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A30389 The memoires of the lives and actions of James and William, Dukes of Hamilton and Castleherald, &c. in which an account is given of the rise and progress of the civil wars of Scotland, with other great transactions both in England and Germany, from the year 1625, to the year 1652 : together with many letters, instructions, and other papers, written by King Charles the I : never before published : all drawn out of, or copied from the originals / by Gilbert Burnet ; in seven books. Burnet, Gilbert, 1643-1715.; Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649. Selections. 1677. 1677 (1677) Wing B5832; ESTC R15331 511,397 467

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for the King to do much without a Parliament in England and Subsidies granted by it but they had reason to think the Parliament would begin with Grievances before they went to Subsidies and if their enquiring into the former proved long and fierce as it would protract the Kings Supply it might also breed Irritations and Heats and end in a Rupture without relieving the King Neither could much be expected from a Loan of Money most of the Cities London especially were not well-affected to the Court and so were like to prove backward and narrow and all might be promised from that was to put off one Summer but the Scotish Storm was like to lie longer Besides he believed that if the Loan of Money went through the Scots would think that a good reason for their entring into England to make the Northern Countries the seat of the War which would prejudice the Kings Service in England All this he foresaw well and therefore was rack't with perplexity only he was not doubtful what to doe himself resolving to follow the Kings Interests on all hazards and in these Consultations this Year ended Anno 1640. An. 1640. They prepare in Scotland for War IN Scotland they begun again to prepare for a new War and the Ministers this year were likewise very busie taxing the King as having violated the late Pacification because way was not given to all their Acts. Besides it was preached in the very Pulpits of Edinburgh that the King had caused burn at London by the hand of the Hangman the Articles of the Treaty at Berwick This was founded on the Censure was put on the Paper spoke of last year which they gave out as the Conditions of Agreement and was burned by Order of the Council of England upon the Declaration made by all the English Lords who were on the Treaty That no other Articles were agreed upon beside the Seven above-mentioned yet this took with the People Next they laid on great Taxes for paying the last years Debts and defraying the Expence this year was like to draw on and for procuring of Money they fell on a new Device to cause the Ministers exhort all to lend liberally for the Service of the Cause which they did with so much Art and Zeal that the Women came and brought in their Jewels Rings and Plate however much Money was not got that way and all was far short of what they needed therefore divers of the most zealous of the Lords chiefly the Earls of Rothes and Cassils did give Bonds for great sums of Money and one Dick a rich Citizen of Edinburgh was got to lend them many thousand pounds Lanerick made Secretary of State In February the Earl of Sterlin the Secretary died for whose Place the King made choice of the Marquis his Brother Lord William whom he created Earl of Lanerick It was indeed the Kings choice for neither had the Marquis moved it nor himself pretended to it The Earl of Lanerick did act so considerable a part in Affairs after this that methinks their History should be as little divided as their Counsels and Affections for the Kings Service were and therefore as Lanerick's Actions come in my way they shall not be passed over in silence Being made Secretary his first care was to inform himself of all that belonged to his Place and Duty in the discharge whereof he resolved neither to spare labour or industry that thereby he might supply the defect of his years which were then but four and twenty But to go on with the Series of the Story the King went on carefully with his Preparations only the Charge of a Fleet was so great that he could not think of it this year but sent out as many Ships as stopt the Scotish Trade And finding how ill he had been served by his Lieutenant-Generals the former year and confiding both in the valour fidelity and conduct of the Earl of Strafford then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland he was called over to be Lieutenant-General in this Expedition and the Marquis was designed Colonel of the Kings Regiment of Guards The state of Affairs in Scotland In Scotland they were gathering Money bringing in more Arms and fortifying suspected Places few resisting them except Huntley in the North and Niddisdale in the South but the later was able to doe little The Marquis had divers Letters from my Lord Lindesay which are yet extant complaining of the Preparations they heard were making against them That Officers for the Army were already named Money was gathering not only Berwick Carlisle were fortified but Edinburgh-Castle and Dumbriton also had new men put in them and English-men were put in the former whereupon they were forced to resolve on hazarding the utmost for the Defence of Religion and Liberties and that all were Contributing very liberally and knew of good Friends both in England and abroad wherefore he assured him if things went to extremities they would not end so well as they did last year And he besought him that he would prove a good instrument betwixt the King and the Country protesting that for his own part nothing next to Religion went so near his Heart as the Kings Service In end he conjured him not to accept of any new Service if it went to an open Breach assuring him he would be ruined if he did telling him that God had provided a relief for them beyond their expectation The Marquis carried all these Letters as he got them to his Majesty and by his command wrote the following Answer My Lord I Received yours of February The Marquis his Letter to the Lord Lindsay wherein you endeavour to let me see the hazard that His Majesty may run if he take not a peaceable Course with his Subjects of Scotland which you say I am reported to be no adviser of as likewise the unavoidable Ruine that will befall me in case of my accepting of any Imployment against them The Arguments that you use are the Resolutions of your own People and the assistance that you will have elsewhere the particular way you forbear to write yet you say that God hath provided it beyond your expectation and as it was beyond your expectation so it is still beyond my belief my Reasons you shall have anon But first I will say somewhat concerning my self Know then Brother for a truth that I heartily pray a Curse may follow him and his Posterity that doth not endeavour and wish that these unhappy Troubles may be composed in a fair and peaceable way God who knoweth the Secrets of all mens thoughts can bear me record with how much care pains and zeal I have endeavoured that and I promise you I shall as faithfully continue in that Course as ever man did in any Resolution which was with reason grounded in his heart how few either believe or know this I care not for I have laid my accompt long since and am resolved on the worst that
returned into Scotland the Duke of Castle-herald had again great advantages if any such desire of Power had governed him for the Reformation had then prevailed in Scotland and he and all his Family except his youngest Son Lord Claud from whom descended the Earls of Abercorn were Protestants so that to have put himself at the head of that was the likeliest way to have advanced his own Designs but it appeared that he and his Sons embraced the Religion not for Faction but out of Conscience for he continued true and faithful to the Queen to the last of which She was so sensible that beside many Publick Testimonies of Her confidence in them such as the naming the Duke of Castle-herald her Adopted Father and calling him still by that Name and the referring Her whole Concerns when She was a Prisoner in England to his Care when that severe and unparalelled sentence of Death was to be executed on Her She took a Ring off Her finger and gave it to one of Her Servants and ordered him to carry it to Her Cousin Lord John Hamilton who then represented his Father that was dead his elder Brother being sick of a Frenzy and tell him that that was all She then had to witness her great sense of his and his Families constant Fidelity to Her and of their suffering for Her Interests and desired that it might be still kept in the Family as a lasting Evidence of Her kindness to it which is preserved to this day Nor was t●eir Duty to the Crown at that time easie or cheap to them for the contrary Faction designed to root them out of Scotland and therefore in one of their Mock-Parliaments their Blood was attainted and their Estates and Honours were afterwards given to other Persons and they were forced to seek shelter in England and France till King James came to Govern by his own Couns●ls then being also pressed to it by the Intercession of Queen Elizabeth He restored them to their Honours and Estates and created Lord John Hamilton Marquis of Hamilton who was Grand-Father to t●e two Dukes whose MEMOIRES I now publish King James did also treat him with the same respect that the Queen his Mother had done the Duke of Castle-herald and called him always Father and wrote to him often with the greatest Freedom and Familiarity that was possible and when that King went to Denmark to bring home His Queen He named him Lord Lieutenant of the South of Scotland and left for him a Letter yet extant full of great Esteem and Kindness to which He added this Postscript with his own Hand MY LORD if my constant Trust had not been in you of your great Love towards me I had not thus employed you upon such an occasion therefore I assure my self you will not frustrate my Expectation He also called him to Christen one of his Children and continued to the last to put great Confidence in him That Lord did indeed deserve to be so used by him for as he had with an invincible Patience and Loyalty submitted to the hard Vsage ●e met with during that King's Childhood and for some years after so he made no Stirs nor Disturbance but that little that was at Sterlin An. 1585. so that when he was admitted to the King's presence the King said to him My Lord I did never see you before and must confess that of all this Company you have been most wronged you were a faithful Servant to the Queen my Mother in my Minority and w●en I understood not as I do the estate of things hardly used And though he was frequently invited by the Violent Church-party to head them in their Mutinous Courses yet he would never engage in it And when that old Lord was dying as he was giving his Blessing to his Son and reckoning up the most signal Favours of God to him he named three more particularly The first was That during all his Troubles and notwithstanding the great Offers were made him in France by the House of Guise if he would change his Religion yet God had never left him to do so base a thing though he lost his Interest in that Court by refusing it The other was that he had never oppressed any of his Vassals and Tenants And the third was that he had never entertained one thought contrary to the Duty he owed the Crown and that no hard Vsage ●e met with had ever prevailed on him to any such Design and therefore charged his Son on his Blessing to continue in the same Courses All this I thought needful to be said for the Honour of that Family because Buchanan studied with much Art and Industry to cast an eternal Disgrace upon it For as he from being a great Flatterer of Mary Queen of Scotland which may be seen in his Dedication of his Incomparable Paraphrase of the Psalmes to Her became Her mortal Enemy and partly by Lies partly by his cruel aggravating of some unjustifiable things has written the History of Her Reign with so much Malice that his Work stands condemned as a base Libel by an Act of Parliament in Scotland so being provoked by an Injury which a Servant of the Duke of Castle-herald's youngest Son did him of which he thought he got not sufficient Reparation and carrying a spite to them because they adhered to the Queen's Interests he wrote of that Family with the most impudent and virulent Malice that was possible And his admirable stile of Latine in which he is inferiour to none that wrote since the days of Augustus has made all Forreigners take their Informations wholly from him and the Collectors of the General History of that Age do for the most part draw all the Account they give of Scotish Affairs out of him by which that Family hath suffered much in the opinions of Forreign Nations so dangerous it is to provoke one that has much Malice and can write ● History so that it shall take with the World But that Writer contradicts himself so often in what he says of that Family that small regard is to be had to it And Lesly Bishop of Ross Privy-Counsellour to Mary Queen of Scotland who wrote the History of that time and bore no great good will to the Duke of Castle-herald and his Children for being such Promoters of the Reformation speaks always of them with a great deal of Honour and Iustice. For the Father of those Dukes he was as Archbishop Spotswood truly calls him a Nobleman of rare gifts and fitted for the greatest Affairs and was most Vniversally beloved by all his Countrymen he was a very Graceful and Gallant Person and of a most agreeable Conversation and ●ery obliging and so did recommend himself to all sorts of Persons King James finding him excellently qualified broug●t him to Court where he made a great Figure the rest of his Life All these things concurred to make me very desirous to see whether the late Dukes had continued in those
our personal Oath we do not take upon us to lay any further Bond upon our Posterity than the Word of God doth recommending onely our Example to them so far as they shall find it agreeable to Gods Word In this sense as is said and no otherwise do we subscribe the said Confession and the general Bond annexed thereunto at Aberdeen Octob. 5. 