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A34178 The Compleat statesman demonstrated in the life, actions, and politicks of that great minister of state, Anthony, Earl of Shaftesbury : containing an account of his descent, his administration of affairs in the time of Oliver Cromwell, his unwearied endeavours to restore His Most Sacred Majesty, his zeal in prosecuting the horrid Popish Plot, several of his learned speeches during his being Ld. Chancellor, his two commitments to the Tower, the most material passages at his tryal, with many more considerable instances unto His Lordships going for Holland. Dunton, John, 1659-1733. 1683 (1683) Wing C5658; ESTC R35656 48,139 160

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Gentry a learned Clergy and an understanding worthy People but yet we cannot think of England as we ought without reflecting on the condition thereof They are under the same Prince and the influence of the same Fav●…urites and Councils When they are hardly dealt with can we that are Richer expect better usage For 't is certain that in all absolute Governments the poorest Countries are always most favourably dealt with When the ancient Nobility there cannot enjoy their Royalties their Shrievaldoms and their Stewardies which they and their Ancestors have possessed for several hundreds of years but that now they are enjoin'd by the Lords of the Council to make deputations of their Authorities to such as are their known Enemies can we expect to enjoy our Magna Charta long under the same persons and Administration of Affairs If the Council-Table there can imprison any Nobleman or Gentleman for several years without bringing him to Trial or giving the beast Reason for what they do can we expect the same Men will preserve the Liberty of the Subject here My Lords I will confess that I am not very well vers'd in the particular Laws of Scotland but this I do know that all the Northern Countries have by their Laws an undoubted and inviolable Right to their Liberties and Properties yet Scotland hath out-done all the Eastern and Southern Countries in having their Lives Liberties and Estates subjected to the Arbitrary Will and Pleasure of those that govern They have lately plundered and harased the richest and wealthiest Countries of that Kingdom and brought down the barbarous Highlanders to devour them and all this almost without a colourable pretence to do it Nor can there be found a Reason of State for what they have done but that those wicked Ministers designed to procure a Rebellion at any rate which as they managed was only prevented by the miraculous hand of God or otherwise all the Papists in England would have been armed and the fairest opportunity given in the just time for the execution of that wicked and bloody design the Papists had and it is not possible for any man that duly considers it to think other but that those Ministers that acted that were as guilty of the Plot as any of the Lords that are now in question for it My Lords I am forced to speak this the plainer because till the pressure be fully and clearly taken off from Scotland 't is not possible for me or any thinking man to believe that good is meant us here We must still be upon our guard apprehending that the Principle is not changed at Court that those men that are still in place and Authority have that influence upon the mind of our excellent Prince that he is not nor cannot be that to us that his own Nature and Goodness would incline him to I know your Lordships can order nothing in this but there are those that hear me can put a perfect cure to it until that be done the Scottish Weed is like death in the pot Mors in Olla But there is somthing too now I consider that most immediately concerns us their Act of Twenty two thousand men to be ready to invade us upon all occasions This I hear that the Lords of the Council there have treated as they do all other Laws and expounded it into a standing Army of Six Thousand Men. I am sure we have Reason and Right to beseech the King that that Act may be better considered in the next Parliament there I shall say no more for Scotland at this time I am afraid your Lordships will think I have said too much having no concern there but if a French NobleMan should come to dwell in my House and Family I should think it concerned me to ask what he did in France for if he were there a Felon a Rogue a Plunderer I should desire him to live elsewhere and I hope your Lordships will do the same thing for the Nation if you find Cause My Lords Give me leave to speak two or three words concerning our other Sister Ireland Thither I hear is sent Douglas's Regiment to secure us against the French Besides I am credibly informed that the Papists have their Arms restor'd and the Protestants are not many of them yet recovered from being the suspected Party The Sea-Towns as well as the In-land are full of Papists That Kingdom cannot long continue in the English hands if some better care be not taken of it This is in your Power and there is nothing there but is under your Laws Therefore I beg that this Kingdom at least may be taken into consideration together with the State of England for I am sure there can be no safety here if these Doors are not shut up and made sure Some few daies after this Speech the King was pleased to make a great Alteration in his Council and to appoint the Right Honourable Anthony Earl of Shaftesbury President thereof About the 18th of April 1679. His Majesty was pleased to declare the Dissolution of the Late Privy Council and for Constituting a New one The Lords of the Council not to exceed Thirty besides the Princes of the Blood which His Majesty may at any time call to the Board being at Court and the President and Secretary of Scotland which are uncertain The Names of that most Honourable Council were His Highness Prince Rupert William Lord A. B. of Canterbury Heneage Lord Finch L. Chancellor Anthony Earl of Shaftesbury Lord President of the Council Arthur Earl of Anglesey Lord Privy Seal Christopher Duke of Albermarle James Duke of Monmouth Master of the Horse Henry Duke of Newcastle John Duke of Lauderdale Principal Secretary of Scotland James Duke of Ormond L. Steward of the Houshold Charles Lord Marquess of Winchester Henry Earl of Arlington L. Chamberlain of the Houshold James Earl of Salisbury John Earl of Bridgwater Robert Earl of Sunderland one of His Majesties Principal Secretaries of State Arthur Earl of Essex first L. Commissioner of the Treasury James Earl of Bath Groom of the Stable Thomas Lord Viscount Falconberg George Lord Viscount Hallifax John Lord Bishop of London Daniel Lord Roberts Henry Lord Hollis William Lord Russel William Lord Cavendish Henry Coventry Esq one of His Majesties Principal Secretaries of State Sir Francis North Knight L. Chief Justice of the Common Pleas. Sir Henry Capell Knight of the Bath first Commissioner of the Admiralty Sir John Ernby Knight Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir Thomas Chicheley Knight Master of the Ordnance Sir William Temple Baronet Edward Seymour Esquire Henry Powle Esquire This great Change put men upon various Discourses and Apprehensions suitable to their respective Dispositions and Inclinations but the most sober both of the Parliament and others hoped now to see the Popish Plot wholly Eradicated especially considering the daily fresh Discoveries that were brought before the Council and Parliament the last of which was of no long continuance for about June 1679.
