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A10150 The historie of Wyates rebellion with the order and maner of resisting the same, wherunto in the ende is added an earnest conference with the degenerate and sedicious rebelles for the serche of the cause of their daily disorder. Made and compyled by John Proctor. Proctor, John, 1521?-1584. 1554 (1554) STC 20407; ESTC S101196 49,378 214

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in their beddes or newlye rissen thought verely that either Wyat with his band had been in the towne or verie nere The thing was so soden happened in suche a tyme as men not acquainted w t like matters were so amased that some of them knewe not well what to do and yet in th end it proued to nothing for it grewe by a messenger that came verie late in the night desiringe too speake with the lorde Aburgaueny or maister shiriffe to giue them certaine aduertismēt that sir Henrie Isleie the twoo Kneuetes and certaine other with .v. C. weldishe menne were at Seuenocke and would merche in the morning from thence earlye towardes Rochester for the aide of Wyat againste the duke of Norff. and in theire way burne and destroy the house of George Clarke aforesaied A meaning of y e rebels to burne maister George Clarkes house Wherupon the lorde Aburgaueny and the sheriffe by thaduice of the gentilmē afore named for that the saied Clarke had bene a painful and seruisable gentilman chaūged their purposed iourney frō Rochester to incounter with Isley and his bande to cutte them from Wyat saue Clarke from spoyle And so in the morninge earely beinge sundaye The lorde Aburgaueny the shiriffe The merching of the lord Aburgaueny and the shiriffe too incounter Isleye Warram Sentleger Richarde Couert Thomas Roydon Anthony Weldon Henrye Barnei George Clarke Iohan Dodge Tho. Watton Heughe Catlyn Thomas Henley Christopher Dorrell Heughe Cartwright Iohan Sybyll Esquiers Thomas Chapman Iames Barram Iasper Iden Iohan Lambe Walter Heronden Walter Taylor Iohan Raynoldes Thomas Tuttesham Iohan Allen and Thomas Holdiche gentilmen with yomen to the nomber of .vi. C. or ther aboute merched oute of Malling in order till they came to Wrotham heath where they mought easely here the sounde of the traitours drommes Wrotham heathe● and so makinge hast pursued them till they came to a place called Barrow grene Barrowe grene thorough which laye the right and redye waye that the traitours shoulde take merching from Seuenocke towardes maister Clarke The lord Aburgaueny beynge verye glad that he had preuented them in winning the grene sent out spialles to vnderstand their nerenesse and to discriue their numbre reposinge them selues there tyl the retourne of his spialles who at their comminge saide that he neded not to take further paynes to pursue them For thei were at hand commynge towardes him as fast as they could marche whiche was glad tidinges to the Lorde Aburgauenye and hys bande And taking order furthwith to sette his men in a raye he determined to abyde theyr commminge aud there to take or geue the ouerthrow Whiche the traytours vnderstandyng whether it was for y t they misliked the matche or the place to fight whiles the lord Aburgaueny and his band were busye in placing them selues The s●rinkyn● of the rebelles they shrancke as secretlye as they coulde by a bye way And were so farre gone before the Lorde Aburgaueny vnderstode therof by his spialles as for doubte of ouertaking them afore their comming to Rochester he was driwen to make suche haste for the ouertakinge of them as diuers of his fote m●n were farre behinde at the onset geuing The first sighte that the Lorde Aburgaueny coulde haue of thē after they forsoke their purposed way was as they ascended Wrotham hyll directlye ouer Yaldam Maister Peckams house where they thinkinge to haue great aduauntage by the winning of y e hil displaied their ensignes brauelye The displa●●yng of the rebell is ensignes semynge to be in great ruffe But it was not longe after or theyr corage was abated For the lord Aburgaueny the shyreffe and the rest of the gentlemen with such other of the queenes true and faythfull subiectes as with great paynes takinge to clyme the hyll and to holde waye with the horsemen The rebels ouertaken ouertoke the rebelles at a fielde called Blackesoll fielde in the parishe of Wrotham a mile distant frō the very top of the hyll Blackesol● fielde where the lorde Aburgaueny the shyreffe the gentlemen aforenamed and other the quenes true and faithfull subiectes handled them so hotte so fiersly y t after a smale shot w t longe bowes by the traytours The skyrmishe a fierse bragge shewed by some of the horsemen they tooke their flighte away as fast as they coulde Yet of them were taken prisoners aboue thre skore In this conflict Warram Sentleger who brought with him a good company of souldiours alwaies a seruisable gentlemā also George Clarke Anthony Weldon and Richarde Clarke w t others did very honestly behaue thē selues Williā Sentleger hearing of a fraie towardes betwene the Queenes true Subiectes and the traitours came to the lord Aburgauenie into the field with all haste not an houre before the skirmishe who with the rest of the gentlemen with certaine of the Lorde Aburgauenyes and Shireffes ●eruauntes beinge all well horsed serued faithfullie and from ●hence chased the horsemen till thei came to a woode called Hartlei woode foure miles distant from the place where the onset beganne The chase 〈◊〉 the horse ●●n The Queenes true subiectes did so much abhorre their treason and had the traitours in suche detestation as with greate difficultie anye escaped with life that were taken prisoners and yet were thei al verie wel armed weaponed and had also great aduantage by the place of fight Sir Henrie I●sleye laye al that night in the woode and fleed after into Hāpshire The two Kneuettes being wel horsed were so hastely pnrsued as thei were driuen to leaue theyr horse and crepe into the woode and for haste to rippe their bootes from their legges and runne awaie in th● vampage of their hose The chase continued so longe as nighte came on before it was full finished Thus was I●●ey the Kneuetes and their bande ouerthrowen by the faithfull seruice of diuers gentlemen and yomen seruinge vnder the lord Aburgaueny and the shyreffe whose forwardnesse corage and wisedome in this trayterous broyle no doubt was verye muche prayse worthie as wel for theyr spedie acceleration of their strength which consideryng how they were euery way compassed with the traitours was no small matter in so litle space and for their wise and politike handlinge also in kepinge them together from Wyat who merueylouslye and by sundrye wayes soughte to allure them away For had not they in their owne personne to the incouraginge of their companye aduentured farre and by theyr wisdome discretion and greate charge politikelye hādled the matter some thinke that Wyat had been at London before he was loked for by anye good man with no smale trayne whose iouruey was greatly hyndered and his companye very muche discomfited by this repulse geuen to Isleye and his band Where amongest other thinges Gods secret hād was greatly felt to y e great comfort present ayd of true subiectes against the traitours who hauinge suche aduauntage of the place as in
