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A52965 Rawleigh redivivus, or, The life & death of the Right Honourable Anthony, late Earl of Shaftsbury humbly dedicated to the protesting lords / by Philanax Misopappas. Philanax Misopapas.; S. N. 1683 (1683) Wing N72; ESTC R3409 90,509 250

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RAWLEIGH Redivivus OR THE Life Death OF THE Right Honourable ANTHONY Late EARL of SHAFTSBURY Humbly Dedicated to the Protesting Lords By Philanax Misopappas Virtuti Pompeij quae potest Par Oratio inveniri Cicero LONDON Printed for Thomas Malthus at the Sun in the Poultrey 1683. TO THE Most Illustrious and High-born Prince James Duke of Monmouth And to the Right Honourable Anthony Earl of Kent Theophilus Earl of Huntington William Earl of Bedford James Earl of Salisbury Gilbert Earl of Clare Thomas Earl of Stamford Robert Earl of Sunderland Arthur Earl of Essex Charles Earl of Macklesfield Charles Viscount Mordant Philip Lord Wharton William Lord Pagett Ford Lord Grey of Wark John Lord Lovelace Henry Lord Herbert of Cherbury Charles Lord Cornwallis Thomas Lord Crew Who enter'd their Protestation against the Lords rejecting the Impeachment of Edward Fitz-Harris and generously asserted the Commons Right to Impeach any Subject whatsoever Great Sirs THe following Tract humbly offered to your Lordships and for which the Author implores your Patronage is a brief but yet true and impartial History of the Life and Policies the Rise and Fortunes Troubles and Exit of the late Earl of Shaftsbury whose great Actions constant Loyalty and successful Councils certainly are worthy the transmitting to Posterity for whose sake as well as the vindicating his Name and Honour from the bold and confident although ridiculous and groundless Calumnies wherewith the Roman Achitophels have maliciously aspersed him I have endeavour'd to Decipher him and draw his Image according to the best of my skill although infinitely below his Deserts which justly merit the being pourtray'd by a more skilful hand and one whose extraordinary acquirements and admirable proficiency in Politicks renders capable of representing his Lordships wonderful Parts and Abilities in the most apt and lively Touches Especially in regard the malice of 〈…〉 hath somewhat 〈◊〉 his best Feature and un●●●fully sullyed the most Beautiful and Loyalest of his Actions My Lds. It was the extraordinary Endowments wherewith this Earl was inrich'd that drew upon him so much Envy and swell'd his Adversaries to such an heighth of Malice and Fury fearing lest he might prove their Rival and acquire a greater Interest in the Favour of his Soveraign then they were willing he should Or else it was his imitation of the magnanimous Roman who being Commanded by the Emperor to forbear coming to the Senate and threaten'd with Imprisonment if he presumed to appear in that Assembly boldly answer'd You may do as you will but I must do as I ought Nor had ever any Man larger Experience then his Lordship of the truth and reality of what the famous Sir Walter Raleigh so long since wisely observed That he who follows Truth too near at the Heels may have his Teeth struch out thereby and that he who goes after her oft loseth her sight and himself too Most Noble Patriots I acknowledge that it is no small persecution of your Illustrious Greatness to be thus troubled with the impertinent Address of one so much below you And am very sensible that the Generosity and good Nature of persons who like your selves shine with Glory and Splendor in a superiour Orb frequently draw upon them unnecessary and needless Dedications And therefore I should not have been guilty of presuming to six your Honourable Names to any trifle of mine had not the nature of the thing laid a kind of necessity upon me and furnished me with an unanswerable Argument and sufficient Apology for so doing May it please your Lordships You are all under the same Circumstances and you have like him adventur'd to stem the Stream and dared to be Virtuous when to be wicked and debauch'd is in Fashion And have presumed to be Loyal under the disadvantage of exposing your selves thereby to the malice and rage of a sort of Men who with an Hellish Industry have long endeavour'd to Metamorphise your very Virtues into Vices and Transubstantiate your Loyalty into a Crime You have with a firm resolution and undaunted courage opposed in the very face of danger the ambitious and growing designs of a bloody and malicious Crew who have Burned our City Assassinated our Magistrates Forged Shame Blots and invented Meal-Tub Conspiracies to ruine our Nobility and Gentry And if Divine Goodness had not protected us and disappointed them would have murther'd our Soveraign Massacred our Persons Extirpated our Religion Plunder'd our Houses seized our Estates trampled upon our Laws inslaved our Wives and Children and subjected our Posterity to a Bondage infinitely worse then that of Egypt And whatsoever is Sacred and Dear to us as English Men or Christians must have been sacrific'd to their Revenge for the satiating whereof and to give vent to their fury they would have turn'd the Paradise of the World into an Acheldama And moreover my Lords his Enemies are your Enemies his Reproaches are all directed at and centre in You. You were all to be involved in the same Guilt and made Parties in the same pretended Conspiracy And You were by an imaginary Power derived from that Infallible Fop the Pope all condemned to the same Fate in the secret Consults and private Cabals of Rome as appears by the Scheme found in the Meal-Tub and afterwards more fully discovered by Mr. Dangerfield Nor is it unworthy Your consideration that the time when that cursed Conspiracy was hatching and some Circumstances in the management thereof renders it not altogether improbable that it derived its Original from and was ingaged in upon the success of a certain Story upon the account whereof the greatest of You stands at this day strip'd of all Your Honorary Places But that which further encourag'd me to make this Address to Your Lordships was Your being his intimate Acquaintance and constant Companions his familiar Friends and only Associates with whom he maintained an exact Correspondence and almost daily conversed withal whereby You must necessarily be better acquainted with and have a clearer prospect of the Principles and Temper Designs and Inclinations of his Lordship than any of his detractors can possibly pretend to since many of them never had any personal knowledge of and much less intimate Acquaintance with him and most of them never saw him in their Lives Nor have many of his Accusers notwithstanding their formal and confident charging him with Treason ever born a Part or made a Figure large enough in the World to procure them admittance to his Person or imbolden them to appear in his presence or so much as exchange two words with him in their whole Lives You know his Loyal Behaviour towards and constant cleaving to the Interest of his Soveraign and are surviving Testimonies of the extraordinary Reverence and profound Veneration wherewith he always made mention of His Majesty whensoever you had occasion to speak of him in Your publick or private Discourses nor can You have forgotten his frequent lamenting his own unhappiness in being so strangely mis-represented
That he whose Counsels had been so successful in contriving His Restoration might be highly necessary and very much conduce to the Establishment of Him in His Kingdom and to shew the extraordinary Esteem he had for his Parts and Abilities he advanced him to be one of the first Rank in the Council placing him above his Royal Brother the Duke of Gloncester and even General Monke himself whom his Majesty use to 〈◊〉 Political Father And having in sundry respects saith Sir William Dugdale in his History of the Baronage of England whom we cannot suspect of Partiality manifested his Loyalty to Charles the First and his great Affection to his Country in the late perilous and difficult Times and likewise to our present Soveraign by his prudent and seasonable Advice and Consultation with General Monke in order to His Majesties Restoration in consideration of these his acceptable Services he was by Letters Patents bearing date at Westminster upon the 20th day of April in the Thirteenth Year of His Majesties Raign advanced to the Degree and Dignity of a Baron of this Realm by the Title of Lord Ashly of Wimbourne St. Giles and to the Heirs Males of his Body This Honour was conferred upon him in the Banqueting-House at White-hall three days before His Majesties Coronation in order to his assisting in the performance of that splendid Ceremony And when his Majesty was pleased to issue out the Grand Commission of Oyer and Terminer for the Trial of the Regicides directed to several Noble Persons choice was made of this Honourable Lord to be of the number of that Court his Majesty deeming him to be a Person whose Prudence and Loyalty render'd him as deserving of the Honour to which his Majesty therein preferred him as any other contained in that Commission And as if his Majesty had so high a Valuation for his Lordship that he thought his profound Parts and exemplary Loyalty merited a perpetual confluence of Royal Favours he raised him at several times to higher degrees of Honour making him Chancellor of his Exchequer Under-Treasurer of the Exchequer Lord Lieutenant of the County of Dorset and one of the Lord Commissioners of the Treasury But all these being too small to compensate his Merits and demonstrate the Royal Bounty and Princely Gratitude of his Soveraign whose Generous Nature inclines him to delight in nothing more then to reward like a King He was advanced to the Title and Dignity of an Earl being in the year 1672. created Earl of Shaftesbury and Lord Cooper of Paulet to him and the Heirs Males of his Body by Letters Patents bearing date at Westminster upon the 23 d. day of April in the Twenty Fourth Year of his Majesties Raign And in November following upon the Resignation of Sir Orlando Bridgeman his Majesty to gratifie the uninterrupted good Services of the Earl of Shaftesbury Chancellor of his Exchequer and one of the Lord Commissioners of the Treasury was pleased to give unto him the Keeping of the said Great Seal with the Title of Lord High Chancellor of England these are the words of the Gazette being the second Person that had enjoyed that Title since his Majesties Raign Whereby he was placed by his Great Master in the highest Orb that any Subject could possibly move in The Kings Conscience being as it were committed to his Care and Management And with what Prudence and Candour Honour and Integrity he acquitted himself in that great and weighty Imployment the Transactions of the Court of Chancery during the time of his Chancellorship will best testisie Justice then run in an equal Channel so that the Cause of the Rich was not suffer'd to swallow up the Rights of the Poor nor was the strong or cunning Oppressor permitted to devour the weak or unskilful Opposer but the abused found Relief suitable to their Distress and those by whom they were abused a severe Reprehension answerable to their Crimes The mischievous Consequences which commonly arise from the delays and other practices of that Court were by his ingenious and judicious Management very much abated and every thing weighed and determined with such an exact Judgment and Equity that it almost exceeds all possibility of belief And because the Traducers of this Lords Loyalty not only reproach him with the Tap which was an unquestionable Mark of Loyalty and Honour it being got in conducting his Majesty to his Crown and Kingdom but have likewise quarrel'd at his constant Faithfulness to the Royal Interest and endeavour'd to abuse every thing he did for his Majesties Service as they have done the speech he made to the Parliament upon the account of the Dutch War And that the World may see the temper of the Men and upon what ground it is they were his Enemies I have set down the Speech verbatim as follows My Lords and you the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commous THe King hath spoken so fully so excellently well and so like Himself that you are not to expect much from me There is not a word in His Speech that hath not its full weight And I dare with assurance say will have its effect with you His Majesty had called you sooner and His Affairs required it but that He was resolved to give you all the ease and vacancy to your own private Concerns and the People as much respit from Payments and Taxes as the necessity of His Business or their Preservation would permit And yet which I cannot but here mention to you by the Crafty insinuations of some ill affected persons there have been spread strange and desperate Rumours which your Meeting together this day hath sufficiently proved both malicious and false His Majesty hath told you that He is now engaged in an important very expensive and indeed a War absolutely necessary and unavoidable He hath referred you to His Declaration where you will find the Personal indignities by Pictures and Medals and other publique affronts His Majesty hath received from the States their Breach of Treaties both in the Surinam and East-India business and at last they came to that heighth of Insolence as to deny the honour and right of the Flag though an undoubted Jewel of this Crown never to be parted with and by them particularly owned in the late Treaty of Breda and never contested in any Age. And whilest the King first long expected and then solemnly demanded Satisfaction they disputed His Title to it in all the Courts of Christendom and made great Offers to the French King if he would stand by them against us But the most Christian King too well remembred what they did at Munster contrary to so many Treaties and solemn Ingagements and how dangerous a Neighbour they were to all Crowned heads The King and His Ministers had here a hard time and lay every day under new Obloquies Sometimes they were represented as selling all to France to make this War Portsmouth Plymouth and Hull were to be given into the
thrown down or some such like ominous accident had happened and with abundance of earnestness renewed the motion for calling the Duke to the Bar but there were too many Lords between for that motion to succeed and advice was brought every moment from the House of Commons that the things was yet in agitation among them which gave his Lordship an opportunity to appear with extraordinary vigour in defence of the Duke's Person and his Proposal so that the Earl seem'd more properly another Principle than the Duke's Second Whereupon the Lord Chancellor therefore undertook on the contrary to make the Prorogation look very formidable laying the best colour upon it and the worst upon his Opponants Thus for five or six hours it grew to be a fixed Debate many arguing it on both sides in a regular method until they received the welcome News that the Commons were risen without doing any thing whereupon the greater number called for the Question and had it in the affirmative that the Debate should be laid aside And thus being flasht but not satisfied with their Victory they fell desperately upon them who had affirmed the dissolution the same night and the next day voted his Lordship with the Duke of Buckingham the Earl of Salisbury and the Lord Wharton to be commited to the Tower under the Notion of Contempt during his Majesties and the Houses pleasures The Contempt for which they were committed was their refusing to recant their Opinions and ask pardon of the King and the House of Lords notwithstanding the liberty and freedom of Speech which His Majesty verbally and of course allows them at the opening of every Parliament The Warrant for the committing his Lordship together with the Earl of Salisbury and the Lord Wharton ran Thus ORdered by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled That the Constable of his Majesties Tower of London his Deputies shall reserve the Bodies of James Earl of Salisbury Anthony Earl of Shaftsbury and Philip Lord Wharton Members of this House and keep them in safe Custody within the said Tower during his Majesties Pleasure and the Pleasure of this House for their high Contempts committed against this House And this shall be your sufficient Warrant on that behalf J. Brown Cler. Par. To the Constable of the Tower THE four Lords continued in the Tower so long that the Parliament was several times Adjourned during their Confinement which his Lordship bore with abundance of patience and incredible chearfulness considering the many weaknesses and infirmities of Body he then laboured under They expected to have been Released at least of course by Prorogation but Adjournments was so much in use at that time that it made them despair of being releived that way wherefore finding no end of their Captivity they looked upon the procuring their Liberty to deserve as much care as others took to retain them in durance to which end they each of them chose the method he judged most proper The Duke of Buckingham the Earl of Salisbury and the Lord Wharton upon their application to His Majesty by a Petition were enlarged But Shaftsbury could not come off so for having made his Addresses to His Majesty in an humble Petition to be restored to his Liberty and the Favour of his Majesty he found the Royal Earl deaf to his Sute and no relief to be obtained that way Whereupon his Lordship applied himself to the Court of Kings-Bench the constant Residence of His Majesties Justice whether he was brought Wednesday Jan. 27. 