Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n earl_n sir_n warwick_n 19,099 5 12.1312 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A40878 A trve relation of that memorable Parliament which wrought wonders begun at Westminster, in the tenth yeare of the reigne of K. Richard the second : whereunto is added an abstract of those memorable matters, before and since the said kings reigne, done by Parliament : together with a character of the said amiable, but unhappy King, and a briefe story of his life and lamentable death.; Historia sive narracio de modo et forma mirabilis Parliamenti apud Westmonasterium anno Domini millesimo CCCLXXXVI. English Fannant, Thomas. 1641 (1641) Wing F416; ESTC R592 22,223 53

There are 5 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

that for the appeasing of all private discontents if any were the King and the rest of the Appellants with the rest of the commissioners should dine together in the great Hall which they did and there was great joy at this reconciliation through all the Kingdome When these things were concluded they then began againe this araignment of the Traytors whereupon John Blake and Thomas Vske were indicted on the 4. day of March who although they were men of inferiour quality yet were they found to bee parties in the said Treason Vske was a Sergeant at Armes and was indicted amongst the Conspirators so that b●●●● late made Sheriffe of Middlesex hee had indicted the five Appellants and the Commissioners as Traytors and Blake was an Intelligencer of Tressilians one that used to goe and come betweeue the Conspirators and relate the state and successe of the treason from one to another And when they could say nothing to prove themselves cleare sentence was pronounced upon them as their Masters were before them they were carried to the Tower and from thence were dragged at the Horse taile to Tyborne and there hanged But Vske obtained this favour that his head was cut off after hee was hanged and set aloft upon Newgate for Fowles of the aire to take repast On the sixth day of March there were called to answer Robert Belknap John Holt Roger Falthorp William Burleigh Iohn Locton and Iohn Carey Baron of the Exchequer for their conspiracy against the Commissioners at Nottingham but because it is not needfull to rehearse every part of their indictment they were all condemned like as the rest Whilst the Peeres were trying them the Clergie were retired into the Kings Chambers but when word was brought to them of the condemnation of the Judges the Archbishop of Canterbury the Bishop of Winchester the Chancellor the Treasurer Lord Keeper of the Privie Seale arose hastily and went into the Parliament house powring forth their complaints before the King and the Peeres humbly upon their knees beseeching them that for the love of God the Virgin Mary and of all the Saints even as they hoped to have mercy at the day of Judgement they should shew favour and not put to death the said Judges then present and bitterly bewayling their iniquities in whose hearts the very life soule and spirit of our English Lawes lived flourished and appeared and there appeared great sorrow both on the one part of the Complainants and also of the Defendants The Duke of Gloucester likewise with the Earles of Arundel Warwick Nottingham and Derby whose hearts began to be mollified and joyned with them in their lamentable Petition At length by intercession of the Clergy the execution upon the persons was ceased and their lives were granted them but were sent to the Tower to be kept close prisoners On the 12. of March being thursday it hapned that the afore-said Knights Simon de Burleigh Iohn de Beauchamp Iames Baroverse and Iohn Salisbury were brought into the Parliament house where their accusations were read proved they found guilty and not any way able to cleare themselves From this day almost till the Ascension of our Lord the Parliament house was only taken up with the tryall of Sir Symon Burleugh for three Appellants viz. The Duke of Glocester the Earles of Arundell and Warwicke with the whole house of Commons vrged that execution might be performed according to the Law And on the other side the King and Queene the Earles of Darby and Nottingham and the Prior of Saint John his Vncle with the major part of the uper House did labour to have him saved But because the Commons were tyred with so long delayes and excuses in the Parliament and fearing as it was most like that all their paines would be to little or no purpose they humbly craved leave of the King to goe to their habitations There was also some muttering amongst the Common people and it was reported to the Parliament that the Commons did rise in diverse parts of the Realme but especially about Kent in favour of the said Sir Simon Burleigh which when they heard those that before spake and stood for him now flew cleane from him and by joynt consent on the fifth day of May sentence was pronounced only against the said Sir Symon that hee should be drawne from the Tower to Tyborne and then to be hanged till hee were dead and then to have his head strooke from his body But because he was a knight of the Garter a gallant Courtier powerfull and once a Favourite of the Kings and much respected of all the Court the King of his speciall Grace was pleased to mittigate his doome that he should only be led to Tower-hill and ther be beheaded On the twelfe of May the Thursday before Whitsontyde in like manner were condemned John Beauchamp Steward of the houshold to the King Iames Bereverous and Iohn Salsbury knights Gentlemen of the privie Chamber whereof the two first viz. Iohn Beauchamp and Iames Bereverous were beheaded on Tower-hill but Iohn Salsbury was drawn from Tower-hill to Tyborne and there was hanged On the same day also was condemned the Bishop of Chichester the Kings Confessor but because of his great dignitie he was pardoned Now they began to loath the shedding of so much Christian blood they tooke into consideration other more weighty affaires for the good of the Realme concerning the Wars with the Scots and French concerning Loanes and Subsidues and of the customes of Wine and