dede thei hadde were lyke rather to giue then receiue so foule an ouerthrowe But this it is you see to serue in a true cause and her whome God so fauoureth that he wyll ●ot suffer the malice and rage of her enemies at anye tyme to preu●ile against her to whome he hath giuen so many ●otable victories and soo miraculous● that her enemies mighte seme rather to haue ben ouerthrow● Spiritu Dei● then vanqueshed huma●o robore The lorde Aburga●eny the shiriffe and the gentilmen with them Thanke● geuen too GOD fo● victorie after they had geuen humble thankes to God for the victorie whiche they did verie reuerentlie in the fielde taken ordre for the prisoners were driuē to deuide thē sel●es for want of harboroughe and vitta●le for the souldiours that had well deserued bothe The lorde Aburgaueny and certen with him went to Wrotham The shiriffe certen with him to Otforde where they hadde muche to doo to get vittaile for ●●●ir souldiours The lorde Aburgaueny and the shiriffe su●pec●●ng that some of those gen●●lmen lately discō●●ted in this ●●irmishe woulde not longe tarie in the realme but make shift to passe the seas yea and by sp●●all vnderstandinge Wyat him selfe with some of his company therunto bent deuised to lay● the countree aboute that they mought not escape And considering that they woulde not do it at Douer nor in that coste they knowing the lorde Warden to haue suche watche vnto them but rather for sundrie respectes at Rye or more southward and hauinge greate proufe of Thomas Dorrell the yonger his fidelitie Thomas Dorrell of Scotney ȳe yonger he retorned the same Dorrel being newly come vnto him with ixxx men well appointed into Sussex geuing him streight charge that con●ulting with sir Iohan Guyldforde they should both day and night s●t sure watche for the passinge of a●y that waie to the sea co●t further to take suche ordre as no m●●it●d fishe wine or other vitaile comming out of those partes should passe to the rele●f of the traitors Anthony Kneuet notwithstanding great and streight watche layed roūde about the countree by the shiriffe for thapprehension of him and other that fled arriued that sundaye at nighte late at Rochester where his newes were so ioyful Harpers running a●aye from Wyat. that Harper furthwith found the meane to ridde him selfe out of their cō●pany without any leaue taking and ran to the duke of Norff. to whome he semed so greatly● to lament his treason that the duke peteinge his case the rather for the longe acquaintaūc● betwe●e them in tymes paste receiued him too grace But within a day after he ran from the duke and retourned to hys olde mate as hereafter shal appere Wyat hearing of Isleye his ouerthrowe and vndertandinge by the proceding at Mallinge the day before that those thinges sette furthe in his proclamations wherby he thought his strength at home to be most surely knit vnto him were now become rather a weakenninge then otherwise the people there being redie to fall from him for his so abusinge of them he fell into so great extreme anguishe and sorowe as writing a letter of expostulation to some of his familiars abrode in reprehension of theire infidelitie in that they sticked not to him soo fast as they promised Wyats bewai●ing his case with teares he bedewed the paper wherupon he wrotte with teares issuing so abundātlye from his eyes as it woulde beare no inke and so leauing to write calling for a preuie cote that he had quilted with angels not longe afore Wyatscote of fēce quilted with aungelles which mought serue bothe for his defense and refuge for his necessitie being in a nother countree he practised with suche as were nere vnto him where they mought haue redie passage and most for their suretie to take the sea Wyates practise to flye by sea For Englande saied he is no place for vs to rest in His company also shranke frō him as fast as they could deuise meanes to escape wherunto Thomas Isleye and others hadde a greater respecte thē him selfe he seming to take care for nothinge but howe he mought safely● conuey him selfe beinge well frended as it was thought with some of the shipmaisters Wyat mated Thus was Wyat so mated by the lorde Aburgaueny the shiriffe and their bande as he was at his wittes ende as ye haue heard and cheifely by kepynge him from that whiche by spiall about him they afterwarde vnderstode him specially to desire whiche was offer of battaile he and his beinge fully persuaded that there coulde be no greate force raised against him in the shire whereof the moost parte should not be his when it should come to the shewe Wherin although he mought be deceiued as in dede he was yet his quarrell with the disposition of the people therunto well considered with the end of his traueil whiche coulde be but spoyle and rauen redye meanes and lures to drawe the careles multitude vnto him It semed to the lorde Aburgaueny suche as serued with him better pollicie to werie Wyat and weaken him by the cutting away of his strēgth from him then to offer him battaile til the duke of Norffolkes comminge whome the lorde Aburgaueny the shiriffe knewe to be at hande towardes Wyat vnto whom thei and all the gentilmen of their band after their skirmishe with Isley made the haste possible they myghte But before their comminge the case was wonderfully chaūged to the great descomforte of all the quenes true subiectes and that came to passe that of al mē was lest feared For who was it that suspected suche cruell malitious disposition to remaine in any Englishe heart towardes his countree in anye sub●ectes thought towarde his Soueraygne that receyuyng her graces armoure weapon and moneye woulde haue plaied so traiterous a part as these captaynes did with their band● It is so straunge a case as the world neuer saw It is so malicious a part as the Iew would not haue done the like hauynge receyued hys hyre to serue So it was that the noble Duke beinge an auncient and worthy captayne yet by long imprysonment so diswonted from the knowledge of our malicious world the iniquitie of our tyme as he suspectinge nothinge lesse than that whiche folowed but iudgynge euerye man to accorde with him in defier to serue truelye marched furthe the Mondaye aboute tenne of the clocke in the mornynge from Grauesende to strowde towardes Rochester and aboute foure of the clocke in the after noone of the same day he arriued at strowde nere vnto Rochester The dukes marchinge frō strowde to Rochest hauinge wyth him the captayne of the garde Griffith Morgan nowe bishop of Rochester The names of the gentlemen seruing vnder the duke Sir Edwarde Braye syr Iohn Fogge knightes Iohn Couerte Roger Appulton esquiers and Thomas Swan gentleman with certayne of the garde and other to the numbre of CC. or there aboute besides Bret and other