people have no claim of Property or Right in themselves or any thing else for he hath now declared that the peoples choice cannot give any man a Right to sit in Parliament but the Right must be derived from his gracious Will and Pleasure with that of his Councellors and his Clerks Ticket only must be their evidence for it Thus hath he exalted himself to a Throne like unto God's as if he were of himself and his power from himself and we were all made for him to be commanded and disposed of by him to work for him and serve his Pleasure and Ambition A little after there is an Instance of Chief-Justice Tresilian who was executed at Tyburn in the time of Richard the Second for advising the King that he might at any time dissolve the Parliament and command the Members to depart under the penalty of Treason Divers other Protestations were contained in that Instrument against the Arbitrariness and Tyranny of that proceeding and in conclusion they declare they will 〈◊〉 ●…t their complaints before the Lord against their powerful Oppressors hoping he will redeem his people out of the hands of wicked and deceitful Men. This protestation was signed by One hundred and seventeen persons whereof Sir Anthony Ashly Cooper the present Earl of Shaftesbury was one and many others of great Loyalty and Integrity some whereof are since dead and others still alive in great Honour and Office By this may be easily discerned the Opinion he had of the Illegal and Arbitrary proceedings of O. C. and how much of the sufferings of the Loyal Party would have been prevented had that point of a free Parliament been then gained His Majesties Restauration must have been the natural consequence of it The constant correspondence he always kept with the Royal Party and that almost to the hazard of his Life and Family are sufficient Testimonies of his sincerity to his Masters Interest and Service His House was a Sanctuary for distressed Royalists and his correspondence with the Kings Friends though closely managed as the necessities of those times required are not unknown to those that were the principal managers of His Majesties Affairs at that time This made that great Politician O. C. so apprehensive of this great Assertor of his Countries Rights and Opposer of Arbitrary Government and Enthusiasm that though his vast Abilities were known at least to equal the ablest Pilot of the State yet we cannot find him amongst the Creatures of his Cabinet or Council nor amongst the Eleven Major Generals to whom the Care of the Nation was committed No their Principles their Aims and Designs were incompatible one was for Subverting the other for Maintaining the Antient standing Fundamentals of the Nation which once dissolved it were impossible but an universal Deluge of Confusion Blood and Rapine must ensue This made our brave Patriot with divers of the Heroick English Race to the utmost oppose the growth of a Protectorian Power So that we find Sir Anthony Ashly Cooper accused before the Parliament in the year 1659. for keeping Intelligence with the King and for having provided a Force of Men in Dorsetshire to joyn with Sir George Booth in attempting to restore and bring His Majesty that now is to His Rightful Throne Many persons of great note were imprisoned on the account of this Plot and amongst the rest Sir Anthony Ashly Cooper who though at that time one of the Commissioners of the Army and a Member of the House of Commons yet was complained of to the Parliament for a great Manager of the Design and although no man knew better how to obviate the Reasons of the House and plead his own Cause yet was with great difficulty cleared and discharged of that Imputation by the House of Commons The Eyes of the great States-men were so much upon him that he was one of those Loyal Persons mentioned by Baker in his Chronicle whereof the Council of State was composed in which List we find General Monk to be the foremost and that Council the Chronologer calls men of Integrity and well affected to Kingly Government And he that will but consider how soon His Majesties Restauration ensued upon the Election of this Council will have good reason to be of the same Opinion And in the 673 page we find him to be one of the Nine of the Old Council of State who sent that encouraging Letter to the said General to promote his undertaking for the Advantage of the Three Nations Again we find him in the List of that Council of State consisting of Thirty Nine upon whom an Oath was endeavoured to be Imposed for the Abjuration of the Royal Line but by the Influence of Sir Anthony Ashly Cooper and General Monk upon Coll. Morly that Oath was opposed in Council as being a snare and against their Consciences This was strongly pleaded by the Soberer part of the Council whereof this great Patriot was one and so an end was put both to that Oath and to the Council Nor is it in the least unknown to persons then in being how much his Advice influenced the Councils of those times He was the person that was particularly singled out of the whole Council by Commissary Clargis in Novemb. 