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A46088 An impartial account of the arraignment trial & condemnation of Thomas late Earl of Strafford, and Lord Lievtanant of Ireland before the Parliament at Wesminster, Anno Dom, 1641. Strafford, Thomas Wentworth, Earl of, 1593-1641, defendant. 1679 (1679) Wing I68; ESTC R11824 83,221 54

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came to Westminster with the number of five or six thousand having Weapons and Battoons in their hands at the entring of every Coach some cried Justice others Execution a third man told his Fellows that both were to be conjoyned and that Justice and Execution was the noble Word upon which quasi dato-signo all the Rabble cried aloud with one voice Justice and Execution with a wonderful strange noise Some went to the Coach side and told the Lords that they must and would have Justice done upon the Deputy In particular above 1000 of them beset the Lord Steward's Coach and demanded Justice and Execution of him Justice said they we have gotten already and we only desire and must have it Execution The Lord Steward replied they should have Justice and Execution and desired them only to forbear and have patience a while No said they we have had too much patience we will not suffer longer and therefore my Lord before you go from us you must grant us Execution The Lord Steward told them he was going to the House to that effect and that they should have all content But whilst they were about to detain him longer some of the greatest Power amongst them said We will take his word for once and with difficulty enough made passage for him The Lords stayed within 'till twelve of the Clock nor was there any course taken in the mean time for dissolving of the multitude the greatest part of them went home the back way by Water only when the Lord Holland Lord Chamberlain and Bristol came out to their Coach all of them called Justice and Execution but when they perceived that Bristol was in the Coach they drew near the Coach side and told him For you my Lord Bristol we know you are an Apostate from the Cause of Christ and our mortal Enemy we do not therefore crave Justice from you but shall God willing crave Justice upon you and your false Son the Lord Digby Let a man cast his Eyes back now but for some few Months past and he shall see what trust may be reposed in the favour of the giddy multitude unless a man shall resolve to quit all Religion and Honesty and to mould and fashion his Conscience to the present distemper and fancy of the people neither can he do so safely when so much hazard lies in the Inconstancy of their Conceptions After this they drew up all the Names of those either in the House of Commons or the House of Lords whom they imagined to favour the Lieutenant and gave them the Title of Straffordians with this close That all those and all other Enemies to the Common-wealth should perish with him and did post up the Paper at the Gate of Westminster as if the old Democracy of Rome and the Tribunitial Power thereof in Cippo proscribere were now renewed and revived A Copy of the Paper posted up at the corner of the Wall of Sir William Brunkard's House in the Old Palace-Yard in Westminster Monday May 3. 1641. The Names of the Straffordians posted 1. Lord Digby 2. Lord Compton 3. Lord Buckhurst 4. Sir Robert Hatton 5. Sir Thomas Fanshaw 6. Sir Edward Alford 7. Sir Nicholas Slanning 8. Sir Thomas Danby 9. Sir George W●ntworth 10. Sir Peter Wentworth 11. Sir Frederick Cornwallis 12. Sir William Carnaby 13. Sir Richard Winn. 14. Sir Carvis Clifton 15. Sir William Withrington 16. Sir William Pennyman 17. Sir Patrick Curwent 18. Sir Richard Lee. 19. Sir Henry Slingsby 20. Sir William Portman 21. Mr. Garvis Hollis 22. Mr. Sydney Godolphin 23. Mr. Cooke 24. Mr. Coventry 25. Mr. Benjamin Weston 26. Mr. William Weston 27. Mr. Selden 28. Mr. Alford 29. Mr. Floyd 30. Mr. Herbert 31. Captain Digby 32. Serjeant Hide 33. Mr. Taylor 34. Mr. Griffith 35. Mr. Scowen 36. Mr. Bridgeman 37. Mr. Fett●plass 38. Dr. Turner 39. Captain Charles Price 40. Dr. Parry Civilian 41. Mr. Arundell 42. Mr. Newport 43. Mr. H●lb●r● 44. Mr. Noell 45. Mr. ●ir●on 46. Mr. Pollard 47. Mr. Price 48. Mr. Travanni●n 49. Mr. Jane 50. Mr. Edgerombe 51. Mr. Chi●●eley 52. Mr. Maltery 53. Mr. Porter 54. Mr. White Secret E. D. 55. Mr. Warwick This and more shall be done to the Enemies of Justice afore-written Nor stayed they here one of them in the height of his fury cryed out Hornesco Referens if we get not satisfaction of the Lieutenant we will have it of the King or as some say worse If we have not the Lieutenant's life we will have the King 's Oh impious Mouth Oh un-natural Miscreant This Man was marked by a Gentleman of the Inns of Court and four or five requested by him to bear witness of the Words Nor did he stay here but the Gentleman with fidelity and courage enough went to the fellow and kindly invited him to drink a Pint of Wine the Fellow suspecting nothing went along with him but in the mean time he sent for a Constable in whose hearing he asked how he durst speak such Words as those he like a mad-man replied That he would maintain them Whereupon he was apprehended by the Constable and committed to the Gate-house where he was three or four times examined yesternight some report that he freely confessed his Words and withall threatned to shew great Authority for them even within the Gates of the Court This day I hear little of him but some say the business will be slubber'd over with this That he said only If we get not satisfaction of the Lieutenant we will go to the King And it is likely this will be the Issue of the business lest this zeale should be quenched in the breeding and beginning whose surcharge and excess is laudable yea necessary in a time of Reformation Add to this that if this man should suffer it might settle and calm the forwardness of the people before the whole business be ended about the Earl of Strafford They have further threatned that after Wednesday they will shut up their shops and never rest from petitioning till not only the Liuetenants matter but also all things else that concern a Reformation be fully perfected The house of Commons sat all that day Monday till 8 at ●ight nor were they Idle all that time but brought forth that Protestation or band of Association as they term it which is now in print it was then drawn up and without further process or delay before they came out subscribed by the whole House except the Lord Digby and an Uncle or Friend of his It is thought by some whose heads are not green that it is very like a Covenant in Scotland but that must be left to further time and wiser heads if that Comment that perhaps will follow be not worse then the ●ext it may in probability happen out to be canonical enough but the too general Phrase in it lyes very open to have sences pro re nat● thrust upon them which may be very justly suspected to have been intended where
AN IMPARTIAL ACCOUNT OF THE Arraignment Trial Condemnation OF THOMAS Late EARL of STRAFFORD And Lord LIEVTANANT of IRELAND BEFORE The PARLIAMENT at WESMINSTER Anno Dom. 1641. LONDON Printed for Joseph Hindmarsh at the Black Bull near the Royal Exchange in Cornhil 1679. TO THE READER AMongst the Superfoetations of the Press I hope you will have no Cause to reckon this small Collection either if you respect the Matter of it I mean the Pleadings in it or the Great Personage concerned in them I am apt to perswade my self it may not altogether be unseasonable in the present Conjuncture of Affairs or unbeneficial to the Reader who shall carefully peruse it The Case it self as well as the Actor the Great and Noble Earl of ●trafford have somewhat more than ordinary and peculiar in them and as this Great and Solemn Trial is so Paramount in the Equipage of all its Circumstances that as former Ages have been unable so future are unable to produce its Parallel To give you though but a Rude Draught of this Great Master of Defence who so easily put by the Thrusts of his most applaudedly Skilful and Dexterous Adversaries will require an Abler Pencil than mine Take then his Character in this Book from his own Mouth seeing otherwise whatsoever may be spoken of him is beneath what was spoken by him and instead of those Strange and Unheard of Monopolies laid to his Charge in this his Trial he may seem a greater himself in engrossing so much of Worth and Ability in his own Bosom As to the Matter of these Collections you have in them a Fine and Pleasant Intermixture of Points of Law and Matters of State You may thereby understand the Constitutions of the two Kingdoms which were then in a strange and most preter-natural Fermentation a Sick Stomach nauseating at Pleasant and Wholsome Meat the Body Politick growing Hot and Feavourish in strange Jactations and Unquietnesses wilfully refusing and scorning the Help and Advice of a most Skilful Aesculapius The Collector you will find hat● very well discharged his Part Ne quid Falsi dicere audax ne quid Veri dicere non audax Herein is nothing false Reported no material Truth Omitted and nothing Trivial to swell the Book and make it more Chargeable and less Vseful to the Peruser is for any private End or Design of the Publisher's Gain here set down or observed So that I may compare this Collection to a well-made and easily manageable Net that as Nothing Considerable escapes its Draught so there is no great Pains or Toil in the Cleansing of it no Sticks Stones or Small Fish to give thee any Trouble to return them whence thou hadst them To be short In the Perusal of this Brief but Full Account of this Great Transaction ●s thy Pains will not be Great so thy Charge but not Advantage will be Inconsiderable Farewell THE PROCEEDINGS AGAINST THOMAS Earl of STRAFFORD Lord Lieutenant of IRELAND in the Parliament at Westminster Anno Dom. 1641. Sir YOu have here the Diurnal of the whole Process against the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland it was taken by the hand of a ready Writer a faithful Ear and an understanding Head He was present at all the Action and I make no doubt of the Fidelity of his Relation Which beginneth thus THE House for the Appearance of the Lord Lieutenant was the great Hall in Westminster where there was a Throne erected for the King on each side thereof a Cabinet enclosed about with Boards and before with a Tarras Before that were the Seats for the Lords of the Upper House and Sacks of Wool for the Judges before them ten Stages of Seats extending farther than the midst of the Hall for the Gentlemen of the House of Commons at the end of all was a Desk closed about and set apart for the Lord Lieutenant and his Councel Monday Morning about seven of the Clock he came from the Tower accompanied with six Barges wherein were one hundred Souldiers of the Tower all with Partizans for his Guard and fifty pair of Oars At his Landing at Westminster there he was attended with two hundred of the Trained Band and went in Guarded by them into the Hall The Entries at White-Hall King Street and Westminster were guarded by the Constables and Watchmen from four of the Clock in the Morning to keep away all base and idle persons The King Queen and Prince came to the House about Nine of the Clock but kept themselves private within their Closets only the Prince came out once or twice to the Cloth of State so that the King saw and heard all that passed but was seen of none Some give the reason of this from the received practice of England in such Cases Others say that the Lords did intreat the King either to be absent or to be there privately lest Pretentions might be