at any time towardes hys prince Wyat as is said was cō●mitted to the Tower So were diuers other gentlemen as sone ●fter was Henrye Graye duke of Suffolke his .ii. bretherne the duke being so hardly pursued by the lord Hastinges erle ●●●tingdon was by him appr●●hended in Leycetershire The duke of Suffolkes apprehension by the Erle of Hūtīgdon wherby he declared him selfe as wel in honour and vnspotted loyaltie as in parentage patrimonie to suc●ede his great grandfather y e lord Hastinges whose fidelite and stedfast trueth towardes kinge Edwarde the fourthe and his chyldren the Cronicles reporte to his immortall hon●ure Of the common people there were suche a numbre taken in the chase by the Earle of Penbroke that besides the vsuall gailes sundrie chur●hes in Lon●don were made places for their sau●garde tyl order was taken for their enlargement The duke was arrayned by his Perres and by verdit foūde ●●●tie of tre●son before the du●● 〈◊〉 Norff. beinge lorde Cunsta●●● and that daye his Iudge 〈◊〉 he and his brother Tho●●s at seuerall dayes made 〈◊〉 ende at Tower hyll by 〈◊〉 of their heades Sundrie 〈◊〉 of Wyates complices be●●ge arrained and condemne● 〈◊〉 their confession of trea●●● suffered in diuer● partes of 〈◊〉 ●hyre a● Hen●ye 〈◊〉 ●●●ghte Thomas I●leye hys 〈◊〉 and Water Mantel at 〈◊〉 where Wyat firste 〈◊〉 his s●anderde 〈◊〉 ●●eue● William his bro●●●r with another of the 〈◊〉 ●t Seuenockes Bret at 〈◊〉 ha●●inge in ●haynes● 〈◊〉 of the common sorte verye 〈◊〉 were executed saue onely 〈◊〉 he ●●slyked the sa●e and 〈◊〉 howe ●enitent and s●row●●●● he was therfore Certayne wordes proceding from Wyat at hys arraynem●●t My Lordes I muste confesse my selfe giltie as in the ende trueth must ●●forse me to saye and that I 〈◊〉 iustly plagued for my sīnes 〈◊〉 m●st greuouslye I haue 〈◊〉 agayn●t God who 〈◊〉 suffe●ed me to fal into this beastlye bruti●h●nesse and horri●●e offense of treason And loe in me the like ende as all sorthe that haue attēpted like enterprises from the beginning haue 〈◊〉 For peruse the Cronicles throughout and you shal finde 〈◊〉 rebelliō neuer from the beginning 〈◊〉 ●nder●●andyng the gre●● 〈◊〉 ●●nour and suerty 〈◊〉 this realm● shall receyue 〈◊〉 ma●●●ge if it shal please 〈◊〉 Que●n● to be mercyfull to 〈◊〉 ●h●re is no man liuing th●● 〈◊〉 more trustie and sayth●●●●● 〈◊〉 ●●rue her grace no no● 〈◊〉 r●●die to die at her high●●●●●ote● what so euer the qu●●●● 〈◊〉 ●hus ●●rre touchinge Wy●●s wordes at his arrayne●●●t I thought not super●●u●●● hereto reporte to the ende th●t all other blindly fallen int●●he ●●●●e errour woulde by the example of Wyat 〈◊〉 also ●●th ●im to repentaunce aswel ●●●●ss●nge to the worlde with ●●en voyce their detestable misc●●●fe as also from the ver●e ●●rge suche as were in prison in 〈◊〉 countrey for that offense ●●inge of no smale numbre but ●nd to compou●de by their dis●●●tion with the offenders accordinge to the qualitie of their offenses Which maner of order ●●ing not hard of in y ● like case or at the lea●t verye rarelye declared a singular clemencie and ●enignitie in the queene that ●eing folowed so cruelly wolde y●t be so moued with pitie as t● vouchsafe to answere them with suche lenitie in the executinge of so fewe in comparison to so great a nūbre so large a ●ause beinge all in her graces mercy to dispose at her plesure ● beside suffre the rest to escape with so smale abashement of ●heir countenaunce after so hainous ●ffense 〈◊〉 th●t shall peruse this storye diligentlye and co●sider al partes therof exactlye with remembraunce of thinges past sithence the beginning of the queenes moste happye raygne must of force recogni●e of what condition so euer he be the magnificence mercie and fortitude of this moste noble princesse as from time to time with such pacience to indure so great malice of her owne subiectes with suche lenitie to forbeare the reuenge of so intollerable outrage with suche mercie in the ende to pardon and remit ●o haynous and great offendours Happie was it w t those haynous offendours that her graces moste worthie and honourable counsell were so agreable to her vertuous inclination as inclined rather to pursue mercifull pardon for continuaunce of life then to prosecute reuenge by ●xecution of death It is to be w●●hed by all good men with one assent that prouoked with so great clemencie these degenerates reforme thē selues and forbeare thus to attempt so gracious a princesse vnto whom by gods authoritie the sworde is not vaynly committed leste thereby they procure to thē selues damnation in sekinge by suche outrage theyr owne deathe and confusion From the desier wherof we see by a numbre of euident argumentes the queenes highnes and her honourable counsell to be so farre as by all meanes they can imagine they seeke t● e●●hewe that they by moste wylfull and malicious meanes folowe to their subuersion ¶ An earnest conference with the degenerates and sedicious for the searche of the cause of their greate disorder HEre I purpose to shut vp this tragicall treatise touchinge the displayinge of Wyat and hys aduenture and yet not to ende my trauel concerninge the same but shall gladlye debate and conferre with thee louinge countreeman suche speciall and necessarie matter as further riseth therof tending as well to our mutual comfort presently as also to a generall doctrine to indure to oure posteritie not without presente terror to the wicked race whose hertes broile in desire to rebel Al which pointes this present storie doeth plēteouslye performe to him that listeth to learne Wherby first y ● good and godly may be comforted as by this experimente to consider howe God alwayes defendethe his chosen and electe vessell our moost gracious and mercifull princesse against the malitious and cruell assaultes of her ennemies be they neuer so craftie neuer so stronge And secondlye a generall doctrine therewith taughte or rather by newe experience renued so many times taughte before that the ineuitable end of rebellion is certein confusion to the rebel Of these two y e thirde necessarely springeth as a terrible prohibition in the heartes of the ●●cked neuer after to attempte ●●e lyke villanie against Gods ●●noynted wherof they can at ●o tyme skamble other part thē small confusion linked to perpetuall infamie And to make perfite impression herof in your ●eartes you degenerates that ●annot satisfie your selfes with so vertuous a prīcesse but thus ●rom time to time moleste her highnes w t seditious rumours vprores and rebellion I here ●ppeale to you chiefly require you to enter into the secrete clo●et of your owne heart and to ●onder with me in egall ballaunce of due consideration the incomparable vertue mercie and benignitie of this most worthy princesse oure queene with your owne mischiefe crueltie and intollerable malice And then let truth giue sentence whether this disorder groweth of ● lack in y e head or of a malicious corruptiō ī the mēbres Can
the nobilitie of the realme and the wholle counsell one or two onely except were agreable to his pretenced treason woulde with all theyr power strength further y e same which he found most vntrue to his subuersion And y t the lorde Aburgaueny the lorde Warden syr Robert Southwell high shyreffe with al other gentlemen wold ioyne with him in this enterprise set theyr fote by his to repell the straungers This proclamation and such annexed persuasions made at Maydstone on the market day and in other partes of the shire had so wrought in the heartes of the people How Wyates vntrue persuasiōs abused the people that diuers which before hated him and he them were nowe as it seemed vpon this occasion mutually reconciled and sayd vnto hym Syr is your quarell onely to defend vs from ouerrunning by straū●gers and to aduaunce libertie and not agaynst the Queene No quod Wyat we mynde no thynge lesse than anye wise to touche her grace The nature of an heretike is to sai one thinge and thinke another but to serue her and honour her accordynge to our duties Well quod they geue vs then your hande we wyll sticke