficient might grant the Dispensation which he engageth to procure within three or four moneths at the farthest And in the interim that no time be lost the remaining Temporal Articles shall be treated and concluded As touching the Palatinate by his late Dispatches into Flanders due course is taken to settle all things as may be desired But until it be known what effects the same hath wrought and what the Emperor will reply no Answer can be given in writing to the Particulars contained in the Ambassadors Memorial Moreover the Popes Demands to which King Iames took exceptions being now accommodated by the King of Spain were sent into England and presently signed by the King and Prince without the change of a word King Iames having strong assurance that the Dispensation must needs be granted speedily appointed his Agent Gage who was now again at Rome to present to the Pope and certain Cardinals those Letters which lay in his hand to be delivered at a fit season The Kings Letter to the Pope gave him the stile of Most Holy Father Likewise he directed the Earl of Bristol to proceed to the Temporal Articles and to consummate the whole business But while the King had so much zeal and confidence in his Applications to Spain and Rome the Palatinate is left at random upon the Spaniards loose and general promises For Colonel Papenheim had block'd up Frankendale the onely Hold whereby the Palsgrave
to day were presented to them they have put themselves to the Offensive by preparing a strong Fleet which is ready to set sail to the West-Indies to the end they may at least interrupt the peaceable Annual return of the Gold and Silver of those parts by which the House of Austria do continually advance their greatness And this preparation together with their Voyages into the East-Indies will make them irreconcileable to Spain These enterprises were commended to the King as approved by all good men to be a principal means to cast down the fearful power of Spain Onely it was too vaste a design for that little Countrey but if the King were pleased thoroughly to close with them their Affections and constant interest would so binde them to him that he might absolutely dispose of them and by their forces by Sea and Land conjoyned with his own be able to give the Law to Europe And the present state of the Provinces might incite the King to this Conjunction For the last Summer if the Imperialists had joyned with the Spaniards they had undoubtedly made an irruption into the borders of that State and they are like to break in this next year except some notable Turn shall intervene and then our best Link for a Bond of Friendship is broken and those Provinces of a strong Staff will become a broken Reed Such R●presentations were made to the Court of England but the Counsels then prevailing were not propense to this Conjunction and Interest although we were then breaking with Spain and the House of Austria About the beginning of December when the Ratification came from the new Pope Bonfires were made throughout all Spain and the great Ordnance thundred out reports of joy And that King to satisfie his Oath made to the Prince of Wales prepared for the Espousals and a day was prefixed and all things appointed for the Solemnity according to the Magnificence of that Court The Infanta's Family was setled her Officers distinguished and the beginning of March was the time for her journey into England From the Princes departure she had applied herself to the learning of the English Tongue The English Ambassadors carried themselves like Subjects towards her as being their Masters Wife or Spouse Many rich presents had she prepared for her future Lord and Husband And the Earl of Bristol had provided many costly Liveries for his Attendants in the Solemnity of the Espousals But all things were instantly discomposed by the opening of the new commands from England to the Earl which were to procure an intire surrender of the Palatinate and Electorate before he move one step further towards the Contract In the Court of Spain there was great resentment of these new delays and they discerned a breach towards The Infanta gave over the study of English and was no more stiled the Princess of England but to the Demands from England the King of Spain replied That if a Treaty be set on foot and the Emperor and Duke of Bavaria will not come to Terms of Conformity he will joyn Arms with England to recover the Palatinate The Spaniards confessing the Demand just but unseasonable professed the Desponsorio's past the Infanta on her knees should have been a Suiter to the King to restore the Palatinate making it thereby her act and drawing the Obligation wholly to her These offers did not satisfie Bristol was called home and all was dashed to peeces It was an amazement to the Christian World that when the Match was brought to such perfection the motion should be rejected by that side which pursued it with so much eagerness and patience as being the master-peece of all their designs In the latter part of this long tedious act the Spaniard appeared real but in the former part their reality was questionable For our parts the business shall remain as we finde it a dark Riddle and Mystery The Earl of Bristol having demurred upon the new Instructions to prevent as he desired the embroiling of the whole Treaty was to make his Apology to the King his Master and for himself he thus pleaded That he understood the Infanta was his yong Masters wife or Spouse at least and that both the King and Prince infinitely desired the Match The powers were drawn by the intervention of both parties the King of Spain accepting them and the Prince legally delivering them and they were deposited with him in trust as the Ambassador of the King of Great Britain with a Publick Declaration how and when he was to deliver them and this was drawn into an Instrument by the Secretary of State According to this state of things he appeals to any Censure which were the more prudent honest and dutiful way whether to put a disgrace upon so great and worthy a Princess who was to be his Masters Wife and a scorn upon the King of Spain by nominating a day for the Marriage when the powers would be expired and not at all to insist upon making good the Publick Trust reposed in him by two so great Monarchs to the hazard and overthrow of so great and important a business or contrariwise to represent to his Majesty the state of things in Truth and Sincerity with his humble opinion of the wrong and disgrace to the Infanta by deferring the Marriage and of the indignity offered to the King of Spain and the danger of the whole Treaty by the detention of the Powers without the pretence of some emergent cause And after all this when his Majesty had declared his pleasure there was ready an exact obedience Wherefore in the confidence of his own innocencie he professeth as great a confidence of his Majesties accustomed grace and favor Bristol being called home acquainted the Conde Olivares with the Letters of Revocation and desired withall to have a day assigned him to take his leave of the King Olivares answered That he had much to say to him by his Majesties order and spake to this effect in the presence of Sir Walter Aston and the Conde Gondomar That the King had received large advertisements with what malice and rancor his Enemies did prosecute him and how powerful they are in England And in regard that the Envy which was drawn upon him proceeded from his earnest endeavors to accomplish the Match and that the particular fault laid to his charge was in point of delivering the Proxies deposited in his hands that his Majesty takes it to heart and judgeth himself touched in his honor if for this cause his Enemies shall prevail so far as to work his ruine or disgrace And therefore he will write to the King of Great Britain and send a particular Ambassador if it be needful to mediate for him for that he had served his Master with that exactness and fidelity which deserved not only to be assisted by all good offices but to be rewarded and published And his Majesty for the example of his own Subjects and for the encouragement
drawn upon us and cannot but foresee and fear least the like may hereafter happen and unevitably bring such peril to your Maiesties Kingdoms We are most humble Suitors to your gracious Maiesty to secure the hearts of your good Subiects by the engagement of your Royal word unto them that upon no occasion of Marriage or Treaty or other request in that behalf from any foreign Prince or States whatsoever you will take off or slacken the Execution of your Laws against the Popish Recusants To which our humble Petitions proceeding from our most loyal and dutifull affections toward your Maiesty our care of our Countries good and our confident perswasion that this will much advance the glory of Almighty God the everlasting honor of your Maiesty the safety of your Kingdom and the encouragement of all your good Subiects We do most humbly beseech your Maiesty to vouchsafe a gracious Answer This Petition after a Conference between both Houses was reduced to another form and so presented to the King To which his Majesty returned this Answer My Lords and Gentlemen of both Houses I Cannot but commend your zeal in offering this Petition to me yet on the other side I cannot but hold my self unfortunate that I should be thought to need a spur to do that which my Conscience and duty bindes me unto What Religion I am of my Books do declare my profession and behavior doth shew and I hope in God I shall never live to be thought otherwise surely I shall never deserve it and for my part I wish it may be written in Marble and remain to Posterity as a mark upon me when I shall swerve from my Religion for he that doth dissemble with God is not to be trusted with men My Lords for my part I protest before God that my heart hath bled when I have heard of the increase of Popery God is my Iudge it hath been such a great grief to me that it hath been as Thorns in my Eyes and Pricks in my Sides and so far I have been and shall be from turning another way And my Lords and Gentlemen you shall be my Confessors that one way or other it hath been my desire to hinder the growth of Popery and I could not be an honest man if I should have done otherwise And this I may say further that if I be not a Martyr I am sure I am a Confessor and in some sence I may be called a Martyr as in the Scripture Isaac was persecuted by Ishmael by mocking words for never King suffered more ill Tongues then I have done and I am sure for no cause yet I have been far from persecution for I have ever thought that no way more encreased any Religion then persecution according to that saying Sanguis Martyrum est Semen Ecclesiae Now my Lords and Gentlemen for your Petition I will not onely grant the substance of what you crave but add somewhat more of my own for the two Treaties being already annulled as I have declared them to be it necessarily follows of it self that which you desire and therefore it needs no more But that I do declare by Proclamation which I am ready to do that all Iesuites and Priests do depart by a day but it cannot be as you desire by our Proclamation to be out of all my Dominions for a Proclamation here extends but to this Kingdom This I will do and more I will Command all my Iudges when they go their Circuits to keep the same courses for putting all the Laws in Execution against Recusants as they were wont to do before these Treaties for the Laws are still in force and were never dispenced with by me God is my Iudge they were never so intended by me but as I told you in the beginning of the Parliament you must give me leave as a good horseman sometimes to use the Reins and not alwayes to use the Spurs So now there needs nothing but my Declaration for the disarming of them that is ready done by the Laws and shall be done as you desired and more I will take order for the shamefull disorder of the resorting of my Subjects to all foreign Ambassadors for this I will advise with my Councel how it may be best reformed It is true that the houses of Ambassadors are priviledged places and Major though they cannot take them out of their houses yet the Lord and Mr Recorder of London may take some of them as they come from thence and make them examples another point I will add concerning the education of their children of which I have had a principal care as the Lord of Canterbury and the Bishop of Winchester and other Lords of my Councel can bear me witness with whom I have advised about this business for in good faith it is a shame their Children should be bred here as if they were at Rome So I do grant not onely your desire but more I am sorry I was not the first mover of it to you but had you not done it I would have done it my self Now for the second part of your Petition you have here given me the best advice in the world for it is against the rule of wisdom that a King should suffer any of his Subjects to transgress the Laws by the intercession of other Princes and therefore assure your selves that by the Grace of God I will be carefull that no such conditions be foisted in upon any other Treaty whatsoever for it is fit my Subjects should stand or fall to their own Laws This Petition was furthered by the Duke of Buckingham who still retained the memory of his ill-usage in Spain and the Spanish Ambassador being netled thereat accused him to the King not without some reflection upon the Prince himself with some difficulty they procured a secret entercourse with the King and suggested unto him matters of near and high concernment to his Royal dignity and person They tell him that being besieged and closed up by the Dukes Servants and Vassals he was no more a freeman That he was to be confined to his Countrey-house and Pastimes the Prince having years and parts answerable for publick Government That the Duke had reconciled himself to all popular men such as Oxford Southampton Essex Say and others and sought to raise an opinion of his own greatness and to make the King grow less and that all looked towards the rising Sun Hereupon they advise the King to free himself from this Captivity and eminent Danger and to cut off so ungratefull an affecter of Popularity and greatness and so he should shew himself to be as he was reputed the oldest and wisest King in Europe These secrets were quickly blown abroad and brought to the Dukes Ear. But whatsoever impression the King received from them the thing whereupon he insisted openly was the demand of particular proofs But all their Answers consisted of Arguments against declaring the names of the Conspirators whereupon