1659. and had communicated to him a dangerous Design tending to Involve the Nation in further trouble which this Honourable person imparted to the Council of State This-was that great Council that complied with General Monk in that great Revolution of Restoring His Majesty And if that great Action were the occasion of a candid construction put on all the former Actings of the General why they should not have the same Candour for this Noble person I think none can determine His Employment at this time was in places of the highest Trust and Importance an undeniable Testimony of the great Opinion the then great Mininers had of his Loyalty as well as known Ability for the Management of the then Intrieate and close Designs A further prospect will be taken of his Concurrence with Gen. Monk in that Important Juncture if we remember that his Regiment was one of the first that declared for the Parliament and General Monk in March 165●… So zealous was he in putting all his strength to the turning the great Wheel of State At the time of His Majesties Restauration as a most signal Testimony of His Majesties good Sentiments of his former Actions he was Advanced to be one of the first Rank in His Majesties most Honourable Privy Council and was placed above His Majesties Royal Brother the Duke of Gloucester and even Gen. Monk himself whom His Majesty used to call his Political Father And about three daies before His Majesties Coronation he was in the Banquetting-house created Baron Ashly of Wimbourn St. Giles's and another addition of Honour was conferred on him viz. Lord Cooper of Paulett And at last in the year 1672. he was made Earl of Shaftesbury at the same time when Duke Lauderdale
Attorney was pleased easily to answer the Objection of one of my Council if a great Minister be so Committed he hath the Cure of a Pardon a Prorogation or a Dissolution But if the Case should be put why Forty Members or a greater number may not as well be taken away without Remedy in any of the King's Courts he will not so easily answer and if in this case there can be no Relief no man can foresee what will be hereafter I desire your Lordship well to consider what Rule you make in my Case for it will be a President that in future Ages may concern every man in England My Lord Mr. Attorney saith you can either Release or Remand me I differ from him in that Opinion I do not insist upon a Release I have been a Prisoner above Five Months already and come hither of Necessity having no other way to get my Liberty and therefore am very willing to tender your Lordship Bail which are in or near the Court as good as any are in England either for their Quality or Estate and I am ready to give any Sum or Number My Lord This Court being possest of this business I am now your Prisoner The Court delivered their Opinion Seriatim Mr. Justice Jones Mr. Justice Wild Lord Chief Justice Reimsford Mr. Justice Twisden was absent but he desired Justice Jones to declare that his Opinion was that the Party ought to be remanded which being the sense of the Court his Lordship was Remanded by the Court. His Lordship being denied Redress in the Court of King's-Bench he continued a Prisoner in the Tower until the following February and on the Fourteenth of that Month presents a Petition to the House of Lords then Sitting wherein his Lordship makes a very humble Submission both to the King and House of Peers and for better satisfaction here is inserted what was said to be a Transcript of the Proceedings of that House relating to that Affair Die Jovis Feb. 14. 1677. A Petition was presented to the House from the Earl of Shaftesbury wherein he humbly submits himself to their Lordships pleasure and is ready to make acknowledgment and submission according to their directions but in regard it did not appear to this House that his Lordship had made his Acknowledgment to His Majesty after some Debate the Petition was rejected Die Mercurii Feb. 20. 1677. A Petition from the E. of Shaftesbury was presented to the House and Read as follows To the Right Honourable the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled The Humble Petition of Anthony Earl of Shaftesbury Sheweth THat your Petitioner on the 16th of Feb. 1676. was Committed Prisoner to the Tower of London by your Lordships because he did not obey your Lordships Order where he hath continued under Close Confinement to the great decay of his Health and danger of his Life as well as prejudice of his Estate and Family In all humble Obedience therefore unto your Lordships he doth acknowledge that his Endeavouring to maintain that this Parliament is Dissolved was an ill-advised Action for which he humbly begs the Pardon of the King's Majesty and of this most Honourable House and doth in all humble Duty and Observance to your Lordships beseech you to believe that he would not do any thing willingly to incur your displeasure Wherefore your Petitioner in all humble Duty and Obedience both to His Majesty and your Lordships hath made his humble Submission and Acknowledgment in his most humble Petition unto the King 's most Sacred Majesty and is ready to make his further Submission to His Majesty and this Honourable House according to the direction thereof And he doth most humbly implore your Lordships That you will be pleased to restore him to your Favour and discharge him from his Imprisonment And your Petitioner c. Shaftesbury This being Read the Lord Chancellor acquainted the House that His Majesty had received a Third Petition from the E. of Shaftesbury more submissive in Form than ☞ the Two First But His Majesty understanding that the Earl of Shaftesbury hath endeavoured to free himself from the Censure of this House by Appealing to the King's-Bench to have their Judgments thereupon during the late Adjournment doth not think fit as yet to signifie his pleasure as to his Discharge until this House hath taken that matter into consideration So that at that time the House refused to Address to the King for a Discharge for the said Earl but entered on a Debate concerning his Appeal from this House to the King's-Bench for an Habeas Corpus which Debate was again resumed the day following and the Records of the King's-Bench produced by which it did appear that two Rules of Court had been obtained upon the Motion of the E. of Shaftesbury's Council Trin. Term 1677. and the Returns thereupon were Read by which it did