to you to deathe in this quarell That done there came to hym one other of good wealthe saying Syr quod he they saye I loue potage well I wyll sell all my spones and all the plate in my house rather than your purpose shall quayle and suppe my potage with my mouthe I trust quod he you wyll restore the right religion agayne Whiste quod Wyat you may not so much as name religion for that wil withdraw from vs the heartes of manye Wyates owne wordes to proue heresy to be the ground of his rebellion you must only make your quarrell for ouerrunnyng by straungers And yet to thee be it sayd in counsell as vnto my frende we mynde only the restitution of Gods word But no wordes By these his wordes it appeared that his principall intent was not to kepe out straūgers whiche commonlye doe not inuade to oure hinderaunce but by rebellion amongest our selues nor to aduaunce libertye whiche euer decayeth through treason but to aduaunce heresye the Lady regent of his life and doinges This same thursday as Wyat Thomas Isleye and others were occupied at Maydstone with proclamations to styrre the people suche lyke so were others his confederates occupied in like maner by proclamacions at Mylton Ashforde other townes in the East partes of the shyre Through whose allurementes the multitude were growen so earnestlye affected to Wyates purpose that they suffred maister Christopher Roper a man of good wurshyppe and so estemed of thē to be taken of Wyates ministers Thapprehē●sion of master Christopher Roper by y e rebels and caried out of the market place withoute any maner of rescue for that he hauinge his heart and eye full fixt vpon the Queene not onelye withstode the readinge of Wyates traiterous proclamation at Milton but also in y e same place proclaymed him and all hys traytours And beynge roughlye charged therewith by Wyat and other his galauntes when he was broughte to Rochester he answered master Christopher Ropers words to Wyat. this tonge spake it and doeth now auowe it They suffred maister Tucke also maister Dorrel of Calehyll being gentle men of good wurshyppe Thapprehē●sion of maister Tucke and maister Dorell and Iustices of peace to be taken oute of theyr houses by the rebelles and conueyed withoute anye maner of rescue in the daye tyme to Rochester beinge twentye miles distant where they wyth maister Roper were kepte as prisoners in greate daunger of life In lyke maner syr Henrye Isleye Antonye Kneuet William Kneuet with others were at Tunbrige Seuenocke and other townes in the West partes of the shyre styrrynge the people by alarummes drummes and praclamations Nowe ye shal vnderstād that the euening afore the publishing his pretence at Maydestone How Wyat wrote to the sheriffe of his entēt to styrre Wyat sent a letter by one Thomas Monde a man of muche honestie to sir Robert Southwell beyng Shreif of the shyre vnto whom long afore as I can vnderstāde he had neither spokē nor writtē other thē in defiaūce they beyng in contencion for maters of religion as it was saied Neuerthelesse to serue his purpose dissembling his great malice and haut courage he wrote a letter to him of suche effect as foloweth The effect of Wyates letter to sir Robert Southwell Shreif of Kent After heartie commendations there hath been betwene you and me many quarelles and grudges and I euer the sufferer and yet haue you sought the ende whiche is nowe frendlye offered vnto you if you bee willing to receiue it But whatsoeuer priuate quarell you haue to me I doubte not but youre wysdome is to muche seyng so manye perilles at hand to vs both this pretensed mariage taking effect to dissent from vs in so necessarie a purpose as wherin we nowe determine to entre for the common wealthe of the whole realme And that you may the better vnderstand our pretence I send you the copy of our proclamation comprehending the somme and effect of our meaning● whervnto if the commen wealth shal fynde you an enemie saye not hereafter but that you were frēdly warned● we forbeare to write to the lorde Aburgaueny for what you may do with him if you list we know The style of wyates proclamation A proclamation agreed vnto by Thomas Wyat George Harper Henrye Isleye Wyates fals● presumption of the best of the shyre knightes and by diuers of the best of the shyre sent vnto the commons of the same FOrasmuche as it is now spred abrode certainly pronounced by the lorde Chauncelour and other of the counsell of the Qnenes determinate pleasure to marry w t a straūger ce we therfore write vnto you because you bee oure neighbours because you be our frendes Because and because you be Englishemen that you wyll ioyne with vs as we wil with you vnto death in this behalfe protestyng vnto you before God that no other yearthly cause could moue vs vnto this enterprise but this alone wherein we seke no harme to the quene but better counsel coūselours Such coūselours he meaneth a● woulde fauour heresy ce which also we would haue forborne in all other thinges saue onely in this For herein lieth the helth welth of vs al. For trial herof manyfest profe of this intended purpose Lo now euen at hand Lo loud lie Spaniardes be nowe already ariued at Douer at one passage to the nombre of an hundreth passing vpwarde to London in companies of ten foure and vi with harnes harquebusses and morrians with match light the formest company wherof be already at Rochester We shall require you therfore to repaire to such places as the bearers hereof shal pronoūce vnto you there to assemble determine what may be best for y e aduauncement of
dīmed with such a fond mist. For if they ment to resist strāgers as thei mind nothing lesse thei wolde thē prepare to go to the sea coastes not to the quenes most roial person with such a cōpany in armes weapō Ye can cōsider I trust this noble gētlemā the lord Aburgaueny here presēt being of an aūciēt great parētage born amōg you such other gentlemē as you se here which be no strāgers vnto you my selfe also although a pore gētlemā who I trust at no time hath abused you hath sōwhat to lose aswel as thei wold be as loth to be ouer run with stāgers as thei if any such thing were ment But for that we know most certēly that ther is ment no maner of euil to vs by those strā●gers but rather aide profit cōfort against other strangers our aūcient enemies with whō they as most arrāt degenerate traitors do in dede vnkindly vnnaturally ioine we in her graces defēse wil spēde both life what we haue beside to the vtter most peny against thē Wel I can no more now sai vnto you but vnderstāding y e quenes highnes as a most merciful prīcesse to be ones again determined to pardon as many as by their traiterous deceitfull proclamatiōs other illusiōs wer allured to this last treasō so they repaire to their habitations within xxiiii houres after her graces proclamation read become true subiectes to her gra●e to aduise such as hath taken part with those traitours or haue withdrawē them selues cōtrary to their allegiaūce frō the aiding seruing of their soueraigne accordīg to their duties against her enemies thākefullye to accept imbrace her most gracious pardō vse meanes of thē selues to apprehend those arrant and principall traitours and make a present of them to the quenes highnes or leaue thē to thē selfes as most detestable traitors who beīg once so graciously mercifully forgeuē could not but cary the