Majesty will be likewise pleased strictly to command all your Iudges and Ministers of Iustice Ecclesiastical and Temporal to sée the Laws of this Realm against Popish Recusants to be duly executed And namely that the Censure of Excommunication be declared and certified against them and that they be not absolved but upon publick satisfaction by yielding to Conformity Answ. His Majesty leaves the Lawes to their Course and will order in the point of Excommunication as is desired X. That your Majesty will be pleased to remove from places of Authority and Government all such persons as are either Popish Recusants or according to direction of former Acts of State to be justly suspected Answ. This his Majesty thinks fit and will give order for it XI That present order be taken for disarming all Popish Recusants legally convicted or justly suspected according to the Laws in that behalf and the Orders taken by his late Majesties Privy-Council upon reason of State Answ. The Laws and Acts in this Case shall be followed and put in due execution XII That your Majesty be also pleased in respect of the great resort of Recusants to and about London to command forthwith upon pain of your indignation and severe execution of the Laws that they retire themselves to their several Countries there to remain confined within Five miles of their places Answ. For this the Laws in force shall be forthwith executed XIII And whereas your Majesty hath strictly commanded and taken order that none of the natural born Subjects repair to the hearing of Masses or other Superstitious Service at the Chappels or Houses of Foreign Ambassadors or in any other places whatsoever we give your Majesty most humble thanks and desire that your Order and Commandment therein may be continued and observed and that the Offenders herein may be punished according to the Laws Answ. The King gives assent thereto and will see that observed which herein hath been commanded by him XIV That all such Insolencies as any that are Popishly affected have lately committed or shall hereafter commit to the dishonor of our Religion or to the wrong of the true Professors thereof be exemplarily punished Answ. This shall be done as is desired XV. That the Statute of 1 Eliz. for the payment of Twelve-pence every Sunday by such as shall be absent from Divine service in the Church without a lawfull excuse may be put in due execution the rather for that the penalty by Law is given to the poor and therefore not to be dispenced withal Answ. It is fit that this Statute be executed and the Penalties shall not be dispenced withal XVI Lastly That your Majesty would be pleased to extend your Princely care also over the Kingdom of Ireland that the like courses may be there taken for the restoring and establishing of true Religion Answ. His Majesties cares are and shall be extended over the Kingdom of Ireland and he will do all that a Religious King should do for the restoring and establishing of true Religion there And thus most gracious Soveraign according to our duty and zeal to God and Religion to your Majesty and your safety to the Church and Common-wealth and their peace and prosperity we have made a faithfull Declaration of the present Estate the causes and remedies of this increasing disease of Popery humbly offering the same to your Princely care and wisdom The Answer of your Majesties Father our late Soveraign of famous memory upon the like Petition did give us great comfort of Reformation but your Majesties most gracious promises made in that kinde do give us confidence and assurance of the continual performance thereof In which comfort and confidence reposing our selves we most humbly pray for your Majesties long continuance in all Princely felicity The Petition and Answer being read it was further intimated to the Commons That as his Majesty took well their minding him of the care of Religion so he would have done and granted the same things though they had never petitioned him neither doth he place his Answer to this Petition as a wheel to draw on other affairs and designs but he leaves them to move in their own Sphere and what he hath done in this particular comes from these two Fountains Conscience and Duty to his Father who in his last speech recommended unto him the Person but not the Religion of his Queen At the same time the Duke signified to both Houses that by the Kings command he was to give an account of the Fleet and the preparations thereof and said that the first and last time he had the happiness to speak in that Auditory it was of the Spanish Treaty and then he was so happy as to be honored and applauded by both Houses of Parliament and he made no question but speaking now with the same heart he should be no less acceptable to them And he made this request to the House of Commons to believe that if any hath spoken or shall speak in discharge of his conscience his zeal of Reformation any thing which may seem to reflect upon some particular persons he shall be the last man that will apply this to himself because he is confidently assured of two things first that they are just not to fall upon him without cause and secondly that himself shall do nothing that unbecomes a faithfull Englishman And for the Method of his ensuing Discourse he chose rather to speak by way of Objection and Answer then in one continued Speech as a speedier means to give the Commons satisfaction Object 1. By what Counsel those Designs and Actions of War were carried and enterprised Answ. By the Counsel of the Parliament appointed according to the Act of both Houses the 23. of March 1623. by those Counsels his Majesty was guided and applied himself accordingly for the defence of the Realm the securing of Ireland the assisting of our Neighbors and others our Friends and Allies and for the setting forth the Navy-Royal His Majesty looking into his purse saw enough to do all the former Actions but not this latter For when he came to consider of the Navy there was neither money nor preparations yet looking upon the Affairs of Christendom he found that of most necessity Hereupon his Majesty of famous memory did him viz. the Duke the honor as to write from Newmarket to him at London a Letter to this effect That looking into the Affairs of Christendom he found it necessary that a Royal-Fleet shou●d be prepared and set in readiness but that he had no Money wherefore himself meaning the Duke and his Friends must begin to lay it out and no doubt but others would follow and by this means the King might lie the longer concealed and undiscovered in the Enterprise as bearing the name of the Subject onely and other Princes in hope to draw him on would sooner come to the business Upon this Letter the Duke said he leaped into the Action with all alacrity and
to the performance of this weighty and publick Charge wherein as I do and shall to the end most humbly desire your gratious acceptance of my good intentions and endeavors So I could not but gather some confidence to my self that your Majesty will look favorably upon the works of your own hands And in truth besides this particular these publick things which are obvious to every Understanding are so many Arguments of Comfort and Encouragement where I contemplate and take a view of those great and inestimable blessings which by the goodness of God we do enjoy under your Majesties most pious and prudent Government If we behold the frame and the face of the Government in general we live under a Monarchy the best of Governments the nearest resemblance unto the Divine Majesty which the Earth affords the most agreeable to Nature and that in which other States and Republicks do easily fall and reverse into the Ocean and are naturally dissolved as into their Primam Materiam The Laws by which we are governed are above any value my words can set upon them time hath refined and approved them they are equal at least to any Laws Humane and so curiously framed and fitted that as we live under a temperate climate so the Laws are temperate yielding a due observance to the Prerogative Royal and yet preserving the Right and Liberty of the Subject That which Tacitus saith of two of the best Emperors Res olim insociabiles miscuerunt imperium libertas and so far is this from the least diminution of Soveraigns that in this your Majesty is truly stiled Pater Patriae and the greatest King in the World that is King of such and so many Free-born Subjects whose persons you have not onely power over but which is above the greatest of Kings to command their hearts If time or corruption of manners breed any Mists or Grievance or discover any defects in the Law they are soon reformed by Parliament the greatest Court of Justice and the greatest Council of the Kingdom to which all other Courts and Councils are subordinate Here your Royal Person sits inthroned in the Seat of Majesty attended by a Reverend and Learned Prelacy a great and full Nobility inthroned like Stars in the Firmament some of a greater some of a lesser magnitude full of light and beauty and acknowledging to whom they owe their lustre and by a choise number of worthy Knights and Gentlemen that represent the whole body of your Commons But to leave generals We live not under a Monarchy only the best of Goverments and under a Government the best of Monarchies but under a King the best of Monarchs Your Royal Person and those eminent graces and vertues which are inherent in your Person in whom Greatness and Goodness contend for superiority it were presumption in me to touch though with never so good a meaning they will not be bounded within the narrow compass of my discourse And such Pictures of such a King are not to be made in Limning but for Publick things and actions which the least eye may see and discern and in them obliquely and by reflexion cheerfully and with comfort behold your Person What Age shall not record and eternise your Princely magnanimities in that Heroick action or venturous Journey into Spain or hazarding your Person to preserve the Kingdom Fathers will tell it to their children in succession After-ages will then think it a Fable Your piety to the Memory of your dear Father in following and bedewing his Herse with your tears is full in every mans memory The Publick Humiliation when Gods hand lay heavy upon us and the late Publick Thanksgiving to Almighty God for removing his hand both commanded and performed in person by your Majesty is a work in piety not to be forgotten and I trust the Lord will remember them and reward them with mercy and blessing to your Majesty and the whole Kingdom Your love to Justice and your care in the administration of Justice we all behold with comfort and rejoice to see it The great Courts of Justice from the highest to the lowest furnished with Judges of that wisdom and gravity learning and integrity The Thrones of Kings are established by Justice and may it establish and I doubt not but it will establish the Throne of your Majesty in your Person and in your Royal Line to the end of time But above all and indeed it is above all as far as Heaven is distant from Earth your care and zeal for the advancement of Gods true Religion and Worship are cleerly and fully exprest and do appear both in your Person and by your many Publick Acts and Edicts It is true that is said of Princes Quod faciunt praecipiunt Of your Majesty both are true and a Proposition made convertible We have received a most gracious Answer from your Majesty to all our late Petitions concerning Religion seconded with a Publick Declaration under the Great Seal and Inrolled in all the Courts of Justice for your Royal pleasure and direction to awaken and put life into these Laws by a careful Execution with provision that the Penalties be not converted to your Private Coffers and yet the Coffers of Kings are not Private Coffers but by your express direction set apart to Publick uses such as concern the immediate Defence of the Kingdom wherein we all have our share and interest Your Royal Proclamation hath commanded those Romish Priests and Jesuites to Banishment those Incendiaries that infect the State of this Church and Commonwealth Their very entrance into this Kingdom is by a just and provident Law made Treason their aims being in truth how specious soever their pretences be nothing else but to plot and contrive Treason against the State and to seduce your Natural born Subjects from their true obedience nourishing in their posterities Factions and Seditions Witness those many Treasons and Conspiracies against the person of that glorious Lady whose memory will never die and that horrible matchless Conspiracie the Powder-Treason the Master-piece of the Devil But God that preserved her and your Royal Father against all their treacherous Conspiracies and hath given you a heart to honor him will honor and preserve you Religion will more truly keep your Kingdoms then the Seas do compass them It is the joy of heart to your Majesties loyal and well-affected Subjects and will ever be the honor of your Regal Diadem and the Crown of your Crown The Spanish Invasion in Eighty Eight I hope will ever be remembred in England with thankful acknowledgment to God for so great a deliverance And I assura my self it is remembred in Spain but with another mind a mind of Revenge they are too constant to their Counsels to acquit their Resolutions and Purposes that drew on that Attempt It was long before discovered and since printed not without their liking That they affect an Universal Monarchy Videor mihi vidore saith Lipsius of their State Solem