1638. Signed Ad. Aberdonen John Forbes D. and P. of Div. R. Barrone D. and P. of Div. Al. Rosse D.D. Ja. Sibbald D.D. Al. Scrogie D.D. Wil. Lesley D.D. These Explanations were too just not to be accepted of by the Marquis of Huntley but lest an humour of annexing Explications might have run through others from their example which might have not onely retarded the Work but occasioned new Grounds to the Covenanters to quarrel this Confession he kept the matter secret and took their Subscription in a Bond apart and so sent it to the Marquis But leaving to the Reader to judge how judiciously cautious these Exceptions were I quit this Digression and go on From all places some Subscriptions were brought except from Argyle-shire my Lord Argyle alledging that since the Assembly was so near all desired to be excused till it had sate and determined about it This confirmed the Jealousies of him it being well known how absolute his Authority was in that place The Marquis returned to Edinburgh about the 20th of October but was much disordered to find neither my Lord S. Andrews nor the other Bishops come thither as he had appointed so that he was left destitute of Council how to resolve on the legality of his Procedure at the Assembly yet having advised with such as he durst trust about the Method in which he was to go on at Glasgow he drew it up and sent it to my Lord of Canterbury to communicate it to His Majesty Likewise those Bishops who stay'd in Scotland having pressed him earnestly to prorogue the Assembly foreseeing what was like to follow on it Some advise to prorogue the Assembly he advertised His Majesty of the hazards which on the one hand were visible but on the other hand if it were prorogued it would not fail of fortifying the Jealousies the Covenanters had spread as if the King intended not to observe what he promised which might work much on the Vulgar Besides he saw grounds to fear that most of the Council would desert him if it went to that and certain it was that the Covenanters would not obey but keep the day onely with this odds that they would hold it at Edinburgh he therefore judged it fitter the day should be kept and His Majesties Gracious Offers first proposed and next the Nullities of the Elections examined and then the Bishops Declinator offered and by that time there was no reason to doubt they would give too good grounds for dissolving them All this he submitted to His Majesties Judgment adding that if he thought fit to prorogue it there were grounds enough from the Actions of the Covenanters for justifying it but a present Rupture would be unavoidable to which he received the following Answer Hamilton YOu will receive a particular Answer by my Lord of Canterbubury of all your Propositions touching the Assembly wherein you will find that my Alterations are rather circumstantial than material As concerning the way of your Proceeding though I confess of importance to my Service you foreseeing rightly what my Iudgment would be of them yet I dare say I have left them as full as any of my Proclamations or Declarations and why I should go further I see no reason for certainly those that will not be contented with what I have done already will be less contented if I should d●e more As for the Opinions of the Clergie to prorogue this Assembly I utterly dislike them for I should more hurt my Reputation by not keeping it than their mad Acts can prejudice my Service wherefore I command you hold your day but as you write if you can break them by proving Nullities in their Proceedings nothing better Lastly concerning Assessors I like their Names and as you say you must not suffer me to lose my Privilege To conclude I like your way well and hope upon consideration that you will not mislike my Alterations for I will make none in being Your assured constant Friend CHARLES R. Havearing 29 Oct. 1638. In the end of October the Earl of Rothes with the other Covenanters petitioned for a Warrant to cite the Bishops to appear before the Assembly The Covenanters summoned the Bishops to the Assembly the Marquis answered the Law was patent and there were legal ways for citing all such as were either within or without the Country but for him to give Warrants it had never a President and so could not be granted for it was enough that he did not protect them against a fair Trial whereupon the Covenanters addressed themselves to the Presbytery of Edinburgh for it who gave Warrant for the most scandalous Summons that was ever heard of in the Christian Church which is to be seen in the large Declaration wherein all the Bishops were cited as guilty of Heresie Simony Perjury Incest Adultery Fornication Breach of the Sabbath and what not to which they added respectivè which many said was on design to abuse the poor Vulgar who could not understand the importance of that Law-term but would undoubtedly believe them all guilty of these Crimes This was ordered to be read in the Churches of Edinburgh but carried so secretly that it was onely on the Saturday-night before that the Marquis had notice of it whereupon he presently sent to require them under pain of Treason to forbear but that was not formidable to them so notwithstanding that it was read in the Colledge-Church of Edinburgh after Communion and ordered to be read in all the Churches over Scotland and accordingly done They sent also Orders through all Scotland to search into the Bishops Conversations that all their escapes being gathered together and Witnesses being cited to Glasgow they might find pretexts of Justice to second the fervour of their Zeal Upon the first of November the Session sat down at Edinburgh The Session sits and most of the Lords sign the Kings Covenant and the Marquis having dealt with all the Lords of that Court before went thither to get them to sign the Confession of Faith some desired a delay and this raised a Debate of three hours at length nine of the fifteen signed it two were absent and four refused but those who signed it durst hardly walk the Streets so odiously had the Ministers represented the Confession to all At this time the Marquis got the Earl of Marre to resign the Castle of Edinburgh to the King The Castle of Edinburgh in the Kings hands five thousand pounds Sterlin was that he demanded for it but he was brought to accept of two thousand and because the Earl of Marre would not meddle with
I shall esteem it a very great Service but I shall not advise you to engage me in further Charge except it may be the Pay of some few Officers So not doubting but that you will make as much of little as you may and recommending this Lord to your care I rest Your assured constant Friend CHARLES R. Newcastle 13 May 1639. The Marquis found Aboyn had no Propositions to make besides General Stories and he saw him to be of an unstay'd Humour so that he was hopeless of any good account of his business As for Money he was limited by the King and for Men he had sent away the two Regiments that same day and since he expected Orders every Hour from His Majesty for somewhat to be executed by the third Regiment he could not weaken it too much yet he sent a few Officers the chief of whom was Colonel Gun together with some Ammunition and four small Peece of Artillery And of all this he gave an account to His Majesty adding that perhaps some might misrepresent his lying so long idle but His Majesty knew what Orders himself had given it being his part to obey yet he earnestly craved liberty to doe somewhat worth the while to which he received the following Answer Hamilton HAving much Business I refer you to Master Treasurer yet thi● I think necessary to pass under my own Hand because of a Clause in yours of the 26th of this Moneth that I am so far from having the least hint in my Heart against you that I would think my self a happy Man if I could be as confident in the Faith Courage and Industry of the rest of my Commanders and Officers as I am of you which makes me really to be Your assured constant Friend CHARLES R. Berwick May 29th 1639. By this time the King had encamped at the Birks three miles from Berwick where His Majesty lay in the Camp himself All this while Traquair was not allowed to see the King till he had done some Service which might expiate his former Errors And My Lord Roxburgh was in the same case Some on the Borders are gained for the King for he coming to wait on the King at York to clear himself of his Sons fault in turning in to the Covenant His Majesty was so Gracious as to tell him he believed him innocent yet for examples sake he found it necessary to keep him under some mark of his Displeasure So after a few days Confinement both Traquair and he were suffered to go near the Borders to see whom they could engage to the Kings Service and they gained the Earl of Hume to be satisfied with His Majesties Proclamation and had got good assurances both of the Lord Iohnstown the Earl of Queensberry and of Buckcleugh his Friends The Proclamation was published first at Heymouth next by General Arundel and Ruthwen at Dunce upon which Lesley brought forward his Forces and lay at Duncelaw in view of the Kings Army On the fourth of Iune at noon the Marquis received the following Letter from His Majesty Hamilton The King orders the Marquis to enter on Hostilities THis day I received yours by the Lord Seaton and find your Opinion therein very good if I might spare so many men but every one that I dare consult with about this protesteth against the diminishing of one man ●rom my Army besides I have no mind to stay here upon a meer Defensive which I must do if I send you that Strength you mention Likewise I think that I have my Lord Hume sure and am reasonably confident of my Lord Johnstown I have good hopes too of Queensberry and the Scots therefore all these things considered it were a shame if I should be idle Wherefore now I set you loose to doe what mischief you can doe upon the Rebels for my Service with those men you have for you cannot have one man from hence Leaving the rest to the relation of this honest Bearer I rest Your assured constant Friend CHARLES R. Camp near Berwick 2 June 1639. The Marquis no sooner got this but he presently set to work resolving neither to spare Burroughstownness which was his own Town who goes about it nor Prestonpans which was his Cousins But a strange Accident befell him the next day for as he went out in a small Vessel with a Drake on her and 60 Souldiers to view the Queensferry and burn the Ships that lay in the Harbour he saw a Merchant-barque coming down towards him and he caused row up to her but she perceiving her Danger run her self aground upon the Sands of Barnbougle The Tide falling apace and he following her indeliberately run himself likewise on ground where he was like to have been very quickly taken by the men on the Shoar who were playing upon him and some Volleys passed upon both hands But they on the Land were waiting till the Waters should fall reckoning him their Prey already which had been inevitable had not the Seamen got out and being almost to the middle in Water with great tugging set them afloat and so he returned safe to the Fleet. And this was all the ground for that Calumny of his making Appointments on the Sands of Barnbougle with the Covenanters The next day at eight in the morning being the sixth of Iune he received the following Letter from Sir Henry Vane My Lord BY the Dispatch Sir James Hamilton brought your Lordship from His Majesties Sacred Pen and gets new orders from His Majesty you were left at your liberty to commit any act of Hostility upon the Rebels when your Lordship should find it most opportune since which my Lord Holland with 1000 Horse and 3000 Foot marched towards Kelso himself advanced towards them with the Horse leaving the Foot three miles behind to a Place called Maxwel-heugh a height above Kelso which when the Rebels discovered they instantly marched out with 150 Horse and as my Lord Holland says eight or ten thousand Foot five or six thousand there might have been He thereupon sent a Trumpet commanding them to retreat according to what they had promised by the Proclamation They asked whose Trumpet he was he said my Lord Holland's their answer was he were best to be gone And so my Lord Holland made his Retreat and waited on His Majesty this night to give him this account This morning Advertisement is brought His Majesty that Lesley with 12000 men is at Cockburn-spath that 5000 men will be this night or to morrow at Dunce 6000 at Kelso so His Majesties opinion is with many of his Council to keep himself upon a Defensive and make himself here as fast as he can for His Majesty doth now clearly see and is fully satisfied in his own Iudgement that what passed in the Gallery betwixt His Majesty your Lordship and my Self hath been but too much verified on this occasion And therefore His Majesty would not have you to begin with them but to settle things
of the Magazine in the Navy which being done the Fleet was to be sent out of the Frith And accordingly on the 24th of Iune he came to Edinburgh but he met with such Reproaches and Hootings from the Vulgar that he was forced for preventing a Tumult to desire some of the Covenanting Lords to wait on him to the Castle and yet on the way he was all along cried out upon with most unworthy Names as Pyrate Traitour Enemy to God and his Country with other such-like Invectives These he could not but despise though he was sensible of the Dishonour put upon the Kings Commissioner by that Usage yet he might well have expected that it should have secured him from the Jealousies Stories which were spread of him as if he had been all that time so popular that he was looked upon as the chief Friend of the Good Cause which was as well grounded as the rest of these Reports But having executed the Kings Orders about the Castle of Edinburgh he left the Earl of Traquair whom with the Earl of Roxburgh His Majesty had again received into his Favour to see the rest of the Conditions fulfilled The Tables continued to sit The Tables continue to sit pretending it was necessary they should doe so till all were scattered It is true I have in my hands a Copy of a Warrant for them to sit till the 20th of Iuly but whether it was signed I can neither assert nor deny Divers Disorders fell out in Edinburgh and Traquair met with many Insolences in one of which the White-staff which was carried by his Servant before his Coach was pulled out of his Hand and Complaint being made of this to the Town-Council of Edinburgh all the Reparation they offered was to bring my Lord Treasurer another White-staff so it was said they rated the Affront put on the King in the Person of his Treasurer at Six pence Other Insolences were also complained of and the Covenanters partly excused them and the Covenanters are insolent partly denied what was alledged but no Reparation was made These Disorders obliged His Majesty to change his purpose of coming to Scotland in Person resolving to be present onely by his Commissioner The Marquis returned to His Majesty and stated all that was to be thought upon for Scotish Affairs in a Paper presented to His Majesty at Berwick the 5th of Iuly yet extant in these words To leave all that is past the Question is briefly The Marquis his advice to the King WHether the Assembly and Parliament now indicted is fittest to be held or discharged If held the Success of the Assembly will be the Ratisying of what was done at Glasgow or if that point be gained yet certainly most of the Acts that were made there will of new enacted nor is there any hope to prevent their finding Episcopacy to be abjured by their Covenant and the Function against the Constitution of their Church This will be by the Members of Parliament ratified and put to the Kings Negative Voice and if it be not condescended to by him it is more than probable that his Power even in that Court and in that Place will be questioned If it will be discharged nevertheless the Assembly be keeped by the Rebels and the same things done in it by them and thereafter maintained by the generality of the Kingdom this consequently will bring alongst with it the certain loss of Civil Authority and so necessitate the re-establishing the same by Force or otherwise the desertion of that Kingdom So it is to be resolved on whether it be fit to give way to the Madness of the People or of new to intend a Kingly Way If way be given to what is mentioned it is to be considered in that case if the King shall be personally present or not if not present who shall be imployed and how instructed If the Kingly Way be taken what shall be the means to effectuate the intended end particularly how Money may be levied for the waging of this War and if that be feisible without a Parliament If a Parliament what the Consequence may prove So all may be summed up in this Whether to permit the Abolishing of Episcopacy the lessening of Kingly Power in Ecclesiastick Affairs the Establishing Civil Authority in such manner as the Iniquity of the Times will suffer and to expect better and what will be the Consequence of this if way be given thereto or to call a Parliament in England and leave the event thereof to hazard and their discretions and in the interim Scotland to the Government of the Covenanters This Freedom declares how candidly he dealt with the King in all his Counsels It is true he pressed the King earnestly to give way to the abolishing of Bishops judging that to be the onely mean to bring Scotland again into Order but this was out of no other Principle save his Desire to see the King again enjoy the Affections as well as the Obedience of his Subjects of Scotland thinking Episcopal Government not so essential or absolutely necessary as not to be parted with for a time in such an Exigency wherein the Ruine of the King and Kingdom was was so manifestly threatned His Majesty considering that God did not tie him to Impossibilities The King intends to send him again Commissioner into Scotland resolved notwithstanding his Conscientious adhering to Episcopacy in England to give way for some time to lay aside that Government in Scotland hoping to draw more good from it but intended to imploy another for executing it knowing that his Countenance and Carriage would betray the Discord was betwixt his Heart and his Actions if he went himself and being well satisfied with the Marquis his Behaviour desired him to return to Scotland in the same Character and finish that Business But he made use of all his Forces both of Reason Friendship who opposes it with all his Interest and Interest to divert the King from this representing the following Reasons to dissuade him from it in a Paper presented the 8th of Iuly in these words IF Your Majesty give way to the Covenanters Demands it would be seriously considered which will be the fittest way to doe it if by Your Majesties Own Personal Presence or by a Commissioner if Your Self I shall say in that case nothing in this Paper if by a Commissioner then give me leave humbly to represent to Your Majesties Consideration how unfit it is that I should be imployed The Hatred that is generally carried me and in particular by the chief Covenanters will make them hoping thereby either to ruine me or at least make my Service not acceptable stand more peremptorily on these other Points of Civil Obedience which Your Majesty aims at than they would doe to one that is less hated Since they are the same men I have formerly treated with who now again must be principally used they cannot but find these Particulars which I