clem●●cie of the same in their hartes to the furtherance of all obedience whiles thei liued if ther had been any spark of grace in thē And further I haue to say vnto you y t as these traitors by their proclamatiōs w tout authoritie haue moued you to styr against the quene your soueraigne apointed you placꝭ wher to mete cōsult for y e furtherāce of their traiterous purpose to brīg with you such aid as you cā so shal I require you in her graces name charge you that be here present not to come there but that you such as be absent taking knowledge herby repair to such places as I the quenes shireffe officer shal appoint you with such ayde as you can bring for the better seruice of the quene the shyre where you shal be assured to receyue comforte thankes and honestie to th ende of your liues and your posteritie And thother waye but endles shame and vtter vndoinge to you and yours whiche shall be worste to your selues and yet a greate griefe to vs your neyghbours whose aduise in al other your priuate causes you haue been content to folowe nowe in this waightiest that hathe or maye happen to you wyll refuse vs and folow them that hathe euer abused you to your and thei vtter confusion At Mallynge the seuen and twenteth daye of Ianuarye Anno Mariae primo God saue Queene Marye and all her well wyllers The shiriffe reading this exhortation caused one Barrham a gentilman and seruaunt to the lord Aburgau●ny to pronounce it as he reed it so loude and soo distinctlie as the people assembled rounde aboute him to a verie great nomber in maner of a ring mighte easlie here and vnderstand euerie word proceding frō Barrham who of his owne head cried out vnto them You maye not so muche as lyfte vp your finger against your kinge or quene And after the people had heard the Shiriffes exhortation cried God saue quene Marie whiche they did moost hertely spending therin a conuenient tyme the shiriffe vsed these wordes vnto them Maisters quod he althoughe I alone did speake vnto you yet what wordes were spoken too you by me were also spoken to you by the lorde Aburgauenye and all the gentilmen here present The sh●riffes spech to the multitude in whose persons I then spake and now require at your handes a plaine and resolute aunswere Will you nowe therfore ioyne with suche as you s●e euidentlie to be arrāt traitors orels with the lorde Aburgauenie and suche gentilmen as you see here present that wil lyue dye with you in defense of oure rightfull quene againste these traitors The people with one voice defied Wyat and his complices The peoples āswee● to the sheriffe as arrant traitours and saied that they nowe well espied they hadde but abused them Wherfore in defense of quene Marie they woulde dye vpon them expressinge their mindes with suche earnest shoutes and cries as shewed to procede vnfainedly frō their hartes which after was confirmed by a better experience the day folowing as ye shall anone here But by the waye ye shall vnderstande that Wyat heringe of this proclamation saied I knowe that Barram well Wyates promise of barrams rewarde but yet I neuer tooke him to haue so wyde a throte if I lyue I maye happen to make him crowe a higher note in a nother place What trowe ye should then haue become of the authour In the Sundaye followinge the lorde Aburgaueny the shiriffe and the rest of the gentilmen were determined to haue merched in the morninge earelye towardes Rochester to haue aided the duke of Norfolke and sir Henrye Gerningham captain of the garde then being at Grauesend towardes Wyat with a certain bande of whitecotes to the nomber of .vi. C. sent vnto them frō London The duke of Norf sir Henrye Gernīghās comminge to Grauesende wherof Breet and others were their captaines Roger Ap●ulton and Thom●s Swa●●rustie gētilmē Roger Appulton gentilman was also at Grauesende with the duke attendant to serue where in lykewyse was Thomas Swan gentilman This satterdaye at night the lorde Aburgaueny suspectinge that Wyat and hys complices liynge within foure myles of them and beinge so muche prouoked in that they were in the day so rightly set forthe in their coloures at Malling would for reuēge worke some anoyaūce to thē or his bande y t nighte either by a cāmasado or by some other meane did therfore to preuent the same set a strong watche in in the market place at Malling and other partes of entrie into the towne The lorde Aburgaueny set the watch ī persone and gaue the watch word him selfe before he would take any rest But betwene one two of the clocke in the night when euerie bodye was taken to rest sauing the watche there happened a larom A larom at Malling sundry cryeng treason treason we are all betraied in such a sort that such as were
pompe and glory cariyng with him vi pieces of ordinaūce whiche they had gotten of the quenes besides their owne to Cowling castle a holde of the Lorde Cobhams foure myles distant from Rochester and not much out of their way towards London where the lord Cobhā was Wyat at his comming to Cowling castle bent his ordinaunce against the gate with great and sundry shottes fyre ●rake and burned vppe a waye ●hrough the gate The Lorde Cobham defended his castle as stoutly as any man might do hauing so fewe against so great a numbre and so litle munition him selfe discharging his gunne at suche as approched the g●te right hardely And in that assault two of his own men were slaine After this assault talk with the lorde Cobham Wyat marched to Grauesende where he reposed that night wyates marchīg to Dartforde From Grauesende he his bande marched the wednesday nexte after to Dartford where he reposed that night whether came sir Edwarde Hastinges maister of the Quenes horse and sir Thomas Cornewalles knightes The comming of the maister of the horse sir Thomas Cornewalles to Wyat. both of her graces honorable preuie counsell sent frō the qnene to Wyat tunderstand the cause of his commotion and ●lso as it was sayde finding any repentant submissiō in him to promise pardon or at the lest great hope therof Wyat vnderstāding their cōming taking with him certen of his bād wēt to the weast ende of the towne where he had planted his ordinaūce at the lighting of maister Hastinges sir Thomas Cornewalles frō their horsse Wyat hauing a parte sin in hys hād aduanced him selfe sōwhat afore suche gentlemen as were with him Prid●● vsing but litle reuerence due frō a subiect to coūselours traced nere them to whō the maister of the horsse spake in substaunce as foloweth The quenes maiestie requireth to vnderstand the very cause wherfore you haue thus gathered together in armes her liege people whiche is the part of a traitour and yet in your proclamations and persuasions you call your selfe a true subiecte which can not stande together I am no traitor quod Wyat the cause wherfore I haue gathered the people is to defend the realme frō ouerūning by straungers whiche muste folowe this mariage takinge place why ꝙ the queenes agentes there be no strangers yet come whome eyther for power or nūbre ye nede to suspect But if this be your only quarrell because ye mislike the mariage wyl ye come to communication touching that case and the quene of her gracious goodnes is content ye shal be hearde Wyates arrogant aun●●●●●● To whom Wyat shaped 〈…〉 declare his malicious entent traiterous heart to the quenes owne person and royall estate I yelde therto quod Wyat