made hereafter that his being there was either to threaten or some otherwise to interrupt the course of Justice A third sort That the King was not willing to be accessary to the Process till it came to his Part but rather chose to be present that he might note and understand what Violence Rigor or Injustice happened When the Lieutenant entred the Hall the Porter of the Hall whose Office it is asked Mr. Maxwel whether the Axe should be carried before him or no who did answer That the King had expresly forbidden it nor was it the Custom of England to use that Ceremony but only when the Party accused was to be put upon his Jury Those of the Upper House did sit with their Heads covered those of the Lower House uncovered The Bishops upon the Saturday before did voluntarily decline the giving of their Suffrages in Matters Criminal and of that Nature according to the provision of the Cannon-Law and Practice of the Kingdom to this day and therefore would not be present yet withal they gave in a Protestation that their Absence should not prejudice them of that or any other Priviledge competent to them as the Lords Spiritual in Parliament which was accepted The Earl of Arundel as Lord High Steward of England sate apart by himself and at the Lieutenants Entry commanded the House to proceed Mr. Rym being Speaker of the Committee for his Accusation gave in the same Articles which were presented at his last being before the Upper House which being read his Replies were subjoyned and read also the very same which were presented before in the Upper House Some give the Reason of this because the Lower House had not heard those Accusations in publick before 〈◊〉 others that the Formality of the Process required no les however that day was spent in that Exercise The Queen went from the House about eleven of the Clock the King and Prince stayed till the Meeting was dissolved which was after two The Lieutenant was sent to the Tower by his Guard and appointed to return upon Tuesday at nine of the Clock in the
upon him and by withdrawing so great Sums of Money from the Crown had weakned the King prejudiced the Subject of the Protection they were to expect from him and had been the cause that the extraordinary way of Impost and Monopolies had been undertaken for supplying of the Royal Necessity And that this Act therefore ought to be enough to make the Charge and Impeachment of High Treason laid against him The Lieutenants Reply was That he conceived he had given full satisfaction to all hitherto brought against him about that pretended Arbitrary Government nor would he spend time in vain Repetitions for the present Article though in all its parts it were granted to be true yet he could not perceive by what Interpretation of Law it could imply the least Act of Treason and when it should be directly Charged upon him as a point of Misdemeanor Oppression or Felony he made no doubt but he should be very able to clear himself abundantly in that point also yet lest any prejudice might stick to his Honour by these bold Assertions he was content to step so far out of the way as to give Answer First That it concerned him nothing what particulars in the Lease had past betwixt the King and the Dutchess of Buckingham or whether she had obtained a more ea●ie condition than the Duke her Husbands especially seeing that same was granted some years before his coming to that Government yet thus much he could say that the Dutchess had paid thirty thousand pound fine and therefore no marvail her yearly Rent was the less Secondly For the Book of Rates wherein the chief matter of Oppression and Grievance seemed to rest the same was there established by the Deputy Faulkland An. 1628 three years before his going into Ireland and therefore it was exceeding strange in his apprehension now that could rise up in judgment against him Thirdly That he had his interest in the Customs by Assignation of a Lease from the Dutchess which was given her before his Government nor did he ever hear it alledged as a Crime of Treason for a man to make a good Bargain for himself Fourthly That not of his own accord but at the Kings special Command he had undergone that Charge on hopes that upon the enquiry into the worth thereof the Customs might be improved for the Benefit of the Crown and the true value thereof discovered This he proved by the Lord Cottington and Sir Arthur Ingram Fifthly That when a new Book of Rates was recommended to man by the Council Board of England in the time of his Lease he so far preferred a fear he had That the Trade of Ireland might thereby be discouraged before his own Commodity as he presumed in all humility to refuse the said Book of Rates and tendred his Reasons thereof to the Kingdom and Council-Board of England Sixthly That he never understood that the Customes could a●●e to those great Sums alledged but though they should yet his advantage was but ●mall for first dividing the fourteen thousand pounds he paid to the King then five parts of eight which was yearly given in upon Oath and that procured first by himself at the Exchequer-Board the other three parts 〈◊〉 ide● amongst four of them which were equal sharers in the Lease would not amount to any great Sum of Money And therefore except it were Treason for him to have ●mproved the Kings Revenue encouraged the Trade and refused the new Book of Rates he could in his own weak ●udgment discern none there nor could he think it a Crime for him to take an Assignation of a Lease granted before his time and to insist in the Book of Rates used before his coming over and therefore was confident the Lords would rather take his Accusation as an exercise of Rhetorick in the Gentlemen his Adversaries than as a thing spoken in good earnest by them The same day the Eleventh Article concerning Tobacco was Charged on by the same man Mr. Glyn after this manner That for the farther advancement of his Tyrannical and Avaritious Designs he had of himself established a Monopoly for the restraint of Tobacco in that Kingdom where they offered Five Particulars to the Proof First That he had restrained the Importation of Tobacco Secondly That in the mean time he had brought in a great quantity himself and sold the same at exorbitant Prices Thirdly That of Tobacco already imported he had forbidden any to be sold but was first sealed by his Officers Fourthly That upon a pretended Disobedience he had punished a great Number of People by Seizures Imprisonments Fining Whipping Pillory and such like cruel and inhumane Vsages Fifthly That by these means he had gained one hundred thousand Pounds yearly For Proof hereof First The Proclamation for restraining Tobacco was read Secondly The Proclamation about the Sealing of the same Thirdly Some Witnesses who declared that Ships had been restrained from Landing Tobacco Fourthly Others who had known some Tobacco seized on as forfeited Fifthly The Remonstrance of the House of Commons in Ireland declaring that the Earl had sold 500 Tun of Tobacco which sold at 2 s. 6 d. per pound amounts to 100000 l. They concluded the Charge That he had sucked up the Blood and eaten up the Kings Liege-People and had by this one point of Oppression raised greater Sums to himself than all the Kings Revenue in that Kingdom extended unto And therefore was liable to the Crime of Treason for troubling the Peace and bereaving the People of their Goods who were entrusted into his Care and Government The Lieutenant's Reply was That his most secret Thoughts were conscious of nothing but of a sincere intention and endeavour to promote and advance the wellfare of that Kingdom and withal he conceived by their leaves that nothing in that Charge could have the least reference to Treason yet as he said before for removing of all prejudice he was content to answer First That long before his coming to Ireland the same restraint had been of Tobacco and the same Impost of eighteen pence per pound enjoyned by King James Secondly That at that time the Tradesmen for this Commodity paid but twenty pounds a year to the Crown for the Impost but now 400 l. Thirdly That the Parliament in Ireland 1628 had Petitioned to have this Impost setled by an Act of State for ever afterwards as a part of the Revenue of the Crown Fourthly That he had express Command from the King for issuing those Proclamations and therefore could not imagine more danger in them than in others for Monopolies in England in the worst sence Fifthly That the Proclamations were not put forth by himself alone but by the whole Councel-Board of Ireland Sixthly That for the Contract of Tobacco he was so tender of it that it was sent over hither and seen and approved of by the Councel-Board of England before it was condiscended to in Ireland For the Proclamations he told them it
At this the Lieutenant rose and humbly intreated the Lords no evidence should be received against him upon an Article of such importance but what might be thought authentique and such a one under favour he conceived that Copy not to be First Because no transcript but the Original only can make faith before the Kings Bench in a matter of Debt therefore far be it from them to receive a most slender Testimony in matter of Life and Death before the supream Judicatory of the Kingdom Secondly If Copies be at any time received they are such as are given in upon Oath to have been compared with the Originals which are upon Record such an one was not that Copy It was Replied by Master Glin for all of them spake as occasion served that the House had but the day before admitted Copies as Evidences much more should they do this when it was prosecuted by the Officer himself who best knew it having executed the same To this the Lieutenant answered that all other Copies ought to be received upon Oath to have been compared with the Original as right reason requireth but that this was not so and for the Officer himself pro●ucing it that was the best Argument he could use why it should not be admitted For said he Master Savil may be charged with Treason for seising Men of War upon the Kings Subjects he hath nothing for his defence but a pretended●Warrant from me Now what he swears to my prejudice is to his own advantage nor can a Man by any equity in the World be admitted to testify against another in suum justificationem The point seemed exceeding weighty and in effect was the groundwork of the whole Article which not proved nothing could evince him to have been accessary to the Consequence The upper House therefore adjourned themselves and went up to their own Court and after a very hot contestation between the sactions and above an hours stay they returned and declared that the Lords after mature deliberation had resolved that the Copy should not be admitted and desired them to proceed to other preo●s which after a little pause they did First the Lord Renelaugh affirms that he heard of such a Warrant and knew sometimes three sometimes five Souldiers Billeted by it Secondly Master Clare declares the very same Thirdly Another Deposeth he had seen such a Warrant under the Deputies Hand and Seal And so much for the proof For the Statute they alleaged one of Edward 3.6 that whosoever should carry about with them English Enemies ●sh R●bels or Hooded-Men and less them upon the Subject should be punished as a Traytor Another of Hen. 6.7 That whosoever should ●ess Men of War in his Majesties Dominions should be thought to make War against the King and punished as a Traytor They concluded It was evident the Lord Strafford had incurred the penalty and breach of both the Statutes and therefore desired the Lords should give out Judgment against