1677. upon the Return of an Alias Habeas Corpus directed to the Constable of the Tower and there being some dispute about the sufficiency of the Return his Council prays to have the Return filled and Friday appointed to debate the sufficiency of it which being granted the Earl was re-manded back again unto the Tower On Friday morning his Lordship was brought up again and then the Case was strongly and learnedly argued on both sides and after the discussing the Point about the sufficiency of the Return then Mr. Williams Mr. Wallop and Mr. Smith who were Council for his Lordship gave divers weighty Reasons in the Earls behalf that the Court might and ought to relieve him The Attorney and Solicitor Generals argued the contrary shewing divers Causes why that Court could not relieve a person committed by Parliament So soon as they had done the Earl stood up and in an Elegant Speech spake for himself and directing him self to the Court delivered himself to this Effect MY LORDS I Did not intend to have spoken one word in this business but something hath been objected and laid to my charge by the Kings Council Mr. Attorney and Mr. Solicitor that inforces me to say something for your better satisfaction They have told you that my Council in their Arguments said That this Court was greater than the House of Peers which I dare to appeal to your Lordships and the whole Court that it was never spoken by them I am sure it was not spoken by any direction of mine What is done by my Council and by me is That this Court is the most proper place to resort unto in those Cases where the Liberty of the Subject is concerned The Lords House is the Supream Court of Judicature in the Kingdom but yet there is a Jurisdiction which the Lords House do not meddle with The Kings Council mentioned as a wonder that a Member of the Lords House should come hither and thereby diminish the Jurisdiction of that Court I acknowledg them to be superiour to this or any Court in England To whom all Appeals and Writs of Error are brought and yet there is a Jurisdiction that they do not challenge and which is not natural to them or proper for them They claim not to meddle in Original Cases and so I might mention in other things And I do not think it a kindness to any Power or Body of Men to give them a Power or Jurisdiction which is not natural or proper to their Constitutions I do not think it would be any kindness to the Lords to make them absolute and above the Law for so I humbly conceive this must do if it be adjudged that they by a general Warrant or without any particular Cause assigned do commit me or any man to a perpetual and indefinite Imprisonment And my Lords I am not so inconsiderable a person but what you do in my Case must be Law for every man in England Mr. Attorney is pleased to say I am a Member of the Lords House and to lay wait on the word Member It 's true I am one of them and no man hath a greater reverence and esteem for the Lords than my self But I hope my being a Peer or a Member of either House shall not lose my priviledg of being an English-man or make me to have the less Title to Magna Charta or the other Laws of English Liberty My Opinion is not with one of my
Council who argued very learnedly that the passing an Act by the Kings Royal Assent can not make a Session because the usual Promise was not in it It was without any instruction of mine that he mentioned that Point The Kings Council tells your Lordships of the Laws and Customs of Parliaments and if this were so I should submit but this Case of mine is primae impressionis and is a new way such as neither Mr. Attorney nor Mr. Solicitor can shew any President of and I have no other remedy or place to apply my self to than the way I take Mr. Attorney confesseth that the Kings Pleasure may Release me without the Lords if so this Court is Coram Rege This is the proper place to determine the Kings Pleasure This Court will and ought to judge of an Act of Parliament null and void if it be against Magna Charta much more may judge an order of the House that is put in Execution to deprive any Subject of his Liberty And if this Order or Commitment be a Judgment as the King's Council affirms then it is out of the Lords hands and properly before your Lordships as much as the Acts which were lately passed which I presume you will not refuse to Judge of notwithstanding Mr. Attorney General saith this Parliament is yet in being yet I take it something ill that he tells me I might have applied elsewhere My Lords they speak much of the custom of Parliament but I do affirm there is no custom of Parliament that ever their own Members should be put out of their own power and the inconveniences will be endless Mr. Attorney was pleased easily to ansiver the Objection of one of my Council if a great Minister be so committed he hath the Cure of a Pardon a Prorogation or a Dissolution But if the Case should be put why forty Members or a greater number may not as well be taken away without Remedy in any of the King's Courts he will not so easily answer And if there can be no relief in this Case no Man can foresee what will be hereafter I desire your Lordships well to consider what Rule you make in my Case for it will be a president that may in future Ages concern every Man in England My Lord Mr. Attorney saith you either can release or remand me I differ from him in that Opinion I do not insist upon a Release I have been a Prisoner above five Months already and came hither of necessity having no other way to get my Liberty and therefore am very willing to tender your Lordship Bail which are in or near the Court as good as any are in England either for their Estate or Quality and I am ready to give any sum or member My Lords this Court being now possest of this business I am now your Prisoner The Court having heard all that could be said pro and con on both sides delivered their Opinions Seriatim one of the Judges indeed was not there in Person but he adventured hower to shew the exactness of his Justice to depute Judge Jones to speak for him when it came to his turn and declare although he had not heard what his Lordships Council or himself could say that it was his Opinion his Lordship ought to be remanded and the rest of the Court unanimously concurring with the Opinion of their absent Brother he was by them remanded back again to the Tower according And thus his Lordship being denied redress in the Court of Kings-Bench remained a Prisoner in the Tower until the February following and then on the fourteenth of that Month the Parliament being then sitting he presented a Petition to the House of Lords wherein he makes a very humble submission both to His Majesty and the House of Peers but they objecting against the Petitions he had presented to His Majesty as not having made a satisfactory acknowledgment of his Crimes after some debate rejected this Petition Whereupon the weak condition he was then brought into by his confinement requiring speedy enlargement he presented another Petition to His Majesty and likewise to the House of Lords in both which he renued his Supplication to be released from his imprisonment And not only acknowledged with all humble submission That his endeavouring to maintain the Parliaments being Dissolv'd was an ill advised Action and so must every Man acknowledg who will strive in vain to sail against Wind and Tide but in the most submissive Terms assured them that he was ready to make what further acknowledgment and submission they should require and that in the way and manner too which they should please to direct yet unfortunate Earl he could not obtain his Liberty upon these Terms neither another pretence being then laid hold on for the prolonging his Imprisonment Which was the horrid Crime of endeavouring his enlargment by applying himself to the Court of Kings-Bench in order to his being admitted to Bail And yet a certain Gentleman in the World who had at that time a mighty influence upon Affairs and improved this imaginary fault as much as possible to the prejudice of the Earl hath since that time been himself guilty of the supposed Crime And not only so but hath rendred himself also more pertinacious therein by his reiterated applications to that Court to take Bail for him His Lordships Second Petition to the House of Lords was as follows To the Right Honourable the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament Assembled The humble Petition of Anthony Earl of SHAFTSBVRY Sheweth THat your Petitioner on the 16th of February 1676. was committed Prisoner to the Tower of London by your Lordships because he did not obey your Lordships Order where he hath continued in close confinement to the great decay of his Health and danger of his Life as well as prejudice of his Estate and Family In all humble Obedience therefore unto your Lordships he doth acknowledge That his endeavouring to maintain that this Parliament is Dissolved was an ill advised Action for which he humbly begs the Pardon of the King's Majesty and of this most Honourable House and doth in all humble Duty and Observance to your Lordships beseech you to believe that he would not do any thing willingly to incur your displeasure Wherefore your Petitioner in all humble Duty and Obedience both to His Majesty and your Lordships hath made his humble submission and acknowledgment in his most humble Petition unto the Kings most Sacred Majesty and is ready to make his further submission to His Majesty and this Honourable House according to the direction thereof And he doth most humbly implore your Lordships that you will be pleased to restore him to your favour and discharge him from his Imprisonment And your Petitioner c. SHAFTSBVRY THis Petition being read the Lord Chancellor acquainted the House that His Majesty had received a Third Petition from the Earl of Shaftsbury more submissive than the two former But His Majesty understanding
cannot long continue in the English hands if some better care be not taken of it This is in your Power and there is not bing there but is under your Laws Therefore I beg that this Kingdom at least may be taken into consideration together with the State of England for I am sure there can be no safety here if these Doors are not shut up and made sure But His Majesty had another kind of esteem for his Lordship for not long after the making of this Speech having Dissolv'd His Privy Council and chosen a new one he was pleased to constitute the Earl President thereof a Place so considerable for Honour and Trust that it hath not been enjoyed by any Subject for many years and was improv'd by him as much to the advantage of His Majesty and the Protestant Interest as possible And when the Bill for excluding the Duke of York had passed the House of Commons as the only expedient they could find out to suppress the Designs of the Papists and prevent their ever introducing the Popish Religion into England they sent it up to the House of Lords where his Lordship was one of those Honourable Lords who Voted for its passing that House in order to its being offered to His Majesty for His Royal Assent The Grand Jury returned for the Hundred of Osalstone in the County of Middlesex in June the 2d 1680. finding the Constables defective in not presenting the Papists as they ought it was ordered they should make further presentments by the 16th of that Instant upon which day they met again to receive them when likewise a Bill against D. Y. for not coming to Church was brought before them together with the following Reasons for his being indicted subscribed by the persons undernam'd First Because the 25th Car. 2d when an Act was made to throw Popish Recusants out of all Offices and Places of Trust the Duke did then lay down several great Offices and Places as Lord High Admiral of England Generalissimo of all His Majesties Forces both by Land and Sea Governour of the Cinque Ports and divers others thereby to avoid the punishmant of that Law against Papists Secondly 30. Car. 2d when an Act was made to disable Papists to sit in either House of Parliament there was a Proviso incerted in that Act That it should not extend to D. Y. on purpose to save his right of sitting in the Lords House though he refused to take those Oaths which the Protestant Peers ought to do Thirdly That His Majesty in His Speech March 6th the 31st year of his Reign doth give for a Reason to the Parliament why he sent His Brother out of England Viz. Because he would leave no Man Room to say that he had not remov'd all Causes which might influence him to Popish Councils Fourthly That there hath been divers Letters read in both Houses of Parliament and at the secret Committee of both Houses from several Cardinals and others at Rome and also from other Popish Bishops and Agents of the Pope in other Forreign Parts which do apparently shew the great Correspondencies between him and the Pope and how the Pope could not choose but weep for joy at the reading of some of his Letters and what great satisfaction it was to the Pope to hear that he was advanced to the Catholick Religion as likewise that the Pope hath granted him Briefs sent him Beads and ample Indulgencies with much more to this purpose Fifthly The whole House of Commons hath Declared him to be a Papist in their Votes Sunday April 6th 1679. wherein they resolv'd nemine contradicente that the Duke of York's being a Papist and his hopes of coming such to the Crown had given the greatest countenance and encouragement to the present Conspiracy and Designs of the Papists against the King and the Protestant Religion Sixthly That besides all this Proof and much more to this purpose it is most notorious and evident he hath for many years absented from Protestant Churches during Religious Worship These are the Reasons why we believe him to be a Papist this was subscribed and delivered by his Lordship together with the Earl of Huntington and the Lords Grey of Wark Russel Cavendish Brandon and Wharton as also by Sir William Cowper Barronet Sir Gilbert Gerrard Barronet Sir Edward Hungerford Knight of the Bath Sir Scroop How Thomas Thinn Esq William Forrester Esq and John Trenchard Esq But whilst the Jury were in debate of the Matter they were sent for up by the Court of Kings-Bench and dismist so that nothing was done upon it more than the Juries having receieved the presentment Wherefore on Wednesday July the Thirtieth the former Lords Knights and Gentlemen with the addition of the Lord Clare Sir John Cope Barronet Sir Rowland Gwynne and Mr. Wandsford presented the same to a second Grand Jury who were discharged as the former But whilst his Lordship was thus vigorously prosecuting the Popish Plot in the face of danger the Papists were as vigilent in contriving his ruine though with somewhat more secrecy and silence resolving to seize the Prey before they gave the least Alarm or Notice of their intention as appear'd by their close Caballistical Designs carryed on against this Earl and all the rest of the Protestant Nobility and Gentry in England wherein Mr. Dangerfield was a considerable Agent having been for that purpose fetcht out of Newgate by the Papists who hoping to reap a vast advantage by having him to manage their Affairs willingly disburst a large sum to discharge his Debts The first sangunary work they imployed him in was to attempt the Murther of his Lordship promising him 500 pounds for so acceptable a service as they apprehended it to be he inquired the Reason why they thirsted after his Life and how there might be any probable way proposed whereby it might be accomplished to which it was answered That as to the first they should be glad to have him out of the way because if they were rid of him as they were of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey it would be no difficult thing to bear down all the rest of their Opposers As to the second They affirmed it to be as easie as desirable since said the Lord P s my Man Wood was at Thannet House two nights since upon pretence of an Errand but his business was to view the House and observe what conveniences there were to make his escape after the fact was done assuring him that Wood found the thing so feasable that after he came back he declar'd himself sorry that he was not provided to have done it then And to encourage him to undertake this sanguinary enterprise with the more chearfulness he gave him Ten Guinneys in hand as an assurance that the full reward should be paid so soon as the fatal stroak should be given Promising moreover that Mr. Regaut a Virginia Merchant of Mrs. Celliers acquaintance should come to him on Sunday following to instruct him in