since these Arguments are as I conceive used for Your Service the Good of which shall be ever preferred by me before either Life or Fortune which I would willingly expose to all Dangers rather than You shall be pleased to lay this Employment on me for Your Majesties Affairs would be infinitely prejudiced thereby All which I humbly beseech You to take into Your Royal Consideration The King chuses Traqu●ir to be Commissioner There was too much Justice in these Reasons and His Majesty was too full of Affection for him to press it any further therefore the King made choice of his Treasurer the Earl of Traquair for the Service making account that if he served honestly it would doe well if otherwise his Majesty would have good reason to shake him off Upon this he was presently called from Scotland The King also wrote for 14 of the Lords that were the chief Covenanters and writes for many Covenanters to come and wait upon him at Berwick that he might advise with them about the Affairs in hand But the true reason as was believed was to try what fair Treatment might doe with them This gave great Jealousies to the Covenanters who were not so blind as not to understand what the effect of this might prove And indeed some studied to infuse worse Jealousies as if the Design of calling for the Lords had been to send them all Prisoners to London In end they resolved none should go save three from each Estate the three Lords were the Earls of Montrose London and Lowthian and Lowthian was the person who pressed them most to send any for many had no inclinations to send at all But before they came to Berwick the King ordered the Marquis by a Warrant in writing yet extant under His Majesties Hand to try what way he could gain upon them and discover the bottom of their Intentions how the Estate of Bishops should be supplied in Parliament and how far they intended to lessen the Kings Authority The King also allowed him to use what means he pleased and speak to them what he thought fit not onely authorizing but requiring him to it and warranting him if he were ever questioned or accused for it by any Bearing date at Berwick the 17th of Iuly 1639. The Kings Trust in the Marquis It is easie from this to infer both how intirely His Majesty confided in him and how unjust they are who upon any Expressions he might then have used offer injury to his Memory and yet he managed this so cautiously that very little escaped him for which he could not have justified himself without this Order But so tender was he of His Majesties Reputation that when he was afterwards charged for some hard Speeches alledged to have been uttered at that time in all his written Defences he never made use of this Justification knowing how at that time it might have prejudiced His Majesties Service if it had been known that he gave such Warrants to those he imployed reserving to whisper it in His Majesties Ear when he should be admitted to his Presence And indeed till this appeared the Writer of these Memoires was not a little stumbled with some of his Speeches then uttered which were hard to be understood for having them so near the Fountain he could scarce doubt his Information but this Order reconciles the Truth of these Reports he had heard with the Marquis his Innocency The King gains Montrose The King was highly sensible of the Affront put upon him by hindering all he had called for to come to wait on him yet he resolved to bear as far as Humane Patience could go and studied to gain upon the Lords that came The Earl of Montrose was much wrought upon and gave His Majesty full Assurances of his Duty in time coming and upon that entred in a Correspondence with the King The other two were a little mollified but not gained onely from them the Marquis learned that all the Acts of Parliament for Episcopacy were to be abrogated by the next Parliament and that they designed to change the course of bringing in things to the Parliament by the Lords of the Articles as a Prelimitation upon the Parliament Whereupon the next thing to be done was to draw Traquair's Instructions which was not done without great and long Consultation none being privy to it besides the Marquis and Traquair himself That which made the King so tender was his Zeal for Episcopacy but Traquair helped him out of all Difficulties by telling him that doe the next Parliament what it would there were still good grounds to introduce Episcopacy when ever the King was able to carry it for Bishops being by all the Laws of Scotland one of the three Estates of Parliament no Act that passed without them could have force in Law much less the Act that abolished them especially they not appearing or consenting to it but protesting against it This gave much ease to the Kings thoughts and so on the 27th of Iuly Traquair's Instructions were signed which follow as they are taken from a Copy of them under the Marquis his Hand CHARLES R. AT the first Meeting of the Assembly Traquair 's Instructions before it be brought in dispute who shall preside you shall appoint him who was Moderator in the last Assembly to preside in this till a new Moderator be chosen We allow that Lay-elders shall be admitted Members of this Assembly the but in case of the Election of Commissioners for Presbyteries Lay-elders have had Voice you shall declare against the informality thereof as also against Lay-elders having voice in Fundamental Points of Religion At the first opening of the Assembly you shall strive to make the Assembly sensible of Our Goodness that notwithstanding all that is past whereby We might justly have been moved not to hearken to their Petitions yet We have been Graciously pleased to grant a Free General Assembly and for great and weighty Considerations have commanded the Archbishops and Bishops not to appear at this Assembly You shall not make use of the Assessors in publick except you find you shall be able to carry their having Vote in Assembly You shall labour to your uttermost that there be no question made about the last Assembly and in case it come to the worst whatever shall be done in Ratification or with relation to the former Assembly Our Will is that you declare the same to be done as an Act of this Assembly and that you consent thereunto onely upon these terms and no ways as having any relation to the former Assembly You shall by all means shun the Dispute about Our Power in Assemblies and if it shall be urged or offered to be disputed whether We have the Negative Voice or the sole Power of Indicting and consequently of Dissolving except you see clearly that you can carry the same in Our Favours stop the Dispute and rather than it be decided against Vs stop the
came to them and with great vehemence pressed them to engage in a new War and among other Motives brought them Engagements in writing from most of the greatest Peers of England to joyn with them and assist them when they should come into England with their Army This did much animate them for they had not the least doubt of the Papers brought them But all this was discovered at the Treaty of Rippon to have been a base Forgery for there the Scotish Lords looking very sullenly on some of the English Lords as on Persons of no Faith or Truth the Lord Mandevil came to the Earl of Rothes and asked the reason of that Change of their Countenance and Behaviour in them who after some high reflections at length challenged him and the other Lords of not keeping what they had engaged to them Upon which that Lord stood amazed and told him and so did the other Lords there that they had sent no such Messages nor Papers to them and that they had been abused by the blackest Imposture that ever was Thus it appeared how dangerous it may be to receive some things that seem to have the highest Probabilities in them easily and upon trust In April following the King called a Parliament in England A short Parliament in England but they begun with their Grievances in which they rose to so high a strain that after twenty days Sitting the King by advice of his Council dissolved them but the hopes of Money from the Parliament failing the next Course was to try what could be drawn by Loan and for good example the Councellours subscribed for near two hundred thousand pounds Sterlin The Councellours lend Money What the Marquis his part was in this I should have willingly concealed judging fit that his Story should be as sparing in relating it as himself was modest in not boasting of it but Sanderson and some other malicious or ignorant Pens who say That he pretended Poverty and subscribed for none force me to free him of that Calumny by a true Relation of what his Duty to the King cost him at this time He subscribed for 10000 l. Sterlin and laid down Eight thousand of it presently in Gold likewise in August following at York he again subscribed and laid down Six thousand and three hundred pounds for both which he had Tallies struck Besides this when he served as Commissioner in Scotland in the year 1638. he got no Payments made him Ten thousand pounds Sterlin was allowed him of which he had not received a farthing and besides the great expence he was at in that Service he laid that year out of his own Money about 5000 l. Sterlin on the Kings account And thus in the space of four years he advanced to the King near Thirty thousand pounds Sterlin and this was in a time when the advantages he had by his Places and Pensions were through the necessity of the Kings affairs dried up But since I was forced to say this I must not conceal His Majesty who now reigns His Justice and Goodness to his Heiress in repaying the sum contained in those Tallies together with the other Royal effects of His Favour which they have felt in the repayment of the Scotsh Debt This is said once for all and all this was little reckoned of by him who was ready to hazard both Life and Fortune for His Majesties Service acknowledging that it was Just since he and his Ancestors owed so much to the King and his Progenitours bounty that all he had should be spent in his Service The Covenanters in Scotland were beginning to look to themselves and fearing Ruthwen Ruthwen a terror to the Covenanters who was in the Castle of Edinburgh they required him to obey their Orders but he told them he had his Trust from the King and would acknowledge no Commands but his whereupon they blockt him up He might easily have done them much Mischief but his Orders were to hold himself most on the Defensive and to amuse them but not to break out to open Hostilities within which limits he contained himself The second of Iune came which was the day the Parliament was to Set but the King had sent down an Order to the Justice-Clerk for proroguing it The Parliament sits notwithstanding the Kings Orders for proroguing of it and he was to carry along with him in this Affair the assistance of the Kings Advocate who was at this time confined to his House in Fife by the King upon pretence of some petty maleversation in his Office but really because of his adhering to the Covenanters too much The Kings Advocate was glad both of being delivered from that Disgrace and for being honoured with the Employment But to clear the Method in which he intended to proceed to make this Prorogation legal I must look back a little when Traquair got his Commission under the Broad-Seal there was another Commission given under the quarter-Seal to the Lord Elphinstown the Lord Napier the Kings Advocate and the Justice-Clerk these or three of them were impowred to act as Commissioners in Traquair's absence and upon his Orders Therefore the Kings Advocate judged it needless to fill up a Blank that was sent down to be made use of if need were to make the Prorogation Legal but resolved to require one of the other two to concur with the Justice-Clerk and himself in the Prorogation which was to be done after the Parliament was Fenced therefore they provided the persons necessary for Fencing of it a Ceremony they use in the beginning of a Session who are the Constable the Marshal the Provost of Edinburgh the Sheriff of Lowthian and a Doomster and if any of these be absent the King must name others for their Service that day So the Members of Parliament being met the Kings Advocate required the Lord Elphinstown who was first in the Commission to go up with them to the Throne for executing the Kings Commands who having read the Commission found their Power was only to act by the Commissioners Order and therefore called for Traquair's Warrant the Kings Advocate answered That as when the King is present a Commissioners Power of it self expires so also when his Warrant is produced there is no need of one from his Commissioner But Elphinstown stood on the Letter of the Commission and so found he was not legally warranted to doe it That same was the Lord Napier's Answer who was also of the Commission and so the Kings Advocate and the Justice-Clerk could doe nothing but take Instruments Many imputed this to the Kings Advocat's Jugling but he vindicated himself solemnly which is extant under his Hand with a long Narrative of this whole Affair sent up by him to the King However the effects of this Errour were great for the Members voted themselves to be in a Parliamentary Capacity as being summoned by the King at first and again adjourned to this day whereupon they proceeded to
that till you express the Particulars of your Desires His Majesty can give no direct Answer therefore His Majesty requires that you set downthe Particulars of your Demands with expedition he having been always willing to hear and redress the Grievances of His People and for the more mature Deliberation of these great Affairs His Majesty hath already given out Summons for the Meeting of the Peers of the Kingdom in the City of York upon the 24th of this Month that so with the advice of the Peers you may receive such Answer to your Petition as shall most tend to His Honour and the Peace and Wellfare of His Dominions And in the mean time if Peace be that you desire as you pretend He expects and by these His Majesty commands that you advance no further with your Army to these parts which is the only means that is left for the present to preserve Peace betwixt the two Nations and to bring these unhappy Differences to a Reconciliation which none is more desirous of than His most Sacred Majesty Signed LANERICK With which he wrote this Cover My Lords ACcording to your Desires I presented unto His Majesty in your names the Petition you sent me whereupon His Majesty hath been Graciously pleased to command me to make this reference which you shall receive herein inclosed joined unto the Petition My Lords by this you may see His Majesty is as he ever was willing to hear and redress the Grievances of His Subjects and I pray God you may take those Courses that may not too much incroach on the Goodness of so Gracious a Soveraign This shall be the earnest Prayer of Your Lordships Servant LANERICK York 5th Sept. 1640. To this they returned the Answer that follows which was sent by Sir Iames Mercer Right Honourable An. 1639. AS nothing in Earth is more desired of us than His Majesties favour so doth nothing delight us more than that His Majesty beginneth again to hearken to our Humble Desires The Covenanters make a second Address wherein we trust nothing shall be found but what may serve for His Majesties Honour and for the Peace of His Dominions The Particulars we would have expressed but that they are contained in the Conclusions of the late Parliament and our Printed Declarations which were sent to your Lordship but in case the Papers be not by your Lordship we now summarily repeat them That His Majesty would be Graciously pleased to command that the last Acts of Parliament may be published in his Highness's Name as our Soveraign Lord with the Estates of Parliament convened by His Majesties Authourity Next That the Castle of Edinburgh and other strengths of the Kingdom of Scotland may according to the first foundation be furnished and used for our Defence and Security Thirdly That our Countrymen in his Majesties Dominions of England and Ireland may be free from Censure for subscribing the Covenant and be no more pressed with Oaths and Subscriptions unwarranted by our Laws and contrary to their National Oath and Covenant approved by His Majesty Fourthly That the Common Incendiaries who have