him as a Traytor The Lord Lieutenants Reply was That in all the course of his Life he had intended nothing more than the preservation of the Lives Goods and welfare of the Kings Subjects and that he dared profess that under no Deputy more than under himself had there been a more free and un-interrupted course of Justice To the Charge he answered First That the Customes of Ireland differed exceedingly from the Customes of England and was clear by Cooks Book and therefore though sessing of Men might seem strange here yet not so there Secondly That even in England he had known Souldiers pressed upon men by the presidents of York and Wales in case of known and open Contempts and that both in point of Outlary and Rebellion and also even for sums of Debt between party and party there is nothing more ordinary than these Sessings to this day in Scotland whereby the chief house of the owner is seized upon Thirdly That to this day there hath been nothing more ordinary in Ireland than for the Governours to appoint Souldiers to put all manner of Sentences in execution which he proved plainly to have been done frequently and familiarly exercised in Grandisons Faulklands Chichesters Wilmot Corks Evers and all preceding Deputies times And had even for Outlaries for the Kings debts in the Exchequer of Collection of Contribution money and which comes home to the point for peteet sums of money between party and party so that he marvailed quâ fronte or with what boldness it could be called an Arbitrary Government lately brought in by him To this the Lord Dillon Sir Adam Loftis and Sir Arthur Teringham deposed the last of whom told that in Faulklands time he knew twenty Souldiers Sessed upon a Man for refusing to pay sixteen shillings sterling Fourthly That in his instructions for executing his Commissions he hath express warrant for the same as were in the instructions to the Lord Faukland before him both of which were produced and read Fifthly That although all these presidents were not yet it were not possible to govern the Kingdom of Ireland otherwise which had been from all times accustomed to such summary proceedings Sixthly That no Testimony brought against him can prove that erer he gave warrant to that effect and for the Deeds of the Serjeant at Arms he did conceive himself to be answerable for it As for the Acts of Parliament he had reserved them to the dispute of his Lawyers but was content to say thus much for the present First That it is a ground in the Civil Law that where the King is not mentioned there he cannot be included But with all distance to his sacred Person be it spoken he conceived himself to be in his Master the Kings place for so his Commission did run in that Kingdom of Ireland Secondly The words of the Statute are not appliable to him for God knows he never went about in person to lay Souldiers upon any of the Kings Subjects Thirdly That the Kings own Souldiers enquiring in a customary way obedience to his Orders could in no construction be called Irish-Rebels English Enemies or Hooded-men Fourthly That the use and custom of the Law was the best Interpreter thereof and for that he had already spoken enough Fifthly That it favoured more of prejudice than equity to start out such an old Statute against him and none others though culpable of the same Fact to the overthrow and ruine of him and his Posterity Sixthly That under favour he conceived for any Irish Custom or upon any Irish Statute he was to be judged by the Peers of Ireland Seventhly That Statute of what force soever was repealed First By the Tenth of Henry the Seventh where it is expresly declared nothing shall be reputed Treason hereafter but what is so declared by the present Statute now not a word there of any such Treason Secondly By the eleventh of Queen Elizabeth where expresly power is given to the Deputy of Ireland to sess and lay
was the height of his Tyranny not only to dominier over the Bodies but also over the Consciences of Men to which purpose he had enjoyned an Oath to the Scots in Ireland and because some out of tenderness of Conscience did refuse to take the ●ame he had fined them in great Sums of Money Banished a great number from that Kingdom called all that Nation Traytors and Rebels and said if ever he returned home from England he would root them out both Stock and Branch For Proof of this First Sir Jammy Mountgomery was produced who declared at large how that Oath was contrived Secondly Sir Robert Maxwell of Orchiardon who spake to the same purpose Thirdly Sir Jo. Clotworthy who declared that a great number had fled the Kingdom for fear of that Oath Fourthly One Mr. Samuel who deposed that upon the tenth of October 1638. He heard the D●puty say these words that if he returned he would root them out Stock and Branch They Concluded That this was a point of the most Tyrannical and Arbitrary Government that before this time was ever heard of not only to Lord it over the Fortunes but also over the Souls of Men. And that it rested only in the Parliament which hath the Legislative Power to enjoyne Oaths And that therefore this was one of the chief points he had done against the Priviledges and Liberty of the Subject The Lieutenant Replied That every new Article acquainted him with a new Treason that if he had done any thing in all his life acceptable to the King and Countrey he conceived it to be this To these Particulars First He desired the Lord would call to mind the condition of those times no than pointing to my Lord Steward knows better than your Lordship who had then the chiefest place in his Majesties Service I would be very sorry to rub said he old Sores especially seeing I hope things are in a fair way to a firm Peace and I wish that I may not be deceived that is that it may be so only thus much I may say we had then greater fears and apprehensions in Ireland left the Scots in the Kingdom who were above one hundred thousand Souls might have joyned with their Countrey-Men at home for the disturbance of our Peace mean time we detected a Treason of Betraying of the Castle of Knockfergus to a great Man in that Kingdom whose name I now spare by one Freeman who upon the discovery was executed The Councel-Board therefore in Ireland resolved to prescribe the Scots an Oath whereby they might declare their discontent at their Countrey-mens proceedings and obliege themselves to the Kings Service but while we were about this they of their own accord come to Dublin to Petition for it and took it with a wonderful alacrity and heartiness so that it is a marvelous falshood for any man to say it was invented or violently enjoyned by me Secondly about the same time the same Oath verbum verbo was by the Councel of England prescribed to the Scots at London and else where which was no small encouragement to us in Ireland Thirdly I had said he which I never shewed because I had no need before this time a special Warrant from the King all Written with his own hand to that effect and when the King commands a matter not contrary to Law truly I said he do conceive it both contrary to Law and Conscience not to yield him all due obedience For the Proof brought against him there was nothing seemed to be of any moment but the words For the first words That he had called all the Nation Rebels and Traytors He said there was no proof at all nor indeed could there be any for if I had said it quoth he I had been perfectly out of my Witts And he thanked God such irrational-speeches used not to escape him He honoured that Kingdom very much because it was the native soil of our dread Soveraign his gracious Master and because he knew a part yea he hoped the greatest part of them had been and ever will be as loyal and dutiful to the King as any other of his Subjects and of those too who had subscribed that unhappy combination he knew a great many had done it against their hearts and wills and would be ever ready upon occasion to remonstrate the same by adhering to the Kings service So that this accusation was nothing but a wrestling and perverting h●s words and meaning of purpose to make him odious and irritate a whole Nation against him For the other words they were proved only by one Witness which could make no sufficient faith and that Witness too he would evince if not of perjury yet of a notable mistake For he had sworn positively that he had spoken these words the tenth of October whereas he was come out of Ireland into England the twelfth of September before and was at London the one and twentieth For th●se that had fled the Kingdom because of that Oath he knew none such and if they did they fled into Scotland which might sufficiently argue their Intentions and Resolutions For his part if they were not willing to give that Testimony of their Loyalty to their Prince although he had known of their Departure he would have been very loath to have kept them against their wills but should have been gladly rid of them and have made them a Bridge to be gone rather than stay Upon Monday Master Whitlock Proceeded to the 20 Article and told him that because the matter was intervenient consimilis nature they had resolved to joyne the five next Articles together because all of them tended to one point or period that is to shew what bad Design he had to have subdued the Kingdoms both of Scotland and England by force of Arms and to reduce them to that arbitrary Government he had lately introduced into Ireland The Lieutenant intreated that they would proceed according to the order prescribed by the House which was Article by Article He said five Articles were many the matter weighty his Memory Treacherous his Jugment weak It was bitterly replied my Master Glin that it did not become the Pris●ner at the Bar to prescribe them in what way they should give in their Evidences The Lieutenant modestly answered that if he stood in his place he would perhaps crave the like favour unless his abilities did furnish him with more strength than he could find in himself for his part he was contented they should proceed any way always provided they would grant him a competent time for Replying Then Whitlock went on and told the Lords that something in those Articles concerned the Scottish something the English Nation that which concerned the Scottish he reduced to five heads First That the Deputy had said at the Councel-Board that the Scots demands contained sufficient 〈◊〉 to perswade to an offensive War Secondly Thus the same demands did strike at the Root and Life of