the most dexterous and probable means of putting the Design in execution and secure the payment of the 500 l. All things being thus agreed on the Lord P s took him by the hand and wished him good success And to render him the more pliable and active in this designed Tragady he was sent first to the Lord Castlemain then to Sharp the Priest and last of all to Jack Gadbury the Fortune-Teller by all whom he was severely scoulded for not complying with the Popish Lords in their command to kill the King insolently upbraiding him with horrid ingratitude in refusing to perform that for which he was taken out of Prison and maintained in so much splendour ever since Hoping that this chiding might raise in him a magnanimous Resolution to regain the Credit he had lost by that refusal by a Resolute perpetrating the Murther of his Lordship Dangerfield being thus prepared on the Sunday following Regaut came to Mrs. Celliers and having first dined together he gave him general directions how to accomplish the Murder demanding how he would order the Mony to be paid when he had performed the enterprise telling him that if he pleased it should be brought in Guinneys and lest with Mrs. Cellier for him but he disliking the way desired That when Regaut heard that the Lord Shaftsbury was Dead and should receive a Note from him that then he would immediately pay the Mony for his use which he promised should be done accordingly But ordered him to attend on Sharp and some others for more particular instructions how to Act this Tragedy He attended upon them several times before they could resolve what method he should take However to prevent his flaging he was commanded by the Conspirators to repair to Knowles the Priest to confess and receive the Sacrament which he did at Knowles's Lodging at a Coffe-House in White-fryars from whom he received some directions how to proceed in the Murther but Dangerfield telling him that they were silly and impractable Knowles sent him to the Lady Abergaveny telling him that she was a Witty Lady and had some Correspondence with the Lord Shaftsbury and therefore was the more capable of advising him Wherefore he presently repared to her Lodgings at the House of Mr. Grissin in great Lincolns-Inn Fields where he found easie admittance into her Ladyships Chamber upon sending in word that he came from Knowles So soon as he entered he acquainted her who he was and the business he waited upon her Ladyship about Sir said she I have received a very good Character of you and therefore think my self obliged to return you thanks for the extraordinary diligence wherewith you have managed our business hitherto and I hope you will proceed with the like care until you have finished what you have so well begun As for the taking the Earl of Shaftsbury out of the way it 's a thing of no difficulty it being altogether as easie to kill him as to kill a Bird on a Tree Pray Madam which way shall I do it with so much 〈◊〉 and ease said Dangerfield why several waies replyed the Lady it may be done but I would have you pretend to Cure the Gout and my Lord being troubled with that Distemper I will recommend you to him under that pretence whereby you will easily gain admittance which having obtained you must watch your opportunity to dispatch him From thence Dangerfield went to P s's House and acquainted the Countess where he had been and the several waies which had been proposed by Knowles and others for the Murthering the Earl of Shaftsbury but more especially the Ladys Project as being the more likely way to succeed To which the Countess replyed It was but a silly contrivance yet peradventure it might do However she gave him no order to proceed thereon as yet But resolving if possible to make sure work they obliged him to charge his Lordship with Treason by making him one of the Protestant Peers whom they intended to charge with a Conspiracy against the Kings Crown and Life that so if they failed of Murthering him with their hands they might however destroy him with their breath To which purpose his name was inrolled in that List which was found in the Meal-Tub and gave the first light into their Plot which was more fully discovered by Dangerfield's miscarrying in the chief part of their Conspiracy Viz. placing the Treasonable Papers in Collonel Manse's Chamber whereby all was spoiled for that time And Dangerfield being to wait on His Majesty to give him an account of this pretended Plot the Countess of P s gave him directions to lay all the Burthen he could upon the Presbyterians in general but more especially upon His Grace the Duke of Monmouth the Earl of Shaftsbury Lord Grey of Wark Lord Howard of Escrick the Duke of Buckingham and some others And that he should explain to His Majesty the meaning of the Contents of the several Papers he had presented to the Duke who was the person that introduced him to His Majesty to make this pretended discovery and how the Presbyterians were resolved to use their utmost endeavours for the reducing the present Government and setting up a Common-wealth once more and setling His Grace the Duke of Monmouth therein a likely business and that the Earl of Shaftsbury and other persons of Honour were issuing out Commissions for that purpose and had promised some to several persons And having hereby secured this Design indifferently well as they thought and being now come to a Resolution in what method Dangerfield should attempt his Lordships Life they commanded him to repair to Sharp and confess and receive it being their common custom to make them receive the Sacrament and Introduction to the horridest Villanies and the crafty Priest having first palliated the Murther by urging the necessity of it and the extraordinary advantage that would thereby redound to their Cause and Party and so covered the Crime with a Mantle of Religion that he made it appear meritorious He then proceeded with abundance of Formality and Jesuitical Zeal to Conjure him by all that was good or sacred that he should with all possible speed stab his Lordship so soon as he should receive order from the Popish Lords so to do He promised he would and so the impudent Ecclesiastical Villian dismissed him with abundance of costly benedictions and hearty wishes for the happy success of his enterprizes And a Letter coming for the Lords in the Tower which commanded him to go that very night and put their Resolution of stabing his Lordship in Execution he received instructions not to enter into any discourse with him when he had him alone but after a little Apology for his coming to his Lordship without being sent or introduced by any other person and desiring to know whither if it should sall out to be in his power to serve him he should obtain so much favour of his Lordship as to find his service acceptable
And that for the second time he had received His Majesties Gracious Pardon wherefore he hoped those Matters would not be remembred against him now to the prejudice of his Evidence The Earl of Essex demanded of him who had sollicited His Majesty for his Pardon he answered Captain Richardson then his Boy Witnessed that he had Lodged at Powis's House and had been several times at the Lord Powis's Lodgings at the Tower That he had several times sent him with Letters and other Papers to the Lord Powis and that he had brought him back Answers That the Lady Powis had been several times at Mrs. Celliers during the time that Dangerfield Lodged there and particularly on the Saturday was seven night before when she was alone with him in a Room in private discourse about half an hour Then the Lord Chancellor asked him whether he had ever been with the Earl of Shaftsbury to which he replyed He had been several times with his Lordship and had discoursed with him repeating some of those things which had passed between them You are in the mean time saies the Chancellor a fine Fellow to come first to the King then to the Lord Powis and from thence to the Earl of Shaftsburys and discover to one what discourse you had with the other and go with one Story to the Earl of Shaftsbury and bring another to the Council And indeed the business appeared so plain to the Board that they committed him to Newgate by the following Warrant THese are in His Majesties Name to require you to 〈◊〉 into your Custody the person of Thomas Willoughby which was the Name he then went by herewith sent you for forgng Letters importing High Treason and fixing the same privately at Mr. Mansel's Chamber to render him Guilty thereof without cause And you are to keep him safe till he shall be delivered by due course of Law for which this shall be your Warrant Council-Chamber Whitehall October 27th 1679. To the Keeper of Newgate or his Deputy ANd now the wickedness which had hitherto hovered in the Dark Cavernes began to be more and more exposed for Mrs. Celliers House being searched the whole Scheam of their Villanies was found hid in a Tub of Meal they having assured themselves that none would be so scrutinous as to to search there whereupon she was apprehended and being examined concerning Mr. Dangerfield she said she had entertained him upon no other account than to get in desperate Debts However being sent to the Gate-House she presently dispatcht away a Paper to him telling him That now her Life lay in his hands and therefore directed him to confirm what she had said That he was taken into her House only to get in bad Debts c. sending him withal Twenty Shillings in Silver and a Guinney and two Books of Account that so he might Conover and be perfect in his Lesson But taking Caution by the unfortunate Mr. Coleman he resolved not to throw away his Life as he had done nor patiently consent to be Hanged to please the Conspirators Wherefore he made a full discovery of the whole Matter upon Oath before Sir Robert Clayton then Lord Mayor of London whereupon Sir Robert repaired to Whitehall and gave an account thereof to His Majesty who presently sent it to the Council and Dangerfield was thereupon by order of Council brought before them and was further examined by their Lordships who thereupon committed the Earl of Castlemain to the Tower Mr. Gadbury to the Gate-house Mrs. Cellier and Mr. Regaut to Newgate and the Countess and others into the Custody of His Majesties Messengers and the whole Design was at several times undeniably proved before them by innumerably concurring Circumstances and substantial Evidences and the Conspirators themselves confest the greatest part of it to be true But yet hoping to make the best of it and turn it off to the Lord Shaftsbury and the rest of the Protestants whose ruin they thirsted for their Oracle Gadbury pretended to make some great discovery in case His Majesty would grant him his Pardon which he Graciously promised to do But his Lordship hearing thereof and suspecting that those who had endeavoured to ruin him by a Plot to charge him with Treason and had failed of accomplishing it that way would not scruple at attempting to attain their end by false and feigned discoveries thereof desired that no Pardon might pass the Seal for Gadbury until he had first been heard in Council whereby he wisely prevented that mischief which was supposed to be designed against his Lordship by that Jesuited Star-gazing Caballistical Whiffler That which confirmed most men in their Opinion that he had some design against the Earl was this That although he did shortly after receive the King 's Gracious Pardon yet no discovery made by him was ever heard of to this day But these things were scarce over when another design to murther him is discovered by Francisco de Feria who deposed at the Bar of the House of Commons that being prefered to be Interpreter and Secretary of Languages to the Lord Gasper Abrew de Freitas Ambassador in Ordinary from the Prince of Portugal to the King of England The Ambassador perswaded him to kill the Earl of Shaftsbury by throwing a hand-Granado into his Coach which he said was easie to be done when his Lordship was travelling upon the Road into the Country which he did often What an heroick and magnanimous Soul must he then be master of that could so bravely bare up against all those boisterous Storms and continual Tempests which were perpetually raised against him by the art and malice of the Popish Crew And that notwithstanding those innumerable difficulties and dangers wherewith he was always surrounded and which still threatned his ruine the simple consideration of his own Innocence and Loyalty was able to maintain an undisturbed quiet and a perpetual Serenity within him But however these frequent disappointments inraged yet it did not discourage them from further Attempts against his Life and Honour but rather added to their fury and encreased their desire of revenge The next endeavour therefore to prove that he the Earl of Essex and the Lord Wharton had assisted Oates Tongue and Bedloe in contriving the Popish Plot. To which purpose they corrupted Mr. Blood and prevailed with him to write a treasonable Letter to Oates and then cause the Doctor 's Papers to be searched and rummaged in hope to find it there and so to prove him to be a Confederate with his Lordship and other Protestant Nobles But the Doctor sent the Letter to Sir Joseph Williamson then Secretary of State and thereby spoiled that Design whereupon they sent one Lewis to his Lordship to desire he would send by him the said Lewis some Directions to Dr. Oates under his Lordship 's own hand-writing how he should manage himself in reference to the Plot but the Earl absolutely denied to have any thing to do therewith And having failed in
and make no haste into the Boat they called to him to come away Gentlemen said he I intreat you to excuse my going with you for I now call to mind some extraordinary business which obliges me to stay in Town But his company was too pleasant to be so easily relinquish'd wherefore one of them stepping out of the Boat endeavoured by his importunity to alter his resolution and perswade him to go with them according to his first intention but being not able to prevail he protested he would carry him into the Boat if he would not go willingly so that being unwilling to disoblige them he adventur'd to go although with much reluctancy As they were shooting the Bridge it being low Water the force of the Ebb carried their Boat with such violence against a Loyter that was just gone through before them that she sunk but several Boats presently making towards them they were all sav'd however their design for Bowling at Greenwich was spoiled for that day Having spent some considerable time in the Inns of Court his Relations began to think of disposing of him in Marriage and a suitable Match was enquired after that might answer the largeness of his Fortune At length a Marriage is agreed by the consent of both Families between him and Margaret Daughter to Thomas Lord Coventry sometime Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England whose agreeable Conversation render'd his Life the more pleasant and delightful He had no Issue by this Wife His second Wife was the Lady Frances Daughter to the Earl of Exeter by whom he had Issue his only Son and Heir Anthony Lord Ashly now Earl of Shaftesbury who married the virtuous and ingenious Lady the Lady Dorothy Daughter to John Earl of Rutland by whom he hath Issue two Sons Anthony a Youth of about Twelve years of Age extreamly like his Grandfather both for Person and Parts for which reason he was so dear to him that his Life seemed to be bound up in this Grandsons as Jacobs was said to be in his Son Benjamin's His last Wife was Margaret Daughter to William Lord Spencer a most accomplished and Virtuous Lady whose exemplary Piety is so extraordinary that she may very well be proposed as a pattern for other Noble Personages to imitate her constant custom being to rise by Five of the Clock in the Morning and she usually spends two or three hours there in her private Devotions No sooner did the Fame of his great Abilities reach the Royal Ear but his late Majesty cast a favourable Eye upon him employing him in several eminent Services which he performed with an exact Loyalty to the satisfaction of his Majesty from whose Interest he never departed otherwise then as Hushai from King David when the Tribes of Israel revolted from him in order to the using his Interest for the Service of his Prince and endeavour by his Wisdom and Counsel so to order and influence the Councils and Designs of the Conspirators that they might be the less hurtful to his Soveraign and tend to the overthrow of themselves And it is admirable to contemplate with what dexterous Skill and exquisite Policy he so managed all their Councils as to make them run directly towards and naturally tend to swell the Royal Stream which immediately upon their Ebb flowed so suddenly and swiftly that like a swelling Sea it easily overflowed all those Banks which were cast up to impede its Flux and by its irresistable force bore down all before it until at last it terminated in the full Tide of his Majesties Restoration Like the Generous Hushai never resting until he saw his Ejected Soveraign like the glorious Sun newly escaped from a total Eclipse return to the possession of his Crown and Kingdom His Majesty having December 5. 