been the Authors of this Combustion in His Majesties Dominions may receive their Iust Censure Fifthly That our Ships and our Goods with all the Damage thereof may be restored Sixthly That the Wrongs Losses and Charges which at this time we have sustained may be repayed Seventhly That the Declarations made against us as Traytors may be recalled and in end by advice and consent of the Estates of England convened in Parliament His Majesty may be pleased to remove the Garisons from the Borders and any Impediment that may stop free Trade and with their advice may condescend to all Particulars which may establish a stable and well-grounded Peace for enjoying of our Religion and Liberties against all fears of molestation and undoing from year to year as our Adversaries shall take the advantage This Royal testimony of His Majesties Iustice and Goodness we would esteem to be doubled upon us were it speedily bestowed and therefore must crave leave to regrate that His Majesties Pleasure concerning the Meeting of the Peers the 24th of this Instant will make the time long ere the Parliament be convened which is conceived to be the only mean of settling both Nations in a firm Peace and which we desire may be seriously represented to His Majesties Royal thoughts the more this time is abridged the more able will we be to obey His Majesties Prohibition of not advancing with our Arms Our Actions and whole comportment since the beginning of these Commotions and especially of late since our coming into England are Real Declarations of our love and desire of Peace nothing but invincible necessity hath brought us from our Country to this Place no other thing shall draw us beyond the limits appointed by His Majesty which we trust His Majesty will consider of and wherein we hope your Lordship will labour to be a profitable Instrument for the Kings Honour the Good of your Country and of Your Lordships humble Servants and affectionate Friends A. Lesly Rothes Cassils Montrose Dumfermline Lindsay Lowdon Napier Tho. Hope W. Rickarto●n J. Smith P. Hepbu●● D. Home Keir Ja. Sword Scots-Leager at New-Castle Sept. 8th 1640. An. 1640 On the 24th of September the Peers of England having met the King by their Advice commanded his Secretary to write the following Letter My Lords The King appoints a Treaty ACcording to His Majesties appointment the most part of the Peers of this Kingdom of England met here at York this day where His Majesty did communicate unto them your Desires and Petitions and because you do so earnestly press for a speedy Answer His Majesty with Advice of the Peers hath nominated such a number of them for a Conference with you upon Tuesday at Northallerton whose Names are underwritten But withall if you shall think the time too short and that with conveniency you cannot come so soon thither if betwixt this and Sunday you do acquaint His Majesty therewith he will take Order for the delay thereof for one day or two And that you may without all fear or danger of Detention send such Persons unto the said Conference as you shall think most fit if betwixt this and Sunday you send hither the Names of these you mean to imploy His Majesty will with all possible diligence return a safe conduct under his own Royal Hand for them and their necessary Servants His Majesty hath likewise commanded me to let you know that upon your relieving of such Officers and others of His Subjects as are detained by you he will return all such of yours as are his Prisoners either here or at Berwick and hereafter resolves that fair Quarters should be kept betwixt both Armies Thus having imparted His Majesties Pleasure I continue Your Lordships Servant LANERICK York 24th of September 1640. And now the King was in a great strait what to resolve on Most of all the
the story of the Bond signed the former year at Cumberwald broke out upon which he and some of his Friends were committed close Prisoners to the Castle of Edinburgh and were called Plotters On the 12th of August the King came to Scotland The King comes to Scotland accompanied by the Prince Elector who came along with him to see what Assistance he might expect from the Scotish Parliament The King to please the Scotish Clergy the more appointed Mr. Henderson to wait upon him while he should be in Scotland and to provide Preachers for him being resolved to conform himself to the Scotish Worship while he was among them The Parliament at first Voted that all the Members should subscribe the Covenant which was done by all only the Duke of Lenox took a few Days to advise All the Members of Parliament subscribe the Covenant after which he came and subscribed with the rest Most differences had been settled at London but the matter of the Incendiaries and Plotters was that at which things stuck long and occasioned the Kings stay in Scotland Many censured the Marquis as not concerning himself so much for those persons as became him and because he in prosecution of the Design the King had laid down took much Pains on the Earl of Argyle it was said he was courting the Kings Enemies and neglecting his Friends But he judged the great Design of Settling the King with the Country was to be prefered to all private Interests and his brother following his Method shared with him in the same Jealousies though not to so high a degree But His Majesty knew the Marquis too well to be easily moved with these Whispers therefore in one of his Speeches in Parliament He declared That the Marquis had carried himself as a faithful Subject and Servant in all his Employments during these Troubles and as one that designed the Good and Happiness of his Country upon which the King gave his Assent to the following Act of Parliament IN the Parliament holden at Edinburgh The Marquis is vindicated by the Parliament in this Session thereof holden the last day of September t●e year of 1641 years this Act following was made by the King and Estates whereof the Tenour follows Whereas there have been certain scandalous words spoken of the Marquis of Hamilton tending to the prejudice of his Honour and Fidelity to His Majesty and his Countr● which are now acknowledged by Henry Lord Ker Speaker thereof in presence of His Majesty and Estates of Parliament to have been rash and groundless for the speaking whereof he is heartily sorry and since His Majesty and the Estates of Parliament know it to be so Therefore His Majesty and Estates foresaid declare the said Marquis of Hamilton to be free thereof and esteem him to be a Loyal Subject to His Majesty and faithful Patriot to his Country and the said Estates remit the further Censure of the said Lord Ker to the Kings Majesty Extracted out of the Records o● Parliament by me Sir Alexander Gibsone younger of Dury Knight Clerk to his Highness's Register and Rolls under my Sign and Subscription manual Alex. Gibsone Cl. Reg. The Marquis had often heard that his Enemies had Designs upon him and he represented what he heard to the King yet he loseth ground with the King but acknowledged he had it only by Whispers and thus matters went on till the 11th of October Yet all this while the Marquis was insensibly losing ground with the King for the perpetual Whispers of his Enemies could not choose but make some impression being specious though forged grounds of Jealousie cunningly contrived and managed with great assiduity art and malice Lanerick also found the Kings Countenance beginning to change towards him whereupon he assumed the freedom to ask His Majesty if he judged that he had been capable so far to forget his particular Favours to himself who from nothing had heaped both Fortune and Honours on him as to do any thing might merit the change he saw in him the King answered He believed he was an honest man that he had never heard any thing to the contrary but that his Brother had been very active in his own Preservation This made Lanerick Look the more narrowly to his Brothers Actions to see if he could discover whether in any thing he had studied to preserve himself by prejudicing the King but in a long Account of that business which I have under his hand he protested that the nearer he looked he discovered in him the greater Fidelity and Affection to his Master It is true the King met with great Opposition in Scotland in the matter of the Incendiaries and Plotters and it was represented that the Marquis and his Brother might have made it less which perhaps left some Impressions on His Majesty but having it so often under both their hands That might their Souls perish if they left any thing undone that was in their power to get a Compliance to the Kings Desires from the Parliament I must believe this Opposition flowed from the Distempers of that Time But about the middle of October an odd passage fell in which for its not being expected was called the Incident A Gentleman not known to the Marquis brought him and the Earl of Argyle the Discovery of a Plot he said was laid for their Lives and the Earl Lanerick's which he said he could justifie by one Witness who was invited to the execution of it He told also a long formal Story of the persons were to be Actors of Time Place and Manner and said it was to be executed that very night This the Marquis carried to the King without naming Particulars which could not be done safely by the Law of Scotland since he had but one Witness to prove them by The King desired him to examine the thing to the bottom and bring him what further Evidence he could find In the Evening other Presumptions were brought to the Marquis but no clear Evidence and the matt●r was got abroad and in every bodies mouth so that all who depended on these Lords came about them in great numbers and those on whom the Design was fastened gave out it was a Forgery to make them odious and gathered also together The Marquis hearing this did not stir out of doors lest some of their too officious followers had raised Tumults and next day in the Evening he with the Earl of Argyle and his Brother and half a dozen Servants went out of Town to his House of Keneel twelve miles from Edinburgh and sent his excuse to His Majesty with the true account of the Reasons that moved him to do what he had done Upon this many Discourses went about People of all sides passing construction as they were affected but the Parliament took the whole matter into Consideration Those who had given the Information owned what they had said and those on whom the Plot was fixed did as positively deny
all so that no clear Proof being brought the Parliament could come to no other Decision but that the Lords had good reason to withdraw themselves and so they were invited to return to their place in Parliament But he is again in His Majesties favour This was a tedious business and put a great stop to the Settlement betwixt the King and the Nation but further Particularities are thought needless to be set down since this Matter vanished no effect following on it The Marquis quickly recovered his former ●oom in the Kings Affection so that there remained not so much as a vestige of this cross Adventure Things in Scotland took presently a Settlement and those were called Plotters and Banders after examination and a delivering up of their Bond which was burnt by the hand of the Common Hangman were set at Liberty after some time of further Restraint but the Process of the alledged Incendiaries was to go on yet they were to enjoy their Liberty and undergo no other Censure but the loss of Publick Imployment which though yielded at London was long resisted in Scotland they pretending their Oath to bring them to condign Punishment But as the King was going on with the Settlement of one Kingdom The Rebellion breaks out in Ireland he got the saddest News that ever were heard out of Ireland of the desperate Rebellion and Massacre had broken out there whereupon His Majesty recommended to the Parliament of Scotland the Relief of his oppressed Protestant Subjects in Ireland which they undertook very willingly But because of the interest England had in Ireland Commissioners were appointed to Treat with the Parliament of England for Concluding a Peace betwixt the two Nations and Settling of Trade and particularly about the Terms upon which they should engage in the War of Ireland and so about the middle of November the King having granted to the Scotish Nation all they could demand ended the Parliament there and returned to London about the end of that month But before the Marquis left Scotland he by the Kings particular Command entred in a close Friendship with Argyle considering that besides the great Power of that Family his Interest with the Clergy and Covenanters was such that none could be so useful to His Majesties Service as he And this Friendship was to be twisted closer by a Bond of a near Alliance betwixt their Children But from all the Letters that passed betwixt them yet to be seen it is as clear as can be that all the Marquis his design in this Friendship was for the Kings Service and that all that time Argyle expressed a hearty concurrence in it To gratifie the Covenanters the more the King had created him a Marquis Lowdon was also made Chancellor Lesley Earl of Leven and Lindsay put in a fair way to be Treasurer Traquair being turned out The King at his return to London The King returns to London where he finds matters worse found the Edge he had left on some of their spirits was no way blunted but growing into more sharpness When the Marquis was in Scotland a Member of the House of Commons laying out their Grievances among other things inveighed against Monopolies and spoke so plainly that all understood he meant the Marquis as a Person that deserved to be accused as well as either Strafford or Canterbury but others of that same Cabal took him up sharply And now upon the Kings return his Enemies finding their designs against him could not take with the King in whose Favour he was as much as ever they took a strange Course to destroy him which was to set on some Members of the House of Commons to accuse him as the Incendiary betwixt England and Scotland who had engaged England into all that Expence who had also invited the Scots to march into England and had been always the third in Strafford's and Canterburie's Counsels who had advised the Dissolving of the former Parliament and had oppressed the Subjects by the grants of many Monopolies which he had This was smelled out even by some of the same Cabal who perswaded their Friends to desist shewing them That for his Carriage betwixt England and Scotland an Oblivion was passed in the late Treaty which was ratified by the Parliament of England That for other things though his Engagement in the Court had carried him along to some extreme Counsels yet they said it was well enough known how moderate his Inclinations were how great an Instrument he had been in the late Settlement of Scotland and how much he was hated upon that account and that this was a design to destroy him either out of malice or because some feared his moderate Counsels in England as much as they hated them in Scotland This seems to have flowed from the Friendship which divers of the Leaders in the House of Peers had for him whom he had often obliged and as they were not unsensible nor forgetful of his good Offices so they seem to have had a particular kindness for his Person And while he was in Scotland he kept Correspondence with Mandevil Essex and others and chiefly with the Lord Say and Seale but all their Letters shew that his greatest business with them was to prepare them to a better Correspondence with the King But when the Marquis smelled out the design against him he gave the King an account of it and told him that if His Majesty intended to go on in his Affairs in a Kingly way he would wait on his Commands and expose himself to the displeasure of the House of Commons but if His Majesty intended to settle Matters by an absolute Compliance with the Parliament then he conceived it was fit that his Servants should use their endeavours for their own Preservation that so they might be afterwards useful to his Service yet he said he would do nothing for himself but by His Majesties Allowance and Direction being it is like taught more caution by the Jealousies had been taken from his care of vindicating himself in the Parliament of Scotland The King upon this allowed him to use all means for his own Preservation which he so managed that the designed Accusation came to nothing This partic●lar His Sacred Majesty vouchsafed to tell the Writter adding that he had it from the Queen His Mother Anno 1642. An. 1642. THe Tumults and Disorders about Whitehall and Westminster rose to that height that the King withdrew to Windsor in the beginning of the year The Scotch Commissioners continued Treating about their engaging for Ireland The S●ots Commissioners animate the Houses to press the change of the Laws about Church-Government which the King pressed forward very earnestly but some of the Commissioners begun to tamper with those who were most opposite to the Court in the Two Houses and in stead of Moderating them were instigating them to persist in their Demands about Religion to get Episcopacy brought down and Presbytery set up To