orientem ab Occidente a Monster in Nature And one of their own speaking of the two great Lights which God hath placed in the Firmament makes the Pope Luminare majus presidens urbi orbi and the King of Spain Luminare minus ut subdatur urbi dominetur per totum orbem A great flattery and a bold and impudent elusion But I trust as God hath put it into the heart of your blessed Father by that matchless Book of his written to all Christian Monarchs and Princes a Work by which he raised a Monument to himself more lasting then Marble to denounce War to that Adversary of God and Kings the Pope so he hath set your sacred Majesty upon the Throne of your Father to do as many things worthy to be written as he had written things worthy to be read amongst them to restrain that unlimited pride and boundless ambition of Spain to reduce it to their proper current channel who under the title of Catholick King makes his pretence to more Countries and Kingdoms then his own and by color of disguised Treaties he invades the Palatinate and dispossesseth that Incomparable Lady your Royal Sister and the Children of this Kingdom of their right and their antient Patrimony and Inheritance to the discomfort and dishonor of this great and glorious Nation God in his mercy soon repair this breach by your Royal head and I assure my self the hearts the hands and the purses of all good Subjects will say Amen But I may weary your Majesty and lose my self and forget for whom I am a Speaker Custom gives me the priviledge as an humble Suitor on the behalf of the House to present their few Petitions unto your Majesty 1. The first That for our better attending this Publick and important service our selves and our necessary Attendants may with your Majesties tender allowance be free both in our persons and goods from Arrests and troubles according to our antient Priviledges 2. The next That since for the preparing and drawing to conclusion such Propositions as shall be handled in the House Debate and Dispute will be necessary and by variety of opinions Truth is oftentimes best discerned your Majesty will likewise according to your antient usage and priviledge vouchsafe us liberty and freedom of speech from which I assure my self duty and loyalty to your Majesty will never be severed 3. That when occasions of moment shall require your Majesty upon our humble suit and at such times as may best sort with your occasions will vouchsafe us access to your Royal person 4. That the Proceedings of the House may receive a favorable Interpretation at your gracious hands and be free from misconstructions The Houses began their work with rendring thanks to the King for his gracious Answer to their late Petition for Religion An Act was tendred and read To administer an Oath for the rendring a true Accompt of all General and Publick Taxes Rates and Collections Another against Scandalous Ministers It was moved some Provision might be made against Scandalous Livings as well as against Scandalous Ministers The Commons further fell into Examination of the Publick Grieveances and the Carriage or rather Miscarriage of the Fleet to Cadiz The Evil Counsellors about the King Misgovernment and Misimployment of the Kings Revenue An Accompt of the Subsidies and Three Fi●teens granted 21 Iacobi And resolved of a Committee for secret Affairs and another for Grievances to sit every Friday and Wednesday during the Parliament And Mr. Whitby was commanded to the Chair for the Committee for Grievances where were delivered these ensuing Consultations I. The State of the King in the Constant Revenue of the Crown 1. What it was and how for the Introitus and Exitus they are ordered 2. What now it is either in cleer or by Lands by Customs and Impositions or by Casualties 3. The means how it is abated By gifts of Lands ex mero motu and no valuable consideration and this may be revoked By grants of Pensions now 120000 l. before but 80000 l. Good Times have resumed them or contracted them upon Necessity By increase of Houshold from 45000 l. to 80000 l. the Purveyors more and the Tables less furnished then formerly By fruitless Ambassadors with larger allowance then formerly To reduce them to the Ordinary of the late Queen By treble increase of the Privy-Purse By double increase of the Treasury of the Chamber and Great Wardrobe In all by not using the best course of Assignments whereby the Creditors are delayed in the paiment and the King surcharged in the price the Exchequer-man making his profit from the Kings wants II. The Condition of the Subject in his Freedom 1. Formerly in Taxes by Parliaments as by Subsidies and Fifteens spent onely on Defence of the State or Aid of our Allies by Tonage and Poundage imployed in Guard of the Seas Loans rarely and those imployed intirely for the Publick Imposition by Prerogative of old Customs rated easily by the Book of Rates if any either limited to time or measure 2. New Impositions and Monopolies multiplied and settled to continue by Grants Customs Inhannced by the new Book of Rates Tonage and Poundage levied though no Act of Parliament nor Seas guarded the Times the Wayes and the Persons that induce these 3. The Imploiment or Waste of the Treasure What Sums have been granted for the Defence of the State the last Three years How in particular spent and where By what Advice as by the direction of the Council of War appointed by Parliament by full Order of the Council by any other then those and by whom First Publick Treasury is to be examined Secondly The Kings Subjects how many and when transported and imployed as to the Palatinate Count Mansfields Land-soldiers in the last Fleet The Designs where they were sent the Council that directed it the success of the Action and the Return of the persons in number and the Loss Thirdly In Ships and Munition our own The Number and Quantity imployed severally the Number imbarqued in those Ships and what prejudice and discouragement of Trade the Council that directed such Imploiments the several success as at Algier and Cadiz Strangers and those Ships either of Allies or Enemies Allies hired by Contract to serve and how used or taken as Prize if so how then delivered and dealt withal in the course of Justice what success hath followed upon Injustice done them as the Arrest of our Goods in France and Germany whereby our Merchants are at a stand The number and true value of the Goods the Accompt thereof made to his Majesty or his Officers the dismissing and discharging any of them or the Goods viz. by whom the Directions the Pretence the Value of the Goods the Place whither they went Honor of the King which as in all other things consists in what formerly hath been done How formerly we stood a Nation feared renowned victorious We made the Netherlands a
which though it do invite him to render unto you such a satisfaction that he hopes may acquit and restore him to your good opinion and might prevent your proceedings which otherwise by a Parliamentary course are like to follow Yet according to his duty having moved the Lords of the Upper House upon your notice given him they would by no means as things now stand give him leave to answer in regard he is not ignorant you are presently to enter into consideration of his Majesties Message and that by a delay therein your own purposes will be in some sort disappointed and the affairs of Christendome much prejudiced but for that upon a resolution you have deferred and respited that service until those things depending against him be first determined he out of fear that his necessary defence would spin out a great deal of time which is more precious is the willinger to obey their Lordships that so he might hasten without obstacle or interruption given unto him to keep day with his Majesty And this he doth as he conceives to his own infinite prejudice knowing how grievous it is to be transmitted as a Grievance by the voice of this House But he doth profess he will rather hazard the safety of his Fortunes Reputation and himself then to be the least occasion of any that may work dis-affection or mis-understanding between the King and his People And it is his Protestation that whatsoever interruption is made by his actions his endeavors shall be as long as he hath any favor with his gracious Master to take opportunity of doing good offices to this House and of rendring all that he can be able for the safety of the State and the general good of the Common-wealth And this he saith you may the easier beleeve because his Majesty can witness that he hazarded in his Fathers time the loss of the best affection of the best of Masters to obtain for them their desire In this zeal he was desirous to have appeared unto you ever since the beginning of this Parliament and in this zeal he doth now present himself unto you But to return to the main point he lest we should be mistaken gave us occasion in plain words to remember you that it is not he that doth refuse to answer but the Lords commanded him not to answer which he the cheerfullier obeyed in respect of his fidelity to prefer the Universal Weal before his own particular And in the mean time he desireth the charitable opinion of this Noble House until he be convinced that he shall appear not worthy of it which his own innocency maketh him confident that he shall not Whilst the Duke stood ready to be impeacht his Grace propounded to the Lords of the Council to have it moved to the King that in regard of the important services by Sea the usual pay to the Sailers might be raised from Fourteen to Twenty shillings a Moneth which was as much as they ordinarily received for Merchants wages The King being therein moved was consenting Nevertheless multitudes of the pressed Mariners ran away leaving his Majesties Ships unfurnished and his Service disappointed There was a great Debate in the House of Commons Whether the Committee of Twelve where Mr. Glanvile had the Chair shall consider of any new matter not heretofore propounded in the House against the Duke And it was resolved in the Affirmative Mr. Glanvile reports from the Committee the Examination concerning a Plaister and a Posset applied and given to King Iames in his sickness when the Kings sworne Physicians had agreed upon other Directions Hereupon it was resolved That this should be annexed to the Charge against the Duke as a transcendent Presumption of dangerous consequence Hereupon his Majesty sent this Message to the Commons THat he having given way to Enquiry about the Duke of Buckingham and hearing that there is new matter intended to be brought against him nevertheless leaveth the House to their own way to present the business to him or to the Lords withal adviseth them to consider of the season of the year and to avoid all loss of time It was Ordered That thanks should be returned to his Majesty for this Message On Monday the First of May the Gentleman-Usher brought the Earl of Bristol to the Bar according to their Lordships Order and the Lord Keeper acquainted him That the King had commanded his Attorney General to charge the Earl of Bristol before their Lordships with High Treason and other Offences and Misdemeanors of a very high nature that they might proceed in a Legal course against him according to the Justice and usual proceedings of Parliament I. Offences done and committed by the Earl of Bristol before His Majesties going into Spain when he was Prince I. THat the said Earl being trusted and employed by the said late King as his Ambassador to Ferdinando then and now Emperor of Germany and to Philip the Fourth then and now King of Spain in Annis 1621.22 and 23. And having Commission and particular and special Direction to Treat with the said Emperor and the King of Spain for the plenary restoring of such parts of the Dominions Territories and Possessions of the Count Palatine of Rhine who married with the most Excellent Lady Elizabeth his now Royal Consort the onely Daughter of the said late King Iames which were then wrongfully and in hostile manner taken and possessed with and by the Armies of the said Emperor and King of Spain or any other and for preserving and keeping such other parts thereof as were not then lost but were then in the protection of the said late King Iames and to the use of the said Count Palatine and his Children And also to Treat with the said King of Spain for a Marriage to be had between the most High and Excellent Prince Charls then Prince of Wales the onely Son and Heir Apparant of the said King Iames and now our most Soveraign Lord and the most Illustrious Lady Donna Maria the Infanta of Spain Sister to the now King of Spain He the said Earl contrary to his duty and Alleagiance and contrary to the trust and duty of an Ambassador at Madrid in the Kingdom of Spain to advance and further the designs of the said King of Spain against our said Soveraign Lord his Children Friends and Allies falsly willingly and traiterously and as a Traitor to our said late Soveraign Lord the King by sundry Letters and other Messages sent by the said Earl from Madrid in the years aforesaid unto King Iames and his Ministers of State of England did confidently and resolutely inform advise and assure the said late King That the said Emperor and King of Spain would really fully and effectually make restitution and plenary restauration to the said Count Palatine and his Children of the said Dominions Territories and Possessions of the said Count Palatine and of the said Electoral Dignity And that the said King of
this business can be attributed to his fault since on the one side it will evidently appear to your Lordships that be never moved his Majesty and the Prince to admit of delays but rather to think of some other course and it will on the other side appear by all the Dispatches that he pressed things with the Ministers of Spain to as speedy a conclusion as the uttermost terms of fair Negotiation and good manners would bear And whereas it is pretended that the Spaniards should take occasion by entertaining the said Treaties to abuse his said late Majesty which he knoweth not yet he saith he used all the vigilancie and industry that a careful Minister could do and had from the Spaniards all the assurances by oaths words and writings which could be expected from Christians the which without adding or diminishing he faithfully presented unto his said late Majesty and his said late Majesty was pleased in those times to conceive upon those assurances that they dealt really with him And he conceiveth that his Majesty that now is then Prince and the Duke of Buckingham were pleased to write as much to the late Kings Majesty at their first coming into Spain and that all which the said Earl had written touching that imploiment was there avowed by the Conde Olivarez and Conde Gondomar to the said Prince and Duke at their arrival at Madrid and he hopeth that if that Dispatch may be perused it will as well appear and be adjudged that he served his Majesty with some measure of vigilancie as well as fulness of fidelity III. To the Third Article the said Earl saith That he did not either by words or by Letters to his late Majesty or his Ministers extol or magnifie the greatness and power of the King of Spain nor represented to his late Majesty the supposed dangers that might ensue unto him if a War should happen between him and the King of Spain nor affirmed nor insinuated the same as in the said Article is mentioned but if he did at any time speak or write of the power and greatness of the King of Spain or represented any danger to his said late Majesty that might ensue by entring into Hostility with the said King of Spain it was as a faithful Counsellor and Servant to his Majesty by way of his advice and opinion which he ever delivered sincerely faithfully and truly according to the present occasion and in no wise with such as intent as in the said Article is mentioned nor to any other evil intent and purpose whatsoever But he hath been so far from disswading his late Majesty to take Arms that he hath upon all just occasions advised that all fitting preparations for War might be made as beginning with the year 1621. from which time he is onely charged will appear by his Speech in Parliament presently after his return out of Germany and that he hoped his Majesty would no longer relie upon single Treaties but make all fitting preparations for War and that the Parliament would enable his Majesty thereunto and by the care he took before his going again upon his Ambassage into Spain that the establishment of an Army under his Majesties own Standard of Horse and Foot and under his own pay might be setled and provided for as likewise his advice to the Lords of the Council that his Majesty might have a curb upon the King of Spain upon all occasions by continuing of Sir Robert Mansfields Fleet upon the Coasts of Spain as will appear by his Letter written from Vienna 26 Iuly 1621. mentioned in the Answer to the first Article By all which it appeareth That he labored and endeavored as much as in him lay that his Majesty might be well prepared for any occasions of War that should happen And he no way remembreth to have discouraged