Monarchical Government and were only to be answered by the Sword Thirdly That he had caused some Scottish Goods and Ships to be seized on in Ireland Fourthly That he had engaged the Irish Parliament by their Declaration in that War against the Scots Fifthly That by all possible means he had put had thoughts and Suspicions into his Majesty against his Scottish Subjects and laboured to make a National quarrel between them and England which if the Kings Piety and the Prudence of better affected States-men had not prevented could not have been s●erd up again without much Blood Concerning England his Speeches were either before or after the Parliament First Before his Creature and Bosom friend Sir George Ratcliff he had said to Sir Robert King when he was doubting how the King might have Monies to pay his Armies that the King had four hundred thousand pounds in his Purse thirty Thousand Men in the Field and his Sword by his side and if he wanted Money afterwards who will pitty him Secondly That his Brother Sir George Wentworth had said to Sir Robert Be●ington upon the dissolution of the last Parliament that seeing the English would not grant supply to the King it seems they were weary of their Peace and desired to be conquered a second time Thirdly That he himself upon a discourse with the Primate of Ireland had said that he was much of the mind of those English Divines who maintained it lawful for a King having tried the affection and benevolence of his People and then denied their help upon an inevitable necessity and present danger of the Kingdom that he might use his Prerogative for his own supply and the defence of his Subjects Fourthly To the Lord Conway in a Discourse he had said That if the Parliament meaning the last Parliament should not grant a competent Supply that then the King was Acquitted before God and Man and might use the Authority put into his hands Fifthly That he did say at the Council Board If the Parliament should deny to help the King he would take any other way be could for his Majesties Service and Assistance His Expressions after the Parliament were two First That the Parliament had forsaken the King and that the King should not suffer himself to be over-mastered by the frowardness obstinacy and stubbornness of his People Secondly That if his Majesty pleased to employ Forces he had some in Ireland that might serve to reduce this Kingdom The Proofs for the Scots Particulars were these First The Lord Traquiere who was indeed very favourable to the Lord Lieutenant and spake nothing to his Disadvantage but what was scrued from him with much difficulty he told them That when he gave in the Demands he heard him say that it was high time for the King to put himself into a posture of War but that first all the Council of England said the same as well as he secondly That it was a double Supposition 1. That the Demands were truly given in 2. That there was no other Remedy left but Arms to reduce them Secondly The Earl of Morton's Testimony being sick himself was produced and it was one and the same with the Article Thirdly Sir Henry Vane was examined who declared That he had heard the Lieutenant to advise the King to an Offensive War when his own Judgment was for a Defensive Fourthly The Testimony of the Earl of Northumberland was produced which was the very same with Sir Henry Vane's Fifthly The Treasurer of England deposed the same with Traquiere Sixthly One Beane from Ireland told That he had known Ships seized on there but by whose Procurement or Warrant he knew not To the Articles about England First Sir Robert King and the Lord Renelaugh deposed the same that Sir Robert King and the Lord ●enelaugh had heard Sir George Ratcliffe speak those words in the Article Secondly Sir Robert Barrington of Sir George Wentworth Thirdly The Primate's Testimony who is sick was the same with the Article Fourthly The Lord Conway deposed the same with the Article Fifthly Sir Henry Vane deposed He had heard those Words spoken at the Council-Board For the Words spoken after the Parliament To the first Sir Tho. Jermyne Lord Newburg Earl of Bristol Earl of Holland were Examined Bristol did mince the Matter but Holland's Testimony was express because of the exceeding great Love he carried to the Man For the last which were the most dangerous Speeches about the reducing of this Kingdom there was only Sir Henry Vane's Testimony who declared only thus That he had either those Words or the like Here some of the Lieutenants Friends shewed themselves 1. The Lord Savil who desired of Sir Hen●y Vane to know whether he said their or this or that Kingdom and withal said it was very hard to condemn a man for Treason upon such petit Circumstances 2. The Earl of Southampton desired to know whether Sir Henry Vane would swear those words positively or not Sir Henry Vane said positively either them or the like The Earl replied that under favour those or the like could not be positive 3. The Earl of Clare desired to know what could be meant by this Kingdom for his part he said he thought it meant of the Kingdom of Scotland to which the Word this might very well be relative that Kingdom being only mentioned in the preceding Discourse And that he was the more ready to be of that Opinion because he could not see by what Grammatical Construction it could be gathered from his words that he meant to reduce England which neither then was neither is now God be thanked out of the way of Obedience nor upon Rebellious Courses They at last concluded the Charge That the Words were so monstrous that to aggravate them was to allay them and therefore they would simply leave them to the Judgment of the Lords The Lieutenant's Reply was That though the heaping up of those Articles had put him to a great Confusion yet he would endeavour to bring his Answer into the best Method he could and first he would reply to the Proo● then add something in general for himself in what a hard taking and lamentable Condition he was to have his private Discourses his most intimate and bosome friends search'd and sisted to the least Circumstance that he might seem guilty of that which by God's assistance he should never be To the Lord Traquieres and the Deputies Depositions he thought their Proofs did not much stick upon him for upon the Suppositions first That the Demands were true secondly That they were not justifiable thirdly That no other Course could prevail He could not see what other Advice he could possibly give the King than to put himself into a posture of War especially seeing then there was frequent Reports of the Scots invading or entring into England nor was he of any other mind than all the rest of the Council-Board For that of Morton's he doth not positively remember the
Words but if the Demands were read perhaps they would imply nothing less and if so how otherwise to be answered but by the Sword all other Means being first assayed which is ever to be supposed For Sir Henry Vane's and Northumberland's Testimony about perswading of an Offensive War he said he remembred it very well and thought it as free for him to give his Opinion or an Offensive as they for a Defensive War Opinions said he if they be attended with Obstimacy or Pertinacy may make an Heretick but that they ever made a Traytor he never heard it till now nor under favour should I be an Heretick either said he for as I was then so am I now most willing to acknowledge my Weakness and correct my Errors whereof no man hath more or is more sensible of them than I my self yet if that Opinion of mine had been followed it might perhaps have spared us some Money said he and some Reputation too of which we have been prodigal enough For the last about the Ships it proves nothing but he would willingly confess that some Ships were there detained and that by himself and his own Direction as Vice Admiral of Connaugh but it was at the Command of the Lord Admiral the Earl of Northumberland and produced his Letter to that purpose To the English Proof He marvelled much how Sir George Ratcliff's Words could be put upon him Sir George though alledged to be his Bosom Friend yet had thoughts of his own and might have some other thoughts in his Bosom and be to some other Expressions than Sir George Ratcliffe No man said he can commit Treason by his Attorney and should I by my Friend Sir George as by a Proxy For his Brother He never knew him before so rash but that was nothing to him except they could prove a nearer Identity than Nature had instituted and that his Brother's Words and his were ●ll one yet withal he conceived that his Brother's Words might be very well understood of the Scots conquering England but not at all of the Irish and so he wished with all his heart that he had not spoken something which is like a Prophesie To the Primate's Testimony with all Reverence to his Integrity be it spoken he is but one Witness and in Law can prove nothing Add to this said he that it was a private Discourse between him and me and perhaps spoken by me Tentandi gratia and how far this should be laid to a mans Charge let your Lordships judge Yea this seems to me against Humanity it self and will make the Society of men so dangerous and loathsom to us that our Dwelling Houses will be turned to Cells and our Towns to Defarts That which God and Nature our Tongues have bestowed upon us for the greater comfort of venting our own Conceptions or craving the Advice of Wiser and Learnecer men should become Snares and Burdens to us by a curious and needless Fear yet if my Words be taken said he with all that went before and followed after I see no danger in it To the Lord Conway I may reply the same with this Addition That it is a very Natural Motion for a man to preserve himself every Greature hath this Priviledge and shall we deny it to Monarchy provided this be done in a lawful though in an extraordinary way This grain of Salt must be added to season all my Discourse To that of Sir Henry Vane of offering my Service to the King I thank him for the Testimony and think he hath done me much honour thereby but if he or any body else do suspect that his Majesty will employ me in unlawful Enterprizes I shall think them more liable to the Charge of Treason than my self To the subsequent Testimonies I shall not need to wrestle about them much only the last of Sir Henry Vanes pinches and lies sore upon me but to that which the Earl of Clare and I thank him for it hath said already give me leave to add this that the Testimony of one man is not a sufficient Witness nor can a man be Accused much less Condemned of Treason upon this and for that read the Stat. of Hen. 7.12 and of Edw 6.5 Now my Lords said he to give you further satisfaction I shall desire all the Lords of the Councel which were then present only to the number of eight may be examined whether they heard these words or not for the Archbishop and Sir Francis Windebank they cannot be had Sir Henry Vane gives the Testimony I deny it four only remain First The Earl of Northumberlands Testimony which was read had declared expresly that he had never heard those words nor any like them from the Lord Strafford but he spake with great Honour and regard to the Kingdom of England Secondly the Marquess Hamilton who declared upon his Oath that he had never heard such words but that he had heard the Lieutenant often say that the King was to rule his Royal Power Candidè Castè that it would never be well for this Kingdom till the Prerogative of the Crown and the Priviledge of the Subject went in one pace together and that Parliaments were the happiest way to keep a correspondency between the King and People The very same was delivered by the Lord Treasurer and the Lord Cottington Now my Lords you may mervail how these words rested only on the ears of Sir Henry Vane but my Lords said he that I may remove all scruple from you I will make it evident that there was not the least intention that the Irish Army should set a foot in England and then I hope you will conceive that I had no meaning to reduce this Kingdom This he made clear by the Testimony of Northumberland the Oaths of Marquiss H●milton Lord Cottington Lord Treasurer Sir Thomas Lucas who only were private to that matter For other of my words my Lords said he I desire you would not take them by halves if so who should be free from Treason Certainly if such a precident take sooting Westminster-hall shall be more troubled with Treason then with Common-Law look therefore to the Antecedents and Consequents of my Speeches and you shall find the state of the question clearly altered the Antecedents were upon an absolute or inevitable necessity upon a present Invasion when the remedy of a Parliament cannot be expected the Consequents for the defence of the Kingdom which acompts afterward to the Parliament The qualifications too in a lawful convenient and ordinary way so far as the present necessity can permit Add but these and which of you are not of my mind Is the King endowed with no power from the Lord Is he not publicus inspector Regni Stands it not him in hand to do something on present necessities And that these were his words he often proved over and over again by the Marquess by the Lord Treasurer Cottington Sir Tho. Jermine My Lords what I have kept to the