marks of His Majesties Favour and Confidence in the disposal of all Offices and Places at Court that every third time they should be filled with Scotish men together with other particulars not needful to be mentioned But against all this it was objected that those who had the Ascendant in the Councils at Oxford were either Papists or men of Arbitrary Principles and the Clamours that always follow Generals and Armies where there is no certain Pay were carried to Scotland not without great additions against the Kings Forces to possess people with a deep alienation from them It was likewise said that since the King notwithstanding the Declining of his Affairs in England would not grant what was desired there about Episcopacy it might be from thence gathered what he would do if his Arms were successful and therefore all People were possessed with the jealousies of his subverting the whole Settlement with Scotland assoon as he had put the War in England to a happy Conclusion And though it was answered to this that the Kings putting things to hazard rather than sin against his Conscience was the greatest assurance possible that he would faithfully observe what He had granted to this Malicious people said that it would be easie to find distinctions to escape from all Engagements and if the putting down of Episcopacy was simply sinful according to the Kings Conscience then that alone would furnish Him with a very good reason to overturn all since no Men are bound to observe the promises they make when they are sinful upon the Matter And these Reasons did generally prevail with the Covenanters to refuse to joyn with the Kings Party in England therefore they concluded it necessary to Engage with the Two Houses both because the Cause was dear to them it being a pretence for Religion and Liberty It was also said often that they owed their Settlement partly to the backwardness of the Armies the King had raised against them in England and partly to the Council of the Peers who had advised the King to grant a Treaty and afterwards a full Settlement to them And that Paper which was sent down in the Year 1640 as the Engagement of 28 of the Peers of England for their Concurrence with the Scotish Army that year was shown to divers to engage them unto a Grateful return to those to whom it was pretended they were so highly obliged For though the Earl of Rothes and a few more were well satisfied about the Forgery of that Paper yet they thought that a Secret of too great Importance to be generally known therefore it was still kept up from the Body of that Nation And upon these Pretences and Inducements it was that it came to be generally agreed to to enter into a Confederacy with the Two Houses So Fatal did the Breach between the King and his People prove that even when it seemed to be well made up by a full Agreement there was still an after-game of Jealousies and Fears which did again widen it by a new Rupture which to these men seemed at this time unavoidable otherwise they found the ease of a Neutrality to be such that the Men of the greatest Interest in those Councils have often told the Writer they had never engaged again had it not been for those Jealousies with which they were possessed to a high degree There was a Committee of Nine appointed to Treat with the Commissioners the English pressed chiefly a Civil League and the Scots a Religious one but though the English yielded to this yet they were careful to leave a door open for Independency Thus the Treaty with the English Commissioners went on notwithstanding a Letter the King wrote to the Chancellour to be communicated to the Council requiring them not to Treat with them since they came without His Majesties Order but they who had leaped over all other matters could not stand at this And now came to light that which had been a hatching these many Months among the Iunto's which was the Solemn League and Covenant which follows The Solemn League and Covenant of the three Kingdoms WE Noblemen Barons Knights Gentlemen Citizens and Burgesses The Solemn League and Covenant Ministers of the Gospel and Commons of all sorts in the Kingdoms of Scotland England and Ireland by the Providence of God living under one King and being of one Reformed Religion having before our eyes the glory of GOD and the advancement of the Kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Iesus Christ the Honour and Happiness of the Kings Majesty and His Posterity and the true publick Liberty Safety and Peace of the Kingdom wherein every ones private condition is included And calling to mind the treacherous and bloody Plots Conspiracies Attempts and Practices of the Enemies of GOD against the true Religion and Professors thereof in all places especially in these three Kingdoms ever since the Reformation of Religion and how much their Rage Power and Presumption are of late and at this time encreased and exercised whereof the deplorable estate of the Church and Kingdom of Ireland the distressed estate of the Church and Kingdom of England and the dangerous estate of the Church and Kingdom of Scotland are present and publick testimonies We have now at last after other means of Supplication Remonstrance Protestations and Sufferings for the preservation of our selves and our Religion from utter ruine and destruction according to the commendable practice of these Kingdoms in former times and the example of Gods People in other Nations after mature deliberation resolved and determined to enter into a mutual and Solemn League and Covenant Wherein we all subscribe and each one of us for himself with our hands lifted up to the most high GOD do Swear THat we shall sincerely really and constantly through the grace of GOD endeavour in our several Places and Callings the preservation of the Reformed Religion in the Church of Scotland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government against our common Enemies the Reformation of Religion in the Kingdoms of England Ireland in Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government according to the Word of GOD and the example of the best Reformed Churches And shall endeavour to bring the Churches of GOD in the three Kingdoms to the nearest conjunction and Vniformity in Religion Confession of Faith Form of Church-Government Directory for Worship and Catechising that we and our Posterity after us may as Brethren live in Faith and Love and the Lord may delight to dwell in the midst of us That we shall in like manner without respect of persons endeavour the extirpation of Popery Prelacy that is Church-Government by Arch-bishops Bishops their Chancellours and Commissaries Deans Deans and Chapters Arch-deacons and all other Ecclesiastical Officers depending on that Hierarchy Superstition Heresie Schism Prophaneness and whatsoever shall be found to be contrary to sound Doctrine and the Power of Godliness lest we partake in other mens sins and thereby be in danger to
glad to get it carried on at any rate But many judged the oddest part of it all was their Oath to maintain the Priviledges of both Parliaments since that was never defined and was scarce capable of a Definition and the Priviledges of the Parliament of England were far enough from the knowledge and divination of the Scotish People who in this case must believe all that to be Priviledge which they called so The Covenant was carried up by those trusted with it to the Two Houses to be approved by them and being returned to Scotland the Committee of Estates did by their Printed Act of 22th of October ordain it to be Sworn and Subscribed by all the Subjects under the pain of being punished as Enemies to Religion His Majesties Honour and the Peace of these Kingdoms and to have their Goods and Rents confiscated and they not to enjoy any Benefit or Office within the Kingdom and to be cited to the next Parliament as enemies to Religion King and Kingdoms and to receive what further punishment His Majesty and the Parliament should inflict on them At this time His Majesty sent Mr. Mungo Murray to Scotland to assure his Friends of his Confidence in them who brought the following Letters from the King and Queen to the Duke Hamilton Letters from the King and Queen to the Duk● I Find there hath been a great Mistaking about that mark of Favour which I thought fit to bestow upon you the particulars I have commanded Mungo Murray to tell you only this I assure you that my Confidence of you is not lessened from what I commanded your Brother to assure you of in my Name for you shall find me Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. Cousin AS soon as I had occasion since my Arrival hither to write to you I have resolved to do it both to assure you of all that I said to you when I was at York as also to tell you that I am none of the least sharers in rejoycing at the Honour the King hath put on you This is a mark of the Confidence He hath in you which I am assured you will make the World see was founded on very good reason The Bearer is a Person who will tell you more than I can write to him I refer my self and shall say no more but that I am Your affectionate Cousin HENRIETA MARIA R. Oxford 28th August The Kings Friends had gone to the several places where their Interests lay to see what likelyhood there was of Raising any Force for advancing the Kings Service by extreme ways and to put a better colour on their Gathering of People together they carried with them the following Letter which was Signed by His Majesty and of which Lanerick was ordered to give an attested Copy to all who were well-affected CHARLES R. RIght Trusty and Right well-beloved Cousin and Councellour The Kings Letter to His good Subjects in Scotland We Greet you well Since nothing on Earth can be more dear to Vs than the Preservation of the Affections of Our People and amongst them none more than those of Our Native Kingdom which as the long and uninterrupted Government of Vs and Our Predecessors over them doth give Vs just reason in a more near and special manner to challenge from them so may they justly expect a particular Tenderness from Vs in every thing that may contribute to their Happiness but knowing what industry is used by scattering Seditious Pamphlets and employing private Agents and Instructions to give bad impressions of Vs and Our Proceedings under a Pretence of danger to Religion and Government to corrupt their Fidelities and Affections and to engage them in an unjust Quarrel against Vs their King We cannot therefore but endeavour to remove these Iealousies and secure their fears from all possibility of any hazard to either of these from Vs We have therefore thought fit to require you to call together your Friends Vassals Tenants and such others as have any dependance upon you and in Our Name to shew them Our Willingness to give all the Assurances they can desire or We possibly grant if more can be given than already is of preserving inviolably all those Graces and Favours which We have of late granted to that Our Kingdom and that We do faithfully promise never to go to the contrary of any thing there established either in Ecclesiastical or Civil Government but that We will inviolably keep the same according to the Laws of that Our Kingdom and We do wish God so to bless Our Proceedings and Posterity as We do really make good and perform this Promise We hope this will give so full satisfaction to all that shall hear of this Our solemn Protestation that no such persons as study Division or go about to weaken the Confidence betwixt Vs and Our People and justly deserve the name and punishment of Incendiaries shall be sheltred from the hand of Iustice and all such others as shall endeavour Peace and Vnity and Obedience to Vs and Our Laws may expect that Protection and increase of Favours from Vs which their Fidelity deserves So expecting your Care hereof We bid you heartily farewell From Our Court at Oxford the 21st of April 1643. These Lords appointed at parting to meet again about the end of August The Lords whom theKing employed meet and send Propositions to the King which accordingly they did and when they met divers told they found much coldness among their Friends Many professed a cordialness to the Kings Service but they had neither Armes nor Ammunition nor saw they a place of Security for a Rendezvouz nor of Safety for a Retreat in case of a Misfortune so that divers of the Noblemen said It was not in their power to bring any with them to the fields but their own Domesticks Whereupon it was agreed by them all to send one Neal Servant to Mr. Murray of the Bed-Chamber to the Marquis of Newcastle to desire him to seize on Berwick which was of great Importance and was at time without a Garison that it might be the Place whither they might bring what Forces they could draw together which was indeed the most proper Place for them since the Counties that lay next it were best-affected They likewise desired my Lord Newcastle to send them such Arms and Ammunition as could be spared them out of the Kings Magazins which were then in his hands they also ordered Neal to go forward from him to Oxford to give the King an account of their Desires that they might be presently supplied He was dispatched on the 29th of August but on the 4th of September my Lord Newcastle wrote back to them a short answer referring them to Neal who in a large one both which are extant told them that my Lord Newcastle said he could spare them neither Armes nor Ammunition and as for Berwick he could not seize on it without bringing Ruine on himself and his Posterity unless
most to conduce to Our Honour and the Good and Advancement of Our Service as you will answer for it to Vs at your peril and for your so doing these shall be your Warrant Given at Our Court at Oxford the 26th of September 1643. With these Publick Letters the King wrote to the Duke Hamilton HAving much to say and little time to write The Kings Letter to the Duke I have commanded this Trusty Bearer to supply the shortness of this Letter which though it be chiefly to give trust to what he shall say to you in my Name yet I cannot but assure you by my own Hand that no ill Offices have had the Power to lessen my Confidence in you or my Estimation of you for you shall find me Your most assured real constant Friend CHARLES R. Oxford 28th September 1643. The Lords whom the King trusted seeing no present help of Men The Kings Affairs in Scotland decline nor relief of Armes like to come from England were like men desperate and some moved desperate Propositions that according to what had been in some former cases practiced in Scotland there should be Orders given out requiring all to kill the chief Leaders of the Church-party where-ever they could find them setting Prices on their Heads and that with such Orders some of the Blanks should be filled up But the Duke opposed this strongly and said he would take it on him without an Instruction to assure them that he knew His Majesty would rather patiently suffer all things than consent to a Course so barbarous and unchristian As for the practices of some former ruder times these were to be no Precedents now Besides if this were done on the one side they might expect the same Orders would be presently issued out against them from the Comittee of Estates which would bring on an unheard-of Butchery and lay all their Throats open to their Servants whereupon it was laid aside only the Proposition with the Precedents is yet extant and they resolved to see what Force they could bring together under the pretence of their Attendants to the Countess of Roxburgh her Funeral which was to be in the beginning of November But there was some Difference about the Methods of carrying on their designs among these Lords and divers others who were called to their Consultations besides those who were particularly trusted by His Majesty Those whose Fortunes were broken were for brisker Courses and those whose Estates were intire and had the most followers thought it fitter to delay an open Breach as long as was possible This diversity of Opinion raised some Animosities and Jealousies among them so that they fell into a mutual distrust neither was Secrecy though not only enjoyned but sworn closely kept for all their Designs broke out and and yet some who were guilty of