or to have spoken or written any thing that might have been understood to have tended to the discouraging of his said late Majesty for the taking of Arms and entring into hostility with Spain or for resisting of him and his Forces from attempting the Invasions of his late Majesties Dominions or the Dominions of his late Majesties Confederates Friends or Allies as by the said Article is charged against him neither remembreth that he had any cause so to do But if he have in any kinde spoken or written of Spain or the power thereof it may have been to his late Majesty or his Majesty that now is by way of discourse speaking of the solidness of the Spanish proceedings of their serious and deliberate debating of business before they resolve on them of the constant pursuing of them when they are once resolved wishing that England and other Nations would therein imitate them For he supposeth the right way to impeach their greatness was to grow as wise as they and to beat them at their own Weapons But otherwise he is confident never to have been heard to speak or write any thing that might give any terror or discouragement to his late Majesty or his cheif Ministers knowing that England well-ordered need to take little terror at the power of Spain having almost in all attempts and enterprises won honor upon them And as for the preventing of dangers that might ensue upon a War though he knew not what is aimed at in that particular yet he is most confident out of the Integrity of his own Conscience That he neither said nor advised any thing but what befitted a faithful Counsellor and an Ambassador which was truly to deliver his opinion as he understood it upon the present occasion And as for affirming that his Majesties quiet should be disturbed and he not to be permitted to Hawk or to Hunt he remembreth not what discourse he may have had or written to any person how fit it might be upon the being broiled in a great War seriously to intend it and to make it our whole work But as he is confident it will appear that what discourse soever it might have been it wanted not true zeal and affection which he hath ever borne to the Kings service And he hopeth it will not be found to want due respect and reverence on his part which he ought to shew to so gratious a Master Neither can it be conceived that the considerations of Hunting and Fowling should be considerations worthy so great and prudent a King to withhold from a War for the good of Christendom and his Kingdom if he should have been justly provoked thereunto IV. To the Fourth Article the said Earl saith That he did not any thing contrary to his duty and alleagiance or contrary to the faith and duty of an Ambassador as by this Article is alleaged but did intend the service and honor of his late Majesty and no corrupt and sinister ends of his own advancement as by this Article is also alleaged And as for the Conferences which is pretended he should hold concerning the Treaty That being told there was little
King so straitned in time as by the said Article is pretended will appear by the said Earls Dispatch of September 28. 1623. In which upon scruple that was then made of the Infanta's entring into Religion he wrote to the same effect Viz. That if the Dispensation should come he knew no means how to detain the Proxies above twenty or twenty four dayes So that although difficulty happened until the middest of November 1623. yet it was foreseen that it must of necessity happen whensoever the Dispensation should come and then was warning of two moneths given thereof viz. from September 24. until November 29. which was the time appointed for the Desponsories So as he most humbly submits himself unto your Lordships which of the two wayes was the safer or dutifuller for him to take whether upon inferences and conjectures to have overthrown so great a business or on the otherside first to have presented unto his Majesty the truth and sincerity as he did the true estate of his Affairs with his humble opinion therein with an intimation that if his Majesty should resolve to break the Match that for the said Earl his honest discharge of the publick Trust reposed in him when the Proxies were deposited in his hands and for his sufficient warrant in so great a cause his Majesty would be graciously pleased to give him clear and express order which he had not and in the interim whilest his Majesty might take into consideration the great inconveniences that might ensue the said inconveniences might be suspended and the business kept upon fair terms that his Majesty might have his way and choice clear and unsoiled before him And as to the evil Consequences which are pretended would have followed if the said Earl had proceeded to the consummation of the Match before he had express order and warrant to the contrary he supposeth his Majesty should speedily have seen the Marriage which he so long sought to have effected that the Prince should have had a worthy Lady whom he loved that the Portion was much greater then ever was given in money in Christendom that the King of Spain had engaged himself for restitution of the Palatinate for which the said Earl conceived a daughter of Spain and Two Millions had been no ill pawn besides many other additions of advantage to the Crown of England Whereas on the contrary side he foresaw that the Prince would be kept a year longer unmarried a thing that so highly concerneth these Kingdoms he doubteth that the recovery of the Palatinate from the Emperor and Duke of Bavaria by force would prove a great difficulty and that Christendom was like to fall into a general Combustion So that desiring that his Majesty should have obtained his ends and have had the honor and happiness not onely to have given peace plenty and increase unto his own Subjects and Crowns but to have compounded the greatest differences that had been these many years in Christendom And by his Piety and Wisdom to have prevented the shedding of so much Christian Blood as he feared would ensue if these businesses were disordered These Reasons he confesseth and the zeal unto his Majesties service made him so earnestly desire the effecting of this business and cannot but think himself an unfortunate man his Majesties affairs being so near setling to his Majesties content as he conceived they were and hoping to have been unto his Majesty not onely a faithful Servant but a successful Servant to see the whole estate of his affairs turned up-side down without any the least fault of his and yet he the onely Minister on the English and Spanish side that remained under disgrace XI To the Eleventh Article the said Earl saith That the Article is grounded upon a Petition by him preferred to this Honorable House supposed to be scandalous which your Lordships as he conceiveth according to the Customs and Priviledges of the House of Peers would have been pleased first to have adjudged so to have been either for matter appearing in it self or upon hearing the said Earl for if the matter appearing in the Petition it self be not to be excepted unto it cannot as he conceiveth by Collateral accidents be taken for a Scandal till it be examined and found false For a plain and direct Answer thereunto he saith That the said Petition is such as will not warrant any such inference as by the said Article is inforced And that he hopeth to justifie the Contents of the said Petition in such sort as shall not displease his Majesty nor deserve that expression which is used in the Charge but contrarily what he hath said or shall say therein in his defence shall in all things tend to the Honor and Service of his Majesty by reducing into his Memory divers Circumstances and laying before him the passages of divers particulars which by undue practices have been either concealed from his Majesty or mis-related to him Having thus offered to this High and Honorable Court such Proofs and Reasons as he hopeth shall in your Lordships W●sdom and Justice clearly acquit him of any capital Crime or wilful Offence if it shall appear that out of Errors of Judgment too much ferventness of zeal to his Majesties service or the ignorance of the Laws of this Realm wherewith he hath not been able to be so well acquainted as he ought by reason of Foreign Employments by the space of many years or by any other ways or means he hath faln into the danger of the Laws for any thing pardoned in the General Pardon made in the Parliament holden at Westminster Anno Vicesimo primo Regni Imp. Iacobi Angliae c. of Blessed Memory he humbly prayeth allowance of the Pardons and the benefit thereof with this Clause That he doth and will aver that he is none of the persons excepted out of the same although he is very confident he shall not need the help of any pardon having received many significations as well from his Majesties own mouth that he had never offended his Majesty as lately by several Letters from the Lord Conway that he might rest in the security he was in and sit still and should be no further questioned But he hopes your Lordships will not onely finde him so far from blame but that he hath served his late Majesty of Blessed memory and his most gratious Son the Kings Majesty that now is with that fidelity care and industry that your Lordships will take such course as you in your wisdoms shall think fit not onely for the upholding the Honor and Reputation of a Peer of this Realm after so many employments but likewise become humble and earnest Suitors to his Majesty on his behalf which he humbly prayeth That he may be restored to his Majesties most gratious Favor which above all worldly things he most desireth The Eighth of May the Commons brought up their Charge against the Duke which was delivered at a Conference of both Houses
in the chief Court of Admiralty in the name of the said late King and of the Lord Admiral against them for Fifteen thousand pound taken Piratically by some Captains of the said Merchants ships and pretended to be in the hands of the East India Company and thereupon the Kings Advocate in the name of Advocate for the then King and the said Lord Admiral moved and obtained one Attachment which by the Serjeant of the said Court of Admiralty was served on the said Merchants in their Court the sixteenth day of March following whereupon the said Merchants though there was no cause for their molestation by the Lord Admiral yet the next day they were urged in the said Court of Admiralty to bring in the Fifteen thousand pounds or go to prison wherefore immediately the Company of the said Merchants did again send the Deputy aforesaid and some others to make new suit unto the said Duke for the release of the said Ships and Pinaces who unjustly endeavoring to extort money from the said Merchants protested that the Ships should not go except they compounded with him and when they urged many more reasons for the release of the said Ships and Pinaces the Answer of the said Duke was That the then Parliament must first be moved The said Merchants therefore being in this perplexity and in their consultation the three and twentieth of that moneth even ready to give over that Trade yet considering that they should lose more then was demanded by unlading their ships besides their voyage they resolved to give the said Duke Ten thousand pounds for his unjust demands And he the said Duke by the undue means aforesaid and under colour of his Office and upon false pretence of Rights unjustly did exact and extort from the said Merchants the said Ten thousand pounds and received the same about the 28. of April following the discharge of those Ships which were not released by him till they the said Merchants had yielded to give him the said Duke the said Ten thousand pounds for the said Release and for the false pretence of Rights made by the said Duke as aforesaid VII Whereas the Ships of our Soveraign Lord the King and of his Kingdoms aforesaid are the principal strength and defence of the said Kingdoms and ought therefore to be always preserved and safely kept under the command and for the service of our Soveraign Lord the King no less then any the Fortresses and Castles of the said Kingdoms And whereas no Subject of this Realm ought to be dispossessed of any his Goods or Chattels without order of Justice or his own consent first duly had and obtained The said Duke being Great Admiral of England Governor-General and Keeper of the said Ships and Seas and thereof ought to have and take a special and continual care and diligence how to preserve the same The said Duke in or about the end of Iuly last in the first year of our Soveraign Lord the King did under the colour of the said Office of Great Admiral of England and by indirect and subtile means and practices procure one of the principal Ships of his Majesties Navy-Royal called the Vantguard then under the Command of Captain Iohn Pennington and six other Merchants Ships of great burden and value belonging to several Persons inhabiting in London the Natural Subjects of his Majesty to be conveyed over with all their Ordnance Munition Tackle and Apparel into the parts of the Kingdom of France to the end that being there they might the more easily be put into the hands of the French King his Ministers and Subjects and taken into their possession command and power And accordingly the said Duke by his Ministers and Agents with menaces and other ill means and practices did there without order of Justice and without the consent of the said Masters and Owners unduly compel and inforce the said Masters and Owners of the said six Merchants Ships to deliver their said Ships into the said possession command and power of the said French King his Ministers and Subjects and by reason of his compulsion and under the pretext of his power as aforesaid and by his indirect practices as aforesaid the said Ships aforesaid as well the said Ship Royal of his Majesty as the others belonging to the said Merchants were there delivered into the hands and command of the said French King his Ministers and Subjects without either sufficient security or assurance for redelivery or other necessary caution in that behalf taken or provided either by the said Duke himself or otherwise by his direction contrary to the duty of the said Offices of Great Admiral Governor-General and Keeper of the said Ships and Seas and to the faith and trust in that behalf reposed and contrary to the duty which he oweth to our Soveraign Lord the King in his place of Privy-Counsellor to the apparent weakening of the Naval strength of this Kingdom to the great loss and prejudice of the said Merchants and against the liberty of those Subjects of our Soveraign Lord the King that are under the Jurisdiction of the Admiralty VIII The said Duke contrary to the purpose of our Soveraign Lord the King and his Majesties known zeal for the maintenance and advancement of the true Religion established in the Church of England knowing that the said Ships were intended to be imployed by the said French King against those of the same Religion at Rochel and elswhere in the Kingdom of France did procure the said Ship Royal and compel as aforesaid the said six other Ships to be delivered unto the said French King his Ministers and Subjects as aforesaid to the end the said Ships might be used and imployed by the said French King in his intended War against those of the said Religion in the said Town of Rochel and elswhere within the Kingdom of France And the said Ships were and have been since so used and imployed by the said French King his Ministers and Subjects against them And this the said Duke did as aforesaid in great and most apparent prejudice of the said Religion contrary to the purpose and intention of our Soveraign Lord the King and against his duty in that behalf being a sworne Counsellor to his Majesty and to the great scandal and dishonor of this Nation And notwithstanding the delivery of the said Ships by his procurement and compulsion as aforesaid to be imployed as aforesaid the said Duke in cunning and cautelous manner to mask his ill intentions did at the Parliament held at Oxford in August last before the Committee of both Houses of Parliament intimate and declare that the said Ships were not nor should they be so used and imployed against those of the said Religion as aforesaid in contempt of our Soveraign Lord the King and in abuse of the said Houses of Parliament and in violation of that Truth which every man should profess These three Articles were aggravated by Mr. Glanvile