appear that the Earl of Shaftesbury was Committed the 16th of Feb. 1676. by this House for a Contempt and then the Remittitur of the Earl of Shaftesbury to the Tower was also Read After this a Petition from the Earl of Shaftesbury to this House was Read wherein his Lordship took notice of an Order of this House of the 20th Instant for bringing the Records of the Court of King's-Bench into this House concerning the Matter of an Habeas Corpus brought by him that he takes himself to be greatly concerned and to have a Right to be present and heard when any Debate of any new matter against him is entered upon That he cannot pretend but that he may have erred for want of a President to guide him and being deprived of the benefit of Council by reason of his close Confinement and being resolved not to do any thing willingly that might in the least offend His Majesty or their Lordships he humbly takes this opportunity to give further Evidence thereof by casting himself at their Lordships feet and as he hath humbly begg'd the Pardon of His Majesty so he beggs also the Pardon of this House for having offended them in any thing whatsoever This having been Debated a long time the House at last came to this Resolution following Resolved and declared That it is a breach of the Priviledge of this House for any Lord Committed by the House to bring an Habeas Corpus in any Inferiour Court to free himself from that Imprisonment during the Session of Parliament Resolved That the Earl of Shaftesbury shall have Liberty to make his full Defence notwithstanding the Resolution and Declaration aforesaid Die Veneris Feb. 22. The House sent a Warrant to the Constable of the Tower to bring the Earl of Shaftesbury to the Bar of this House on the Monday following accordingly on the Monday following the Earl of Northampton Constable of the Tower brought the Earl of Shaftesbury to the Bar of the House where having kneeled the Lord Chancellor gave him an account of the foregoing Resolution of the House Whereupon the Earl of
Shaftesbury answered to this Effect My Lords I have presumed to present two Petitions to this Honourable House the first your Lordship mentions I do again here personally renew humbly desiring that I may be admitted to make that Submission and Acknowledgement your Lordships were pleased to Order And that after a Twelve-months close Imprisonment to a man of my Age and Infirmities your Lordships would pardon the folly or unadvisedness of any of my words or actions And as to my second Petition I most humbly thank your Lordships for acquainting me with the Resolution and Declaration in that point and though Liberty be in it self very desirable and as my Physician a very Learned man thought absolutely necessary to the preservation of my Life Yet I do profess to your Lordships upon my Honour that I would have perisht rather than have brought my Habeas Corpus had I then apprehended or been informed that it had been a breach of the Priviledge of this Honourable House It is my Duty it is my Interest to support your Priviledges I shall never oppose them My Lords I do fully acquiesce in the Resolution and Declaration of this honourable House I go not about to justifie my self but cast my self at your Lordships Feet acknowledg my Errour and humbly beg your pardon not only for having brought my Habeas Corpus but for all other my VVords and Actions that vvere in pursuance thereof and proceeding from the same Errour and Mistake One Blany was then called into the House who had delivered a paper to the Lord Treasurer Danby pretending to give a relation of some words spoken by the E. of Shaftesbury in the Court of Kings-Bench at the time when he moved for his Habeas Corpus but though this whole Transaction were no longer since than the last Trinity Term yet the said Mr. Blany could not affirm that what was written in the said paper was in part or whole really spoken by the Earl of Shaftesbury so that the Lord Treasurer being able to make nothing of Mr. Blany's paper which was a hard case the House of Lords proceeded to a Resolution in what form the Earl of Shaftesbury should make his submission and acknowledgment which being drawn up in words importing much the same with what the Earl had before declared which being read to him by the Lord Chancellor the Earl of Shaftesbury repeated the same at the Bar of the House and then his Lordship withdrew The House then ordered that the Lords with white staves should wait upon His Majesty to give His Majesty Account that the House had received satisfaction from the Earl of Shaftesbury in the matter of the Habeas Corpus and the other contempt for which he stood committed and are humble Suitors to his Majesty that he would be pleased to discharge him from his Imprisonment And that their Lordships do acquaint the House to morrow what they have done in this matter Die Martis 26 Feb. 1677. The Lord Treasurer reported to the House That the Lords with white slaves had waited on his Majesty according to the Order of this House To which His Majesty was pleased to give this answer That he will give Order for the Earl of Shaftesburys discharge Thus was this great heat whereby some of this worthy Peers Enemies thought then to blast his Loyalty and Integrity and endeavoured to foment the disgusts of the House against him at last extinguished and the Earl a little after saw this Parliament first prorogued and soon after dissolved Now was that Diabolical Plot of the Jesuits and Papists discovered by the great care and fidelity of Dr. Titus Oats which convinced both the King Lords and Commons and all the Nation in General of a damnable treasonable popish design to murther our Protestant King with the chiefest of the Nobility and Gentry and to reduce a