Service The Lieutenant Replied First That though all the Charge were in the most strict and rigid way o● sence verified against him yet he could not conceive by what Interpretation of Law it could be rech't home to High-Treason and to that common objection that the Treason was not individual but Accumulative he replied that under favour he thought to that manner were as much as to say no Treason at all Because First That neither in Statute Law Common Law nor practise there was ever till this time heard of such a matter as Accumulative-Treason or a Treason-by way of Consequence but that it is a word newly coined to attend a Charge newly invented such an one as never was before Secondly That Treason was a thing of a simple and specificative nature and therefore could not be so by accumulation but either must be so in some or either of the Articles or else could not be so at all Thirdly He did conceive that it was against the first principles of Nature and false therefore could not be so by Accumulation but either must be so in some or each of the Articles or else could not be so at all That a heap or Accumulation should be and not be of Homo-genous things and therefore that which in its first being is not treasonable can never confer to make up an accumulative Treason Cumulus an heap of Grain so called because every or at last some of the individuals are grain if otherways an heap it may be but not an heap of Grain Just so perhaps these Articles may make up an heap of Felonies Oppressions Errors Mis●demeanors and such like and to the thing it self I shall give an answer when under that name they shall be Charged against me but they can no ways confer to the making up of Treason unless some at the least be Treason in the Individual Secondly That the Testimonies brought against him were all of them single not two one way and therefore could not make Faith in matter of Debt much less in matter of Life and Death yea that it was against the Statute expresly to impeach a Man of High-Treason under the evidence of two famous Witnesses much less to adjudg and convince him upon attestation of one Thirdly To the Lord-Treasurers Testimony he did with all his heart condiscend unto it but upon shese grounds only that there was a present necessity of Money that all the Councel-Board had so voiced with him yea before himself and he always thought it Presumption in a Man not to follow the wiser and more judicious and that there was than a Sentence of the Star-Chamber for the right of paying Ship-Money for his part he would never be more prudent then his teachers nor give Judgment against the Judges and therefore he thought it not far amiss to advise the King for the collecting of that which by Law was his own in such a present and urgent necessity and although his opinion and it was no more had been amiss he hoped that though in case of Religion being attended with stubbornness and pertinacy it might come home to Heresie yet in his case opinion could not reach so far as Treason unless it be Treason for a Man to spake his Judgment freely when he is upon his Oath to do the same Fourthly For the words about fining he had already acknowledged in his general Answers to be true but with these qualifications that it was his opinion only that it was upon the refusal as he conceived of a just service that he had spoken them by no means to prejudice the Citizens but to make them the more quick and active in the Kings service that no ill consequence at all hapned upon them that they were words might have been spared indeed but innocently though suddenly spoken which he hoped might proceed from a Man of such a hasty and incircumspect humor as himself made so both by nature and his much infirmity of body without any mind at all to Treasen and that if all Chollerick expressions of that nature should be accounted treasonable there would be more suits of that kind fly up and down Westminster-Hall then Common-Law Fifthly To those words attested by the Alderman he positively denied rhem and hoped they should never rise up against him in Judgment because the Testimony was single and not positive but only to his best remembrance and that it was exceeding strange that not any one man neither of the Councel or other Aldermen were so quick to observe them but only Alderman Garway which he thought sufficient to nullifie that single Testimony except he could demonstrate himself to have some rare and singular faculty of hearing In the Close He desired the Lords from his misfortune to provide for their own safety and seriously to consider what a way was chalked out to ruin them both in their Lives and Estates if for every opinion given in Councel or words suddenly or hastily spoken they who are born to weild the great affairs of the Kingdom should be Arraigned and Sentenced as Traytors Then they went to the twenty sixth Article and Charged thus That the Lord Strafford having by his wicked advises exhausted the Kings Treasury did also Councel him First To imbase the Coin by an allay of Copper-Money Secondly To seize upon all the Bulloin in the Mint Thirdly That in discourse with some of the Aldermen about that business he had said the City was more ready to countenance and relieve the Rebels than the King and that the King of France did use to manage such businesses not by Treaties or Requests but by sending forth his Commissaries to take Accompt of Mens Estates accompanied with Troops of Horses The Proofs were First Sir Thomas Edwards who declared that in discourse with the Lord Strafford having remonstrated unto him that their goods were seized on beyond Seas because of the Money taken out of the Mint he told him that if the Londoners suffered it it was deservedly because they had refused the King a small Loan of Money upon good security and that he thought them more ready to help the Rebels than the King Secondly Mr. Palmer declared that he spake something about the King of France but whether with relation to England or not he did not remember Thirdly Sir William Parkise attested in the same words and withal that the Lord Cottington was then present and could declare the whole business Fourthly Sir Ralph Freeman declared that in a discourse with the Lord Strafford he had said that the servants in the Mint-house would refuse to work the Copper Money and he replied that then it were well to send those Servants to the House of Correction They closed the Charge That by such undutiful Councel and words he had given more then sufficient proof of his Design and purpose to subdue this Kingdom and subvert the Fundamental Laws and Priviledges of the same The Lieutenants Reply First That he had expected some proofs
about the two first particulars but did hear of none and that it was no small disadvantage to him to be charged with a great many odious Crimes by a Book Printed and flying from hand to hand through the whole Kingdom yet when they came to prove there should be no such thing laid against him Secondly About the Speeches He ingeniously confessed that some such thing might perhaps have escaped the dore of his lips when he saw their backwardness to his Majesties Service and as the times were then conditioned he did not think it much amiss to call that faction by the name of Rebels but yet he thought he had abundantly satisfied for that oversight if it was any at York For having understood there that the City of London were willing to make a Loan of Money he there before the great councel of the Peers expressed himself to this sence that the Londoners had sufficiently made up all their delays hitherto by their Act that the King was oblieged to their forwardness and that he himself should be as ready to serve them as any poor Gentleman in England About the other words he said that being in conference with some of the Londoners there came at that time to his hands a Letter from the Earl of Leicester then at Paris wherein were the Gazets inclosed reporting that the Cardinal had given some such order as to leavy Money by forces this he said he only told the Lord Cottington standing by without the last application or intention concerning the English Affairs Cottington being examined upon this declared the same in the same manner Thirdly to Sir Ralph Freeman he said that his Testimony did not concern the Charge at all nor did he think any thing amiss in it though he had said it if the Servants of the Mint refused 〈◊〉 work according to directions they did deserve the House of Correction nor was it Treasonable to say the King might use that House for the Correction of his Servants as well as any Man in the Citty for theirs Fourthly He said that there was no great likelyhood that he had committed real Acts of Treason when his adverse party was content to trifle away so much time about words neither was there any Treason in them though they had been fully verified and therefore in that as in all other Articles he reserved a power for his Councel to dispute in matter of Law They went to the Twenty seventh Article and Charged thus That immediately after his Appointment to be Lord Lieutenant to the Army here in England he shewed what Principles of Arbitrary Government lurked within his bosom for by his own immediate Authority without and against Law he had laid Impost of Money upon the Kings Subjects where they mention three Particulars First That he had imposed 8 d. per diem upon the County of York for entertaining the Trayned Bands there one whole Month. Secondly That they had sent out Warrants for collecting the same and threatned to imprison such as should refuse to pay Thirdly That he said that it was a Crime nigh to the Crime of high Treason not to pay the sa● Fourthly They added that in his general Replies he had brought two things for his defence first that this mony was freely and voluntarily offered by those in York-shire secondly that the great Councel of the Peers had notice of the same To the first they answered that a Petition was indeed preferred by the York shire men and a Month pay offered but that the Lord Srafford had refused to present the same upon this exception only because in the same they had petitioned for a Parliament whereby he evidently declared what little ●nclination he had to that way To the Second They appeal'd to all the Lords present whether any such Order did pass before the Council of the Peers at York The Proofs were First A Warrant issued by Colonel Pennyman for this Money and another by Sir Edward Osborne Secondly Mr John Burrowes who declared that he was Clerk to the great Council but did remember of no Order and withal added that it might have passed at that time when he attended at Rippon Thirdly Mr. Dunston who declared that he had known that Money levied by some Musqueteers Fourthly By Sir William Ingram who declared that he had heard the Lieutenant say that to refuse the same came nigh to the Crime of High Treason The concluded the Charge That by these Particulars it was more than evident what unhappy● Purposes and Trayterous Designes he had to subdue this Kingdom and subvert the Fundamental Laws and Priviledges First To the Petition That it was a true Petition drawn up by the York-shire