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A91832 Observations upon some particular persons and passages in a book lately make publick; intituled, A compleat history of the lives and reignes of Mary Queen of Scotland, and of her son James, the Sixth of Scotland, and the First of England, France and Ireland. Written by a Lover of the Truth. Raleigh, Carew, 1605-1666. 1656 (1656) Wing R149; Thomason E490_2; ESTC R206058 10,006 24

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chuse so weak and vitious a person for his most intimate friend and indeed his governor Haply Overbury might have some tincture of pride in him as indeed who would not that had the power and interest of such a favourite at his command that commanded the King himself and often was known to threaten him if he denyed what he desired But that he should be his baud to Essex his Wife is most unlikely when all the world knows he was her greatest enemy and that his hatred to her and the House of the Hawards was his ruine How doth this passage agree with that which follows after wherein this Author sayes in the relation of this Ladies Divorce from Essex that she was a pure Virgin and so delivered in upon oath from the inspection of divers Ladies But this Author often forgets and contradicts himself Haply Overbury had hindred or thwarted this Gentleman in some illegal projects of which they say he had alwayes store which he had offered to Summerset and therefore he is not only contented his body should have been poysoned whilst alive but he will as far as in him lyes if any would believe such a fellow murther his fame too after his death I shall next only mind you of a letter which he sets down fol. 421 of Summersets to the King wherein there is this passage speaking concerning his estate which he desired the King to spare And I may say further that the Law hath not bin so severe upon the ruine of innocent posterity nor yet cancelled nor cut off the merits of Ancestors before the politick hand of State had contrived it into these several forms as fitted to their ends and government And yet this man Summerset could begg all the lands of Raleigh could begg the 10000 li fine of the Earl of Northumberlands and could enjoy the greatest part of the forfeited Lands of the Earl of Westmorland without any scruple But we are alwayes blind in our own affaires And in fol. 429 I take notice of another scandal which he throws upon his quondam Master Henry Ritch Baron Kensington and Earl of Holland scoffing at him for imitating the Earl of Carlile in his expensive wayes and calling him the natural son of the then Earl of Warwick which why he should do I can not imagin for certainly the Lady Ritch was the then lawful wife of the Lord Ritch after Earl of Warwick and if any of her children were to be stiled natural it were those which she had by the Earl of Devonshire not these by Ritch For as this Author saith in another place King James told Devonshire that he had gotten a faire Wife with a foul soul But no doubt this Author had a pick at Holland for turning him out of his service as is mentioned before I omit his slight character of Abbot Archbishop of Canterbury scoffing at his judgment in the businesse of Essex his Divorce calling him Puritan and a fomentor of factions His despising our Nation in the expedition of the Palatinate branding them with the fag end of an old Ballad saying they went abroad to fight and so came home againe as if they had only danced a morice thither when it is well known they defended Manheinu and Frankendale nobly and Hydelburge with so much honour that Sir Gerard Herbert Commander in chiefe there lost his life at push of Pike How contemptuously doth he speak of the Earls Oxford and Essex terming them young men apprehending no danger and so ignorant they knew not how to avoid any How improbably doth he cast the compiling of the History of the Councel of Trent upon a Protestant thereby to vilifie the work as partial fol. 471 And how doth he throughout his whole book contemne and vilifie both the Reformers and Reformation of Religion I shall now only give you an Item of some few of his mistakes He tells us that King Hen. 8 was a Lutheran when all Story assures us he lived and dyed a Papist T is true he put down Monasteries for his own profit and he declyned the Popes Supremacy for his own pleasure and for defending of these he put Sir Thomas Moor and Bishop Fisher to death with many others But at the same time he put multitudes to death for not subscribing and submitting to the six Articles which were all of them ranke Popery He tells us fol. 487 that all our marriages with Spain have been unfortunate to this Crown and then ravels into the story of the Black Prince as if he had married in Spain but if he will read our English Chronicles he shall find to speake the truth though I love not the nation that the Spanish wives were good and that it was the French wives which proved so unfortunate to our Kings Such was Elenor Wife to Hen. 2 who set all his Sons together by the eares with him Such was Isabel Wife to Ed. 2 who for the love of Mortimer suffered her husband to be miserably and cruelly murthered And such was Margaret Wife to Hen. 6 who by her pride perversnesse and evil government was one of the chief causes in the ruine of that meek and gentle Prince vvhom she lived to see murthered in the Tovver and her onely Son the Prince stabbed to death at Tewxbury field and her self sent home poor and miserable to her more poor and beggarly Father in Provence I need name no more Another mistake he hath concerning the Duke of Buckinghams talking with Yelverton in the Tower which surely the Duke never did But that Sir William Balfore should tell him so as being then Lieutenant of the Tower can not be for Balfore came in to be Lieutenant after Sir George More which was long after this time Another such mistake he hath in point of time relating the publick combat which should have bin between the Lord Rey and David Ramsey which he saith was in the time of King James when in truth it was in the Reign of King Charles and after the Marquis Hamiltons expedition into Germany Speaking of the troubles of the Earl of Middlesex he tells us that to his knowledg the Duke bought Chelsey house for the truth of this I refer my self to the Widow Countesse of Middlesex now living who hath told me many times that the Duke had Chelsey for nothing and that her husband never received one peny for it In another story he inverts the same just upon Middlesex saying that he bought Copthall of the Countesse of Winchelsey when I my self know very well that the Lady gave Copthall furniture and all to Middlesex and the Duke of Lenox to be made Countesse and Middlesex indeed bought out the Dukes estate but his mistakes ignorances and wilful errors are infinite both in the language and the matter I shall therefore conclude with that wholsome advice which once that Grave and Learned Lord Chancellor Elsemore gave to Sir Edmond Scony presenting him with a book in hope he would have given him something being then very poor his father yet alive which book the Chancellor having read over saith to Sir Edmond Sir Edmond Scony you gave me a book for which I will give you I humbly thank your Lordship cryes Sir Edmond I will give you good counsel Read more and write lesse Sir Edmond for indeed it is a very foolish book So say I Read more and write lesse Mr. Sanderson for indeed it is not only a very foolish but a very false and scandalous book far fitter for the fire then for the Presse FINIS