Protestant Church to Romish Idolatry and the State to a Catholick slavery The seventh of March 1678. A Parliament met at Westminster and chose the Honourable Edward Seymour Esq their Speaker who had been Speaker of the last long Parliament This Parliament did like noble English Patriots endeavour to give check to the bloody popish Designs on foot and passed many excellent Votes for that purpose many Members acquitting themselves in their Speeches like Men of high sense of the Miserie 's the Nation was like to be involved in This House carried up the Impeachment to the House of Lords against William Earl of Powis William Viscount Stafford Henry Lord Arundel of Wandour William Lord Peters and John Lord Bellasis for High Treason and other high crimes and misdemeanours But this having been at large published to the World in divers other prints with divers Instances how this Noble Peer was personally struck at in that hellish Design I shall refer the Reader for more full satisfaction to the several Narratives and Discoveries of the popish Plot printed by Authority And shall now come to give you an Account of a Speech said to be delivered by this Honourable person in the House of Lords on the 25th of the Instant March Anno 1679. You are appointing of the consideration of the State of England to be taken up in a Committee of the whole House some day the next vveek I do not know how well what I have to say may be received for I never study either to make my Court vvell or to be popular I always speak what I am commanded by the dictates of the Spirit vvithin me There are some other considerations that concern England so nearly that vvithout them you vvill come far short of Safety and Quiet at home VVe have a little Sister and she hath no Breasts vvhat shall vve do for our Sister in the day vvhen she shall be spoken for If she be a VVall vve vvill build on her a Palace of Silver if she be a Door vve vvill inclose her vvith Boards of Cedar VVe have several little Sisters vvithout Breasts the French Protestant Churches the tvvo Kingdoms of Ireland and Scotland the foreign Protestants are a VVall the only VVall and Defence to England upon it you may build Pallaces of Silver glorious Pallaces The protection of the Protestants abroad is the greatest povver and security the Crovvn of England can attain to and vvhich can only help us to give check to the grovving Greatness of France Scotland and Ireland are two doors either to let in good or mischief upon us they are much weakned by the Artifice of our cunning Enemies and we ought to enclose them with Boards of Cedar Popery and Slavery like two Sisters goe hand in hand somtimes the one goes first somtimes the other in a doors but the other is always following close at hand In England Popery was to have brought in Slavery in Scotland Slavery went before and Popery was to follow I do not think your Lordships or the Parliament have Jurisdiction there It is a Noble and Ancient Kingdom they have an Illustrious Nobility a Gallant
the Earl of Arlington and the Lord Clifford were promoted To his happy Councils do both King and Kingdom owe for the happy Conduct of things for divers years so that now he seemed to be incorporate into the heart of his Prince the Events of his Advices were commonly agreeable to what he at first proposed so that it may be said of him as was spoken of Polibius that as Scipio so the King seldom miscarried in any thing that was carried on by his Advice so that at length he seemed to be the Royal Oracle In fine such was the Opinion which his wise Administration had gained that as he sate in one of the highest places in his Masters favour so he was preferred to the highest Trust of Honour in the Kingdom he was made Chancellor of the Exchequer and afterwards Lord High Chancellor of England about the beginning of the Year 1672. Now was the Kings Conscience as it were entrusted to his care and management this was the highest Orb a Subject was capable to move in but with what Sagacity Honour and Integrity he acquitted himself in that great Employment the Transactions of the Court of Chancery at that time can best witness Justice ran in an equal channel the cause of the Rich did not swallow up the Rights of the Poor he that was oppressed found Relief and the Oppressor a Rebuke suitable to his crime the usual delays of that Court were much abated and all the Transactions thereof were managed with the greatest Judgment and Equity As an Instance of his constant adhering to the Interest of his Master and the commune Bonum or Weal of the publick you may take a copy of his Thoughts from that excellent Speech made by him in favour of the Subject in the Exchequer Jan. 24. 1673. at Baron Thurland's taking the Oath a copy whereof follows Mr. Serj. Thurland The King of his Grace and Favour hath made choice of you to be one of the Barons of the Exchequer he designed to place you in a Court of more profit though not of more Dignity but your own Modesty and Virtue hath chosen this Court where you thought you could serve the K. best And I could not omit to mention it here to your Honour it being the greatest Instance of a good man that he had rather be found serviceable than rich His Majesty hath had large proof of your former services besides he takes you upon the credit of that Recommendation that hath justly the best place with him I mean his Royal Brothers Some few things it is fit I should here mention to you and leave with you as Admonitions or rather Remembrances In the first place you are to maintain the Kings Prerogative and let not the Kings Prerogative and the Law be two things with you For the Kings Prerogative is Law and the principal part of it and therefore in maintaining that you maintain the Law The