this were among the busiest to fasten it on the Duke But the Writer designs only an account of his Affairs without reflecting needlesly on others and therefore here he restrains his Pen. So quickly did their closest Secrets fly abroad that when the Duke was returning home from one of their Meetings a Covenanter Lord came from Edinburgh to meet him on his way and told him to a word all had past at their Meeting as that Lord informed the Writer On the 24th of October the Earl of Traquair went to Court A Message sent to Court by the Earl of Traquair whom the Lords that were trusted by the King had carried along with them in all their Counsels though his Name could not be in the Instructions by reason of the Act that was past against him at the former Parliament With him they sent the following Instructions containing the grounds and steps of their whole Procedure which is the fullest and clearest Dispatch was sent this year most of the other Messages being verbal and so will give great light to the rest It is desired it may be represented to His Majesty that now all He expected from our Affection and Industry here is performed this Summer being spent and he having received no other Prejudice from hence than what might rise from words which we did never pretend to prevent being no ways a Party in the Iudicatories To shew our readiness still to venture our Lives and Fortunes in His Majesties Service which we will make good not only by verbal Expressions but real Actions when we shall see the least probability of Success to His Affairs though to our Ruine To represent the Reasons that hitherto we have not been in Action which have been grounded First upon our Desire of Protracting time the chief thing we had Commission to study in which our Endeavours have not been fruitless Secondly that they not His Majesty should be the first Breakers both a pious just and popular Motive and thirdly our expectation of Supplies both of Men Arms Ammunition and Moneys which we were confident should have been provided for us and without which we never conceived our Strength to be considerable To represent that we would immediately draw our selves together into a Body being thereto authorized by His Majesty if we had the least hope of making it considerable and if we had any proportion of Arms or Ammunition a Place of surety for our Rendezvouz and of safety for a Retreat in case of a Misfortune having by divers Messages represented our Wants and pressed for Supplies with the securing of some Places now lost but still without Success without which many who would joyn with us in this Quarrel of serving His Majesty are unwilling to hazard and divers very considerable and most affectionate Noblemen and Gentlemen have declared that for that reason they cannot bring to that Meeting more than their Domestick Servants so that we justly fear we cannot draw together so considerable a Body as could resist much less offend our Enemies and likewise an impossibility for those and other Noblemen and Gentlemen being only so backed and lying at so great a distance one from another and from the Place which of necessity must be appointed for our Rendezvous to joyn with us And considering these necessities we cannot but be the more tender of going unto present Action seeing His Majesty hath so wisely commanded us to weigh the Consequences of angering before he be able to punish and the Prejudices which may thereby arise to His Service wherein we must proceed as we shall be answerable upon our Perils and therefore we dare not presume to advise the present Engaging of His Majesty by drawing our selves into a Body for many would oppose us seeing then we would be esteemed Rebels within this Kingdom that would be unwilling to go into England which probably cannot be done this Winter though we dare give no assurance thereof but do humbly advise that present Preparation be made for the worst and in discharge of our Consciences and Duties to His Majesty we cannot but represent our Fears of the great Disservices He may receive
inclinations over England should prove too hard for them but Mr. Marshall Great Disorders in England who was sent back from the English Commissioners in Scotland comforted them the best he could giving them all assurance that the Designs there would meet with vigorous Opposition wherefore it was moved that some of the Forces might be presently sent down before the Army were drawn together who might hope for good Assistance in Scotland But he also told them that nothing would be so likely to divide them in Scotland as to declare for the Covenant and the Propositions sent to Newcastle and indeed this was much dreaded by the Duke and his Friends since there was nothing so popular in Scotland as that the Parliament and Army of England had fallen from the Covenant but they resolved though that were granted to accept of no Treaty till the Army were presently disbanded for which the former Years Transactions did furnish them with very good reasons Mr. Marshall did what he could to reconcile the Presbyterians and Independents in London and that they might not fall out about Religion it was Voted that the Kingdom should be first settled before Religion was fallen upon The City of London was generally well-affected to the Scotish Design though some studied to alien●te them from it by telling them that those in Scotland were in Correspondence with the Cavaliers in England The City was inconstant and the Citizens feared the Armies falling on them to plunder them so that they were easily over-awed and at that time the Agitators of the Army were upon the Fining of the City in a Million of English Mony A general Answer was returned to the Scotish Demands by the day they had prefixed with the Promise of a more particular one to follow shortly which was looked on as a Design to shift them off by Delays At this time the Two Houses were much lifted up with a Defeat given to Langhorn in Wales which was represented to be greater than indeed it was But to allay their Joy there came in Petitions from many Counties of England for a Personal Treaty with the King and for being disburdened of the Army one came from Essex which was subscribed by twenty four thousand Hands and eight thousand men came out of Surrey with their Petition upon whom the Souldiers fell barbarously and killed about Twenty of them wounding above an Hundred Next the Kentish men rose in a formidable number but it was more terrible that the Navy was staggering and many of the Captains of the Ships declared against their Proceedings This was sad News for London by reason of their Trade which was like to be blockt up And now Cromwel to please the City of London drew the Forces out of it and left the Militia of London in their own Hands only he got Skippon who was of their own Cabal made Major-General of their Trained Bands and there was no small Disorder in the Army the Agitators being for the most part Levellers and against Cromwel as was by some supposed With all this Tragical visage of things they at W●stminster were not a little mortified A Fast at Westminster so they appointed a Day of Humiliation and when they were naming the reasons for the Fast one of the Members had a singular opinion that notwithstanding the Self-denying Ordinance they had past yet they had ingrossed all Places of Power and Profit to themselves by which Juggling God was mocked wherefore he moved that they might devest themselves of these but the rest were not of his mind And if three Sermons and a great many long Prayers would reconcile God to them they would be at the cost but were resolved to quit none of their Power nor Places All these Tumults in England as they had hindered the Two Houses from sending down their Forces to Scotland so they called aloud for hasty Relief from the Scotish Army which from all places was called for But the Oppositition the Clergy and their Party made had so fore-slowed their Levies that they could not overtake this fair opportunity but were forced to leave the poor People in England to be knockt down by the insulting Army The Parliament of Scotland re-assembled in Iune The Parliament adjourns and after few days Sitting and the emitting of new Declarations both for Scotland and England but of a milder strain than their former of April had been being now weary of their hopeless courting of the Clergy they adjourned for Two Years having chosen a Committee of Estates sure to their Designs and they were drawing their Army together with all possible diligence But the great matter now debated in Scotland was A present March is disswaded by some whether they should first make all sure at home or leave things in that disordered posture and make haste into England Lanerick was for taking order with the Opposite Party and the Lords that headed them before they stirred out of Scotland lest otherwise assoon as they were gone the Ministers might blow up the People into Sedition which would either force them to send back a part of their Army for curbing them or lose Scotland totally by their Tumults while their Army should be strugling with an uncertainty in England Besides they were neither well-furnished with Arms Ammunition nor Mony but had good Assurances of large Supplies from the Queen and Prince by Sir William Fleeming and the Prince though much disswaded by these who were both Enemies to the Scotish Nation in General and the Duke in particular continued still firm to his first Resolutions of going to them when all things were brought to that Posture that it were fit for him to hazard himself amongst them and therefore in the middle of Iune Sir William Fleeming was dispatched again from his Highness to Scotland with the following Letter directed For the Lord Duke Hamilton and the Earls of Lindsay Roxburgh Lauderdale Lanerick and Calender My Lords YOu will receive by Sir William Fleeming who is amply instructed the full account of My Intentions and he is not more particularly charged with any thing than to let you know the sense I have of Your Affections yet I thought fit to reserve unto My Self the assuring you that as I conceive I am not capable of being more obliged than I have been by you so I shall be most exactly just in the discharge of my Acknowledgments when it shall please God to make My Condition fit for it In the mean time I have nothing to say but to desire you to be intirely confident of it and that I am most truly My Lords Your Affectionate Friend CHARLES P. Sir William Bellandin met with more Opposition in Holland for Judgments were passed on the Scotish Proceedings from their Declarations and all he could say was not able to take off those Impressions so that no good was expected from Scotland The States of Holland had no great inclination to the Kings Party and the Prince of Orange
negarunt But I go on from this sad subject to the tragical Conclusion of the Duke's Life The News of that Murder sunk the Duke's thoughts into a deep Sorrow which he carried with him to his Grave he well saw his own Danger knowing that those who had broken all the bonds of Loyalty and Duty were not to tie themselves to the faith of a Capitulation or Articles though granted by a person impowered by them and therefore he designed an Escape from Windsor that night which was contrived by his faithful Servant Mr. Cole afterwards one of the Kings Quirries who during his imprisonment had liberty to go and return from London which he did very frequently bringing him an account of what passed And the Duke having gained his Keeper ordered Mr. Cole to send a trusty Servant with two Horses to Windsor which accordingly he did advertising the Duke not to come to the City till seven a Clock in the Morning and then Mr. Cole was to come to him near London and bring him to some secure House in the City whereupon at night about the time of shutting the Gates The Duke makes an Escape from Windsor the Duke made his Escape freely out of the Castle without suspicion and came to the Place appointed where his Servant and Horses waited for him But he fatally went from the Resolutions he had laid down with Mr. Cole and would needs go in the night to Southwark thinking to have got to Mr. Owen's House who was acquainted with the business not considering what had been told him of the Guards were about the City all the night so that there was no coming to it but in the day and all things concurring to hasten him to his Grave there was that night a Party of Horse and Foot in Southwark searching for Sir Lewis Dyves and another who had escaped the night before but is re-taken in Southwark Some of them meeting the Duke in the Streets about four in the morning where he had long knocked at a door took him and examined him he told them a very formal Story of himself and his business which at first satisfied them but they observed that as he took a pipe of Tobacco by them he burned several great Papers to fire it whereupon they searched him and found such Papers about him as discovered him It was not before the next morning that he was missed at Windsor for that night he made his Escape there came an Order from Cromwel to the Governour of Windsor to make him close Prisoner and put all his Servants from him who thereupon ordered the Captain of the Guard to go about it but he hearing the Duke was a-bed delayed it till next morning and then found he was gone It being discovered that Mr. Cole had ordered the Duk 's Escape many advised him to go out of the way but he resolved rather to die than to leave his Master at such a time and made a shift to come at him that same evening When the Duke saw him he lifted up his hands and said It was Gods will it should be thus That night Mr. Cole was also taken and Sir Hardress Waller examined him but drew nothing from him whereupon he was made close Prisoner yet when the Duke was brought to his Trial he procured his Liberty for the Averment of some particulars of his Plea The Duke being thus unfortunately retaken he was committed to Prison at St. Iames's and is kept in St. Iames's in the same Room where the Earl of Norwich the Lord Capel and Sir Iohn Owen were Prisoners and then all saw in what danger his Life was whereupon great endeavours were used and strong applications made in Scotland to the Marquis of Argyle who had then the chief Pow●r there that the Committee of Estates would so far study his Preservation as to own that what he did was by the Authority of that Kingdom that so whatever other Punishment they would lay on him his Life might not go for it And it had been faithfully promised by all the Leaders of that Party at the Pacification at Sterlin either to save his Life or to make his Death a National Quarrel But the Marquis of Argyle would not interpose These who had the power in Scotland refuse to move for him and though the Dukes Daughter the present Dutchess of Hamilton left no means unessayed to prevail on him yet all was in vain for he pretended that since those in England had murdered their King notwithstanding their Commissioners protesting against it it was not to be expected their interposition in other things could be of any weight nor was it fit they should any more address to the Murderers of their Soveraign So all hopes of any Mediation that way failed and not only that but Lambert being prevailed on by the offer of a good Sum to claim the Duke as his Prisoner some Letters came from Scotland about it upon which Lambert was advised not to insist on that Demand This was vouched to the Writer from several hands who had it both from Lambert himself and some other considerable men in the Two Houses But now his Majesties Blood not having satisfied the Cruelty of the New Usurpers their next design was against those who had served him faithfully and therefore the Duke was brought to his Tryal and honoured to be the first of those who followed his Master in that Glorious Martyrdom The Usurpers ordained the pretended Court of Justice to proceed against him so in the 6th of February he was brought to a Tryal It will not be hard to perswade the Reader without further inquiry that those who embrued their hands in the Blood of their Soveraign thereby breaking loose from all Ties Sacred and Humane could not stand much at the effusion of meaner Blood no their Consciences were feared with their former Crime so that nothing could be so wicked but they were stout enough for attempting it yet they chose to varnish over their perfidious Cruelty with some Colours and Appearances of Justice but the Disguise was so thin that it served them to no other purpose but to add hypocrisie to their former Villany which will evidently appear from the following Tryal drawn partly from the Journal of the Court and partly from Notes of what passed taken by some Eye-witnesses Steel and Cook the Counsel for the People of England did exhibit on the 6th of February being Friday the following Charge That the Earl of Cambridge about the 19th of July last Traiterously invaded this Nation in a Hostile manner The Charge given against him and levied War to assist the King against the Kingdom and People of England and had committed Sundry Murders Outrages Rapines Wastes and Spoiles upon the said People and particularly about the 20th of August near Preston did make War joyn Battle and fight against the Forces of the Parliament and therein did murder and kill Collonel Thornley and others To this the