Gentlemen and as true that he had refused to present the same because of that clause about the Parliament but the matter was thus At his Majesties coming to York it was thought necessary for the defence of that County to keep the Trayned Band on foot because the Enemy was upon the Borders and therefore the King directed him to write to all the Free-holders in York-shire to see what they would do for their own defence The Time and Place were designed by the King but the night before the Meeting a small Number convented and in a private and factious way did draw up that Petition upon the morrow at their appointed Diet in presence of the whole Number the Petition was presented to him where he did advise them to leave out that Clause and that because he knew the King out of his own Gracious Disposition had intended to call a Parliament which he desired should rather be freely done than upon the constraint and importunity of Petitions moreover it would seem a Mercenary thing in them at one and the same time to offer a Benevolence and withal to Petition for his Favour upon this Remonstrance they were all willing to recall the Petition and directed him by word of Mouth to offer unto the King the Months pay in their Names which he did accordingly in the presence of Forty of them to their no small advantage This he proved by Sir William Pennyman Sir Paul Neale Sir George Wentworth Sir William Savil Sir Thomas Danby who all of them declared as much in ample terms and withal added That nothing was done upon better grounds of Necessity and Obedience than the Offer of ●hat Money and that they never had heard any man grudge against it to this time For the Second about the Council of Peers he alledged that he never made mention of any Order of theirs but he remembred very well it was twice propounded before them that the King had approved it at that time a just and necessary Act and none of the Council had contradicted it which he conceived as a tacit approbation and an Order in Equivalence But though that had not been yet there was nothing done in the Business but at the special desires of the Gentlemen themselves and for their necessary
Defence and Protection ye● though he had done it by himself alone yet he conceived he had so much power by his Commission causing the Commission to that effect to be read That albeit he should mistake his Commission and do some inferiour Act beyond it because Military proceedings are not alwayes warranted by the Common Law yet it should not be imputed as an Act of Treason to him And to this effect read a Statute of the Seventh of Henry the Second To the Proofs First Colonel Pennyman's Warrant or Sir Edward Osburnes it nothing concerned him and he doubted not but these worthy Gentlemen could justifie their own Act and that he had enough to do to answer his own Misdemeanors Secondly For Sir John Burrowes he was at Rippon when that Proposition was made Thirdly That as the Warrant so neither the Execution troubled him at all Fourthly For Sir William Ingram he was but a single Testimony and that such an one too as he could produce an Evidence to testifie he had mistaken himself in his Testimony upon Oath if it were not to disadvantage the Gentleman He concluded That he had done nothing in that Business but upon the Petition of that County the King 's special Command the Connivance at least of the Great Council and upon a present necessity for the Defence and Safety of the County And so much for Wednesday Upon Thursday the Committee for the Charge declared that they had done with all the Articles and were content to wave the last for Reasons best known to themselves only Sir Walter Earles added that he had some Observations to bring forth upon the two and twentieth Article which he conceived might do much to prove the Earl of Strafford's Designs for Landing the Irish Forces in England And they were First That in his Commission he had Power to Land them in Wales or in any part of England or in Scotland which were altogether superfluous unless there had been some purpose for the same Secondly That within two days before the Date of the Commission Letters were sent to the Lord Bridgewater and Pembroke from Sir Francis Windebank to assist the Earl of Worcester in Levying Forces for the Kings Service and these might be supposed to have intended a joyning with the Irish Thirdly That the Lord Ranelaugh at the raising of the Irish Army did fear such a Design as this Fourthly That the Town of Ayre in Scotland where the Lord Strafford pretended he would Land those Forces was fortified with a Bulwark a Garrison and Block house which would prohibit Landing there that the Earl of Argile's Bounds were divided thence by the Sea and that the Barr or Entry into the Town was very dangerous and shallow The Proofs were only the Reading of the Commission granted to the Lord Strafford The Lieutenants Reply First That his Commission was the same Verbatim with Northumberland's for England and and that it was drawn up by the Council-Board here and sent over unto him so no more Design in him than in the Gentlemen of the English Army nor no larger than that was put upon him Secondly That this was the first time he heard of any such Letters nor did they concern him more than any of the House Thirdly That he was not bound to purge the Lord Ranelaugh from all his Fears and that he had his own Fears too which God forbid should be Evidence of Treason against any man whatsoever Fourthly That it seemed the Gentleman had better Information from that Kingdom than himse●f yet he would be confident to say at Ayre there was never such a thing as a Block-House or Garrison But to remove all Scruples for indeed the Road or Landing-place is not there safe he declared that it was his intention to have Landed some Miles above Ayre and made only his Magazine of that Town To the Earl of Argiles Bounds he hoped the Gentleman knew they came not on foot out of Ireland but had Ships to wast and transport themselves and that one of his prime Houses Rosneth was within some few Miles of the same Frith The Lord Digby finding Sir Walter Earles on ground did handsomly bring him off and told the Lords that all their proofs for that Article were not yet ready and that this was a Superfoetation only of the Charge and that in such a Business ac the Plotting of Treason they must be content sometimes with dark Probabilities Then Mr. Glyn desired the Lieutenant to resume his Defence that they might give a Repetition of their Charge and so close the Process so far as concerned the matter of Fact He replied that in his Case all slackness is speed enough the matter touched him narrowly even in his Life and Estate yea in that which he esteemed above th●m both his Honour and Posterity and therefore he confessed he had no desire to ride post in such a Business That he knew the Gentlemen at the Bar if they were in his Case would think the time little enough except their more able Judgments could sooner dispatch the matter in hand and therefore he humbly intreated that that day might be granted to him for strengthening himself and recollecting his Thought and Spirits and to morrow he would be ready with his last Replies for himself which after a little Ceremony and Contestation was condescended unto by the House of Commons Upon Friday Morning about Eight of the Clock the Lieutenant of the Tower and my Lord's Chamber-Groom came to the Hall and gave information to the House upon Oath That the Lord Strafford was taken with an exceeding great pain and fit of the Stone and could not upon any conditions stir out of his Bed Mr. Glyn replied That it was a Token of his wilfulness not his weakness that he had not sent a Doctor to testifie the same The Lord Steward made answer that a Doctor could not be had perhaps so soon in a Morning nor was it possible for any Physician to give a certain judgment concerning a man's disability by the Stone because there is no outward Symptom● that appear Mr. Glyn excepted That if he did not appear upon Saturday Morning he should lose the privilege to speak in his own defence afterwards and they permitted to proceed The Lord Steward replied That the Lords had appointed four of their Number to go to the Tower and learn the just cause of his Stay and if by any means he were able he should be obliged to come then if not Humanity and common Equity would excuse him In the Afternoon it was reported that he was dead of which there can be no better reason given than the Humour and Genius of the Times that dally with nothing oftner than untruths and calumnies and certainly there are many men of shallow understanding and weak affections who either will not or cannot understand the Gentlemans worth but out of fearful and needless apprehensions are so desirous to hear of his Ruin
my Guilt If your Lordships will conceive of my Defences as they are in themselves without reference to either and I shall endeavour so to present them I hope to go away from hence as clearly justified as I am now in the testimony of a good conscience by my self My Lords I have all along my Charge watched to see that poysoned Arrow of Treason that some men would sain have to be feathered in my Heart and that deadly Cup of Wine that hath so intoxicated some petty misalleaged Errors as to put them in the Elevation of High Treason but in truth it hath not been my quickness to discern any such Monster yet within my Breast though now perhaps by a sinistrous Information sticking to my Clothes They tell me of a two-fold Treason one against the Statute another by the Common-Law this direct that consecutive this individual that accumulative this in it self that by way of construction For the first I must and do acknowledge that if I had the least suspicion of my own guilt I would spare your Lordships the pains cast the first Stone at my self and pass Sentence of condemnation against my self And whether it be so or not I refer my self to your Lordships Ju●gment and Declaration You and only you under the favour and protection of my gracious Master are my Judges under favour none of the Commons are my Peers nor can they be my Judges I shall ever celebrate the Providence and Wisdom of your noble Ancestors who have put the Keys of Life and Death so far as concerns you and your Posterity into your own hands not into the hands of your inferiours None but your own selves know the rate of your noble Blood none but your selves must hold the Ballance in dispensing the same I shall proceed in repeating my Defences as they are reduceable to these two main points of Treason and for Treason against the Statute which is the only Treason in effect nothing is alleaged for that but the fifteenth two and twentieth and twenty seventh Articles Here he brought the sum of all his Replies made to these three Articles before and almost in the same words as before only that testimony of Sir Henry Vane's because it seemed pressing he stood upon it and alleaged five Reasons for the nullifying thereof First That it was but a single testimony and would not make Faith in a matter of Debt much less in a matter of Life and Death yea that it was expresly against the Statute to impeach much less to condemn him upon High Treason under the testimony of two famous Witnesses Secondly That he was dubious in it and exprest it with an as I do remember and such or such like Words Thirdly That all the Councel of eight except himself disclaim the words as if by a singular providence they had taken hold of his Ears only Fourthly That at that time the King had levied no Forces in Ireland and therefore he could not be possibly so impudent as to say to the King