Government of England is so excellently interwoven that every part of the Prerogative hath a broad mixture of the Interest of the Subject the ease and safety of the people being inseparable from the greatness and security of the Crown In the next place let me advise you that you acquaint your self with the Revenue as also with the ancient Records Precedents and Practices of this Court for want of which knowledge I have seen this Court a most excellent Common Pleas when at the same time I could not say so much for it as an Exchequer In the third place let me recommend to you so to manage the Kings Justice and Revenue as the King may have most profit and the Subject least vexation Raking for old Debts the number of Informations Projects upon Concealments I could not find in the 11 years Experience I have had in this Court ever to advantage the Crown but such proceedings have for the most part delivered up the Kings good Subjects into the hands of the worst of Men. There is another thing I have observed in this Court which I shall mind you of which is when the Court hearkens too much to the Clerks and Officers of it and are too apt to send out process when the Money may be raised by other ways more easie to the people I do not say that the Kings Duty should be lost or that the strictest course should not be taken rather than that be but when you consider how much the Officers of this Court and the Undersheriffs get by process upon small summs more than the Kings Duty comes to and upon what sort of people this falls to wit the Farmer Husbandman and Clothier in the Country that is generally the Collector Constable and Tythingman and so disturbs the industrious part of the Nation you will think it fit to make that the last way when no other will serve Give me leave also to mind you of one thing more which is in your Oath That the Kings needs ye shall speed before all other that is the business of the Revennue of the Crown you are to dispatch before all other and not turn your Court into a Court of Common Pleas and let that justle out what you were constituted for In the last place let me conclude with what concerns all my Lords the Judges as well as you let me recommend to you the Port and way of Living suitable to the Dignity of your place and what the King allows you There is not any thing that gains more Reputation and Respect to the Government than that doth and let me tell you Magistrates as well as Merchants are supported by Reputation His particular Application to prevent any misunderstanding between the King and his Parliament is very obvious to any that shall but look into his Speeches to the Parliament during his Chancellorship and with how great concern he still vindicated his Masters Actions He acquitted himself in all the great Emergencies of this High Employment with that universal Applause and satisfaction as seldom happens to men in such an envied station The vilest of his Detractors not being able to fasten any Imputation upon his conduct in those great and weighty Trusts he was advanced to So little of self appeared in his Actions that it may be modestly affirmed of him he made his own Interest strike sail to the publick and his care for others seemed more than for himself and at the time of his highest Elevation he would not neglect the meanest Suitors that applied themselves to him Thus having gradually traced the Advancement of this great Minister to the highest pitch of Honor where he appeared sicut Luna inter Stellas minores I shall now take notice of his Relinquishment of that High Employment and what other contingencies have happened to him since About November 1673. His Majesty was pleased to send for the Lord Chancellor to White-Hall where he resigned the Great Seal of England to His Majesty and was dismist from being Under-Treasurer of the Exchequor which place was conferred on
Shaftesbury and of any Design against His Majesty he gave the same Answer to them as he had done to the former Attackers that he knew nothing great Arguments were used but he could give no satisfactory Answer as he conceived was expected In a little time His Majesty came into the Office and was pleased to say to the Captain that His Majesty knew him well that the Captain had served his Father and His Majesty faithfully and he hoped the Captain would not decline his Obedience To which the Captain answered that he never deserved to be suspected His Majesty was pleased further to tell him he had not had the opportunity to serve his Friends but hoped he might His Majesty was pleased to promise to consider him for his sufferings Then after an excellent Exhortation in which His Majesty told him that the kindness was intended was not with design to speak a word but Truth it self and if he knew the Captain or any other person did he would never endure them His Majesty demanded what he knew of a Design against his Person and Government he answered he knew nothing of any Design against His Majesties Person or Government that he admired why one that had so faithfully served His Majesty and Royal Father both in England and beyond Sea and was so Instrumental to His Majesties Restauration should be suspected But some persons had possessed His Majesty that the Captain was deep in some Design against the Government and knew much of my Lord Shaftesbury At length after much pressing His Majesty told him if he would say As he hoped to be saved he knew nothing of any Design against his Person that then His Majesty would believe him which the Captain having said in the very words His Majesty seemed to be much surprized at it and left him to the management of the Secrery who used such Arguments as he thought fit At last the Captain declared that he knew his Duty to his