to convey them to the Treasury of the Navy If the truth be according to the Privy-seal they are to be added to the former Total as parcel of his own gain If according to that allegation it may prove a president of greater damage to the King then the money is worth for by this way his Majesty hath no means by matter of Record to charge the Treasurer of the Navy with these sums and may lose the benefit of the Act of Parliament 13 Eliz. whereby Accomptants Lands are made liable to the paiment of their Debts to the King and in many cases may be sold for his Majesties satisfaction The Treasurer of the Navy is a worthy man but if he should die the King loseth the benefit The fourth point of this branch is That he hath caused so great a mixture and confusion between the Kings Estate and his own that they cannot be distinguished by the Records and Entries which ought to be kept for the safety of his Majesties Treasure and indempnity of the Subject This is proved in divers instances whereof the last alleaged is one and others follow By the wisdom of the Law in the constitution of the Exchequer there be three Guards set upon the Kings Treasure and Accompts The first is a legal Impignoration whereby the Estates personal and real of the Accomptants are made liable to be sold for the discharge of their Debts which I mentioned before The second an apt Controlment over every Office by which the King relies not upon the industry and honesty of any one man but if he fail in either it may be discovered by some other sworne to take notice of it and either to correct his Errors or amend his Faults The third is a durable Evidence and Certainty not for the present time only but for perpetuity because the King can neither receive or pay but by Record All these Guards have been broken by the Duke both in the Cases next before recited and in these which follow The Custom of the Exchequer is the Law of the Kingdom for so much as concerneth the Kings Revenue Every breach of a Law by a particular offence is punishable but such an offence as this being destructive of the Law itself is of a far higher nature The fifth point of this second branch is concerning two Privy-seals of Release the one 16 the other 20 Iac. whereby this Duke is discharged of divers sums secretly received to his Majesties use but by vertue of these Releases to be converted to the support of his own Estate The proof hereof is referred to the Privy-seals themselves From which he made one observation of the subtilty he used to winde himself into the possession of the Kings money and to get that by cunning steps and degrees which peradventure he could not have obtained at once A good Master will trust a Servant with a greater sum that is out of his purse then he would bestow upon him being in his purse and yet after it is out of his hands may be drawn more easily to make a Release then at first to have made a Free gift This is a proper instance to be added to the proof of the point of mingling his own Estate with the Kings and of the same kind be other particulars mentioned in the Schedule though not expressed in the Charge as Twenty thousand pounds received in Composition for the Earl of M. his Fine which cannot be discovered whether part or all be converted to the Dukes benefit and yet it appears by a Privy-seal to be cleerly intended to the Kings own service for the Houshold and Wardrobe till by the Dukes practice it was diverted into this close and by-way Another instance in this is His endeavor to get the money which should be made of Prize-goods into his own hands And for this purpose he first labored to procure that his man Gabriel Marsh might receive it and when it was thought fit some Partner should be joined with him trial was made of divers but none of any credit would undertake the Charge with such a Consort And the Commons have reason to think there was good cause of this refusal for he is so ill an Accomptant that he confessed in their House being examined that by authority from the Duke he received divers bags of gold and silver out of the S. Peter of Newhaven which he never told When this practice of imploying his own man would take no effect then he procured a Commission from Sir William Russell who is indeed without exception an able and worthy Officer but that is not enough for the Kings security For howsoever he was to receive the money it was to be disbursed by and to the Dukes warrant and profit Which Clause hath been altered since this was questioned in Parliament and now it is to be issued from an immediate Warrant from his Majesty But as it was before it may be noted as an incroachment upon the Office of my Lord Treasurer whereby he might make a more easie way to some sinister end of his own so that upon the matter Sir William was but a safeguard of the money for the Duke himself And this I must note of some guilt in the very act of it The last point upon this whole Charge was a reduction of the value of the Land together with the mony into one totall and to that purpose he rated the Land being valued at a reasonable value at forty years purchase for although some of it was sold for thirty yet a great part was worth more then a hundred years purchase so as forty years is conceived to be an easy Medium at this rate 3035 l. amounteth to 121400 l. which being added to the total of the mony received 162995 l. both together make the sum of 284395 l. besides the Forrest of Leyfeild and besides the profit made out of the thirds of Strangers goods and the Moyetie of the profit made out of the Customes of Ireland This is a great sum in it self but much greater by many Circumstances if we look upon the time past never so much came into any private mans hands out of the publique purse if we respect the time present the King never had so much want never so many forreign occasions important and expensive the Subjects never have given greater supplies and yet those supplies unable to furnish these expences But as the Circumstances make the sum greater so there be other Circumstances which make it less if it be compared with the inestimable gain he hath made by the sale of Honors and Offices and by projects hurtfull to the State both of England and Ireland or if it be compared to his profusion it will appear but a little sum All these gifts and other ways of profit notwithstanding he confest before both Houses of Parliament that he was indebted 100000 l. If this be true how can we hope to satisfie his prodigality if false how can we hope to satisfie
gracious Pardon of his now Majesty granted to the said Duke and vouchsafed in like manner to all his Subjects at the time of his most happy Inauguration and Coronation Which said Pardon under the Great Seal of England granted the said Duke beareth date the 10. day of February now last past and here is shewn forth unto your Lordships on which he doth most humbly rely And yet he hopeth your Lordships in your Justice and Honor upon which with confidence he puts himself will acquit him of and from those misdemeanors offences misprisions and crimes wherewith he hath been charged And he hopeth and will daily pray that for the future he shall by Gods grace so watch over his actions both publick and private that he shall not give any just offence to any The Duke having put in this Answer earnestly moved the Lords to send to the Commons to expedite their Reply and the Commons did as earnestly desire a Copy of his Answer The next day his Majesty wrote this Letter to the Speaker TRusty and Welbeloved We greet you well Our House of Commons cannot forget how often and how earnestly we have called upon them for the speeding of that Aid which they intended us for our great and weighty affairs concerning the safety and honor of us and our Kingdoms And now the time being so far spent that unless it be presently concluded it can neither bring us Money nor Credit by the time which themselves have prefixed which is the last of this Moneth and being further deferred would be of little use we being daily advertised from all parts of the great preparations of the Enemy ready to assail us We hold it necessary by these our Letters to give them our last and final admonition and to let them know that we shall account all further delays and excuses to be express denials And therefore we will and require you to signifie unto them that we do expect that they forthwith bring in their Bill of Subsidy to be passed without delay or Condition so as it may fully pass the House by the end of the next week at the furthest Which if they do not it will force us to take other resolutions But let them know if they finish this according to our desire that we are resolved to let them sit together for the dispatch of their other affairs so long as the season will permit and after their recess to bring them together again the next Winter And if by their denial or delay any thing of ill consequence shall fall out either at home or abroad We call God and man to witness that We have done our part to prevent it by calling our People together to advise with us by opening the weight of our occasions unto them and by requiring their timely help and assistance in these Actions wherein we stand engaged by their own Councels And we will and command you that this Letter be publickly read in the House About this time there happened at three a clock in the afternoon a terrible storm of Rain and Hail in and about the City of London and with it a very great Thunder and Lightening The graves were laid open in S. Andrews Church-yard in Holborn by the sudden fall of the Wall which brought away the Earth with it whereby many Coffins and the Corps therein were exposed to open view and the ruder sort would ordinarily lift up the lids of the Coffins to see the posture of the dead Corps lying therein who had been buried of the Plague but the year before At the same instant of time there was a terrible Storm and strange Spectacle upon Thames by the turbulencie of the waters and a Mist that arose out of the same which appeared in a round Circle of a good bigness above the waters The fierceness of the Storm bent it self towards York-House the then habitation of the Duke of Buckingham beating against the stairs and wall thereof And at last this round Circle thus elevated all this while above the water dispersed it self by degrees like the smoke issuing out of a Furnace and ascended higher and higher till it quite vanished away to the great admiration of the beholders This occasioned the more discourse among the Vulgar in that Doctor Lamb appeared then upon Thames to whose Art of Conjuring they attributed that which had happened The Parliament was then sitting and this Spectacle was seen by many of the Members out of the windows of the House The Commons agreed upon this ensuing Petition to his Majesty concerning Recusants To the Kings most Excellent Majesty YOur Majesties most obedient and loyal Subjects the Commons in this present Parliament assembled do with great comfort remember the many Testimonies which your Majesty hath given of your sincerity and zeal of the true Religion established in this Kingdom and in particular your gracious Answer to both Houses of Parliament at Oxford upon their Petition concerning the Causes and Remedies of the Increase of Popery That your Majesty thought fit and would give order to remove from all Places of Authority and Government all such persons as are either Popish Recusants or according to direction of former Acts of State justly to be suspected which was then presented as a great and principal cause of that mischief But not having received so full redress herein as may conduce to the peace of this Church and safety of this Regal State They hold it their duty once more to resort to your Sacred Majesty humbly to inform you that upon examination they find the persons underwritten to be either Recusants Papists or justly suspected according to the former Acts of State who now do or since the first sitting of the Parliament did remain in places of Government and Authority and Trust in your several Counties of this your Realm of England and Dominion of Wales The Right Honorable Francis Earl of Rutland Lieutenant of the County of Lincoln Rutland Northampton Nottingham and a Commissioner of the Peace and of Oyer and Terminer in the County of York and Justice of Oyer from Trent Northwards His Lordship is presented to be a Popish Recusant and to have affronted all the Commissioners of the Peace within the North-Riding of Yorkshire by sending a Licence under his Hand and Seal unto his Tenant Thomas Fisher dwelling in his Lordships Mannor of Helmsley in the said North-Riding of the said County of York to keep an Alehouse soon after he was by an Order made at the Quarter-Sessions discharged from keeping an Alehouse because he was a Popish convict Recusant and to have procured a Popish Schoolmaster namely Roger Conyers to teach Schollers within the said Mannor of Helmsley that formerly had his Licence to teach Schollers taken from him for teaching Schollers that were the children of Popish Recusants and because he suffered these children to absent themselves from the Church whilest they were his Schollers for which the said Conyers was formerly complained of