1639. upon the advice of the Earl of Strafford and Marquess of Hamilton and Doctor Land Archbishop of Canterbury declared his resolution for the calling a Parliament After 11 years interval he was by the unanimous consent of the Inhabitants of the Borough of Tewkesbury in Gloucester-shire chosen to serve as Burgess for that Town Sir Edward Alford being chosen for the other On Monday April 13. 1640. this Parliament opened and were acquainted by his Majesty That he thought never any King had greater cause to call his People together nor more weighty Affairs to confer with them about then himself the particulars whereof he referred to the Lord Keeper By whom they were recommended to the Parliament in an elegant Speech The Parliament sate in debate of those things recommended to them till the fifth of May when his Majesty concluding they were too slow in giving those Supplies he demanded Dissolved them publishing a Declaration thereupon containing an account of his Reasons for that Dissolution This was the fourth Parliament which had been Dissolved by his Majesty In the beginning of our unhappy Troubles he raised a Regiment for the Service of his Majesty and was by him upon the Rupture with the Parliament made Governour of Waymouth being at the same time High Sheriff of the County of Dorset And when he saw that the War would unavoidably break out he summoned by virtue of his Pesse Contitatus the whole County from sixteen years old to meet at Dorchester which is the County Town thereby to engage them to stand by his Majesty But before that day appointed for their Meeting his Majesty sent down Colonel William Ashburnham with a Commission to be Governour of the County of Dorset whereupon he repaired presently to Dorchester and shewed his Commission to the High Sheriff At which time the Sheriff acquainted the Colonel with what he had done in reference to his Majesties Interest by summoning the County wherewith the Colonel was very well pleased But Sir Anthony concluding that the Colonel's being sent to command as Governour of the County notwithstanding his being Governour of Weymouth and high Sheriff of Dorset-shire proceeded from some secret suspition which his Majesty had conceiv'd of his Fidelity perhaps occasioned by the malicious whisperings of some about the King who grew Jealous of him lest the greatness of his Parts should in time have raised him higher in his Majesties Favour and good Opinion then would have consisted with their Interest took Horse the next Morning and went to his own House about 20 Miles from thence the next day he went to his Brothers and from thence to London The day being come for the Counties Meeting they flocked in vast numbers to Dorchester there being scarce a Man in the whole County wanting whereupon the Colonel being informed that the High Sheriff was not in Town went up to the Guild-Hall being accompanied with several of the chief of the Town and told the People That he was glad to see so great an appearance and that they yielded so ready Obedience to the Summons of their Sheriff who was at that time absent telling them that the occasioning of Summoning of them was to engage them to
French hands for Caution The next day news came that France and Holland were agreed Then the obloquy was turned from treachery to folly The Ministers were now Fools that some days before were Villains And indeed the Coffee-houses were not to be blamed for their last apprehensions since if that Conjunction had taken effect then England had been in a far worse case then now it is and the War had been turned upon us But both Kings knowing their Interests resolved to Joyn against them who were the Common Enemies to all Monarchies and I may say especially to ours their only Competitor for Trade and Power at Sea and who only stand in their way to an universal Empire as great as Rome This the States understood so well and had swallowed so deep that under all their present distress and danger they are so intoxicated with that vast ambition that they slight a Treaty and refuse a Cessation All this you and the whole Nation saw before the last War but it could not then be so well timed or our Alliances so well made But you judged aright that at any rate Delenda est Carthago That Government was to be brought down And therefore the King may well say to you 'T is your War He took his measures from you and they were just and right ones and He expects a suitable assistance to so necessary and expensive an Action which He has hitherto maintained at His own charge and was unwilling either to trouble you or burden the Country until it came to an inevitable necessity And His Majesty commands me to tell you that unless it be a certain Sum and speedily raised it can never answer the Occasion My Lords and Gentlemen Reputation is the great support of War or Peace This War had never begun nor had the States ever slighted the King or ever refused Him Satisfaction neither had this War continued to this day or subsisted now but that the States were deceived in their measures and apprehended His Majesty in that great want of money that He must sit down under any Affronts and was not able to begin or carry on a War Nay at this day the States support themselves amongst their People by this only falshood that they are assured of the temper of England and of the parliament and that you will not supply the King in this War And that if they can hold out till your meeting they will have new life and may take new measures There are lately taken two of their principal Agents with their Credentials and Instructions to this purpose who are now in the Tower and shall be proceeded against according to the Law of Nations But the King is sufficiently assured of His people Knows you better and can never doubt His Parliament This had not been mentioned but to shew you of what importance the frankness and seasonableness of this Supply is as well as the fulness of it Let me say the King has brought the States to that condition that your hearty conjunction at this time in supplying His Majesty will make them never more formidable to Kings or dangerous to England And if after this you suffer them to get up let this be remembred The States of Holland are Englands eternal Enemy both by Interest and Inclination In the next place to the supply for the carrying on of the War His Majesty recommends to you the taking care of His Debts What you gave the last Session did not near answer your own expectation Besides another confiderable Aid you designed His Majesty was unfortunately lost in the birth so that the King was forced for the carrying on of His affairs much against His will to put a stop to the payments out of the Exchequer He saw the pressures upon himself and growing inconveniencies to His People by great Interest and the difference through all His Business between Ready money and Orders This gave the King the necessity of that proceeding to make use of His own Revenue which hath been of so great effect in this War But though he hath put a stop to the trade and gain of the Bankers yet he would be unwilling to ruine them and oppress so many Families as are concerned in those Debts Besides it were too disprortionable a burden upon many of His good Subjects But neither the Bankers nor they have reason to complain if you now take them into your care and they have paid them what was due to them when the Stop was made with Six per Cent. Interest from that time The King is very much concern'd both in Honour and Interest to see this done And yet he desires you not to mis-time it but that it may have only the second place and that you will first settle what you intend about the Supply His Majesty has so fully vindicated His Declaration from that Calumny concerning the Papists that no reasonable scruple can be made by any good man He has sufficiently justified it by the time it was published in and the effects He hath had from it and might have done it more from the agreeableness of it to His own natural disposition which no good English man can wish other then it is He loves not bloud or rigorous severities but where mild or gentle ways may be used by a wise Prince He is certain to choose them The Church of England and all good Protestants have reason to rejoyce in such a Head and such a Defender His Majesty doth declare His care and Concerns for the Church and will maintain them in all their Rights and Priviledges equal if not beyond any of His Predecessors He was born and bred up in it It was that his Father died for We all know how great temptations and offers He resisted abroad when He was in His lowest condition And He thinks it the Honour of His Reign that He hath been the Restorer of the Church 'T is that He will ever maintain and hopes to leave to posterity in greater lustre and upon surer grounds then our Ancestors ever saw it But His Majesty is not convinc'd that violent ways are the Interest of Religion or the Church There is one thing more which I am commanded to speak to you of Which is the jealousie that hath been foolishly spread abroad of the Forces the King hath raised in this War Wherein the King hath opened himself freely to you and confessed the fault on the other hand For if this last Summer had not proved a miracle of Storms and Tempests such as secured their East-India Fleet and protected their Sea-coast from a discent nothing but the true reason want of Money could have justified the defect in the number of our Forces 'T is that His Majesty is providing for against the next Spring having given out Orders for the raising of seven or eight Regiments more of Foot under the Command of Persons of the greatest Fortunes and Quality And I am earnestly to recommend to you that in your Supplies
you will take into your consideration this necessary addition of charge And after His Majesties conclusion of His Speech let me conclude nay let us all conclude with blessing God and the King Let us bless God that he hath given us such a King to be the Repairer of our Breaches both in Church and State and the restorer of our paths to dwell in That in the midst of War and Misery which rages in our Neighbour Countries our Garners are full and there is no complaining in our Streets And a Man can hardly know that there is a War Let us bless God that hath given this King signally the hearts of His People and most particularly of this Parliament who in their Affection and Loyalty to their Prince have exceeded all their Predecessors A Parliament with whom the King hath many years lived with all the Caresses of a happy Marriage Has the King had a concern You have wedded it Has His Majesty wanted Supplies You have readily chearfully and fully provided for them You have relied upon the Wisdom and Conduct of His Majesty in all His affairs so that you have never attempted to exceed your bounds or to impose upon Him whilest the King on the other hand hath made your Counsels the foundations of all His proceedings and hath been so tender of you that he hath upon His own Revenue and Credit endeavoured to support even Foreign Wars that he might be least uneasie to you or burdensom to His People And let me say that tho' this Marriage be according to Moses's Law where the Husband can give a Bill of Divorce put her away and take another Yet I can assure you it is as impossible for the King to part with this Parliament as it is for you to depart from that Loyalty Affection and Dutiful Beha viour you have hitherto shewed towards Him Let us bless the King for taking away all our Fears and leaving no room for Jealousies For those Assurances and Promises He hath made us Let us bless God and the King that our Religion is safe That the Church of England is the care of our Prince That Parliaments are safe That our Properties and Liberties are safe What more hath a good English man to ask but that this King may long Reign and that this Triple-Alliance of King Parliament and People may never be dissolved The King having about that time made Si Edward Turner Speaker of the House of Commons Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer the Lord Chancellor acquainted them therewith and recommended to them His Majesties Pleasure for their Electing a new Speaker in the following Speech My Lords and you the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons HIs Majesty hath commanded me to tell you That he hath many things to say to you but he thinks not this a proper time but will defer it till the House of Commons be compleated with a new Speaker For His Majesty hath since the last Session as a mark of His Favour to His House of Commons and that he might reward so good a Servant taken their late Speaker Sir Edward Turner to be Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer and called him by Writ to be an Assistant to this House I am therefore commanded to acquaint you Gentlemen of the House of Commons That it is the Kings Pleasure you repair to your House and Elect a Discreet Wise and Learned man who after he hath been by you Presented and that Presentation by His Majesty admitted shall then possess the Office of your common Mouth and Speaker And the King is pleased to be here to Morrow in the Afternoon to receive the Presentment of him accordingly The Commons having Elected Sir Job Charlton to be their Speaker who being by them Presented to the King Addressed himself to His Majesty in the following words Most Gracious Sovereign THe Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the House of Commons in Obedience to your Royal Command have proceeded to the Choice of a Speaker They have among them many worthy Persons eminently qualified for so great a Trust yet with too favourable an Eye have cast it upon me who am really conscious to my self of so many infirmities rendring me much unsit for so great an Imployment And although my endeavours of excusing my self before them have not been successful yet they have been so Indulgent as to permit me to continue my endeavours therein before Your Majesties most piercing and discerning Judgment The Veneration due to Majesty which lodgeth in every Loyal Breast makes it not an easie matter to speak before Your Majesty at any time or in any capacity But to speak before Your Majesty in Your Exaltation thus gloriously supported and attended and that as Speaker of Your House of Commons requires greater Abilities then I can pretend to own I am not also without fear That the Publick Affairs wherein Your Majesty and Your Kingdom in this Juncture of time are so highly concern'd may receive detriment through my weakness I therefore with a plain humble heart prostrate at Your Royal feet beseech That You will Command them to review what they have done and to proceed to another Election To which the Lord Chancellour made the following Answer Mr. Serjeant Charlton THe King hath very attentively heard your discreet and handsome Discourse whereby you endeavour to excuse and disable your self for the place of Speaker In answer whereof His Majesty hath commanded me to say to you That he doth in no sort admit of the same For his Majesty hath had long experience of your Abilities good Affection Integrity and Resolution in several employments of great Trust and Weight He knows you have been long a Parliament-man and therefore every way fitted and qualified for the Employment Besides he cannot disapprove the Election of this House of Commons especially where they have expressed so much Duty in choosing one Worthy and Acceptable to him And therefore the King doth allow of the Election and admits you for Speaker Sir Job Charlton seeing his excuse could not be admitted but that notwithstanding his Majesty had confirmed the Commons Choice by his Royal Approbation spake as follows Great SIR SInce it is Your Gracious Pleasure not to accept of my humble Excuse but by Your Royal Approbation to six me under this Great though Honourable Weight and to think me sit to be invested with a Trust of so high a nature as this is I take it in the first place to be incumbent upon me that I render Your Majesty all possible thanks which I now humbly do with a heart full of all Duty and affected with a deeper sense of Gratitude then I can find words to express Next from Your Royal Determination in this Affair whereby you have imprinted a new Character upon me I take courage against my own diffidence and chearfully bend my self with such strength and abilities as God shall give to the Service so graciously designed me no way doubting that Your Majesty