but for my suertie I wyl rather be trusted then trust And therfore I demaunde the custodie of the tower her grace in the tower the displacing of certen coūsellers and placing other in their rowmes as to me shall seeme best Upon this leude answere long stout cōference was betwene them In so muche that the maister of the horsse said vnto him with a s●out corage wyat before thou shalt haue that thy traiterous demaūde graūted thou shalt die and xx M. with thee Shortly after the maister of y e horsie with maister Cornewalles finding him an arrant traitour desperatly set to al mischiefe retour●ed to the quenes maiestie The cōmō people being with him calling to their remēbrance how Wyat in al apparance made his whol matter of styr for strāgers no waies against the quene perceiuing how vnreuerently he vsed him selfe aswel to y ● quenes harrold at Rochester as to y ● priuie coūsel at Dartford cōsidering w t thē selues also that he wold suffer none of the quenes proclamatiōs to be read amōg them their heartes began to rise against him And among thē selues sūdrie of thē much murmured wisshinge with the losse of al thei had thei had neuer been acquainted with Wyat nor his doinges and in dede sought as ●any waies as thei could to be rid of him Whiche perceiued by ●●at and his mates they deuis●d a brute to be sounded in his hande that the lorde Abur●aueny A craftie policie the shireffe did cause to be hanged as many as they c●●lde take coming frō Wyates ●●nde Wherewith the people s●●●●ing in a great mase what t● do were wonderfullye per●●●●ed The queene vnderstan●●●● by the master of the horsse ●nd sir Thomas Cornewalles the arr●gancie of Wyat and ●otwithstanding that she perceyued her merciful inclination rather to prouoke him then otherwise yet semed she nothing willinge euen then by violence and force as she easly mought t● suppresse him But yet a longer time to suffer and abide by delay and mercy her enemy mought be wonne to reconciliation The nobilitie whiche wer● at that time with her grace The suit of the nobles to the quene pe●●ceiuinge such surmounting mercie rather to increase then any● wayes to abate courage malice in the insolent and proud● heart of th● traytours and further vnderstandinge that the traitours demed the con●ation or forbearing to procede rathe● of debilitie feare then o● mercye and clemencye counselled with her grace that wi●● her gracious leaue and licence they mought se● vpon him and his bāde before he should pass● Blacke heath declaring that to suffre suche an arrogant traytour beinge but a meane ●●m●er to approche thus contemp●●●uslye so nere her royall per●on as it were in defiaunce of ●er grace her true subiectes ●houlde greatlye redounde to their dishonours in the opinion of all faithfull men thoroughout the world The Quenes answer to the nobles The quene gaue them all moste heartie and louing thankes sayinge that she nothinge doubted of their true heartes towarde her Yet was she lothe to make anye profe or triall therof in suche quarell as shoulde be with losse of bloude For to represse them with violence and subdue them by the sworde coulde not haue so happie successe but manye of my pore subiectes quod she should derelye bye it with the losse of their liues Wherfore she determined to suffer as longe as she mought and to forbeare that practise tyl there were no other hope ne remedie For albeit in the capitall traytours ther● coulde be but great default yet in the multitude she was persuaded to be no malice but onlye misled by their captaynes and rather seduced by ignoraunce then vpon any euyl purpose ment to her grace Wherfore she desired them to be contented for she was fully determined to continue her mercifull sufferaunce and other her gentle meanes soo longe as shee mought and vanquish her enemies without the sword if any spar●le of obedience or naturall zeale remaine in their heartes Notwithstanding she required 〈◊〉 to prepare and retayne 〈◊〉 force in a readines if their ●●●●e heartes should driue her 〈◊〉 vse extremitie But her highnes
doubtynge 〈◊〉 London beinge her chamber and a citie holden of dere price in her princelye hearte ●ight by Wyat and suche Ruf●ens as were with him bee in daunger of spoyle to the vtter ruyne of the same her highnes therefore as a moste tender and louinge gouernesse went the same daye in her royall person to the guilde halle to forsee those perylles where amonge other matters procedinge from her incomparable wisedome The Quenes spe●he in the guild halle in London her grace declared how she had sent that day two of her priuie counsell to the traitour Wyat desireous rather to quiet thy● tumulte by mercie then by iustice of the sword to vanquishe whose most godly heart fraight with all mercie clemencie abhorred frō al effusion of bloud Her highnes also there shewed the insolent and proud answere retourned from Wyat. Wherat the faithful citezens wer much offended and in playne termes defied him as a most ranke traitour with all his coniurates And touching the mariage her highnes affirmed that nothing was done therin by her selfe alone but with consent and aduisement of the whole counsell vpon deliberate consultation that this coniunction and seconde mariage shoulde greatly aduaunce this realme where●nto she was firste maried to much honour quiet and gaine For quod her grace I am alreadie maried to this commonw●ale and y e faythful membres of the same the spousall rynge whereof I haue on my fynger which neuer hitherto was nor shal hereafter be leaft of Protes●inge vnto you nothinge to be more acceptable to my hart nor more aunswereable to my wyl then youre aduauncement in w●alth and welfare with th●●●●theraunce of Gods glorye ●nd to declare her tender and princely heart towardes them ●he promised constantlye not to d●part from them although by her counsell she had been muche ●●ued to the contrarye but woulde r●maine nere prest to aduenture the spense of her royall bloude in defense of them Suche matter passed from her besides as did so wonderfullye ●●amour the heartes of the hea●ers as it was a world to heare with what shoutes they exalted the honour and magnanimitie of Queene Mary This done her grace retourned towardes white hall and passinge thorowe the streates beinge full of people pressynge to beholde her grace wherein they hadde singular delite and pleasure One amongest all moste im●udent of all others stepped fourth sayinge A male part artificer youre grace maye doe well to make youre forewarde in battayll of your Byshoppes and Priestes for they be trusty and wyll not ●●●eyue you For whiche wordes he was commaunded to ●ewgate who deserued to be ●●nged at the nexte boughe for ●xample of all other so impudentlye and arrogantlye to assaulte hys Soueraygne and Queene with suche seditious and trayterous language The voyce went y t he was an hosier out of al doubte he was a traitour an heretike whose ●eart was whollye in Wyates bosome althoughe hys bodye was absēt● For it was not possible any faithful subiect or true christian to vtter suche shamelesse speche to his liege Ladye and Princesse as he dyd then But suche is the fruite of heresie contempt of God and man as by dayly experience is seene The Thursdaye nexte after Wyat hauing xliij ensignes in his bande Wyates marchinge to Detford strande and not paste foure thousande men although they were accompted of