man that would not depend upon him among other men had me in his eye for not stooping unto him so as to become his Vassal I that had learned a Lesson which I constantly hold To be no mans servant but the Kings for mine Old Royal Master which is with God and mine own Reason did teach me so went on mine own ways although I could not but observe That so many as walked in that path did suffer for it upon all occasions and so did I nothing wherein I moved my Master taking place which finding so clearly as if the Duke had set some ill character upon me I had no way but to rest in patience leaving all to God and looking to my self as warily as I might But this did not serve the turn his undertakings were so extraordinary That every one that was not with him was presently against him and if a hard opinion were once entertained there was no place left for satisfaction or reconciliation What befel the Earl of Arundel and Sir Randal Crew and divers others I need not to report and no man can make doubt but he blew the Coals For my Self there is a Gentleman called Sir H. S. who gave the first light what should befal me This Knight being of more livelihood then wisdom had married the Lady D. Sister to the now Earl of E. and had so treated her that both for safeguard of her Honor blemished by him scandalously and for her Alimony or maintenance being glad to get from him she was inforced to endure a Suit in the High Commission Court So to strengthen his party he was made known to the Duke and by means of a Dependant on his Grace he got a Letter from the King That the Commissioners should proceed no further in hearing of that Cause by reason that it being a difference between a Gentleman and his Wife the Kings Majesty would hear it himself The Solicitor for the Lady finding that the course of Justice was stopped did so earnestly by Petition move the King that by another Letter there was a relaxation of the former restraint and the Commissioners Ecclesiastical went on But now in the new proceeding finding himself by Justice like enough to be pinched he did publickly in the Court refuse to speak by any Councel but would plead his cause himself wherein he did bear the whole business so disorderly tumultuously and unrespectively that after divers reproofs I was enforced for the Honor of the Court and Reputation of the High Commission to tell him openly That if he did not carry himself in a better fashion I would commit him to Prison This so troubled the yong Gallant that within few days after being at Dinner or Supper where some wished me well he bolted it out That as for the Archbishop the Duke had a purpose to turn him out of his place and that he did but wait the occasion to effect it Which being brought unto me constantly by more ways then one I was now in expectation what must be the issue of this great mans indignation which fell out to be as followeth There was one Sibthorpe who not being so much as a Batchellor of Arts as it hath been credibly reported unto me by means of Doctor Peirce Dean of Peterborough being Vice-Chancellor of Oxford did get to be conferred upon him the Title of a Doctor This man is Vicar of Brackley in Northamptonshire and hath another Benefice not far from it in Buckinghamshire But the lustre of his Honor did arise from being the Son-in-law of Sir Iohn Lamb Chancellor of Peterborough whose Daughter he married and was put into the Commission of Peace When the Lent Assizes were in February last at Northampton the man that Preached before the Judges there was this worthy Doctor where magnifying the Authority of Kings which is so strong in the Scripture that it needs no flattery any ways to extol it he let fall divers Speeches which were distasteful to the Auditors and namely That they had power to put Poll-Money upon their Subjects heads when against those challenges men did frequently mourn He being a man of a low Fortune conceived that the putting his Sermon in Print might gain favor at Court and raise his Fortune higher on he goeth with the Transcribing of his Sermon and got a Bishop or two to prefer this great Service to the Duke and it being brought unto the Duke it cometh in his head or was suggested unto him by some malicious body that thereby the Archbishop might be put to some remarkable strait For if the King should send the Sermon unto him and command him to allow it to the Press one of these two things would follow That either he should Authorize it and so all men that were indifferent should discover him for a base and unworthy Beast or he should refuse it and so should fall into the Kings indignation who might pursue it at his pleasure as against a man that was contrary to his service Out of this Fountain flowed all the Water that afterwards so wet In rehearsing whereof I must set down divers particulars which some man may wonder how they should be discovered unto me But let it suffice once for all that in the word of an honest man and of a Bishop I recount nothing but whereof I have good warrant God himself working means The matters were revealed unto me although it be not convenient that in this Paper I name the manner how they came unto me least such as did by well-doing further me should receive blame for their labor Well! resolved it is That I must be put to it and that with speed and therefore Mr. William Murrey Nephew as I think unto Mr. Thomas Murrey sometimes Tutor unto Prince Charls and the yong man now of the Kings Bed-chamber is sent unto me with the Written Sermon of whom I must say That albeit he did the King his Masters business yet he did use himself temperately and civilly unto me For avoiding of inquit and inquam as Tully saith I said this and he said that I will make it by way of Dialogue not setting down every days conference exactly by it self but mentioning all things of importance in the whole yet distinguishing of times where for the truth of the Relation it cannot be avoided Murrey My Lord I am sent unto you by the King to let you know that his pleasure is That whereas there is brought unto him a Sermon to be Printed you should allow this Sermon to the Press Archb. I was never he that authorised Books to be Printed for it is the work of my Chaplains to read over other mens writings and what is fit to let it go what is unfit to expunge it Murrey But the King will have you your self to do this because he is minded that no Books shall be allowed but by you and the Bishop of London And my Lord of London authorised one the other day Cousens
they make no Answer but in the published Sermon distinguisheth a Tribute from a Loan or Aid whereby they acknowledge it was not well before and indeed it was improper and absurd worthy of none but Dr. Sibthorpe I have now delivered the Grounds whereupon I refused to authorise this Book being sorry at my heart that the King my Gratious Master should rest so great a building upon so weak a Foundation the Treatise being so slender and without substance but that it proceeded from a hungry man If I had been in Council when the Project for this Loan was first handled I would have used my best Reasons to have had it well grounded but I was absent and knew not whereupon they proceeded onely I saw it was followed with much vehemency And since it was put in execution I did not interpose my self to know the Grounds of one nor of the other It seemed therefore strange unto me That in the upshot of the business I was called in to make that good by Divinity which others had done and must have no other inducement to it but Doctor Sibthorps contemptible Treatise I imagined this for the manner of the carriage of it to be somewhat like unto the Earl of Somersets Case who abused the Wife of the Earl of Essex must have her divorsed from her Husband and must himself marry her And this must not be done but that the Archbishop of Canterbury must ratifie all judicially I know the Cases are different but I onely compare the manner of the carriage When the Approbation of the Sermon was by me refused it was carried to the Bishop of London who gave a great and stately allowance of it the good man being not willing that any thing should stick which was sent unto him from the Court as appeareth by the Book which is commonly called The Seven Sacraments which was allowed by his Lordship with all the Errors which since that time have been expunged and taken out of it But before this passed the Bishops File there is one accident which fitly cometh in to be recounted in this place My Lord of London hath a Chaplain Doctor Worral by name who is Schollar good enough but a kinde of free Fellow-like man and of no very tender Conscience Doctor Sibthorps Sermon was brought unto him And hand over head as the Proverb is he approved it and subscribed his name unto it But afterwards being better advised he sendeth it to a learned Gentleman of the Inner Temple and writing some few lines unto him craveth his opinion of that which he had done the Gentleman read it But although he had promised to return his Judgment by Letter yet he refused so to do but desired that Doctor Worral would come himself which being done he spake to this purpose What have you done you have allowed a strange Book yonder which if it be true there is no Meum or Tuum no man in England hath any thing of his own If ever the Tide turn and Matters be called to a Reckoning you will be hanged for publishing such a Book To which the Doctor answered Yea but my hand is to it what shall I do For that the other replied You must scrape out your name and do not suffer so much as the sign of any Letter to remain in the Paper Which accordingly he did and withdrew his finger from the Pye But what the Chaplain well-advised would not do his Lord without sticking accomplished and so being unsensibly hatched it came flying into the World But in my opinion the Book hath perswaded very few understanding men and hath not gained the King six pence Pars Secunda HItherto I have declared at length all Passages concerning the Sermon and to my remembrance I have not quitted any thing that was worthy the knowing I am now in the second place to shew what was the issue of this not allowing the worthy and learned Treatise In the height of this Question I privately understood from a Friend in the Court That for a punishment upon me it was resolved that I should be sent away to Canterbury and confined there I kept this silently and expected Gods pleasure yet laying it up still in my minde esteeming the Duke to be of the number of them touching whom Tacitus observeth That such as are false in their love are true in their hate But whatsoever the event must be I made that use of the Report that Iacula praevisa minus feriunt The Duke at the first was earnest with the King That I must be presently sent away before his going to Sea For saith he if I were gone he would be every day at Whitehal and at the Council Table and there will cross all things that I have intended To meet with his Objection I got me away to Croyden a moneth sooner then in ordinary years I have used to do but the Term was ended early and my main fit of the Stone did call upon me to get me to the Countrey that there on Hors-back I might ride upon the Downs which I afterwards performed and I thank God found great use of it in recovering of my Stomack which was almost utterly gone The Duke hastned his preparations for the fleet but still that cometh in for one Memorandum That if he were once absent there should no day pass over but that the Archbishop would be with the King and infuse things that would be contrary to his proceedings What a miserable and restless thing Ambition is when one talented but as a common person yet by the favor of his Prince hath gotten that interest that in a sort all the Keys of England hang at his Girdle which the wife Queen Elizabeth would never endure in any Subject yet standeth in his own heart in such tickle terms as that he feareth every shadow and thinketh that the lending of the Kings ear unto any grave and well-seasoned Report may blow him out of all which in his estimation he thinketh is setled upon no good foundation but the affection of the Prince which may be mutable as it is in all men more or less If a man would wish harm unto his enemy could he wish him a greater torment then to be wrested and wringed with ambitious thoughts Well at first it went currant that with all hast I must be doffed but upon later consideration it must be staid till the Duke be at Sea and then put in execution by the King himself that as it seemeth Buckingham might be free from blame if any should be laid upon any person Hence it was that after his going there was new prosecution of the Yorkshire-men and the refusing Londoners were pursued more fervently then before and it is very likely that the Arrow came out of the same Quiver that the Bishop coming to the Election at Westminster was driven back so suddenly to Bugden Take heed of these things Noble Duke you put your King to t●e worst parts whereof you may
unuseful It is needful that you make a good and timely supply of Treasure without which all Councels will prove fruitless I might press many Reasons to this end but I will but name few First for his Majesties sake who requires it Great is the duty which we owe him by the Law of God great by the Law of Nature and our own Allegiance great for his own merit and the memory of his ever blessed Father I do but point at them But methinks our thoughts cannot but recoil on one Consideration touched by his Majesty which to me seems to sound like a Parliamentary Pact or Covenant A War was advised here Assistance professed yea and protested here I do but touch it I know you will deeply think on it and the more for the example the King hath set you His Lands his Plate his Jewels he hath not spared to supply the War What the People hath protested the King for his part hath willingly performed Secondly for the Cause sake It concerns us in Christian charity to tender the distresses of our Friends abroad It concerns us in Honor not to abandon them who have stood for us And if this come not close enough You shall find our Interest so woven and involved with theirs that the Cause is more ours then theirs If Religion be in peril we have the most flourishing and Orthodox Church If Honor be in question the Stories and Monuments in former Ages will shew that our Ancestors have left us as much as any Nation If Trade and Commerce be in danger we are Islanders it is our life All these at once lie at stake and so doth our safety and being Lastly in respect of the manner of his Majesties demand which is in Parliament the way that hath ever best pleased the Subjects of England And good cause for it For Aids granted in Parliament work good effects for the People they be commonly accompanied with wholsom Laws gracious Pardons and the like Besides just and good Kings finding the love of their People and the readiness of their Supplies may the better forbear the use of their Prerogatives and moderate the rigor of the Laws towards their Subjects This way as his Majesty hath told you he hath chosen not as the onely way but as the fittest Not as destitute of others but as most agreeable to the goodness of his own most gracious disposition and to the desire and weal of his people If this be deferred Necessity and the Sword of the Enemy make way to the others Remember his Majesties Admonition I say remember it Let me but add and observe Gods mercy towards this Land above all others The Torrent of War hath overwhelmed other Churches and Countries but God hath hitherto restrained it from us and still gives us warning of