will please to pardon my Frailties to accept of my faithful Endeavours and always to look favourably on the Work of Your own hands And now Sir my first Entrance upon this Service obliges me to make a few necessary but humble Petitions on the behalf of Your most Loyal and Dutiful House of Commons 1. That for our better Attendance on the Publick Service we and our Servants may be free in our Persons and Estates from Arrests and other Disturbances 2. That in our Debates Liberty and Freedom of Speech be allowed us 3. That as occasions shall require Your Majesty upon our humble Suit and at such times as Your Majesty shall judge seasonable will vouchsafe us access to Your Royal Person 4. That all our Proceedings may receive a favourable Construction That God who hath brought You back to the Throne of Your Fathers and with You all our Comforts grant You a long and a prosperous Reign and send you Victory over all Your Enemies and every good mans heart will say Amen To which the Lord Chancellour reply'd Mr. Speaker THe Kings Majesty hath heard and well weighed your short and Eloquent Oration And in the first place much approves that you have with so much advantage introduced a shorter way of speaking upon this occasion His Majesty doth well accept of all those dutiful and affectionate Expressions in which you have delivered your Submission to his Royal Pleasure And looks upon it as a good Omen to his Affairs and as an Evidence that the House of Commons have still the same Heart that have chosen such a Mouth The conjuncture of time and the King and Kingdoms Affairs require such a House of Commons such a Speaker for with Reverence to the holy Scripture upon this occasion the King may say He that is not with me is against me for he that doth not now put his Hand and Heart to support the King in the common cause of this Kingdom can hardly ever hope for such another opportunity or find a time to make satisfaction for the Omission of this Next I am commanded by his Majesty to answer your four Petitions whereof the first being The freedom of you and your Servants in your Persons and Estates without Arrest or other disturbance the King is graciously pleased to grant it as full as to any of your Predecessors The Second for Liberty and Freedom of Speech the Third for Access to his Royal Person And the Fourth That your proceedings may receive a Favourable construction are all freely and fully granted by his Majesty During the time of his Chancellourship he lived at Exeter-House in the Strand and managed and maintained all things with a Port and Bravery suitable to the Greatness and Dignity of his place exceeding therein all who have enjoyed that Honour in his Majesties Raign as will appear by the manner of his proceeding from his House to Westminster-hall the first day of Hilary Term January 23. being the first Term after his receiving the Seal In the Morning the Twelve Judges and the several Officers of the High Court of Chancery together with the whole Body of the Law repaired to Exeter-house where they were entertain'd at a splendid and magnificent Treat by his Lordship which being ended he proceeded according to the ancient and laudable Custom to Westminster in the following Order First went The Beadles The Constables The High Constable The Tipstaffes The Cryer of the Court The Gentlemen Clerks The Sixty Clerks of the Chancery The Master of the Subpoena Office The Master of the Affidavit The Students of the Inns of Court The Cursitors The Clerk of the Patents The Registers The Barristers at Law The Clerks of the Hanaper The Prothonotary The Clerk of the Crown The Examiners The Clerks of the Petty Bag. The Six Clerks Then proceeded the following Officers being all of them bare The Sealer to the Great Seal The Chafe Wax to the Great Seal The Usher of the Court The Master of the Rolls's Gentlemen The Lord Chancellors Gentlemen The Secretaries The Steward of the House and Warden of the Fleet The Gentleman Usher The Seal-bearer carrying the Purse wherein was the Great Seal The Serjeant at Arms attending the Great Seal carrying the Mace After whom came the Lord High Chancellor himself on Horse-back being richly Array'd The Gentleman of his Horse attended by a Page a Groom and Six Footmen walking along by his Stirrup Next to the Lord High Chancellor followed The Lord Chief Justice The Master of the Rolls The Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer and the rest of the Judges according to their Seigniority And last of all came The Kings Serjeant at Law The Kings Attorny-General The Kings Solicitor-General The Kings Council The Duke of Yorks Attorny and his Solicitor together with the several Masters of Chancery In which Order they passed all along the Strand by White-hall through Kings-street and so to Westminster-hall the Streets being Lined with abundance of crouding Spectators who were exceedingly pleased with the Decency and Gallantry thereof All the time he enjoyed the Chancellorship he managed it with as much Honour and Advantage to his Majesty as any that ever did or will enjoy it And that not only upon the Bench but in the Senate too wherein he endeavoured to the uttermost of his Power to vindicate his Majesties Actions and by his admirable Eloquence labour'd to prevent or remove any Misunderstandings and Jealousies between the King and his Parliament as appears by the many excellent Speeches he made to the Two Houses when he was the mouth of the King to his People and had the Honour to be more successful therein then any who have succeeded him in that Honourable Station His sentiments of and veneration for his Soveraign and the smooth and charming Eloquence wherewith he fluently expressed himself upon all occasions sufficiently appear in that Speech which he made to the Lord Treasurer December the 5th 1672. upon his taking his Oath before him in the Exchequer My Lord Treasurer THe Kings most Excellent Majesty knowing your Integrity Abilities and Experience in his Affairs and particularly those of his Treasury hath thought fit to make choice of you to be his Lord High Treasurer of England and what necessarily accompanies that place hath by his Letters Patents under the Great Seal made you Treasurer of his Exchequer The Lord High Treasurer of Englands Office is held by the Kings delivery of the White-Staff The Treasurers of the Exchequer hath ever been held by Letters Patents And is that by which your Lordship is more immediately intituled to be a Chief Judge of this Court It were too nice and tedious and peradventure too formal to give an account of the several distinct Powers of these two Offices Reason and the length of time hath now so woven them together But as they are both in your Lordship I may justly say you are in a place of the first Rank as to Dignity Power Trust and Influence of Affairs
A place that requires such a Man as our great Masters Wisdom hath found for it from whose Natural temper we may expect Courage Quickness and Resolution from whose Education Wisdom and Experience and from whose Extraction that Noble and Illustrious House of the Cliffords an Heroick Mind a large Soul and an unshaken Fidelity to the Crown My Lord it 's a great Honour much beyond even the place it self that you are chosen to it by this King who without Flattery I may say is as great a Master in the knowledge of Men and Things as this or any other Age hath produced And let me say farther It is not only your Honour that you are chosen by Him but it is your Safety too that you have him to serve with whom no subtile Insinuations of any near him nor the aspiring Interest of a Favourite shall ever prevail against those that serve him well Nor can his Servants fear to be sacrificed to the Malice Fury or Mistake of a more swelling Popular greatness a Prince under whom the unfortunate fall gently a Prince in a word that best of all Mankind deserves that Title Deliciae humani generis My Lord I will not hold you long for you have a Journey to go after you have taken your Oath and your place in this Court you are according to ancient Custom to visit all the Offices in the upper and lower Exchequer and therefore let me end with this Wish or rather Prophesie That you may exceed all your Predecessors the Abilities and Fidelity of the Renowned Lord Burleigh the Sagacity Quickness and great dispatch of his Son the Lord Salisbury and the Uprightness Integrity and Wisdom of that great Man that went last before you the Earl of Southampton And as the E. endeavors were incessant to serve his Soveraign so he was no less solicituos to serve the Publick good endeavoring to make the Courts of Judicature as much as possible answer the Ends for which they were designed viz. The ease of the Subject labouring to have the Kings Prerogative and the Subjects Property so interwoven that they might always be inseparable as appears by that excellent Speech made by him in the Exchequer January 24. 1673. at Serjeant Thurlands taking the Oath in order to be made a Baron as followeth Mr. Serjeant Thurland THe King of his Grace and Favour hath made choice of you to be one of the Barons of the Exchequer he designed to place you in a Court of more profit though not of more Dignity but your own modesty hath chosen this Court where you thought you could serve the King best and I could not choose but mention it here to your Honour it being the greatest Instance of a good Man That he had rather be found serviceable than rich His Majesty hath had large proof of your former Service besides he takes you upon the Credit of that Recommendation that hath justly the best place with him I mean his Royal Brothers Some few things it is fit I should here mention to you and leave with you as Admonitions or rather Remembrances In the first place you are to maintain the Kings Prerogative and let not the Kings Prerogative and the Law be two things with you for the Kings Prerogative is Law and the principal of it Therefore in maintaining that you maintain the Law The Government of England is so excellently interwoven that every part of the Prerogative hath a broad mixture of the Interest of the Subject the ease and safety of the People being inseparable from the greatness and security of the Crown In the next place let me advise you that you acquaint your self with the Revenue as also the ancient Records Precedents and Practices of this Court for want of which knowledge I have seen this Court a most excellent Common Pleas when at the same time I could not say so much for it as an Exchequer In the Third place Let me recommend to you so to manage the Kings Justice and the Revenue as the King may have most profit and the Subjects least Vexation Raking for old Debts the number of Informations Projects upon Concealments I could not find in the Eleven years Exprerience I have had in this Court ever to advantage the Crown but such proceedings have for the most part delivered up the Kings good Subjects into the hands of the worst of Men. There is another thing I have observed in this Court which I shall mind you of which is when the Court hearkens too much to the Clerks and Officers of it and are too apt to send out Process when the Money may be raised by other ways more easie to the People I do not say that the Kings Duty should be lost or that the strictest course should not be taken rather then that be for when you consider how much the Officers of this Court and the Under-sheriffs get by Process upon small Sums more then the Kings Duty comes to and upon what sort of People this falls viz. The Farmer Husbandman and Clothier in the Country that is generally the Collector Constable and Tyshingman and so disturbs the Industrious part of the Nation you will think it fit to make that the last way when no other will serve Give me leave also to mind you of one thing more it is in your Oath That the Kings Needs ye shill speed before all others that is the business of the Revenue of the Crown you are to dispatch before all other and not turn your Court into a Court of Common-Pleas and let that justle out what you were constituted for In the last place Let me conclude with what concerns all my Lords the Judges as well as you let me recommend to you the Port and Way of Living suitable to the Dignity of your Place and what the King allows you There is not any thing that gains more Reputation and Respect to the Government then that doth and let me tell you Magistrates as well as Merchants are supported by their Reputation To his successful Counsel do both King and Kingdom owe the happy Conduct of Affairs for many years together the events of his Advices always agreeing with and answering the Ends for which they were at first proposed so that the King seldom fail'd of any thing that was carried on by his direction for which reason his wise Administration and management of Things had as it were incorporated him into the very Heart of his Prince So that all Men began now to conclude That this great Man whose constant Loyalty had render'd him so dear to His Majesty was too firmly fix'd and rooted in the Royal Favour than ever to be removed or alienated therefrom since he did as most Men imagin'd sit so high and withal so safely that he was above the reach of Envy or the possibility of being undermined by any subtle and false Insinuations or sacrific'd to the malice of any aspiring Favourite Yet Fortune who is always fickle and constant in
that he had endeavoured to free himself from the censure of this House by appealing to the Kings-Bench to have there judgment thereupon during the late Adjournments doth not think fit as yet to signifie his pleasure as to his discharge until this House hath taken that matter into consideration Upon which the Lords refusing to make an Address to His Majesty for his Lordships discharge entered into a debate concerning his Appeal from their House to the Kings-Bench for an Habeas Corpus but not being able to come to any Resolution about it that day the next day it was resumed again and the Records of the Kings-Bench produced by which it did appear that two Rules of Court had been obtain'd upon the motion of his Lordships Council and the returns thereupon were read by which it did appear that the Earl had been committed the 16th of February 1676. for a Contempt committed against the House of Lords and then the remitture of the Earl to the Tower was read After this a Petition from his Lordship to the House was read wherein he took notice of an Order of the House for bringing thither the Records of the Kings-Bench Court concerning the matter of an Habeas Corpus brought by him acquainting them that he took himself to be very much concern'd that they should enter into a debate of that Nature in his absence since he had an undoubted Right to be present and plead for himself when a debate of any new matter against him was entred upon and that although he could not pretend but that there might be a probability of his having err'd for want of a President to guide him and being deprived of the benefit of Council by reason of his close confinement yet he resolved not to do any thing willingly that might in the least offend His Majesty or their Lordships and therefore humbly laid hold of that opportunity to give further Evidence thereof by casting himself at their Lordships feet and as he humbly begg'd the Pardon of His Majesty so he also implored the forgiveness of their Lordships for offending them in any thing whatsoever The debate was somewhat long but at last it came to this Issue They Resolved and Declared That it was a breach of the priviledge of that House for any Lord committed by them to bring an Habeas Corpus in any inseriour Court to free himself from that Imprisonment during the Session of Parliament and that the Earl of Shaftsbury should have Liberty to make his full defence notwithstanding the Resolution and Declaration aforesaid Friday February 22d The Lords directed a Warrant to the Constable of the Tower to bring his Lordship to their Bar on the Monday following The Earl of Northampton then Constable of the Tower accordingly brought him where kneeling at the Bar he received an account from the Lord Chancellor of the Resolutions of the Lords concerning his Appeal to the Court of Kings-Bench whereupon his Lordship stood up and made his reply to this Effect MY LORDS I Have presum'd to present two Petitions to this Honourable House The first your Lordships mention I do again here personally renew humbly desiring that I may be admitted to make that humble submission and acknowledgment your Lordships will please to Order And that after a Twelvemonths close Imprisonment to a Man of my Age and Infirmities your Lordships will Pardon the folly and unadvisedness of any of my Words or Actions And as to my Second Petition