a far greater numbre marched to Detforde strande eight miles from Dartforde and within foure miles of London Where vpon suche aduer●isement as he receyued by spiall of the queenes beinge in the Guilde hall and the order of the people to her he remained that night and the next whole daye diuerse of his owne companye doubtinge by his longer tar●ynge there then he did in other places with other presūptions that he wolde haue passed the water in to Essex His prisoners as ma●●●er Christopher Roper George Dorrel of Calehil Iohn Tucke Esquiers The departing of maister Christopher Rop. and maister Dorrel frō Wyat. who were kepte verye straitlye beinge sickelye and hauinge within the towne no conuenient harborowe or attendaunce were licensed by Wyat vpon promisse of theyr wurshyppe to bee trewe prisoners to prouide for them selues out ●rom the towne where they best might But they thinking no part of their worshyppe stained in breakīg promise with a traitour soughte wayes to escape came no more at him On the Saterdaye folowinge verye earlye Wyates marchinge to So●thwarke Wyat marched to Southwarke wher approchinge the gate at London bridge fote called for the openinge of the same whiche he founde not so readie as he loked for After he had been a litle while in Southwarke diuerse of the souldiers wente to Winchester place where one of them beinge a gentleman beganne to shewe hys game before all the cardes were full dealed I meane to riff●e and spoyle whiche in dede was the determinate ende of theyr purpose but the time was not yet come not thei come to the place where they shoulde beginne it Whervnto Wyat hauynge further respecte then the younge gentleman hadde shewed hym selfe with sterne and fiery visage so muche to bee offended with his doinges that he made diuers beleue that he woulde haue hanged him vppon the wharffe Whiche wherof it grewe eyther of hatred to the euill or of pollicie to purchace credite to a further mischeif as wel the nature and course of rebellion as also Wyates owne wordes may easly let vs tunderstand Who the mondaye nexte afore his sturre deuising with two of his frēdes for the execution of his pretended purpose one of thē at lēgth said vnto him I haue no doubt but you shal be able to assemble a great force but howe you shal be able to continue the same with you hauing not sufficient treasure and monye the onlye baite wherwith the multitude is holdē I stand much in doubt what then quod Wyat● Marye saied the other me thinketh a good waye for your prouision therof after youre force is once gathered that ye apprehend the lorde Warden the lorde Aburgaueny sir Robert Southwel sir Thomas Moyle with other of whose heartes and affection towarde you and your case you stande in doubt wherby ye shal not onlye haue them in saftie whiche are most like within the shire to withstande your enterprise but also prouide you bothe treasure and money which they wante not for the relief of your bande Ah quod Wyat is this the best counsell ye can geue If we pretende to kepe out straūgers begyn our quarel with the spoile of our owne countreymē what wil the whole realme trowe ye then deme of vs Nay your aduice is nought youre waye the nexte waye to accelerate our confusion For if we will go forwarde in our matter and make the best of it to our purpose spoile and tirannye may not be our guides We must by all meanes deuise and al litle inoughe to cōtinue good opinion in the heades of the multitude of some
plausible ende to succede by our sturre otherwise we vndoe our selues For perceiuinge at our entrie y t our myndes runne of spoile who wil not rather resist vs abide the aduēture of that wherof we beare them in hande then to be in certeine to be spoyled by vs And I see no cause whye you shoulde doubte of want of money seinge ye knowe that suche gentlemen as are confedered with vs keping appointment their souldiours shall come redie furnished to beare theire owne charges for .ix. dayes and our happe shall be verie harde if we be not at London shortlye after we stirre and that with so great a company as shal be oute of daunger to be stopped by any of the shire vpon suche a soden or letted of entrie into London finding halfe the frindes there as we thinke to haue Wyates rekening of y e spoile of the tower and London And being ones in London hauinge the tower in our hādes I trust you thinke we shall not lacke money longe after if any be to be had there or in the Aldermens coffers To that saied the other that hadde spoken as yet neuer a worde I knowe commoners in London that haue more redy money then some of the Aldermenne Softe quod Wyat I praye you in any wyse forbeare all suche talke till we come to y e place wher we would be In mean time let vs worke secretly and by all tokens and signes shewe our selues to fauoure and mainteine oure pretence of straungers only Such and the lyke cōmunication was betwene Wyat and two other the mondaye before his rysing Wherby is euident that theire finall entent was to aduaunce them selues by spoyle of other men●es goodes although they pretended otherwise And to coloure the same Wyat so fell out with this gētelman for riffling the lorde Chauncelours house that he made a number beleue he woulde haue hanged him out of hande had not Bret and other entreated for him When thei had lien in Southwarke a day or two and foūde them selues deceiued in Londō whiche by the greate diligence and politike handlinge of that worthye and faiethfull knighte the lorde William Haward Admiral of England The Lorde Williā Haward admiral of Englande that had the speciall charge therof with the aide of sir Iohn Whight knight maiour of Londō his brethern and citezens was so well preserued as the traitours therby were disappointed of that they loked moost certenly for Wyat as a man desperate and setting all the sixe and seuen aduenturing the breaking downe of a wall out of an house ioyning to the gate at the bridge foote Wyates cō●minge into the porters lodge at y e bridge fote wherby he moughte enter into the leades ouer the gate came downe into the lodge aboute a leauen of the clocke in the night where he founde the porter in a slomber Care away and his wife with other wakinge watchinge a cole But seing Wyat they began sodenly to start as greatly amased Whist quod Wyat as you loue your lyues sit you still you shal haue no hurt Gladde were they of that warrant pardye What should they do people better accustomed with y e tankerd of beere to passe furth the night then acquainted with target and speare to indure to fight Wyat a fewe with him went furthe as farre as the drawe bridge on the further side wherof he sawe the lorde Admirall the lorde Maiour sir Andrewe Iudde and one or two other in consultation for ordering of the bridge wherunto he gaue diligent eare a good time and not seene At length conceiued by their talke moore then he could digest perceauinge the great ordinaunce there bent retorned saiynge to his mates this place is to hotte for vs. And when he was come to his colleges and declaringe vppon this exployte what he had hearde and seene they then altogether fell to a newe counsell what was to be done The rebels at their wittes ende Some woulde then retourne to Grenewiche and so passe by water into Eliex wherby their company as ●hey thought shoulde encrease and inter into London by Algate And some woulde to