every approaching danger to save us from surprise And our gracious Soveraign in a true sense of it calls together his High Court of Parliament the lively Representation of the Wisdom Wealth and Power of the whole Kingdom to join together to repell those hostile Attempts which have distressed our Friends and Allies and threatned our selves And therefore it behoves all to apply their Thoughts unto Councel and Consultations worthy the greatness and wisdom of this Assembly To avoid discontents and divisions which may either distemper or delay And to attend that Unum Necessarium the Common Cause propounding for the scope and work of all the Debates the general good of the King and Kingdom whom God hath joined together with an indissoluble knot which none must attempt to cut or untie And let all by unity and good accord endeavour to pattern this Parliament by the best that have been that it may be a Pattern to future Parliaments and may infuse into Parliaments a kind of Multiplying power and faculty whereby they may be more frequent and the King our Soveraign may delight to sit on his Throne and from thence to distribute his graces and favors amongst his people His Majesty hath given you cause to be confident of this you have heard from his Royal mouth which nevertheless he hath given me express command to redouble If this Parliament by their dutiful and wise proceedings shall but give this occasion His Majesty will be ready not onely to manifest his gracious acceptation but to put out all memory of those distastes that have troubled former Parliaments I have but one thing more to adde and that is As your Consultations be serious so let them be speedy The Enemy is before-hand with us and ●lies on the wings of Success We may dally and play with the Hour-glass that is in our power but the Hour will not stay for us and an Opportunity once lost cannot be regained And therefore resolve of your Supplies that they may be timely and sufficient serving the Occasion Your Councel your Aid all is but lost if your Aid be either too little or too late And his Majesty is resolved that his Affairs cannot permit him to expect it over-long Sir Iohn Finch being chosen Speaker made this Address to his Majesty Wednesday the Nineteenth of March. Most Gracious Soveraign YOur obedient and loyal Subjects the Knights Citizens and Burgesses by your Royal Summons here assembled in obedience to your gracious direction according to their antient usage and priviledge have lately proceeded to the Choice of a Speaker And whether sequestring their better Judgments for your more weighty Affairs or to make it known that their Honor and Wisdom can take neither increase or diminution by the value or demerit of any one particular Member in what place soever serving them Omitting others of worth and ability they have fixed their eyes of favor and affection upon me Their long knowledge of my unfitness every way to undergo a charge of this important weight and consequence gave me some hope they would have admitted my just excuse Yet for their further and clearer satisfaction I drew the Curtains and let in what light I could upon my inmost thoughts truly and really discovering to them what my self best knew and what I most humbly beseech your Royal Majesty to take now into your consideration that of so many hundreds sitting amongst them they could have found few or none whose presentation to your Majesty would have been or less repute or advantage to them for et impeditioris linguae sum and the poor experience I have of that Royal Assembly is so ill ballanced with true Judgement that every gust and wave hath power on me whereby I shall not onely suffer in my own particular but which I apprehend with much more care and sorrow do prejudice to their common interest Wherefore dread and dear Soveraign as low as the lowest step of your Royal Throne I humbly bend appealing to your great and Soveraign Judgement for my discharge from this so unequal a burthen imposed on me most humbly and earnestly beseeching your most excellent Majesty for the Honor of that Great
of the Kings Bench this Law will not bend and when it lights on Subjects fitting if it do not bend it is unjust And there comes in the Law of the Chancery and of Equity this is Application of Law in private mens Causes when it comes to Meum tuum And thus the general Government of Cases with relation to the common State of the Kingdom is from the Council Board and there they are to vary from the Law of the Kingdom Suppose it be in time of Dearth Propriety of Goods may in that time be forced and be brought to the Market We saw the experience of it in Coals in London and the Council Board caused them to be brought forth and sold. In a time of Pestilence men may be restrained If a Schism be like to grow in a Church the State will enquire after the favorers of it if there be fea● of Invasion and it be encouraged by hope of a Party amongst us it is in the power of Government to restrain men to their houses In the Composure of these things there is great difference What differences have been between the Courts of Chancery and Kings Bench It is hard to put true difference between the Kings Prerogative and our Liberties His Majesty saw expence of time would be prejudicial it pleased God to move his Majesty by a Divine hand to shew us a way to clear all our difficulties let us attend to all the parts of it there be Five Degrees and there is more assurance then we could have by any Law whatsoever His Majesty declares That Magna Charta and the other Statutes are in force This is not the first time that the Liberty of the Subject was infringed or was in Debate and confirmed all times thought it safe that when they came to a Negative of Power it was hard to keep Government and Liberty together but his Majesty stopped not there but according to the sense of these Laws That he will govern his Subjects in their just Liberties he assures us our Liberties are just they are not of Grace but of Right nay he assures us he will govern us according to the Laws of the Realm and that we shall finde as much security in his Majesties Promise as in any Law we can make and whatsoever Law we shall make it must come to his Majesties allowance and if his Majesty finde cause in his Government he may not put life to it We daily see all Laws are broken and all Laws will be broke for the Publique good and the King may pardon all Offenders his Majesty did see that the best way to settle all at unity is to express his own heart The Kings heart is the best guarder of his own promise his promise is bound with his heart What Prince can express more care and wisdom Lastly he saith That hereafter ye shall never have the like cause to complain May we not think the breach is made up is not his Majesty ingaged in his Royal word The conclusion is full of weight and he prayes God that as God hath blessed this Kingdom and put it into his heart to come amongst us so to make this day successful The wrath of a King is like the roaring of a Lyon and all Laws with his wrath are to no effect but the Kings favour is like to the dew of the grass there all will prosper and God made the Instruments to unite all hearts His Majesty having thus discharged himself he prayes us to proceed to the business that so much concerns him As his Majesty hath now shewed himself the best of Kings let us acknowledge his Majesties goodness and return to that Union which we all desire But this motion was not received with general acceptation and Sir Benjamin Rudyard replyed to it in these words WE are now upon a great business and the maner of handling it may be as great as the business it self Liberty is a precious thing for every man may set his own price upon it and he that doth not value it deserves to be valued accordingly for mine own part I am clear without scruple that what we have resolved is according to the Law and if any Judge in England were of a contrary opinion I am sure we should have heard of him ere now out of all question the very scope and drift of Magna Charta was to reduce the Regal to a Legal Power in matter of Imprisonment or else it had not been worthy so much contending for It is true That the King ought to have a trust reposed in him God forbid but he should and I hope it is impossible to take it from him for it lies not in the wit of man to devise such a Law as shall comprehend all particulars all accidents but that extraordinary Causes may happen which when they come if they be disposed of for the common good there will be no Law against them yet must the Law be general for otherwise Admissions and Exceptions will fret and eat out the Law to nothing God himself hath constituted a general Law of Nature to govern the ordinary course of things he hath made no Law for Miracles yet there is this observation of them that they are rather praeter naturam then contra naturam and always propter bones fines So the Kings Prerogatives are rather besides the Law then against it and when they are directly to their ends for the publique good they are not onely concurring Laws but even Laws in singularity and excellency But to come nearer let us consider where we are now what steps we have gone and gained The Kings learned Councel have acknowledged all the Laws to be still in force the Judges have not allowed any Judgement against these Laws the Lords also have confessed that the Laws are in full strength they have further retained our resolutions intire and without prejudice All this hitherto is for our advantage but above all his Majesty hath this day himself being publiquely present declared by the mouth of the Lord Keeper before both the Houses That Magna Charta and the other six Statutes are still in force That he will maintain his Subjects in the Liberties of their Persons and Proprieties of their Goods That he will govern them according to the Laws of the Kingdom this is a solemn and binding satisfaction expressing his gracious readiness to comply with his people in their reasonable and just desires The King is a good Man and it is no diminution to a King to be called so for whosoever is a good Man shall be greater then a King that is not so The King certainly is very tender of his present Honor and of his Fame hereafter He will think it hard to have a worse mark set upon him then upon any of his Ancestors by extraordinary restraints His Majesty hath already intimated unto us by a Message That he doth willingly give way to have the abuse of Power reformed by which I
People to pray for him hoping that God would enable him by some satisfactory benefit to make amends and comfort his Subjects for those pressures To these temporal Precedents of antient times which were alledged he added an Ecclesiastical Precedent out of a book called Pupilla Oculi being published for the instruction of Confessors in the Title De participantibus cum excommunicatis fol. 59. All the Articles of Magna Charta are inserted with this direction Hos articulos ignorare non debent quibus incumbit confessiones audire infra provinciam Cantuariensem He likewise remembred the Proclamation 8. Iac. for the calling in and burning of Doctor Cowel's book for which these reasons are given For mistaking the true state of the Parliament of the Kingdom and fundamental constitution and priviledges thereof For speaking irreverently of the Common Law it being a thing utterly unlawful for any Subject to speak or write against that Law under which he liveth and which we are sworn and resolve to maintain From these Precedents he collected that if former Parliaments were so careful of false rumors and news they would have been much more tender of such doctrines as these which might produce true occasions of discord betwixt the King and his People If those who reported the King would lay Impositions and break his Laws were thought such hainous offenders how much more should this man be condemned who perswaded the King he is not bound to keep those Laws If that great King was so far from challenging any right in this kinde that he professed his own sorrow and repentance for grieving his Subjects with unlawful charges If Confessors were enjoyned to frame the Consciences of the People to the observance of these Laws certainly such Doctrine and such a Preacher as this would have been held most strange and abominable in all these times The third general part was the conclusion or prayer of the Commons which consisted of three Clauses First they reserved to themselves liberty of any other accusation and for this he said there was great reason that as the Doctor multiplied his offences so they may renew their accusations Secondly they saved to themselves liberty of replying to his Answer for they had great cause to think that he who shifted so much in offending would shift much more in answering Thirdly they desire he might be brought to examination and judgement this they thought would be very important for the comfort of the present age for security of the future against such wicked and malitious practises And so he concluded that seeing the cause had strength enough to maintain it self his humble suit to their Lordships was That they would not observe his infirmities and defects to the diminution or prejudice of that strength NOt long after the Commons by their Speaker demanded Judgement of the Lords against the Doctor who not accounting his submission with tears and grief a satisfaction for the great offence wherewith he stood charged gave this Sentence 1. That Dr. Manwaring Doctor in Divinity shall be imprisoned during the pleasure of the House 2. That he be fined one thousand pounds to the King 3. That he shall make such submission and acknowledgement of his offences as shall be set down by a Committee in writing both at the Bar and in the House of Commons 4. That he shall be suspended for the time of three years from the exercise of the Ministery and in the mean time a sufficient preaching Minister shall be provided out of his livings to serve the Cure This suspension and provision to be done by the Ecclesiastical jurisdiction 5. That he shall be hereafter disabled to have any Ecclesiastical Dignity or secular Office 6. That he shall be for ever disabled to preach at the Court hereafter 7. That his said Book is worthy to be burnt and that for the better effecting of this his Majesty may be moved to grant a Proclamation to call in the said Books that they may be all burnt accordingly in London and both the Universities and for the Inhibiting the printing thereof upon a great penalty Doctor Manwarings submission was in these words MAy it please this Honorable House I do here in all sorrow of Heart and true Repentance acknowledge the many Errors and Indiscretions which I have committed in preaching and publishing those two Sermons of mine which I called Religion and Allegiance and my great fault in falling upon this Theame again and handling the same rashly and unadvisedly in my own Parish Church of St. Giles in the Fields the fourth of May last past I do humbly acknowledge those three Sermons to have been full of many dangerous Passages Inferences and scandalous Aspersions in most part of the same And I do humbly acknowledge the Justice of this Honorable House in that Judgement and Sentence passed upon me for my great offence And I do from the bottom of my Heart crave pardon of God the King and this Honorable House and the Church and this Common-wealth in general and those worthy Persons adjudged to be reflected upon by me in particular for these great Errors and Offences Roger Manwaring Another Message was brought from his Majesty by the Speaker Tuesday 5 of June HIs Majesty wished them to remember the Message he last sent them by which he set a day for the end of this Session and he commanded the Speaker to let them know that he will certainly hold that day prefixed without alteration and because that cannot be if the House entertain more business of length he requires them that they enter not into or proceed with any new business which may spend greater time or which may lay any Scandal or Aspersion upon the State-government or Ministers thereof SIr Robert Phillips upon this occasion expressed himself thus I perceive that towards God and towards man there is little hope after our humble and careful endeavors seeing our Sins are many and so great I consider my own infirmities and if ever my Passions were wrought upon then now this Message stirs me up especially when I remember with what moderation we have proceeded I cannot but wonder to see the miserable straight we are now in What have we not done to have merited Former times have given wounds enough to the peoples Liberty we came hither full of wounds and we have cured what we could and what is the return of all but misery and desolation What did we aim at but to have served his Majesty and to have done that that would have made him Great and Glorious if this be a fault then we are all Criminous What shall we do since our humble purposes are thus prevented which were not to have laid any aspersion on the Government since it tended to no other end but to give his Majesty true information of his and our danger And to this we are enforced out of a necessity of duty to the King our Countrey and to Posterity but we