I most humbly thank your Lordships for acquainting me with your Resolution and Declaration in the Point and though Liberty be in it self very desireable and as my Physitian a very Learned Man thought absolutely necessary to the preservation of my Life yet I do profess to your Lordships upon my Honour that I would have perish'd rather than have brought my Habeas Corpus had I then apprehended or been inform'd that it had been a breach of the Priviledge of this Honourable House it is my Duty it is my Interest to support your Priviledges I shall never oppose them My Lords I do fully acquiesce in the Resolution and Declaration of this Honourable House I go not about to justifie my self but cast my self at your Lordships feet acknowledge my Error and humbly begg your Pardon not only for having brought my Habeas Corpus but for all other my Words and Actions Then was one Blany called into the House who had delivered a Paper to the Lord Treasurer pretending to give an account of some words spoken by his Lordship in the Court of Kings-Bench when he moved to be bailed there But though this whole Transaction was no longer than since last Hillary Term yet Blany could not affirm that what was Written in the said Paper was really spoken by his Lordship so that the Treasurer not being able to to make any thing of Blanys Story which was an hard Case that so much pains should be taken to so little purpose the House of Lords proceeded to a Resolution in what form his Lordship should make his submission and acknowledgment which being drawn up imported much the same with which he had before Declared which being read to him by the Lord Chancellor his Lordship repeated the same at the Bar and than withdrew Whereupon the House ordered That the Lords with white sleeves should wait upon His Majesty and acquaint him the House had received satisfaction from his Lordship in the matter of the Habeas Corpus and the other Contempt for which he stood committed and were become humble Suters to His Majesty that he would be pleased to discharge him from his Imprisonment and that their Lordships acquaint the House with His Majesties Answer All which was done accordingly and the Lord Treasurer reported to the House That the Lords with white sleeves had waited upon His Majesty according to their Lordships Order And that His Majesty was pleased to make this Answer That he would give Order for his Lordships discharge which was accordingly performed and his Lordship by regaining his Liberty made more capable of serving His Majesty and the Protestant Religion against the dark and misterous designs which were then carrying on against both But although the Lords proceeded with so much rigure and severity against his Lordship who deserved to have been more kindly dealt withal by any who pretend to any Loyalty to their Prince since he made so considerable a Figure and had so great a share in the contriving and management of the happy Revolution in 1666. when they were in an unusual heat artificialy kindled and carefully blown into a Flame by some unseen hand who secretly manag'd the Bellows yet when that heat had spent it self and the House acted with more freedom and deliberation they acknowledge the wrong and injury done to his Lordship and the other Noblemen who were committed upon that account and to prevent that illegal preceeding from being made use of as a President in future times they damned the several
to kill the Earl of Shaftsbury as being the great encourager and influencer of the rest not long after which Matteson pull'd a Pistol out of his Pocket in Mr. Prance's Shop affirming he would therewith do Shaftsbury's business having provided the same for that purpose several others also assures Mr. Prance that he would speedily be destroyed But after this their rage was heigthned and they supposed themselves obliged to a greater vigilancy in accomplishing his ruine upon the account of a Speech which was said to be spoken by him in the House of Lords March 25. 1679. upon occasion of the Houses Resolving it self into State of England which was to the following Effect MY LORDS YOV are now appointing the consideration of the State of England to be taken up in a Committee of the whole House some day the next Week I do not know how well what I have to say may be received for I never study either to make my Court well or to be popular I alwaies speak what I am commanded by the dictates of the Spirit within me There are some other considerations that concern England so nearly that without them you will come far short of Safety and Quiet at home We have a little Sister and she hath no Breasts what shall we do for our Sister in the day when she shall be spoken for If she be a Wall we will build on her a Palace of Silver if she be a Door we will inclose her with Boards of Caedar We have several little Sisters without Breasts the French Protestant Churches the two Kingdoms of Ireland and Scotland the forraign Protestants are a Wall the only Wall and Defence to England upon it you may build Palaces of Silver glorious Palaces The protection of the Protestants abroad is the greatest power and security the Crown of England can attain to and which can only help us to give check to the growing greatness of France Scotland and Ireland are two Doors either to let in good or mischief upon us they are much weakned by the Artifice of our cunning Enemies and we ought to enclose them with Boards of Caedar Popery and Slavery like two Sisters go hand in hand sometimes the one goes first sometimes the other but wherever the one enters the other is always following close at the Heels In England Popery was to have brought in Slavery in Scotland Slavery went before and Popery was to follow I do not think your Lordships or the Parliament have Jurisdiction there It is a Noble and Ancient Kingdom they have an Illustrious Nobility a Gallant Gentry a Learned Clergy and an understanding worthy People but yet we cannot think of England as we ought without reflecting on the condition thereof They are under the same Prince and the influence of the same Favourites and Councils When they are hardly dealt with can we that are Richer expect better usuage For 't is certain that in all absolute Governments the poorest Countries are most favourably dealt with When the Ancient Nobility there cannot enjoy their Royalties their Shrievaldoms and their Stewardies which they and their Ancestors have possessed for several hundred of years but that now they are enjoyn'd by the Lords of the Council to make Deputations of their Authorities to such as are their known Enemies can we expect to enjoy our Magna Charta long under the same persons and Administration of Affairs If the Council-Table there can imprison any Nobleman or Gentleman for several years without bringing him to Tryal or giving the least Reason for what they do can we expect the same men will preserve the Liberty of the Subject here My Lords I will confess that I am not very well vers'd in the particular Laws of Scotland but this I do know that all the Northern Countries have by their Laws an undoubted and inviolable Right to their Liberties and Properties yet Scotland hath out-done all the Eastern and Southern Countries in having their Lives Liberties and Estates subjected to the Arbitrary Will and Pleasure of those that govern They have lately plundered and harassed the richest and wealthiest Countries of that Kingdom and brought down the barbarous Highlanders to devour them and all this almost without a colourable pretence to do it Nor can there be found a Reason of State for what they have done but that those wicked Ministers designed to procure a Rebellion at any Rate which as they managed it was only prevented by the miraculous hand of God or otherwise all the Papists in England would have been armed and the fairest opportunity given in the nick of time for the execution of that wicked and bloody Design the Papists had and it is not possible for any man that duly considers it to think other but that those Ministers that acted that were as guilty of the Plot as any of the Lords that are in Question for it My Lords I am forced to speak this the plainer because till the pressure be fully and clearly taken off from Scotland 't is not possible for me or any thinking man to believe that good is meant us here We must still be upon our guard apprehending that the Principle is not changed at Court and that those men that are still in place and Authority have that influence upon the mind of Our Excellent Prince that he is not nor cannot be that to us that his own Nature and Goodness would incline him to I know your Lordships can order nothing in this but there are those that hear me which can put a perfect cure to it until that be done the Scottish Weed is like Death in the pot Mors in Olla But there is something too now I consider that most immediately concerns us their Act of Twenty two Thousand Men to be ready to invade us upon all occasions This I hear that the Lords of the Council there have treated as they do all other Laws and expounded it into a standing Army of Six Thousand Men. I am sure we have Reason and Right to beseech the King that that Act may be better considered in the next Parliament there I shall say no more for Scotland at this time I am afraid your Lordships will think I have said too much having no concern there but if a French Nobleman should come to dwell in my House and Family I should think it concerned me to ask what he did in France for if we were there a Felon a Rogue a Plunderer I should desire him to live elsewhere and I hope your Lordships will do the same thing for the Nation if you find Cause My Lords Give me leave to speak two or three words concerning our other Sister Ireland Thither I hear is sent Douglas's Regiment to secure us against the French Besides I am credibly informed that the Papists have their Arms restor'd and the Protestants are not many of them yet recovered from being the suspected Party The Sea-Towns as well as the In-land are full of Papists That Kingdom
to his work and then receiving a short French Dagger as he judges it to be provided for that purpose by the Virginia Merchant he went immediately to Thannet House in Aldersgate-street where his Lordship lived and found admittance with more ease and freedom than he expected the Earls Innocency rendring him altogether without suspicion But Dangerfield finding divers persons in the Room where his Lordship was and fearing least some of them migt know him and thereby he be discovered he pretended his business required privacy and humbly desired to speak with his Lordship alone whereupon he sent him with one of his Gentleman up stairs and soon after his Lordship coming himself to know what business he had with him Dangerfield repeated over the story wherein he had been instructed but his Lordship not knowing what to make of it entered into some other discourse with him but Dangerfield perceiving some persons to be at the other end of the Room was struck with a suddain horror and sear of mind and the dread of being discovered was so terrible to him that he was in tormented to be gone and presently taking his leave return'd and acquainted those who had employed him that he had been with his Lordship and there being too many persons in the Room be thought it not safe to make an attempt upon him at that time but withal to save his Credit assured them the thing was easie to be done and promised to do it the next time he went The next morning early his Boy went to the Tower with a Letter wherein he gavean Account to the Lords that he had entered himself at the Earl of Shaftsburys and promised without fail to dispatch him within a few days The Countess her self wrote an Answer to that Letter and ordered Dangerfield to go to the King and acquaint His Majesty that he had been at his Lordships to make some further discovery of the New Plot and that he should tell His Majesty Verbatim what he had said to his Lordship and that he had promised to get him an employ and to take care of him The next morning he went to the King and repeated his Lesson accordingly About two or three days after he was ordered by the Conspirators to repair to his Lordship again and frame a discourse to him to this or the like Effect Viz. My Lord I am now come with something that very nearly concerns both your Lordships Honour and Person for if your Lordship should be sent for before the King and Council and there have several Accusations of High-Treason brought in against you and you should thereupon be committed to the Tower and that the Evidence to maintain those Accusations should prove Letters written by your Lordships own hand then I hope you will believe I am your faithful Servant Having received these Instructions and the Dagger he went in the dusk of the Evening a second time to Thannet House where sending for Mr. Shepherd one of his Lordships Gentlemen to the Door he acquainted him with his desire of speaking privately with his Lord. Mr. Shepherd having first acquainted his Lordship therewith took him into a Room which Dangefield supposed to be his Lordships Closet desiring him to stay there and telling him the Earl would come to him presently But as soon as the Gentleman was retired Dangerfield began to look about the Room and found another Door besides that at which he came in and perceiving it lead into the same Room where he had been with his Lordship before he concluded that if the Earl came into the Closet he would immediately have stab'd him having the advantage of two Doors to escape by intending so soon as the fatal stroak had been given to put out the Candle and under the colour of lighting it make his escape But Divine Providence so ordered it that his Lordship came not at all into the Room but after two hours waiting which he employed in searching many Letters and other Papers which he found in a Table-Drawer putting some of them into his Pocket which when they came to be perus'd prov'd to be Letters from Sir Richard Bulstrode His Majesties Agent at Brussels the Contents whereof imported no more than the then present posture of Affairs in that Country sent for him into the next which disappointment so confounded him that he had no power to proceed in his bloody determinations but having repeated his Lesson to his Lordship left him to meditate upon the comused and groundless story and return'd with a seigned chearfulness which made those that had sent him flush with hopes that he had succeeded in his enterprize but when they understood the contrary they were extreamly concern'd having assured themselves of the like success that they had found in the Assassination of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey And Mr. Wood was sent from his Lord to tell him that of all people he admired to find him so great a Coward and that however it was his Lordships pleasure to try him once more ordering him in the mean time to make the most of those Letters by repairing to White-hall and acquainting the King with the Discourse he had with his Lordship and shew the Letters of Sir Richard Bulstrode to His Majesty that thereby he might obtain the greater Credit and least the Earl should have suspected the Intreague by missing of his Letters and be with the King before him he was commanded to make no manner of delay but repair immediately to His Majesty For said he if the Earl should be there before you it may be more prejudicial to you than perhaps you imagine He was moreover to tell the King that a great number of very dangerous Papers relating to the Presbyterians design were in the Lodging of Collonel Mansel and desired a Warrant to seize on them Upon this Dangerfield went immediately to Mr. Cheffinch who had introduced him to His Majesty once before and was by him placed in a Room which the King was to pass through and His Majesty seeing him there asked him what he had to say to him he answered according to the instructions he had received and humbly prayed a Warrant to search the Collonel's Lodgings His Majesty bid him repair to Mr. Secretary Coventry and acquaint him with the business who would thereupon grant him a Warrant Upon this away went Dangerfield to the Secretary and having first acquainted him with the Story told him it was His Majesties pleasure he should wait on him for a Warrant Notwithstanding which the Secretary absolutely refused to grant him one unless he would first make Affidavit that there were such Papers in the Collonel's Chamber and what the Contents of them were But the Gentleman could do neither The first he could not Swear because the Papers were not then there but were to have been conveyed thither after the Warrant was obtained And the second he was afraid to Swear least the Secretary who was a very wise and judicious person should presently apprehend