Soveraign and would never draw his Sword against him but could freely do it against some of the Court who were Enemies both to His Majesty and his Friends So he was taken into another Room where were His Majesty Lord Chancellor Lord Hallifax Lord Hide two Secretaries of State and Lord Chief Justice Pemberton Mr. Graham Booth and Baines were present My Lord Chancellor would not believe but that he must be guilty of knowing great things against the Lord Shaftesbury he told them if he could not be believed on his word there if they pleased to bring my Lord Shaftesbury to his Tryal he should declare in open Court upon his Oath what his knowledge was without any hopes of gain or Advancement the Lord Chancellor wittily replied there were two sorts of Advancements and he was like to come to his own Tryal first before the Lord Shaftesbury My Lord Chancellor demanded if he had no Commission for this New Service against His Majesty to which the Captain answered No. Then the Chancellor told him he was to have a Troop to consist of Fifty Men the Capt. said that was a small Troop he hoped if ever he had Command of a Troop it should be a better than that But the Captain desired to know who gave that Information The Lord Chancellor told him Mr. Booth who was by and Listed under him Captain Wilkinson desired Booth to tell him whether he had given this Information upon Oath Booth answered Yes and it was true At all this the Captain was not concerned so much doth glorious Innocence triumph over the Forgeries and Impious Designs of Evil men and out-braves them even in Death it self That which is very observable in Captain Wilkinsons Information is That at that very time when Booth had sworn he was to have commanded a party of Horse at Oxford his whole Family Wife Children and Servants making about the number of 37 persons were all on Board his Ship bound for Carolina and all lying at his proper charge but when he thought himself most in readiness for his intended Voyage he found himself strangely entangled that he could not stir some Debts he was bound for for others and more of his own fell upon him and he was committed to the Kings-Bench which put a stop to the designed Voyage and he hath often since concluded there was a Divine hand in it I have thought it proper to insert in this place the Testimony of Major Jervas James whose Loyalty and Integrity to his Majesty hath been sufficiently known having most faithfully and as a true Subject served His Majesty both beyond the Sea and at home and declares is still ready with all chearfulness when his Majesty shall please to command him to serve him to the last drop of his Blood He acknowledgeth himself a Son of the Church of England as is it by Law established and hath without scruple taken the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy He stiles the acquaintance he hath with so deserving a person as Captain Wilkinson a great Happiness and acknowledgeth himself obliged to him for so timely entrusting him with so notable a secret being a stranger to the said Captain which trust Major James lookt upon as a great Adventure and the Discovery to endanger the Lives both of the Earl of Shaftesbury and Captain Wilkinson He likewise declares before God and Man that he believes all the Captains Information to contain nothing but the truth of what he had from Booth Bains and Mr. Graham For he lent him the convenience of his Chamber to write the whole business and saw him write it with his own Hand as may also be witnessed by Mr. Robert Bennet who is an Officer in Leaden-Hall-Market and transcribed it for the Captain He hopes his Majesty is and will be well satisfied that those who faithfully and truly serve His Majesty and his Subjects are the persons both to be believed and relied upon and desires that this may have credit according to its Truth and Reality both in the heart of his Majesty and all his loyal Subjects The Information of Jervas James Gentleman I Jervais James Gentleman do declare that the above named Captain Henry Wilkinson came to me upon Tuesday the 11th of Octob. 1681. in the Evening and did then and likewise every day from time to time afterwards make me acquainted with the several Treaties and Transactions between him the said Captain Henry Wilkinson and Mr. Booth Mr. Bains and Mr. Graham and the several other Persons in this his Information mentioned and that they were the very same in substance with what he hath herein set forth declared for at his Request for my own satisfaction I kept a daily Journal during the time of their Treating All which shall be attested upon Oath when required This forementioned Information was published by Captain Henry Wilkinson during the time of my Lord Shaftesbury's confinement in the Tower and was of very great use to satisfie all loyal and honest minded men of the base
my Lord Shaftesbury's Closet to which Mr. Gwin replied that there was nothing Mr. Secretary Jenkins witnessed that that was the Paper he had of Mr. Blithwayt Some things I am forced for brevity to omit My Lord Chief Justice said Now it appears this was the Paper taken in my Lord Shaftesbury's Closet And the Paper was Read which contained the words of that commonly called The Form of an Association When it had been Read Sir F●…n Withins said This Paper was very plausibly penn'd in the 〈◊〉 and runs a great way so but in the last clause but one there they come to perfect Levying of War for they do positively say They will obey such Officers as either the Parliament or the major part of them or after the Parliament is Dissolved the major part of them that shall subscribe this Paper shall appoint The Foreman of the Jury enquired what Date that Paper was of and whether there were any hand to it to