the negative Answer to them That this was about five in the Morning and that Wayte and he went apart of the way towards the place of Treaty where he heard the Articles were concluded Lilburn was next examined who deposed That the Articles were signed by himself and the other Treaties about five in the morning and were to be ratified by the Duke and Lambert and that his own meaning of Preserving the Dukes Life he knew not how the rest meant was only to preserve him from the violence of the Souldiers and not from the Justice of the Parliament At this Peters rose up expressing great dislike of Lilburn's Gloss saying that much tenderness was to be used where the Life of so eminent a person was concerned That he had seen many Articles of War but had never heard of such ambiguity and that it was clear by those Articles the Duke held his Life secured as well from the Parliament as the Souldiers and wished to God that if their Commissioners had meant otherwise it had been so expressed in the Articles it being most necessary that Articles were in a concernment of Life The President answered You say well for the future but it is now too late His Grace resumed what had been said and spoke much on the Articles for weakening Lilburn's Gloss. The Duke is falsly accused by the Governour of Windsor-Castle Next the Governour and Marshall of Windsor were examined about his Escape from Windsor-Castle the Governour deposed that the Duke said to him he needed not fear his Escape he would be a true Prisoner and not go away though the Gates were opened The Marshall said he only heard this from the Governour The Duke expressed a deep r●sentment of this Injury done him by the Governour who wounded his Honour so much which he valued above all earthly things and did shew how unlike it was that any such thing was either demanded or granted since that is only done for a little more Liberty whereas he was all the while kept under strict Guards nor had he the liberty of walking in the Park but was always guarded by two Keepers the one lying all night in the Room next him and the other every night locking the Door and carrying the Key with him That the Governours Testimony in this matter was not to be received he being a Party and now in hazard for his negligence for he was told that if he escaped he should die for it adding that if he were not a Prisoner he would desire right of the Governour for that Scandal cast on him and choose no other place for it but Westminster-Hall But to all this the Governour made no Reply only the President said that though he could not blame the Earl of Cambridge for what he said yet for all that the Governour was not to be discredited The Duke pleads for himself from the Articles granted him After this the Duke spake a little to all the three Branches of his Plea reserving the fuller enlarging upon them to his Counsel He insisted most on the Articles which he doubted not were sufficient to protect him he desired them to consider how Sacred Articles of War were reputed in all Places and among all Nations and how inviolably they were kept all Princes and States being most careful to observe them not only to Strangers but to Subjects having great regard to Articles though only for Quarter much more when there was a Capitulation for Life adding the following Instances Elisha the Prophet would not suffer the King of Israel to kill the Syrian Captains saying Wouldst thou smite those whom thou hast taken Captive with thy Sword and thy Bow The Blood of Abner lay on Ioab's head who killed one that had the Kings Safe-conduct The Gibeonites also though they used Ioshua deceitfully yet were preserved according to the Articles given them and not only Saul's House but the whole Land suffered for the violation of them That Prince Robert and the Lord Cottington though excepted from Life or Pardon by Act of Parliament were notwithstanding that upon the Articles of the Rendition of Oxford permitted to go beyond Sea and never questioned for Life and the like Justice was done the Earl of Bristol and the Lord Paulet upon the Articles of the Surrender of Exeter though both were excepted from Pardon and that the Lord Fairfax and the Officers of the Army were most careful to see Articles always kept in which they judged thei● Honour deeply concerned and had often written to the Parliament to that end therefore he did not doubt the like Justice would be done him By this time it was late and the President appointed Monday next for the Duke to finish his Plea in matter of Fact ordering his Counsel to be in the Court for their better Information and so they adjourned Monday the 19th the Duke and his Counsel were brought to the Bar. The sixth Appearance Collonel Wayte was examined who deposed that the Duke rendred himself to be the Lord Gray's Prisoner and desired Wayte to protect him from the Multitude who thereupon left a Guard at his going away But during his Deposition Peters said he lies he lies and Peters Spencer and other Officers who were with Wayte at Vtoxater being examined did totally falsifie his Deposition Divers were also that day examined about the place of the Duke's Birth who all swore they heard it always said that he was born at Hamilton and that it was not a thing to be doubted of others were examined about the Signing of the Articles who all Witnessed that they were signed long before the Lord Gray came and Major Blackmore deponed that the Duke's being the Lord Gray's Prisoner was by an Agreement betwixt him and Lambert whose occasions pressed him to go suddenly North-ward After this the Duke spake a little to shew how little weight was to be laid on Wayt's Testimony which was so evidently disproved Next his Counsel asked the Courts Directions how they should proceed and the Court answered that after the matter of Fact was handled they might plead in Law upon all the parts of the Plea and they told the Duke by the next Wednesday to finish his Evidence He desired a Warrant for bringing some Gentlemen then Prisoners in White-hall who were his material Witnesses but the Court adjourned and promised to consider of that Motion in the Painted Chamber yet they granted it not Wednesday the 21st the Court sate The seventh Appearance and the Duke was brought to the Bar. Some were interrogated about the time of his Birth to prove him post-natus but it was not proved one person only swearing that he heard him say he was some years younger than the King Evidence was also brought of his Conjunction with Langdale which they accounted Treason yet even that was not clearly proved though it was much laboured Some Letters of his to Langdale had been taken and were brought into Court but as the Letters proved
no Conjunction so it did not appear that they were his Letters only Peters asserted they were like his hand Then a Vote of the Two Houses was read repealing a former Vote of setting an hundred thousand pounds Sterling upon him for Ransome and proof was brought that notwithstanding Articles were given yet some had been forced to take the Negative Oath and thereby they studied to evince that the Parliament did not hold themselves bound to stand to Articles After this his Grace resumed the substance of all those Evidences and shewed that it was not proved he was a post-natus nor that he joyned with Sir Marmaduke Langdale who neither received Orders nor the Word from him but marched and quartered apart and that though he had done otherwise it could not be criminal in him since he had no Orders to the contrary from the Parliament of Scotland but was commanded by them to joyn with all who would concur with him for prosecuting the ends of the Engagement of which Sir Marmaduke approving he had no reason to refuse Concurrence with him neither could this be made Treason by the Law of England of all which it seemed the Parliament was once well-satisfied since by a Vote they had fined him in an hundred thousand pound Sterling as the price of his Liberty by which it appeared they look'd not on him as a Traytor but as an Enemy who had Life granted him by Articles Upon this the Court adjourned till Thursday the 22d and his Counsel were appointed to plead and he was to close his Evidence The Duke was brought to the Bar The ei●ht Appearance and by divers Witnesses it was proved that there was no Rendition made to the Lord Gray but a plain Refusal and that the Treaty was ended the Articles signed and Lambert come up before the Lord Gray came thither There was also produced an Order of Parliament made four years before that No Quarters should be given to any of the Iris● in Arms which inferred that others might have them and another Order was read of the 14th Iuly last declaring all the Sco●s who entred England Enemies and all the English and Irish who assisted them Tr●ytors and with this he closed his Evidence and since he was not to be suffered to speak any more he enlarged on all the parts of his Plea and spake at length as follows That he was sent by the Kingdom of Scotland which was a free Kingdom The Duke pleads largely for himself and independent on England That he having had his Birth Honour and Fortune there was bound to give obedience to their Orders That for himself he had lived much out of business and was seldom in Publick Trust in that Kingdom nor very desirous of any but that being commanded to undertake the Charge of General for ends which he conceived lawful and no way contrary to the Peace or Interest of England he was obliged to follow their Orders and that by some Papers emitted by the Parliament of England against that Expedition they declared they looked on it as a National Breach whereby Scotland had violated their Leagues and Treaties with them so that it was no private Act of his That the entring of the Scotish Army into England Anno 1640 was accounted no Invasion nor Treason but on the contrary was acceptable to this Kingdom which gave a Brotherly Assistance for it and that the late unfortunate Army was designed fully for as good Ends and would have been so looked on had it prospered And for his joyning with Sir Marmaduke Langdale he answered it as was before set down Therefore he being taken Prisoner in such a War he conceived it without a Precedent that he should be Tried for his Life for serving his Native Kingdom in an open War As for his being an Alien he referred that to his Counsel but said it was undeniable he was born in Scotland nor was he proved a post-natus he was also born before his Father's Naturalization and so not included in it and his own Naturalization had been in agitation in the beginning of this Parliament That his sitting in Parliament did not conclude him an English Earl for if questioned he might probably have been expelled out of the House of Peers as his Countryman Mr. Walter Stuart was out of the House of Commons and that his being an Earl did not naturalize him that being the King 's single Act where as Naturalization was only by Act of Parliament As for the Articles it was clear that Lambert being a General Officer commissionated by Parliament was impowered to Capitulate both by the Parliament and by Cromwel the L. Gray having no Authority from the Parliament but only from Cromwel's Letter that he became the Lord Gray's Prisoner only by Lambert's Order and that he made no Surrender till the Articles were signed and delivered that though the Lord Gray had protested against it and yet only an intention to do it was proved he was not concerned in it nor bound to take notice of it Lambert being the Parliaments Officer and sent against him by them That Articles were to be expounded by their plain meaning and not by any mental reserves pretended by the Commissioners That by the first Article he was a Prisoner of War and that it was seldom known that the Life of any such was taken and that by the second Article Life and Safety of Person were expresly secured without any exception That if Articles were now violated it would make the sequel of the Wars if any more followed a down-right Butchery since none would any more trust to a Capitulation which Mischief he prayed God to avert That his Escape out of Prison was no Breach he being only bound by the Articles to deliver himself Prisoner which he did but not to continue so and he concluded that he was confident had he no better Plea his Articles were sufficient according to the Laws of all Nations to preserve his Life Then the President asked him if he had any thing to say as he was Earl of Cambridge whereupon he and his Counsel moved that if what he had said and proved was not satisfactory for the Averment of his Plea he might answer the Charge exhibited which he had not yet done But to this neither the Court nor their Counsel would yield though they gave no reason for it save only that it implyed a desire of Delay but the reason as was said was that they knew had they yielded to that the Charge had been overthrown since the Law of England does not admit that to be Treason which they charged on him that he had assisted the King against the Kingdom and People by levying War Then the Court told his Counsel that Saturday was the longest time they allowed them for performing their part but the Counsel answered that it was impossible for them to undertake it and discharge their Consciences to their Client having so short a time allowed them there
only was her Honour unstained but even her Fame continued untouched with Calumny she being so strict to the severest Rules as never to admit of those Follies which pass in that style for Gallantry She was a most affectionate and dutiful Wife and used to say she had the greatest reason to bless God for having given her such a Husband whom as she loved perfectly so she was not ashamed to obey But that which crowned all her other Perfections was the deep sense she had of Religion she lived and died in the Communion of the Church of England and was a very devout person Many years before her death she was so exact in observing her Retirements to her Closet that notwithstanding all her Avocations and the Divertisements of the Court as the Writer was informed by one that lived with her no day passed over her without bestowing large portions of her time on them beside her constant attendance on the Chappel She bore first three Daughters and then three Sons her Daughters were Lady Mary Lady Anne and Lady Susanna her Sons were Charles Iames and William but all her Sons and her eldest Daughter died young A year before she died she languished which ended in a Consumption of which after a few Moneths sickness she died so that she prepared for Death timeously About a Moneth before her death she called for her Children and gave them her last Blessings and Embraces ordering them to be brought no more near her lest the sight of them might have kindled too much tenderness in her which she was then studying to raise above all created objects and fix where she was shortly to be admitted She died the tenth of May in the year 1638 and left her Lord a most sad and afflicted person and though his Spirit was too great to sink under any burden yet all his Life after he remembred her with much tender Affection She died indeed in a good time for her own Repose when her Lord was beginning to engage in the Affairs of Scotland which proved so fatal both to his Quiet and Life But the Distractions of the following years concurring with the affectionate Remembrance of his Lady which rather increased than abated with time kept him from the thoughts of re-engaging in a married life Neither did the death of his Sons shake him from that purpose since he had so noble a Successor secured for his Family in the person of his Brother and next to him he had two Daughters who were dear to him far beyond the ordinary rate of Children on whom he got his Dignity and Fortune entailed in case his Brother died without Sons His Religion was Protestant and Reformed and as he was a Zealous Enemy to Popery so he was no less earnest for a good Correspondence among all the Reformed Churches His Religion in particular betwixt the Lutherans and Calvinists and therefore was a Great Patron