Kingston vpon Teames and so further West And some of the whiche Wyat him selfe was chiefe wold retourne into Kent to me●te with the Lorde Aburgauen●e the Lorde Warden the shyreffe sir Thomas Moyle sir Thomas Kēpe sir Thomas Finch that were at Rochester cōming on Wyates backe w t a great cō●pany wel appoynted falsly persuading him selfe y t he shuld find amonge them mo frendes then enemies But whether his desyre to returne into Kent grew vpon hope he hadde to fynde ayd there or whether it was to shifte him selfe awaye it was much doubted of his owne companye And some of them that knewe him well excepte they were muche deceyued reported not longe before their execution that his desier to retire into Kent was onelye to shyfte hym selfe ouer the sea The Lorde Warden beynge nowe come to Rochester as ye hearde The Lorde Wardens beinge at Rochester towardes Wyat. and verye honourably furnished with horse and men well appoynted to no smale nūbre enteringe in consultation with suche gentlemen as were there for the better procedynge in their seruice shewed a great desier to accelerate the onset vpon the traitours least malice shuld impute both his former present staye rather to want of forwardnesse then to good policie Wherefore he desyred to pursue after them with all expeditiō Whervnto y e gentlemen then being in armes with him sayde As for your Lordshyps contation hetherto it shal be weyed not as fooles by fansye malice deme but as wyse mē shall measure it by theyr discretion of wisdom We see not but vnaduised hardinesse preproperous haste in moste matters haue these two cōpanions Errour in the beginning Repe●taūce in y e end And for this our case who so vnderstandeth the same can not but confesse your lordships deliberate forbearing to haue proceded of great wysdome as wherin hast coulde litel preuayle And wheras your lordshippe is so d●sirous to pursue after Wyat and his bande you see howe they haue lyen in Southworke and within four miles of London these foure dayes● and yet not medled with by the queenes armie beyng so nere Which is neither for want of men nor of forwardnesse in that noble gentleman the earle of Penbroke the queenes leiuetenant The earle of Penbroke the quenes leuetenaunt but vpon greate policie further respecte no doubt then we seeme to conceyue Wherfore your lordshippe may doe better to pause and fyrst to aduertise the queenes maiestie and the lord leiuetenaunt both what your lordeshyppe vpon graue and depe consideration hath conceyued in this doubtfull time and also in what readinesse your lordshippe is and other gentlemen with you whose pleasures knowen we maye then happelye procede in seruice bothe with good conte●●tacion to them aboue and best suertie for our selues Otherwise if fortune shoulde not fauour our iourneye
the high merites and incomparable mercie of so gracious a princesse as God hathe appointed nowe to ●ouerne ouer vs. I here wyll end as one pitiyng your former case and yet not despairinge your better gouernaunce here after FINIS ¶ 〈…〉 sette furth within the booke THe 〈◊〉 nature of heresie ●●olio i Here●●e the specia● grou●●e of wyat is 〈◊〉 Eodem Rebellion the ref●ge of he●●●ikes 10. W●atts repaire to Londo● fol. il Wyates returne into Kent eodem Wyates first stirre at Maydstone fo ● Why wyat made not religion the pretence of his rebellion ●odem The colour of wyates rebellion ●odē Wyates preparatiue to rebellion fo 4 Wyat vseth vntrue persuasions to further his rebellion eodem The people abused by wyates vntrue persuasions fol. v The nature of an heretike is to say one thing and thinke another eodem ●yates owne wordes proue heresie to be the grounde of his rebellion eodē Heresie the rule and guide of wyates life folio vi Maister Christopher Koper apprehended by the rebelles ●odem 〈…〉 eod 〈…〉 Kopers wordes to 〈◊〉 eodem 〈◊〉 Tucke and mai●●er Dorrel of 〈◊〉 apprehēded by y e rebels fo v●● ●●●tes letter to sir Robert South●●ll sh●re●f of Kent eodem ●yat● falsly presumeth of the best of ●he shire fol. vi●● ●●at wishyng to the Quene bet●●●●●●●●ellours meaneth suche as wou●● 〈◊〉 heresie fol. ix 〈◊〉 loudlye touching the arriual 〈…〉 ●odem The 〈◊〉 answer to the bringer of 〈◊〉 ●●tter fol. x 〈◊〉 ●nd his complices noted by the 〈…〉 traitours x● The ●hir●if gathereth power for the ●● 〈…〉 traiterous pretēce 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and other mete wyate fol. xii 〈◊〉 t●●eth frō al passengers passing 〈…〉 their weapon eod 〈◊〉 writeth to Isley the Kneue●te● 〈◊〉 o●●er to h●●t their commyng vnto 〈◊〉 eodem 〈◊〉 ●●hort●cion made by the sherif ●● 〈◊〉 refelling wyates traiterous 〈◊〉 fol. xvii Wyat defyed by the people as a trayt●●● fol. xxvi 〈◊〉 D●●e of Northfolke sent against wyat fol. xxvii 〈◊〉 ●h●ndreth whiterotes sent from 〈◊〉 against wyat eodem The lor●● Aburgaueny setteth a watc●● in Malling eodem A 〈◊〉 larum in the night at Mal●●●● eodem The ●●b●lles int●nde to burne maister 〈◊〉 Clerkes hou●e fol. xxviii 〈◊〉 rebelles dare not encounter with 〈…〉 Aburgauenie vpon Bar●ow 〈◊〉 ●odem 〈◊〉 rebelles ouertaken by the lord 〈◊〉 at Blacksoll feilde i● the 〈…〉 fol. ●xx T●e ●ebels put to flight at 〈…〉 eodem 〈◊〉 ●●●elles horsemen chase●●rom Blacksolfe ●d to Harley wo● fo 〈◊〉 〈…〉 Isley his flight into 〈◊〉 eodem 〈…〉 reuiued fol. ●●● ●yates letter to y e duke of suff fo x●●● Wyat●s letter to ●●e duke of norf fo●●● 〈◊〉 against the neuters eodē Good to slepe in a whol skin fol. xiv The consultation of the rebels after the reuolt of the whitecotes eodem The rebelles opinion of their owne wisdome fol. xlvi● A 〈◊〉 to appreh●d the sh●rel fo xiv●● The misrekeninge of the rebelles for London eodem The ●ssault of Coulyng castel fol. 4● The ●●●●ing of sir Edward Ha●●inges and sir Thomas Corn●walles 〈…〉 eodem 〈◊〉 proude answere to sir Ed●●●●● Hastinge● c. fol. xli● ● motion of the nobles to the Quene fol. li The ●●●nes ans●ere to her noble● fol. ●●● The Q●eenes sp●che in the Guyld● halle fol. lii● A ma●e part artificer fol. liii● 〈◊〉 marchynge to Detfo●●e 〈◊〉 fol. ●● 〈◊〉 ●eparting of mai●ter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 courage dieth fol. lxv●●● 〈…〉 suffred with y e fore part of his 〈…〉 through the horsmē● 〈◊〉 The Lorde Clinton marshal of th● 〈◊〉 fol. lxix wya● forsa●eth hys entended way● through Holborne eode●● The Lord Clinton deuideth Wya●● 〈◊〉 in two partes fol. lxx 〈…〉 Barkel●y ●nyght eod 〈◊〉 yeldeth hym selfe to an Harr 〈…〉 ●o l●● Rebels at the court gate eodem 〈…〉 shotte throug●●●he nose fo lxx●●● The Queenes wordes to them that crie● 〈…〉 eodem The Iud●●● syt in armour fo●●lxxiii The gar●inge and wa●●inge of the citie eodem The pra●se of the 〈◊〉 of Penbroke fol. lxxiiii wyat committed to the Tower eodē Henry Gray duke of Suff. and his ii brethren cōmitted to the Tower eod The prayse of the Lorde Ha●●ynges eodem ●yat arrained lxxv● ●●ates wordes at hys arrai●●ent ●od●m Of 〈◊〉 as did p●naunce by wearyng 〈…〉 before the Quene ●o ●xxvii The Queenes commission to diuer● of the shire to b●yle and sett● at large t●e ●risoners fol. lxxviii The Quee●es wonderfull mercye fol. lxxix Englande 〈◊〉 fo lxxxxi The earle of H●ntleys wordes to the duke of Sommerset fol. lxxxxiii Imprynted at London by Robert Caly within the precincte of the late dissolued house of the graye 〈◊〉 nowe conuerted to an Hospitall called Christes Hospitall The .xxii. daye of December 1554. Cum priuilegio ad impr●●●●● 〈…〉