to the King's Head Tavern whither the Justice came to examin him as soon as the the Council was risen But in the mean while he Writ a Note to Mrs. Cellier and ordered her to acquaint the Lord and Lady Powis that he was apprehended for they knew that the Messenger would not suffer the Note to be sent until he had first read the Contents of it which having done the Boy carryed it according to directions The next day Colonel Mansel and he being both called into the Council Chamber the Lord Chancellor demanded of the Colonel what Correspondencies these were which he held Here are Papers saies he of dangerous Consequence importing no less than the levying Men and raising Rebellion against the King here is also a Catalogue of Names whom you have listed The Colonel affirmed he knew nothing either of the Letter or List of Names nor never did or ever would hold any Treasonable Correspondence with any Man living And humbly prayed the favour of the Court that he might be permitted how he came by a sight of those Papers assuring them that he did not question but to make it appear that those Papers were brought into his Chamber by Dangerfield and upon leave given by the Board he gave them a full and clear account of the whole Matter whereupon he was ordered to call in his Witnesses which he did And Mr. Harris made Oath That the Papers then before the Council were the same which were left at his House by Mr. Sretch and Mr. Bostock who made Oath That being inform'd by Dangerfield of certain prohibited goods concealed in Ax-yard they appointed to meet him at Mrs. Celliers in order to go with him to seize them but when they came there he was not then ready having not yet lain at his New Lodgings but told them that he intended to go to them that very night and therefore appointed them to come the Wednesday following in the Morning and that when they came there they found Dangerfield in his Chamber and one Bedford with him and that Dangerfield took them aside least Bedford should hear and whispered to them that the goods were in the Room above Stairs and desired them to charge him to assist 'em which they did and that after a narrow search finding no such goods as they were informed of he pointed towards the Bed whereupon they pulled it away from the Wall and searched very narrowly but could discover no goods nor did the Papers appear to them whereupon he pointed to the Beds-head and then Mr. Stretch went behind the Bed with a Candle but could see nothing And that then Dangerfield went himself behind the Bed and calling to them cryed What 's that hangs there pointing to a bundle of Papers that were pinned to the Beds-head which they had no sooner taken down but he snatched one of them out of the Officers hand and cryed out Here 's Treason There was in that Paper words to this Effect I wonder at your delay and that the four Lords have left us for now the Tyrant has declared himself a Papish which agreed very well with what they afterwards endeavoured to charge upon his Lordship and the rest of the Protestant Nobility upon the reading of which words he cryed out Did not I tell you these were Treasonable Papers they ought to be secured and the person whose Chamber this is if he were present They swore likewise that the Papers which the Council had then before them were the same which they took down from behind the Beds-head and that they did verily believe them to be placed there by Dangerfield The Council proceeding no further in the examination of the Plot that day the Justice took Bail for Dangerfield till the next day And then the Colonel Petitioning that the rest of his Witnesses might be heard His Majesty Adjourn'd the Examination thereof till the next Council day in regard of some other business which the Council had then before them whereupon Dangerfield moved that till then he might be Bailed but His Majesty refused to grant it and ordered in Council that he should be taken into Custody by the Messenger who acquainting Dangerfield therewith he stormed and said He was confident there was no such order for he knew there were those persons that would not suffer him to be so Treated but the Messenger insisting upon his order demanded his Sword which he very unwillingly delivered and so was conducted to the Messengers House He had the impudence to move the Board that the Colonel might be committed likewise but my Lord Chancellor opposed the motion and so it fell On the Monday following they being both called into Council and Dangerfield having by that time received instructions from the Conspirators how to proceed in it Addressed himself to His Majesty affirming there were in all sixteen Papers desiring to know what was become of the rest which was before the Council and what was become of the Box of Treasonable Papers and two or three hundred Letters Adding That Mansel had got together a company of Witnesses to disparage the Kings Evidence and to palliate his Treasonable Practices and desiring leave to ask him some questions which being granted he asked him if he did not frequent a Club in Westminster Market whether he did not know one Disney Lisle English Grange and Brown whether he did not bring into the Club a Pamphlet called A Word without Doors and read it publick to the Club whether he did not after the reading thereof utter Seditious Words again His Royal Highness Mansel replyed He knew many of the Gentlemen he had named that they were very honest Gentlemen and good Subjects and that all of them lived in Westminster except Captain Brown who had been Lieutenant to Major Russel's Troop of Horse in His Royal Highnesses Regiment But for all Treasonable discourse with them or any other persons he utterly disowned and was thereupon commanded to call the rest of his Witnesses who appearing proved that there were no more Papers taken in the Chamber than what was before the Council And Mr. Bedford who lay with Dangerfield the night before the pretended discovery and was to have been an Assistant in the management of the Plot acquainted the Council That after the searching the Colonels Chamber and seizing the Papers there he went to Mrs. Celliers and told Dangerfield what an ill thing he had done both in injuring Mr. Mansel and likewise by ingaging him in so base and vile a business desiring him therefore to discover and lay open the whole contrivance and who it was that put him upon it And that Dangerfield replyed He did not doubt but to come off well enough since so great persons had ingaged him in it c. Mr. D'oiley deposed that he had prosecuted him at two several Sessions held in the Old Bayly for uttering false Guinneys to which Dangerfield replyed He was indeed twice prosecuted upon that account but it was out of pure malice
this Project they next procured young Tongue Son to Dr. Tongue to prove that his Father the Earl of Shaftsbury and Oates invented the Popish Plot Whereupon one of the Lords of the Council asked him If they contrived Coleman's Letters too To which he could make no reply and indeed the whole business was so weak and ridiculous that it effected nothing more than the depressing the Wretch that was to have been the Evidence of it under the weight of his own Guilt he being committed to the King's-Bench where he hath ever since remained Besides their publick Designs they had several secret Projects and Artifices to accomplish his Ruine As forging of his Hand and other such like base and villanous Arts as appears by their intercepting Letters directed to his Lordship and after having incerted Treason in them in a hand as near the Original as they could possibly counterfeit transmitted them to such hands as would certainly acquaint our Ministers of State therewith but more especially a certain Gentleman who had commanded a Regiment of Horse in the Service of his late Majesty for whose sake and his present Majestie 's he suffered the loss of all that he had writ to the Earl about relieving him against the Gout with which he was much afflicted whose Letter was intercepted the person that writ it lived at that time in the Frengch King's Dominions and after they had added to it an account that the Writer was able to furnish the Earl with Forty thousand men from France to oppose the D. Y's Interest it was then convey'd to some of the French Ministers of State presuming they would send a Copy of it hither but by an over-ruling Providence the Letter was strangely return'd into the Gentleman's own hands whereby the mischief they intended was prevented His Majesty having prorogued the Parliament his Lordship together with the Earls of Huntington Clare Stamford c. the Lords North and Grey Chando's Grey Howard and Herbert being introduced to his Majestie 's Presence by his Highness Prince Rupert presented the following Petition and Advice to His Majesty SIR VVE are here to cast our selves at your Majestys feet being Ten of the Peers of Your Realm of England and in our own Names and in the Names of several others of our fellow Peers do humbly beg That Your Majesty would consider the great Danger Your Royal Person is in as also the Protestant Religion and the Government of these Your Nations We humbly pray that in a time when all these are so highly concerned Your Majesty will effectually use Your Great Council the Parliament SIR Out of the deepest sence of Duty and Loyalty to Your Majesty we offer it as our humble Advice and earnest Petition that the Parliament may sit at the time appointed and that Your Majesty would be Graciously pleased to give publick Notice and Assurance thereof that the minds of Your Majestys Subjects may be settled and their fear removed To this Petition and Advice His Majesty answered He would consider of what they had offered and told them that he heartily wished all other people were as solicitous for the peace and good of the Nation as he was and ever would be However he was pleased soon after to Prorogue the Parliament from the 26th of January till the 11th of November following About this time his Lordship was visited with a violent and dangerous fit of Sickness and his recovery was somewhat doubted of but Heaven was pleased to spare him to be a further Scourge and Terrour to the Papists those common Pests of Christendom and sworn Enemies to His Majesty and the English Nation The Romanists having tryed so many ways and different methods for accomplishing his Ruine resolved to try a new Stratagem for the effecting thereof viz. The tampering with Dugdale to retract his Evidence concerning the Popish-plot and endeavour to prevail with him to withdraw himself into some place beyond the Seas and leave a Writing behind him wherein he was to retract all he had sworn against the Papists and pretend that the occasion of his Retraction was an extream trouble and anguish of Conscience for having so unjustly and wickedly injured the Papists and procured the shedding of innocent blood affirming that it was by the instigation of his Lordship and other Protestants of unblemished Loyalty to His Majesty upon whom he was moreover to six the Odium of a Presbyterian Plot not only against the Papists but against His Majesties Person and Government But the mischief of it was they had not then Debauched his Conscience perswaded him to question the Truth of God's Omnisciency or wholly Erradicated the Beleif of a Deity out of his mind and thereby render him hardy enough to undertake so Barbarous a Work without any kind of Hissitation Wherefore being touched with some Remorse at so horrid a Villany he gave an account of the business to his Lordship and some others and so that design suffered the same fate with the rest and produced no other effect than exposing the malice of his Enemies and the informing him what he must live in a dayly expectation of from those indefatigable wretches and purchasers of Perjury by offers of two Thousand Pounds and promises of other Rewards and Gratitudes A Sum so considerable and Arguments so powerful and irresistable that it would have been a rarity much more amazing and would infinitly have transcended any of those called The Seven Wonders of the World if they should alwaies have been so unhappy as not to meet with some Profligate Villain or other who would upon those considerations engage to Swear whatsoever they should dictate and even defie the Almighty and storm Heaven it self to gain so immence a Treasure and acquire a Fortune so far above what their Birth or Education ever gave them a Prospect of In December 1680. he was present at and assisted in the trying William Viscount Stafford upon an Impeachment of the House of Commons for Ploting and Conspiring with the Pope and his Emissaries to Murther the King exterpate the Protestant Religion and subvert the Government of these Kingdoms and after a fair Tryal his Lordship with the Majority of the Peers sound him Guilty of the Treason whereof he stood Impeached upon which he received Sentence to be Hang'd Drawn and Quarter'd the rigour whereof was remitted by the Gracious Pleasure of His Majesty And not long after he was beheaded on a Scaffold erected for that purpose on Tower-Hill On the 10th of Jannuary His Majesty Prorogued the Parliament and on the 18th they were Dissolved by Proclamation and a New one summoned to meet at Oxford on the 21 st of the following March which being looked upon by his Lordship and divers others of the Nobility and Gentry to be ominous and attended with much hazard and danger and was afterwards really found to be so by some To prevent which the Earl joyned with several Noblemen in presenting a humble Petition and Advice full of Tenderness
and Affection Duty and Loyalty to His Majesty's Person and Government humbly requesting that the Parliament summoned to meet at Oxford might be Graciously permitted to meet and sit at Westminster It was presented to His Majesty by the Earl of Essex who acquainted the King with the design and intent of their Petition in the following words May it please Your Majesty THe Lords here present together with divers other Peers of the Realm taking notice that by your late Proclamation Your Majesty hath Declared an Intention of calling a Parliament at Oxford and observing from Histories and Records how unfortunate many such Assemblies have been when called at a place remote from the Capital City as particularly the Congress in Henry the Seconds time at Clarendon Three several Parliaments at Oxford in Henry the Thirds time and at Coventry in Henry the Sixths time with divers others which have proved very fatal to those Kings and have been followed with great mischief to the whole Kingdom And considering the present posture of Affairs the many Jealousies and Discontents which are among the People we have great cause to apprehend that the Consequences of the sitting of a Parliament now at Oxford may be as fatal to Your Majesty and the Nation as those others mentioned have been to the then Reigning Kings and therefore we do conceive that we cannot answer it to God to Your Majesty or to the People if we being Peers of the Realm should not on so important an occasion humbly offer our Advise to Your Majesty that if possible Your Majesty may be prevailed with to alter this as we apprehend unseasonable Resolution The Grounds and Reasons of our Opinion are contained in this our Petition which we humbly present to Your Majesty To the Kings most excellent Majesty The humble Petition and Advice of the Lords undernamed Peers of the Realm Humbly sheweth THat whereas Your Majesty hath been pleased by divers Spechees and Messages to Your Houses of Parliament rightly to present to them the dangers that threaten Your Majesties Person and the whole Kingdom from the mischievous and wicked Plots of the Papists and the suddain growth of a forreign Power unto which no stop or remedy could be provided unless it were by Parliament and an Vnion of Your Majesties Protestant Subjects in one Mind and one Interest And the Lord Chancellor in pursuance of Your Majesties Commands having more at large demonstrated the said dangers to be as great as we in the midst of our fears could imagine them and so pressing that our Liberties Religion Lives and the whole Kingdom would certainly be lost if a speedy provision was not made against them And Your Majesty on the 21st of April 1679. having called unto Your Council many Honourable and Worthy Persons and Declared to them and to the whole Kingdom That being sensible of the Evil Effects of a single Ministry or private Advice or forreign Committee for the general Direction of Your Affairs Your Majesty would for the future refer all things unto that Council and by the constant Advice of them together with the frequent use of Your great Council the Parliament Your Majesty was hereafter resolved to govern the Kingdom We began to hope we should see an end of our Miseries But to our unspeakable grief and sorrow we soon found our expectations frustrated the Parliament then subsisting was Prorogued and Dissolved before it could perfect what was intended for our relief and security And tho' another was thereupon called yet by many Prorogations it was put off