and Promoter of the designs of Mr. Dury who bestowed so much of his travel and so many of his years in driving on that desired Union for I find by many of Dury's Letters to him that as he owed a great part of his Subsistence to the Money and Places were procured for him by the Duke both from the King and my Lord of Canterbury so his best Addresses to the Swedish Court and the Princes of Germany were those he had from him and therefore he continued giving him an account of his success as to his Patron and Benefactor As for our unhappy Differences which have divided this Island he judged neither the one nor the other worth the Blood was shed in the Quarrel and the excess he had seen on both hands cured him from being a Zealot for either He was dis●atisfied with the Courses some of the Bishops had followed before the Troubles began and could not but impute their first Rise to the Provocations had been given by them but he was no less offended with the violent spirits of most of the Covenanters particularly with their opposition to the Royal Authority As long as the King employed him for the preservation of Episcopacy he served him faithfully and though afterwards he pressed him much for his consent to the Abolition of that Government in Scotland it was not from any Prejudice himself had at it but flowed only from the Affection he had to His Majesty since he saw it could not have been preserved at that time without very visible hazard both to King and Countrey and so he took the National Covenant at the Kings Command Anno 1641 in the Parliament of Scotland He was all his life a great honourer of true Piety where-ever he saw it notwithstanding any mistakes that might have been mingled with it so that whatsoever particular ground of Resentments he had at any who he judged feared God the consideration of that did overcome and stifle it but his first Imprisonment in the year 1643 was the happiest time of his Life to him for there he had a truer prospect of all things set before him which wrought a Change on him discernible by those who knew him best This made him frequently acknowledge Gods great Goodness to him in that Restraint for then he learned to despise at the foolish pleasures of Sin and the debasing vanities of a false World which had formerly possessed too great a Room in his thoughts It is true he chose to be Religious in secret and therefore gave no other vent to it in his Discourse than what he judged himself obliged to which was chiefly to his Children to whom he always recommended the Fear and Love of God as that wherein himself had found his only Joy and Repose The following words are a part of one of his Letters to them which he wrote a little before his last going to England IN all crosses even of the highest nature there is no other remedy but Patience and with alacrity to submit to the good-will and pleasure of our Glorious Creator and be contented therewith which I advise you to learn in your tender Age having injoyed that Blessing my self and found great C●mfort in it while involved in the middle of infinite Dangers He was a constant Reader of the Scriptures and during his Imprisonment they were his only Companions other books being for a great while denied him and he making a vertue of that necessity became a diligent and serious Reader of those holy Oracles and studied to take the measures of his Actions from them and not from the foolish Dreams and Conjectures of Astrology though the enquiring after and taking notice of these be among the injurious Imputations Obloquy fastened upon him But so far was he from any regard to them that an Astrologer coming to him in Germany with a Paper wherein he said he should read a noble Fortune he after he had sent him away threw it into the fire without once openin● it and indeed he was so far from flattering himself with the
of the Nobility and Gentry went to the Cross and himself read the Kings Proclamation and caused the Major of the Town to proclaim it but God having designed to set his Majesty on the Throne of his Ancestors by his own Immediate Hand all hopes of supplies from Wales or other well-affected Places vanished Cromwell also followed the King from Scotland in great Marches having left General Monk since the famous Duke of Albemarle there with an Army to subdue the little strength that remained for maintaining his Majesties Interest in that Kingdom The day after Cromwel came before Worcester the King called a great Council of War to consider what was to be done where the Duke spoke first and after he had in as short terms as was possible opened the state of Affairs he said one of three things must be done Either they were to March out and fight to lie still and provide for a Siege or to March to London the other side of the Severn being then free He proposed the Difficulties of all these yet said one of them was to be done and desired that his Majesty might put it to the debate which of them was fittest None proposed a fourth Expedient But the Duke did afterwards suggest if the Marching into Wales might be adviseable but as they were in the debate before the half of the Council of War had delivered their opinions there came an Alarm to the door that dissolved the Meeting This was four days before the Fight the Enemy grew daily stronger and raised the whole Country to his Assistance and as the Kings small Army was utterly disproportioned to their Strength so the Courage of the Souldiers did daily abate and the Duke as he clearly foresaw the ruine of the Kings Affairs at that time and the Captivity of his Country that would follow so he desired not to out-live it The Duke apprehenns and prepares for Death which he plainly told to some of his more intimate Friends though for incouraging others he put on a great appearance of Cheerfulness on his looks but apprehending that his End drew nigh notwithstanding all the Attendance he was obliged to at Court and with the Army yet he set off large portions of his Time for reviewing his Life and fitting himself for Eternity and when his Imployment all day denied him the conveniency of such long and serious Retirements as that Work required he took it from his sleep in the night being more solicitous for rest to his Mind than to his Body And the night before the often fatal third of September which was the day of Worcester-Fight though he had stayed very late in the Court yet when he came to his Lodgings the apprehensions he had of what was before him kept him awake and serious as will appear from the following Paper which he wrote and was found in his Pockets when they were searched after his Death A Meditation on Death and a Prayer WHEN sadness for any Worldly Cross lies heavy upon thee remember thou art a Christian designed for the Inheritance of Iesus or if thou be an obstinate impenitent Sinner as sure as God is just thou must perish if this be thy Condition I cannot blame thee to be sad sad till thy heart-strings crack But then why art thou troubled for the loss of Friends Fortune or for any Worldly want what should a damned man do with any of these did ever any man upon the wrack afflict himself because his Mistress slighted him or call for the particulars of a Purchase upon the Gallows if thou dost really believe thou shalt be damned I do not say it will cure all other Sadness but certainly it will or ought to swallow it up And if thou believest thou shalt be saved consider how great is that Ioy how infinite is that Change how unspeakable is the Glory how excellent is the Recompence for all thy Sufferings in the World So let thy Condition be what it will compared to thy future possibility thou canst not feel the present smart of a cross Fortune to any great degree either because thou hast a far bigger Sorrow or a far bigger Ioy. Here thou art but a Stranger travelling to a Country where the Glories of a Kingdom are prepared for thee it is therefore a huge folly to be much afflicted because thou hast a less convenient Inn to Lodge in by the way Let us prepare our selves against Changes always expecting them that we be not surprized when they come O death how bitter art thou to a man that is at rest in his Possessions to the rich man who had promised himself ease and fulness for many years it was a sad Arrest that his Soul was surprized the first night But the Apostles who every day knockt at the Gate of Death and lookt upon it continually went to their Martyrdom in peace and evenness Anytus and Miletus may kill me but they cannot hurt me we are troubled on every side but not distressed perplexed but not in despair persecuted but not forsaken cast down but not destroyed and who is he that will harm you if ye be followers of that which is good Consider that Afflictions are oft-times the occasions of great Temporal Advantages and we must not look upon them as they sit heavy us but as they serve some of Gods ends and the purposes of Vniversal Providence and when a Prince fights justly and yet unprosperously could he see the reasons for which God orders it he would find it unreasonable nay ill to have it otherwise If a man could have opened one of the Pages of Divine Counsel and seen the event of Joseph 's being sold to the Merchants of Midian he might with much reason have dried up the young mans Tears The case of Themistocles was not much unlike th●t of Joseph for being banished he likewise grew in favour with the Persian King and told his Wife he had perished unless he had perished God esteems it one of his Glories to bring good out of evil and therefore it were but reason we should leave God to govern his own World as he pleases and that we should patiently wait till the Change come and likewise not envy the Prosperity of the wicked Rest in the Lord and wait patiently for him fret not thy self because of him who prospereth in his way because of the man who brings wicked devices to pass for evil doers shall be cut off but those that wait upon the Lord shall inherit the Earth Theramenes one of the Thirty Tyrants of Athens escaped when his house fell upon him but was shortly after put to Death by his Colleagues in the Tyranny The last great Trial is Death for which should we grieve of all griefs it is the most unreasonable for why should we grieve at that which is absolutely unavoidable and it is not so much to be cared for how long we live as how well we live for that Life is not best which is longest
wholly submit my self falling down before the Throne of his Mercy who is both the just Inflicter of Death upon us and the merciful Saviour of us in it and from it who is the fountain of Eternal Life and in whom there is no shadow of Death Thou O my Saviour who knows what it is to die with me as a man make me to know what it is to pass through Death to Life with thee my God make me content to leave the World 's Nothing that I may come really to enjoy All in Thee who hast made Christ to me in Life gain and trusting only in his Merits and Mediation will in Death be advantage Charge me not O Lord with the Sins of my Parents nor with the multitude and hainousness of my Transgressions which I acknowledge before thee Remember thy Compassions of old and thy Loving kindness which have been for many Generations Be merciful unto me O Lord for my Soul trusteth in thee though thou shouldest kill me yet will I trust in thy Mercy and my Saviour's Merits for I know that my Redeemer liveth though thou leadest me through the valley and shadow of Death yet shall I fear none Evil falling into the Arms of thy tender and Eternal Mercies O withdraw not thy Favour from me which is better than Life be not far from me for I know not how near Death is to me Lord let thy Servant depart in peace for mine eyes have seen thy Salvation My Body I bequeath to the Grave and desire to have it buried in the ordinary Burial-place of my Ancestors at Hamilton and that no Ceremony nor Pomp at all be used at the interring of my sinful Carcase which hath so much offended and dishonoured God yet through Faith I hope it shall be sprinkled with the precious Bloud of Iesus Christ and being re-united with my Soul shall together rise in Glory reconciled with the Father to enjoy Eternal Happiness with him in Heaven After this follow the Particulars of the Will which he concludes in the following Words And now O Lord pity me in my low Condition and bring me out of my Troubles though the number of my Enemies be great yet thou canst disappoint their Counsels keep them Lord from prevailing and turn them back that persecute my Soul If it be thy Will O Lord restore me to my Country that there in peace I may finish the course of my Pilgrimage in thy fear and live loyal and obedient to my Gracious King Charles the Second and faithful and dutiful to my Country and as I trust that through the Merits and Mediation of Iesus Christ An. 1652. thou hast forgiven all the errors of my Life so I beg and hope thou wilt save me from the terrors of Death Let not O Lord at that last hour my Soul be desolate and forsaken let not those saving Truths I have formerly learned then fail my Memory nor the sweet effusions of thy Spirit which I have sometimes felt then be wanting to my Heart be with me at that time O Lord in a special manner and send the blessed Comforter to assure me of Salvation that I may die with Ioy and leave this World with Contentment since I shall be confident of the Remission of my sins through Christ Iesus and of my going to that place of eternal Happiness which thou hast prepared for all them that fear thee in Christ to which place bring me for his sake to whom with thee and the blessed Spirit of Grace be all Honour Praise and Glory for ever and ever Amen Written by my self at the Hague in Holland the 21th of March 1650. HAMILTON To which shall be added a Letter that was Sealed up with his Will to his Lady Dear Heart ALthough a very short stay in this place may possibly endanger my Life yet seeing these may chance to be the last words you are ever to receive from me no hazard shall keep me from letting you know how sensible I am of the great Love and Kindness you have always had for me for which the Lord reward you unto whose Protection I leave you and as I do recommend you to God who will be near unto all that call upon him and fulfil the desires of them that fear him and preserve all them that love him so I do recommend you unto your self that you would labour to serve fear and love the Lord God and set him before your eyes in all your ways Continue as I have often been a witness to your daily practice in reading the Word of God which will be a Lamp unto your feet and Light unto your paths Look not with prejudice upon any of the Messengers of his Word but reverence them for their Message sake be not too confident of your own Opinions but examine them by the Touchstone of Gods Word and refuse not to hear the admonition of his Servants Repine not at Gods ways or dispensations to you but be patient in Affliction that you may say with David I held my tongue I opened not my mouth because thou didst it For you may have this Comfort that whom God loves he Chastens and really if God had not said it man would hardly believe that Affliction cometh from his Love But if we admit his Truth and consider Experience we shall find that he often afflicteth them most whom he loveth most and who most love him As for those whose eyes stand out with fatness and have more than their hearts can wish he setteth them on slippery places and feeds them as Oxen to the Slaughter He is nearer to us in Affliction than in Prosperity and weare nearer unto him it is his menage to bring us home from our Wandrings at least I have lookt upon it so as to my self which makes me thus desire you may so receive his Visitations Be frequent in Prayer limit not the Spirit in you to the conceptions of other men shun all vain and idle Company and Conversation and pray to the Lord to set a watch before your mouth and to keep the door of your lips Forget and hate the empty pleasures of a licentious Court or of London and with David pray Turn away my eyes from beholding vanity An. 1651. and quicken thou me in thy way Be not hasty nor passionate keep not anger in your heart against any have Charity for all men even for them whom you may look upon as your Enemies and study still rather to put the best than worst construction upon the Actions of any Examine your self every night what good you have done the preceding day and remember still that you are one day nearer that in which you must give an account to God of all your Actions on whose Mercy to you let your earliest and latest thoughts be always fixt Sweet Heart much more I would say but you know I am pressed by time but seek to God and in him you will find all things The next Duty I shall recommend to