to have written them if the reading of them stir but the least spark of the Catholick faith in the heart of so great a Prince whom we wish to be filled with long continuance of joy and flourishing in the glory of all Vertues Given at Rome in the Palace of S. Peter the 20. of April 1623. in the Third year of our Popedom Gregorius P. P. XV. Duci Buckinghamiae NObilis Vir Salutem lumen Divinae gratiae Authoritas qua Nobilitatem tuam in Britanna Regia florere accepimus non modo meritorum praemium sed virtutis patrocinium habetur Egregium plane decus atque adeo dignum cui populi illi addi cupiant diuturnitatem Verum vix dici potest quantus ei cumulus gloriae in orbe terrarum accederet si Deo favente foret Catholicae religionis praesidium facultatem certe nancisceris qua te eorum Principum conciliis inserere potes qui nominis immortalitatem adepti ad coelestia regna pervenerunt Hanc tibi à Deo tributam à Pontifice Romano commendatam occasionem ne elabi patiare Nobilis vir Non te praeterit regalium consiliorum conscium quo in loco Britanna res hac aetate sit quibusque Spiritus sancti loquentis vocibus Principum tuorum aures quotidie personent Quae gloria esset nominis si te hortatore ac suasore Anglicani Reges coelestem illius gloriae haereditatem recuperarent quam Majores eorum amplissimam in iis regnis reliquerunt divini cultus incrementa curando Pontificiae authoritatis ditione non solum tuenda sed etiam propaganda Multi fuerunt atque erunt in posterum quos benevolentia Regum perituris divitiis locupletavit invidiosis titulis auxit atque ut id Nobilitas tua consequatur non ideo sempiternis laudibus nomen tuum memor posteritas colet at enim si consilia tua potentissimos Reges populosque ad Ecclesiae gremium reducerent scriberetur nomen tuum in libro viventium quos non tangit tormentum mortis ac te Historiarum Monumenta in eos sapientes referrent in quorum splendore Reges ambulaverunt Quibus autem te praesentis vitae solatiis futurae praemiis remunetaretur Deus ille qui dives est in mise●icordia omnes facile provident quibus nota est ars vis qua Regnum Coelorum expugnatur Tantae te saelicitatis compotem fieri ut cupiamus efficit non solum Pontificia Charitas ad cujus curas totius humani generis salus pertinet sed etiam genetricis tuae pietas quae cum te mundo peperie Romanae etiam ecclesiae quam ipsa matrem suam agnovit iterum parere cupit Proin cum in Hispanias profectionem paret dilectus Filius religiosus vir Didacus de la Fuente qui gravissima principum tuorum negotia in urbe fapienter Administravit ei mandavimus ut Nobilitatem tuam adeat atque has Apostolicas literas deferat quibus Pontificiae Charitatis magnitudo salutis tuae cupido declaretur Cum ergo audire poteris sententiae nostrae interpretem atque iis virtutibus instructum quae exterarum Nationum amorem Catholico etiam Religioso Sacerdoti conci●lare potuerunt Ille quidem ea do te in hac orbis Patria praedicavit ut dignus sit quem singulari affectu complectaris Authoritate tua Munias Britannorum Regum populorumque saluti gloriae inservientem nos quidem Patrem Misericordiarum Orabimus ut Nobilitati tuae coelestis Regni fores patefaciat frequentia praebeat Clementiae suae documenta Datum Romae apud sanctam Mariam Majorem sub Annulo Piscatoris die 19 Maii. 1623 Pontificatus nostri Tertio Pope Gregory to the D. of Buckingham RIght honorable we wish you health and the light of Gods grace The authority which we understand you have in the Court of England is accounted not only the reward of merit but the patronage of vertue A remarkable honor indeed and of such worth that the people there ought to pray for its continuance But it can scarce be exprest what an access of glory it would receive in the world if by the grace of God it should become the safeguard of the Catholick Religion You have the means to ingraft your self into the assembly of those Princes who having obtained an immortal name have purchased the heavenly inheritance Suffer not Hononorable sir this ocasion to slip out of your hands afforded you by God and recommended to you by the Pope of Rome You are not ignorant as intimate in the Kings counsels in what condition the affairs of England are in this our Age and with what voices of the Holy Ghost speaking the ears of your Princes daily tingle How greatly would you be renown'd if by your perswasion and admonition the King of England should obtain the heavenly inheritance of that glory which their Ancestors left them most ample in those kingdoms by taking care of the increase of Gods worship and not only defending but propagating the dominions of the Pope's authority There have been and will be many hereafter whom the favor of Kings hath much enriched with wealth that fadeth away and honored with envious titles And if your Honor attain this Posterity will therefore adore your memory with everlasting praises But if your advice should reduce Potent Kings and Nations to the Lap of the Church your name would be written in the Book of the Living whom the pangs of death assault not and the Records of Historians would number you among those Sages in whose light and conduct Kings have walked And with what comfort of the present life and reward of the future that God who is rich in mercy would recompence you they easily foresee who are acquainted with the skill and violence by which the Kingdom of Heaven is conquered That we wish you to be partaker of so great happiness not onely our Papal Charity moves us to whose care the salvation of mankinde belongeth but also the Piety of your Mother who having brought you forth to the World desires to bring you forth again to the Church of Rome whom she acknowledges for her Mother Therefore Didacus de la Fuente our beloved Son a Fryer who hath prudently managed the most important affairs of your Princes here in Rome being to go to Spain we have commanded him to wait upon your Honor and to deliver you those Apostolical Letters to evidence the greatness of our Papal Charity and our desire of your salvation You may be pleased to hearken to him as the interpreter of our minde and one adorned with those vertues which have been able to purchase the love of Foreign Nations to a Catholick and a Regular Priest Truly he hath spoken such things of you in this Country of the World that he is worthy whom you should cherish with a singular affection and protect with your Authority as one studious of the glory and safety of the
King and People of Great Britain We will pray the Father of Mercies that he would open the doors of the Kingdom of Heaven to your Honor and afford you frequent evidences of his Clemency Given at Rome apud sanctam Mariam Majorem sub Annulo Piscatoris 19 Maii 1623. being the First year of our Reign The Prince of Wales returned this following Answer to the Popes Letter according to a Copy preserved by some then in Spain at the Treaty CAROLVS Princeps Gregorio P.P. XV. Sanctissime Pater BEatitudinis vestrae Litteras non minore gratitudine observantia accepimus quam exigat ea qua novimus exaratas insignis benevolentia pietatis affectus Atque illud imprimis gratum fuit nunquam satis laudata Majorum exempla inspicienda Nobis à vestra Sanctitate atque imitanda fuisse proposita Qui licet multoties omnium fortunarum vitae ipsius discrimen adiverint quo fidem Christianam latius propagarent haud tamen alacriori animo in infestissimos Christi hostes Crucis Christi vexilla intulerunt quam nos omnem opem operam adhibebimus ut quae tam diu exaltavit pax unitas in Christianam Rempublicam postliminio reducatur Cum enim Discordiarum Patris malitia inter illos ipsos qui Christianam profitentur Religionem tam infelicia seminarit dissidia hoc vel maxime necessarium ducimus ad Sacrosanctam Dei Salvatoris Christi gloriam faelicius promovendam Et minori nobis honori futurum existimabimus tritam Majorum Nostrorum vestigiis insistentes viam in piis ac Religiosis susceptis illorum aemulos atque imitatores extitisse quam genus nostrum ab illis atque originem duxisse Atque ad idem nos istud plurimum in●lammat perspecta no●is Domini Regis ac Patris nostri voluntas quo flagrat desiderium ad tam Sanctum opus porrigendi manum auxiliatricem tum qui Regium pectus exedit dolor cum perpendit quam saevae exoriantur strages quam deplorandae calamitates ex principum Christianorum dissensionibus Judicium vero quod Sanctitas vestra tulit de nostro cum domo ac Principe Catholico Affinitatem Nuptias contrahendi desiderio Charitati vestrae est consentaneum nec a sapientia invenietur alienum Nunquam tanto quo ferimur studio nunquam tam arcto tam indissolubili vinculo ulli Mortalium conjungi cuperemus cujus odio Religionem prosequeremur Quare Sanctitas vestra illud in animum inducat ea modo nos esse semperque futuros moderatione ut quam longissime abfuturi simus ab omni opere quod odium testari possit ullam adversus Religionem Catholicam Romanam Omnes potius captabimus occasiones quo leni benignoque rerum cursu sinistrae omnes suspiciones e medio penitus tollantur Ut sicut omnes unam individuam Trinitatem unum Christum Crucifixum confitemur in unam fidem unanimiter coalescamus Quod ut assequamur labores omnes atque vigilias Regnorum etiam atque vitae pericula parvi pendimus Reliquum est ut quas possumus maximas pro literis quas insignis muneris loco ducimus gratias agentes Sanctitati vestrae omnia prospera faelicitatem aeternam comprecamur Datum Matriti 20 Iunii 1623. Prince Charles to Pope Gregory XV. Most Holy Father WE have received your Letter with no less thankfulness and respect then is due to the singular good will and godly affection wherewith we know it was written It was most acceptable unto us that the never enough Renowned Examples of our Ancestors were proposed to us by your Holiness for our inspection and imitation who though they often hazarded their lives and fortunes to propagate the Christian Faith yet did they never more chearfully display the Banners of the Cross of Christ against his most bitter enemies then we will endeavor to the utmost that the Peace and Union which so long triumphed may be reduced into the Christian World after a kinde of Elimination or Exile For since the malice of the Father of Discords hath sowed such unhappy Divisions amongst those who profess the Christian Religion We account this most necessary thereby to promote with better success the glory of God and Christ our Saviour nor shall we esteem it less honor to tread in their footsteps and to have been their Rivals and Imitators in holy undertakings then to have been discended of them And we are very much encouraged to this as well by the known inclination of our Lord and Father and his ardent desire to lend a helping hand to so pious a work as by the anguish that gnaws his Royal brest when he considers what cruel destructions what deplorable calamities arise out of the dissentions of Christian Princes Your Holiness conjecture of our desire to contract an Alliance and Marriage with a Catholick Family and Princess is agreeable both to your Wisdom and Charity for we would never desire so vehemently to be joyned in a strict and indissoluble Bond with any Mortal whatsoever whose Religion we hated Therefore your Holiness may be assured That we are and always will be of that Moderation as to abstain from such actions which may testifie our hatred against the Roman Catholick Religion we will rather embrace all occasions whereby through a gentle and fair procedure all sinister suspitions may be taken away That as we all confess one Individual Trinity and one Christ Crucified we may unanimously grow up into one Faith Which that we may compass we little value all Labor and Watchings yea the very hazard of our lives It remains that we render thanks to your Holiness for your Letter which we esteem as a singular present and wish your Holiness all prosperity and eternal happiness Dated at Madrid 20 Iunii 1623. Orations Processions and pompous shews were made in Spain to allure the Prince to Popery Popish Books were dedicated and Popish Pictures presented to him They carried him to the most Religious places and to persons famous for pretended Miracles And they shew him of what importance his Conversion is to the gaining of a large entrance into the Infanta's affection and a smooth path to this Catholick Marriage And in case a Rebellion in England should follow his change of Religion they offer an Army to subdue the Rebels But the Prince remained stedfast in his Religion neither did he express any shew of change But as to the interior carriage of Affairs notwithstanding his splendid entertainment to the height of Princely State yet in the main business he was meanly dealt with and in his Addresses to the Infanta unworthily restrained and undervalued The Dispensation sticks long in the Birth but after a tedious Travel it was brought forth Mr. George Gage advertised the King from Rome That the Cardinals made mention of him in most honorable Language and had a firm opinion that the former Rigor towards Catholicks hath risen