which Sir Francis answered that it was after the Bill for Exclusion of the Duke of York for it says that way failing they would do it by force as to the having a name to it Sir Francis said there was none at all The rest of the Evidence were John Booth John Macknamara Edward Turbervill Dennis Macknamara John Smith Edward Joye Bryan Haynes Bernard Dennis Booth deposeth That in January last he was introduced into my Lord Shaftesbury's acquaintance by Captain Henry Wilkinson in order to get a Commission and Plantation in Carolina That the first time he went to my Lord there was my L. Craven and Sir Peter Colliton who are of the Proprietors of that Collony that after this acquaintance he had been there between Christmas and March four or five times and that he found great difficulty in his Accession to his Lordship who was cautious of what company were admitted to him that the said Earl used to inveigh sharply against the Times and look upon himself as not so valued nor respected nor in those Places and Dignities as he expected seemed discontented Particularly that the Earl of Shaftesbury should say that the Parliament would never grant the King Money nor satisfie him in those things that he desired unless he first gave the People satisfaction in those things that they insisted on before and particularly the Bill of Excluding the Duke of York from the Crown Another was the Abolishing the Statute of the 35th of Elizabeth The third was giving his Royal Assent for the passing a New Bill whereby all the Dissenting Protestants should be freed from those Penalties and Ecclesiastical Punishments that they are subject to by the present Establish'd Law That he had Established fifty Gentlemen persons of Quality that he believed would have men along with them that they were to come to Oxford at such a time that if there were any Violence offered to any of the Members by the King's Guards or the Retinue of the Court that then these men with others that other Lords had appointed should repel his force by greater force and should purge the Guards of all the Papists and Tories that Captain Wilkinson was Intrusted with the Command of these men and that these men should be ready to Assist himself and those of his Confederacy to purge from the King those Evil Councillors that were about him That particularly there were named the Earl of Worcester Lord Clarendon Lord Hallifax Lord Feversham Lord Hide which persons were lookt upon to be dangerous and gave the King Evil Advice That those Lords should by Violence be taken from the King and the King brought to London where those things should be Establisht which they designed for their Safety in those two Respects for the preserving the Protestant Religion and likewise for the defending and keeping us safe from Arbitrary Power and Government And likewise that the said Booth had provided Arms and a good Stone-Horse for himself and Arms for his Man before the Parliament Sate at Oxford That the Thursday before the Parliament was Dissolved Captain Wilkinson told him he expected that very week to be called up to Oxford with those men that were Listed with him but Saturday bringing News of the Dissolution of the Parliament it had no further Effects This was the most material of what Booth said for being straitned in Room I am forced to render it as short as I can Turbervil declared That about the beginning of February waiting on my Lord Shaftesbury to have his advice how he might come by some Monies and to gain his Lordships Letter in his behalf to the President of the Council the Earl should say there was little good to be expected from the King as long as his Guards were about him that his Lordship should say the Rabble about Wapping and Aldersgate were of that side that the rich men of the City would vote for Elections but it could hardly be expected they should stand by them in case of a disturbance for they valued their Riches more than their Cause and that at Oxford he had heard the Earl say he wondred the People of England should stickle so about Religion if he were to chuse a Religion he would have one should comply with what was apt to carry on their Cause Smith said that one time being sent for by my Lord Shaftesbury by one Captain Manly his Lordship should tell him that Mr. Hetherington had told him he was afraid the Irish Witnesses would go over to the Court Party and retract what they had said formerly that he advised him to persuade them not to go near that Rogue Fitz-Girald that great Villain that is pampered up and maintain'd by the King and the Court party to stifle the Plot in Ireland and that the Earl had further said That if the King were not as well satisfied with the coming in of Popery as ever the Duke of York was do you think the Duke of York would be so much concerned for the bringing in of Popery as he is That a little before my Lord went to Oxford he should tell the said Smith there were great preparations made and a great many gathered together upon the Rode be tween London and Oxford and Smith asking his Lordship what it might mean my Lord should answer that it was only to terrifie the Parliament to comply with the Kings desire which he was sure the Parliament would never do That they were now more resolute than ever That they clearly saw the Kings aim was to bring in Popery That they had the Nation for them and might lawfully oppose him and he would meet with very strong opposition for that all that came out of the Country should be well Hors'd and armed and so they should all be That the City had resolved to bear the charge of their Members and send so many men to wait on them and that he would be hang'd before he would ever bring in Popery or any thing of that nature Bryan Hains deposed that among