till the 21st of October past and notwithstanding Your Majesty was then again pleased to acknowledge that neither your Person nor your Kingdom could be safe till the Matter of the Plot was gone through It was unexpectedly Prorogued on the 10th of this Month before any sufficient Order could be taken therein All their just and pious endeavours to save the Nation were overthrown the good Bills they had been industriously preparing to Vnite Your Majesties Protestant Subjects brought to nought The discovery of the Irish Plots stifled The Witnesses that came in frequently more fully to Declare that both of England and Ireland discouraged Those forreign Kingdoms and States who by a happy Conjunction with us might give a check to the French Powers disheartned even to such a despair of their own security against the growing greatness of that Monarch as we fear may enduce them to take New Resolutions and perhaps such as may be fatal to Vs the Strength and Courage of our Enemies both at home and abroad encreased and our selves left in the utmost danger of seeing our Country brought into utter desolation In these extremities we had nothing under God to comfort us but the hopes that Your Majesty being touched with the groans of your perishing People would have suffered Your Parliament to meet at the day unto which it was Prorogued and that no further interruption should have been given to their proceedings in order to their saving of the Nation But that failed us too so then we heard that Your Majesty had been prevailed with to Dissolve it and to call another to meet at Oxford where neither Lords nor Commons can be in safety but will be dayly exposed to the Swords of the Papists and their Adherents of whom too many are crept into Your Majesties Guards The Liberty of speaking according to their Consciences will be thereby destroyed and the validity of all their Acts and Proceedings consisting in it left disputable The straitness of the place no way admits of such a concourse of persons as now follows every Parliament The Witnesses which are necessary to give Evidence against the Popish Lords such Judges or others whom the Commons have impeached or had resolved to impeach can neither bear the charge of going thither nor trust themselves under the Protection of a Parliament that is it self evidently under the power of Guards and Souldiers The Premises considered We Your Majesties Petitioners out of a just abhorrence of such a dangerous and pernicious Council which the Authors have not dared to avow and the direful apprehensions of the calamities and miseries that may ensue thereupon do make it our most humble Prayer and Advice that the Parliament may not sit at a place where it will not be able to Act with that freedom which is necessary and especially to give unto their Acts and Proceedings that Authority which they ought to have amongst the people and have ever had unless impaired by some Awe upon them of which there wants not presidents and that Your Majesty would be Graciously pleased to order it to sit at Westminster it being the usual place and where they may consult with Safety and Freedom And Your Petitioners c. Monmouth Kent Huntingdon Bedford Salisbury Clare Stamford Essex Shaftsbury Mordent Ewers Paget Grey Herbert Howard Delamer BUt His Majesty resolving not to alter His Resolution for the Parliaments setting at Oxford and the time of their metting
drawing near the Members from all parts repaired thither and apprehending themselves in danger of being exposed in a place so remote from London to the Insolency of the Papists upon the account of that Vigilency and Courage wherewith they had prosecuted the Popish Plot in former Parliaments they appeared there with a Guard some of them being accompanied thither by their Tenants and Neighbours some by the Freeholders by whom they were chosen and many of them only by their own Domisticks And to say the Truth the whole number was so inconsiderable that it served rather for Ornament than Strength and could have afforded but little assistance if the Papists had made an assault upon them as was feared Going thus attended to Parliaments holden at places remote from the Royal City hath alwaies been usual and customary and accounted not only honest but desent and honourable too especially in times of difficulty and danger when not only a Suspition but unquestionable Evidence and undeniable Proof of a design to destroy the King murther His Subjects and subvert the Government renders it foolish and unsafe to do otherwise least thereby the innocent and unwary expose themselves to the insolence and fury of their stronger Adversaries But notwithstanding this antient and laudable Custom it was looked upon at this time as an ill thing and great improvement made thereof towards the effecting what had been formerly so often unsuccessfully attempted as will appear by the sequel of this History The King having made preparations for His Journey to Oxford went first to Windsor and from thence to the University being met upon the Border of the County by the High Sherift and his Attendance and at Wbateby by the Lord Norris Lord Lieutenant of the County with a great Train of Gentry and the two Troops of the County Militia who conducted him to the East-Gate of the City where he was received by the Mayor and the rest of the Magistrates and welcomed by the Recorder in an elegant and florid Oration Then the Mayor presented him with the Mace Sword which being return'd again the Mayor attended with the Aldermen and Recorder carried the Mace before His Majesty to Christ Colledge-Gate from whence the King passing to His Lodgings which were prepared for him in the Colledge was received by the Bishop and welcomed in a Latin Speech which he made on his Knees And the next morning His Majesty was attended by the Vice-Chancellor the Orator and the rest of the Officers belonging to the University The Orator making a Speech to the King in Latin and to the Queen in English His Lordship and divers other persons imitated those of other parts and went to Oxford accompanied likewise with several persons of their Neighbours and Acquaintance who Innocently offered to wait on them some part of the way and others throughout to Oxford On the 21st the Parliament met at the Convocation House The King told them he had not parted with His last House of Commons had it not been for their unwarrantable proceedings he commended to them the prosecution of the Plot c. Having ended his Speech the Commons returned to their House to chuse themselves a Speaker and unanimously made choice of Mr. Williams who had been Speaker of the former Parliament the choise being over they presented him to His Majesty and the Speaker Addressing himself to the King acquainted Him That the Commons according to His Majesties command had proceeded to choose them a Speaker and to shew that they were not given to change they had chosen him and that he did according to their command prostrate himself at His Majesties Feet to receive his pleasure with a Head and Heart full of Loyalty to His Sacred Person Armed with a settled Resolution never to depart from His antient and well settled Government The King having approved of the choice and confirmed him for Speaker the Commons withdrew and repaired to their own House and settled Elections c. On the 25th they entered upon the consideration of the Matter relating to the Bill which had passed both Houses in the last Parliament for repeal of the Act of the 35th of Elizabeth but was not tendred to His Majesty for the Royal Assent and resolved that a Messenger should be sent to the Lords to desire a Conference thereupon Another Message was also ordered to be sent to the Lords to put them in mind that they had formerly by their Speaker demanded judgment of High Treason at their Bar against the Earl of Danby and therefore desired them to appoint a day to give judgment against him upon their Impeachment The Impeachment of Fitz-Harris was next entered upon in order whereunto his Examination being-read in the House they ordered it to be Printed and that Fitz-Harris should be impeached at the Lords Bar and a Committee appointed to draw up Articles against him The House ordered Sir Lionel Jenkins to carry up the Impeachment to the Lords which he at first refused but perceiving the Commons were ready to proceed against him for that Contempt he complied and went up and impeached Fitz-Harris at the Bar of the Lords House in the Name of the Commons and People of England The Impeachment of Fitz-Harris being thus delivered to the Lords they rejected it whereupon his Lordship and Eighteen Peers entered their Proestation against their throwing of it out The Commons likewise Voted it to be illegal and the next Morning March 28th His Majesty sent for them into the House of Lords and told them that their beginnings had been such that he could expect no good of this Parliament and therefore thought fit to Dissolve them and accordingly the Chancellor by the Kings Command Declared the Parliament Dissolv'd By this unexpected and suddain Dissolution a final conclusion was put to all their Debates and all their further examinations of and prosecuting the Popish Plot was terminated by a full Point The Parliament being thus Dissolv'd the King took Coach immediately and departed to Windsor the same day and after a few hoursstay returned to Whitehall and the Earl likewise returned to London having first left as a mark of his magnificence and bounty a piece of Plate to Baliol Colledge With this Parliament we may conclude the Active part of his Lordships Life for about that time the Scene alter'd and he becomes only passive in the remainder of his Life in relating the Storms whereof I am fallen into such a Laborinth of Plots Sham-Plots misterious Intreagues Subornations and Perjuries and confident Affirmations of moral Impossibilities as no Age ever produced or History can parallel so that it cannot be expected I should Write an exact History thereof but the Reader must be content to let it remain as a considerable part of the Mystery of Iniquity until such time as he to whom all things are open and naked shall bless the World with a full and clear discovery of the secret But as a commical Prologue to the intended Tragedy
But therein the mercenary wretch reckoned without his Hoasts and found himself wofully deceived in the idle immagination that every Mans Conscience was as much viciated and depraved as his own and would adventure upon the most vile and abominable practices whatsoever in hope thereby to free themselves from those pinching necessities which they were involved in and by failing in that enterprize learned the true difference between being impoverished by the want of success in Trade or Merchandice and the being undone by Profuseness and Debauchery Before he adventured to Address himself to the Captain about the business he sent others to brake the Matter to him relating the particular Circumstan ces the Captain was at that time underand instructing them how to behave themselves towards him Being thus instructed October 8th 1681. Bains visited the Captain in the Kings-Bench where after some Complements and Preparitary Discourse to make way for and dispose the Captain to comply with what he had to osser he proceeded to tell him that he must needs know something of the Earl of Shaftsbury's Design against the King and perswading him to discover it to him and promised if he would do so he would procure him a Pardon and a great Reward The Captain answered He knew nothing by his Lordship but that he was a very Loyal Person So soon as he was gone the Captain acquainted Major James with what Bains had offered and the Major presently took his Pen and Ink and wrote it down in his Pocket Book Two or Three days after Booth adventured to try his own Fortune and that he might prove more successful than his fore-runner procured leave for the Captain to go out of the Prison to Booth's Lodging at Mr. Waver's in the Rules where they entertained him with a Noble and Splendid Treat and assured him if he would be an Evidence against the Earl he should have 500 l. per. ann settled upon him and his Heirs as a Reward or if he liked a 1000 l. in ready Mony better he should have so much paid him down and finding him still untractable they perswaded his Wife to use her Interest with him and endeavour to prevail with him and work him to a compliance with what they desired telling her she might thereby be made for ever But when all this and many other contrivancies failed them they gave in an Information of High Treason against him to the King and Council by whose order he was brought before them and straitly examined concerning what he knew of a Plot against the King and to have seized on His Person at Oxford The Captain persisted in his own Innocency and affirmed he knew no such thing by the Lord Shaftsbury or any other Then Booth swore High Treason against him and deposed that Wilkinson was to have been Captain of a Troop of Horse consisting of Fifty Men which were to be employed in seizing the King at Oxford when the Parliament sat there and to gain the greater Credit to his Oath and make the thing more probable he affirmed himself was Listed under him as one of them although to my knowledge and the knowledge of many more The Getleman at that very time when the Parliament met at Oxford and this was pretended to be done was busily employed in the aforesaid Affair of providing for his Voyage to Carolina The Captain upon this Deposition was committed back again to the Kings-Bench Prison where he acquainted the Major with what had passed at the Council and he Writ that down likewise as he had done the rest and the Captain willing to expose the Villany and prevent the mischief of his mercinary Breath published an account of the whole Matter to the World to which I refer the Reader for further satisfaction His Lordship having continued in the Tower from July till the latter end of November without obtaing a Tryal His Majesty then issued out a Commission of Oyer and Terminer to be held at the Old-Bayly on the 24th of that Month when an Indictment of High Treason against his Lordship was preferred to the Grand Jury summoned upon that occasion which was the most substantial of any that had been known for a long time before The Court being set and the Jury sworn the Witnesses gave in the like Evidence to the Court as they had formerly done to the Council They generally swore much to the same purposes and Booth was one of the chief Evidences who declared upon Oath that the Earl told him That he and others had considered with themselves it was necessary for them to have Guards at Oxford and that he had for that reason provided Fifty Gentlemen and had intrusted Captain Wilkinson with the command and management of them that he himself was Listed as one of them yet could name none of the rest and that he had thereupon bought himself a very good Stone-horse with other Accoutrements for the said Service And that Captain Wilkinson promised to furnish his Man with a Horse Now that the World may the better judge of the truth or falseness of what this Man swore in the face of so great an Assembly and from thence argue the validity of the other Evidences I have transcribed Verbatim an Advertisement which was thereupon published the next Week in Janeway's Intelligence Number 65. WHereas upon Thursday last an Indictment was preferred to the Grand Jury at the Old-Bayly against the Right Honourable the Earl of Shaftsbury and whereas Mr. Booth was produced as one of the Evidences who swore in open Court That Captain Wilkinson was engaged with the said Earl against His Majesty and the Government and that the said Captain was to command a Troop of Horse to be mounted with Fifty Gentlemen and that the said Mr. Booth had Listed himself as one of the Troop Also the said Mr. Booth made Oath that he had bought himself a good Stone-horse and other Accoutrements for the said Service and Captain Wilkinson was to furnish his Man with a Horse This is therefore to give Notice That if any one can make it appear that Mr. Booth bought any such Horse with his Marks and Colour and who he bought him of about March last or that he had any such Horse within that time and what Stable he was kept at shall have upon good proof made thereof to the said Captain Wilkinson Five Guinneys paid him for a Reward of his pains Also if any person can make appear That the said Captain Wilkinson hath bought or had any Horse Gelding or Mare for these Two Years last past or ever hath been upon the back of any for the same space of time saving one Gelding which he borrowed to Ride to Wickam when the Members of the last Parliament went to Oxford Or that ever Captain Wilkinson hath been nearer Oxford these Twenty Years than the said Town of Wickam upon proof thereof he shall have Five Guinneys for his Reward Henry Wilkinson IT 's worthy of every Mans consideration that this