that he had an Army there which he might imploy for the reducing this Kingdom Fifthly That he had proved by Witnesses beyond all exceptions Marquess Hamilton the Lord Treasurer the Earl of Northumberland Lord Cottington Sir William Pennyman and Sir Arthur Terringham that there was never the least intention to land those Forces in England He went on So much for the Articles that concern Individual Treason To make up the Constructive Treason or Treason by way of Accumulation many Articles are brought against me as if in a heap of Felonies or Misdemeanors for in their conceit they reach no higher some prolifical seed apt to produce what is treasonable could lurk Here I am charged to have designed the ruin and overthrow both of Religion and State The first seemeth rather to have been used to make me odious than guilty for there is not the least Proof alleaged concerning my confederacy with the Popish-faction nor could there be any indeed never a Servant in Authority beneath the King my Master was ever more hated and maligned by those men than my self and that for an Impartial and strict executing of the Laws against them Here your Lordships may observe that the greater number of the Witnesses used against me either from Ireland or from York-shire were men of that Religion But for my own Resolution I thank God I am ready every hour of the day to Seal my disaffection to the Church of Rome with my dearest Blood But my Lords give me leave here to pour forth the grief of my Soul before you these proceedings against me seem to be exceeding rigorous and to have more of prejudice than equity that upon a supposed Charge of my Hypocrisie or Errors in Religion I should be made so monstrously odious to three Kingdoms a great many thousand Eyes have seen my Accusations whose Ears shall never hear that when it came to the upshot I was never accused of them Is this fair dealing amongst Christians But I have lost nothing by that Popular applause was ever nothing in my conceit the uprightness and integrity of a good Conscience was and ever shall be my continual Feast and if I can be justified in your Lordships judgments from this grand imputation as I hope now I am seeing these Gentlemen have thrown down the Bucklers I shall account my self justified by the whole Kingdom because by you who are the Epitomy the better part yea the very Soul and Life of the Kingdom As for my Design against the State I dare plead as much Innocency here as in matter of my Religion I have ever admired the wisdom of our Ancestors who have so fixed the pillars of this Monarchy that each of them keep a due proportion and measure with other and have so handsomly tied up the Nerves and Sinews of the State that the straining of any one may bring danger and sorrow to the whole Oeconomy The Prerogative of the Crown and the Propriety of the Subject have such mutual Relations this takes protection from that that foundation and nourishment from this And as on the Lute if any one string be too high or too lowly wound up you have lost the Harmony so here the excess of a Prerogative is oppression of pretended Liberty in the Subject Disorder and Anarchy The Prerogative must be used as God doth his Omnipotency upon extraordinary Occasions the Laws answerable to that potentia ligata in Creaturis must have place at other times And yet there must be a Prerogative if there must be extraordinary occasions the Propriety of the Subject is ever to be maintained if it go in equal pace with this They are fellows and Companions that have and ever must be inseparable in a well governed Kingdom and no way so fitting so natural to nourish and entertain both as the frequent use of Parliaments By those a commerce and acquaintance is kept betwixt the King and Subject These thoughts have gone along with me these fourteen
this wonder of the Times only I leave his virtues to speak the rest to the Admiration of Ours and Compassion of succeeding Ages A Letter to a Friend BElieve me Sir this blessed departure of his hath put me in love with Scaffolds more than Death-beds Let it be my Paradox if not Prophetical to me that it is the best kind of Dissolution provided there be Innocence to uphold the Conscience and with good men at least to maintain the Reputation afterwards Here you are attended with the Pregnancy of Judgment and Memory not weakned nor clouded with tedious and giddy Sicknesses Here you have a time prefixed and must of necessity concentricate your self and your best resolution elsewhere Nature is unwilling to find a Suspension abhorring its own Destruction Imo quam multos in medio scelere mors occupavit medium secuit crimen Here a Moment ends the Pain which perhaps not seven Apprentiships elsewere and here if any where we find pitty yea deservings both with God and good men but he that sent us hither must prescribe us the way of our return Vpon that very day of the Execution in the Afternoon Abyss●s abyssum invocat Blood calls for Blood there happened a conflict betwixt the Scots and English Army no certain number yet reported nor what occasion some say Six score some Three score Scots some Twenty some Thirty English only the matter it self was represented by the General the Lord Holland upon a Letter from Sir John Conniers to the Parliament upon Friday with a mighty regret that he had been appointed for Peace but that unhappy rub had fallen out much contrary to his desire The King sent a Letter the day before the Execution by the Prince to the Vpper-house desiring the Rigour of that Sentence might be remitted but it was sent back unbroken up for fear either to refuse the King or discontent the People God forbid His Majesty should give so slender an ear to their Petitions The Lord Strafford's Children are restored to all his Estate and if they Petition for it shall be to his Honours too the House of Commons have been as forward in this as any else whether to make some recompence to them or to give proof to the Nobility lest they should be scared by the example that not so much the Means as the Man was aimed at But it will be a Question whether they can restore that Head too when the Kingdom shall need its service It is to be feared that his great Abilities will shortly be more understood by our want of them than our fruition so dark is mans understanding in Preserving that which is virtuous and useful amongst us Virtutem Incolumem odimus The Earl of Strafford's Letter to His MAJESTY IT hath been my greatest grief in all my troubles to be taken as a person that should endeavour to present and set things amiss between Your Majesty and Your People and to have given Councel tending to the disquiet of Your Majesty and Your three Kingdoms Most true it is that such an attempt my private condition considered had been a great madness seeing through your gracious favour I was so provided as I could not expect in any kind to mend my Fortune or to please my mind more than by resting where your bounteous hand had placed me nay the business is most mightily mistaken for unto your Majesty it is well known that my poor and humble advices concluded still in this That your Majesty should never be happy 'till there were a right understanding procured betwixt you and them No other means to effect and settle this happiness but by the Councel and Assent of the Parliament and no way to prevent the growing Evils of this State but by putting your self entirely upon the Loyalty and good Affection of your Subjects Yet such is my misfortune the truth finds little credit the contrary it seems generally believed and my self reputed the cause of this great separation betwixt you and your People Under a heavier Censure than this I am persuaded no Gentleman can suffer and now I understand that the minds of Men are the more incensed against me notwithstanding your Majesty hath declared That in your Princely Opinion I am not guilty of Treason nor are you satisfied in Conscience to pass the Bill This brings me into a great streight Here is before me the ruin of my Children and Family hitherto untouch'd in all the branches of it with any foul Crime Here are before me the many Evils which may befall your Sacred Person and the whole Kingdom should your self and the Parliament be less satisfied the one with the other than is necessary for the King and People Here are before me the things most valued most feared by mortal Men Life and Death To say Sir there hath not been a conflict within me about these things were to make my self less Man than God knows my infirmities will give me leave and to call a destruction upon my self and my young Children where the intentions at least of my heart have been innocent of this great Offence may be believed would find no easie consent from Flesh and Blood But out of much sadness I am come to a Resolution of that which I take to be best becoming me that is To look upon that which is principally to be considered in it self and that is doubtless the prosperity of your sacred Person and the Common-wealth infinitely to be preferred before any Man's private Interest And therefore in few words as I have put my self wholly upon the Honour and Justice of my Peers so clearly as I wish your Majesty hath been pleased to have spared that Declaration of yours on Saturday last and to have left me entirely to their Lordships so now to set your Majesty's Conscience at Liberty I do most humbly beseech You for the preventing of such mischiefs as may happen by your refusal to pass the Bill by this means to remove praised be God I cannot say this accursed but I confess this unfortunate thing forth of the way towards that blessed Agreement which God I trust shall for ever Establish betwixt you and your Subjects Sir my consent herein shall acquit you more to God than all the World can do beside To a willing Man there is no injury done and as by God's Grace I forgive all the World with a calmness and meekness of infinite contentment to my dislodging Soul so Sir I can give the life of this World with all chearfulness imaginable in the just acknowledgment of your exceeding favours and only beg that in your goodness you would vouchsafe to cast your gracious Regard upon my poor Son and his three Sisters less or more and no otherwise than their unfortunate Father shall appear more or less guilty of this Death God preserve your Majesty Tower May 9. 1641. Your Majesties most Humble and Faithful Subject and Servant STRAFFORD The Petition of THOMAS Earl of STRAFFORD to the Right-Honourable the
Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament at Westminster 1641. Sheweth THat seeing it is the good Will and Pleasure of God that your Petitioner is now shortly to pay that duty which we all owe to our frail Nature He shall in all Christian Patience and Charity conform and submit to that Justice in a comfortable assurance of the great hope laid up for us in the Mercy and Merits of our Saviour Blessed for ever Only he humbly craves to return your Lordships most humble thanks for your noble Compassion towards those Innocent Children who now with his last Blessing he commits to the protection of Almighty God beseeching your Lordships to finish your pious Intentions towards them and desiring that the reward thereof may be given you by him who is able to give above all that we are able either to ask or think wherein I trust the Honourable House of Commons will afford their Christian assistance And so beseeching your Lordships charitably to forgive all his omissions and infirmities he doth heartily and truly recommend your Lordships to the Mercies of our Heavenly Father that for his goodness he may protect you in every good work Amen There was a foolish ridiculous and scandalous Speech Printed which was pretended to have been spoken by the Earl of Strafford to certain Lords before his coming out of the Tower which is protested against and avowed to be false by the Lord Primate of Ireland Earl of Cleveland Earl of Newport Lord Rich Sir William Balfoure Sir William Wentworth Sir George Wentworth Dr. Carre Dr. Price De Moriuis nil nisi verum The Paper containing the Heads of the Lord Strafford 's last Speech written with his own hand as it was left upon the Scaffold falling out of his Bosom 1. Come to pay the last Debt we owe to sin 2. Rise to Righteousness 3. Dye willingly 4. Forgive all 5. Submit to justice but in my Intentions Innocent from subverting c. 6. Wishing nothing but good Prosperity to King and People 7. Acquit the King constrained 8. Beseech to Repent 9. Strange way to write the beginning of Reformation and settlement of a Kingdom in Blood 10. Beseech that demand may rest there 11. Call not blood on themselves 12. Dye in the Faith of the Church 13. Pray for it and desire their Prayers with me A true COPY of his SPEECH delivered on the Scaffold My Lord Primate of Ireland IT is my great comfort that I have your Lordship by me this day in regard I have been known to you these many years and I do thank God and your Lordship for it that you are here I should be very glad to obtain so much silence as to be heard a few words but I doubt I shall not the noise is so great My Lords I am come hither by the good will and pleasure of Almighty God to pay that last Debt I owe to Sin which is Death and by the blessing of that God to rise again through the Merits of Jesus Christ to Righteousness and Life Eternal Here he was a little interrupted Mr Lords I am come hither to submit to that Judgment which hath passed against me I do it with a very quiet and contented mind I thank God I do freely forgive all the World a forgiveness that is not spoken from the Teeth outward as they say but from the very Heart I speak it in the presence of Almighty God before whom I stand that there is not a displeasing thought arising in me towards any man living I thank God I can say it and truly too my conscience bearing me witness that in all my Imployment since I had the Honour to serve His Majesty I never had any thing in the purpose of my heart but what tended to the joint and individual prosperity of King and People although it hath been my ill fortune to be misconstrued I am not the first that hath suffered in this kind it is the common Portion of us all while we are in this life to err Righteous Judgment we must wait for in another place for here we are very subject to be mis-judged one of another there is one thing that I desire to free my self of and I am very confident speaking it now with much chearfulness that I shall obtain your Christian Charity in the belief of it I was so far from being against Parliaments that I did allways think the Parliaments of England were the most happy constitutions that any Kingdom or Nation lived under and the best means under God to make the King and People happy For my Death I here acquit all the World and beseech the God of Heaven heartily to forgive them that contrived it though in the intentions and purposes of my heart I am not guilty of what I dye for And my Lord Primate it is a great comfort for me that His Majesty conceives me not meriting so severe and heavy a punishment as is the utmost Execution of this Sentence I do infinitely reioyce in this mercy of his and I beseech God return it into his own bosom that he may find mercy when he stands most in need of it I wish this Kingdom all the prosperity and happiness in the World I did it living and now dying it is my wish I do most humbly recommend this to every one who hears me and desire they would lay their hands upon their hearts and consider seriously whether the beginning of the happiness and reformation of a Kingdom should be written in Letters of Blood consider this when you are at your homes and let me be never so unhappy as that the last drop of my Blood should rise up in Judgment against any one of you but I fear you are in a wrong way My Lords I have but one word more and with that I shall end I profess that I dye a true and obedient Son to the Church of England wherein I was born and in which I was bred Peace and prosperity be ever to it It hath been objected if it were an Objection worth the answering that I have been inclined to Popery but I say truly from my heart that from the time that I was one and twenty years of Age to this present going now upon forty nine I never had in my heart to doubt of this Religion of the Church of England nor ever had any man the boldness to suggest any such thing to me to the best of my remembrance And so being reconciled by the merits of Jesus Christ my Saviour into whose bosom I hope I shall shortly be gathered to those Eternal happinesses which shall never have end I desire heartily the forgiveness of every man for any rash or unadvised words or any thing done amiss and so my Lords and Gentlemen farewel farewel all things of this World I desire that you would be silent and Joyn with me in Prayer and I trust in God we shall all meet and live Eternally in Heaven there to receive the accomplishment of
all Happiness where every Tear shall be wiped away from our Eyes and every sad thought from our Hearts and so God bless this Kingdom and Jesus have mercy on my Soul Then turning himself about he Saluted all the Noble-men and took a solemn leave of all considerable persons upon the Scaffold giving them his hand After that he said Gentlemen I would say my Prayers and entreat you all 〈◊〉 pray with me and for me then his Chaplain laid the Book of Common-Prayer upon the Cha● before him as he kneeled down on which he prayed almost a quarter of an hour and then as long or longer without the Book and concluded with the Lords Prayer Standing up he spies his Brother Sir George Wentworth and calls him to him saying Brother we must part remember me to my Sister and to my Wife and carry my Blessing to my Son and charge him that he fear God and continue an obedient Son to the Church of England and warn him that he bears no private grudge or revenge toward any man concerning me and bid him beware that he meddle not with Church-livings for that will prove a Moth and Canker to him in his Estate and wish him to content himself to be a Servant to his Country not aiming at higher Preferments Aliter To his Son Mr. Wentworth he commends himself and gives him charge to serve his God to submit to his King with all Faith and Allegiance in things Temporal to the Church in things Spiritual chargeth him again and again as he will answer it to him in Heaven never to meddle with the Patrimony of the Church for if he did it would be a Canker to eat up the rest of his Estate Carry my Blessing also to my Daughter Anne and Arabella charge them to serve and fear God and he will bless them not forgetting my little Infant who yet knows neither good nor evil and cannot speak for it self God speak for it and bless it Now said he I have nigh done one stroke will make my Wife Husbandless my dear Children Fatherless and my poor Servants Masterless and will separate me from my dear Brother and all my Friends But let God be to you and them all in all After this going to take off his Doublet and to make himself unready he said I thank God I am not afraid of Death nor daunted with any discouragement rising from any fears but do as chearfully put off my Doublet at this time as ever I did when I went to bed then he put off his Doublet wound up his Hair with his Hands and put on a white Cap. Then he called Where is the Man that is to do this last Office meaning the Executioner call him to me when he came and asked him forgiveness he told him he forgave him and all the World Then kneeling down by the Block he went to Prayer again himself the Primate of Ireland kneeling on the one side and the Minister on the other To the which Minister after Prayer he turned himself having done Prayer and spake some few words softly having his hands lifted up and closed with the Minister's hands Then bowing himself to lay his Head upon the Block he told the Executioner That he would first lay down his Head to try the fitness of the Block and take it up again before he would lay it down for good and all and so he did And before he laid it down again he told the Executioner That he would give him warning when to strike by stretching forth his hands and presently laying down his Neck upon the Block and stretching forth his hands the Executioner strook off his Head at one blow and taking it up in his hand shewed it to all the People and said God save the King His Body was afterwards Embalmed and appoined to be carried into York-shire there to be buried amongst his Ancestors He left these three Instructions for his Son in Writing First That he should continue still to be brought up under those Governours to whom he had committed him as being the best he could pick out of all those within his knowledge and that be should not change them unless they were weary of him that he should rather want himself than they should want any thing they could desire Secondly He charged him as he would answer it at the last day not to put himself upon any public Employments 'till he was thirty years of Age at least And then if his Prince should ●all him to public Service he should carefully undertake it to testifie his Obedience and withall to be faithful and sincere to his Master though he should come to the same end that himself did Thirdly That he should never lay any hand upon any thing that belonged to the Church He foresaw that Ruin was like to come upon the Revenues of the Church and that perhaps they might be shared amongst the Nobility and Gentry But if his Son medled with any of it he wished the Curse of God might follow him and all them to the Destruction of the most Apostolical Church upon Earth FINIS Monday● Tuesday Pyms first charge The Lieutenants Answer Three new Articles Expres Thursday Expres 2. Staffords Reply Friday Express 3. 4. Corks two Falls 1 Interlining 2 His Groom Satturday Charge 1. Staffords Reply Charge 2. Straffords Reply Charge 3. Straffords Reply Secondly Charge 4. Straffords Reply Glinn 's Ejaculation Straffords Reply Monday Charge Art 6. Strafford 's Reply Charge Strafford 's Reply Tuesday Charge latter part of the 8th Article Lady Hibot's Case Strafford 's Reply Charge Article 9. Stafford 's Reply Wednesday Charge Artic. 10. Strafford 's Reply Charge Artic. 11. Strafford's Reply Thursday Artic 12. Charge by Maynard Staffords Reply Charge by M● Palmer latter part of the 15. Article seizing and laying Souldiers upon the Subjects Straffords Reply Glins Speech Straffords Reply Serjeant Savils Coppy of the Commission rejected Straffords Reply Saturday Charge Article 1● by Mr. Palmer Straffords Reply Whitlocks Charge Article 19. Oath to Scots in Ireland Straffords Reply Monday Article 20 the next 〈◊〉 crowded together Glyn● Honey Comb interposed Straffords Reply Strafford 's Reply Wednesday Whitlocks Charge Straffords Reply Charge Article 26. Straffords Reply Charge Article 27. Strafford 's Reply Thuasday Charge Sir Walter Earl's Observations Glyns charitable speech Strafford's Reply Friday he was hindred from coming by a fit of the Stone Glyn again Report of my Lord Strafford's death Saturday Monday spent in a conference betwixt both Houses Tuesday Strafford's reply My Lord Strafford's last Speech in the Hall The Recorder Thursday The formality of a conference Monday Protestation Saturday May 8. Sunday Four Bishops