Wooll And also concerning the translation of some Bishops because Pope Vrban the sixth after it came to his eares that the Archbishop of Yorke was condemned to avoyd all hope of Irregularity he created him Archbishop of Saint Andrewes in Scotland which Archbishop was under the power of Scots enemies to the Crown and in the gift of the Arch-Pope and because the Pope did chalenge halfe the title of all England to maintaine his Wars but although he craved it yet he was denyed therefore hee dealt warily and craftily hoping to make up his mouth by the translation of Bishops the Bishop of Ely then Lord Chancellor was made Arch-Bishop of Yorke the Bishop of Dublyn succeeded in his place the Bishop of Bathan-Wells in his place the Bishop of Sarum in his place and the Lord Iohn of Waltham Lord-keeper of the privie Seale in his place And this by his translation of Bishops he gained himselfe much money according to the Lawes of the Canon and when this came to the eares of the Parliament that such a summe of money should be transported out of the Land they strove what they could to hinder it but could not because the Clergie gave their consent On the last day of May the King appointed both houses to meet at Keemington whereas they made a conclusion of all the tryalls of the said treason granting license to Thomas Trenet William Ellingham and Nicholas Nagworth Knights Richard Metford Iohn Slake Iohn Lincolne Clerkes
to put in baile provided they were sufficient and to goe into a place of England where they listed without any let or hindrance of any of the Kings Officers Moreover the six Iustices with the Bishop of Chichester who stood condemned with them were sent into Ireland there to remaine for tearme of life and thus they were to be divided viz. Robert Belknap and John Holt in the Village of Dromore in Ireland not to remaine as Iustices or any officers but to live as banished offenders not to be out of Towne above the space of two miles upon paine of death but the King out of his gracious bounty was pleased to give a yearly annuity of 40. pound to Robert Belknap of 20. markes to John Holt during their lives and to Roger Fulthorpe the King allowed 40. pound and to William Burleigh 40. pound during life confining them to the City of Dublin granting Burleigh the liberty of two miles and to Fulthorpe three miles for their recreation John Carey and John Locton with the yearely allowance of 20. pound during life are confined to the Tower of Waterford with the like liberty and the like penaltie and the Bishop of Chichester is likewise sent to Corke there to remaine with some allowance and the like penaltie Behold these men who feared not God nor regarded men but having the Lawes in their owne hands wrested them now this way now that way as pleased best their appetites wresting them at their pleasures for their owne commoditie were at the last brought downe to the depth of miserie from whence they were never able to free themselves On the third day of Iune which was the last day of the Parliament the King the Queene the Peeres of both Estates with the Commons came to the Abbey at Westminster whereas the Bishop of London because it was in his Diocesse sung Masse and the Masse being ended the Archbishop of Canterbury made an Oration concerning the former danger of the Oath which being although the Peeres and Commons had taken the Oath of Allegeance and homage to the King yet because the King was young when they tooke the Oath a new as at the first at his Coronation These Ceremonies being performed the Metropolitan of England with all his Suffragans there present having lighted a Candle and putting it under a stoole put it out thereby excommunicating all such as should seeme to distaste dislike or contradict any of the fore-passed Acts in the last Parliament And the Lord Chancellor by the Kings appointment caused all that were present to sweare to keepe the said Statutes inviolably whole and undissolved as good and faithfull Liege-people of the Kings and the forme of the Parliament was observed throughout all the Realme On the morrow which was the fourth day of June many courteous salutations and congratulations having passed betweene the King the Nobility and Comminalty the Parliament was dissolved and every man returned home And now let England rejoyce in Christ for that the net which was laid so cunningly for our destruction is broken asunder and wee are delivered To God be the praise for all FINIS THE Names of such as were charged and condemned of high Treason in this aforesaid Memorable Parliament Alexander Nevile Archbishop of Yorke-●●●● de Vere Duke of Ireland who was 〈…〉 into France where he was kil 〈…〉 le Earle of Suffolke and Lord 〈…〉 Robert Tressilian Lord chiefe Iustice of the Kings Bench Sir Nichola Bramber sometimes Lord Major of London made a Privie Counsellour John Blake a Serjeant at Armes Thomas Vske an Intelligencer of Tressilians All these except the Duke of Ireland were drawne and hanged at the Elmes now called Tyburne Robert Belknap John Holt. Roger Falthorp William Burleigh Iohn Locton Iohn Carey Baron of the Exchequer All these former 6. named men were as it seemes Iudges and although condemned yet their lives were saved at the intercession of some of the guiltlesse Peeres and they afterward were banished into Ireland Sir Symon de Burleigh was also condemned and beheaded he was a Knight Banneret and of the Garter a great and gallant Courtier and his body lyeth honourably buried and intombed in Pauls Church Sir John Branchamp Steward of the Houshold to the King and Sir Iames Beverous were also condemned beheaded at Tower-hill Sir Iohn Salisbury was condemned drawne from Tower-hill to Tiburne and then hanged There were also detected and condemned of the aforesaid Treason The Bishop of Chichester the Kings Confessor Sir Thomas Trinet Knight Sir William Ellingham Knight Sir Nicholas Nagworth Knight Richard Metford Clerke Iohn Slake Clerke Iohn Lincoln Clerke An Abstract of many memorable matters done by PARLIAMENTS in this Kingdome of ENGLAND BY Parliament Sir Thomas Wayland chiefe Justice of the Common-Pleas 17. Ed. 1. was attainted of Felony for taking bribes and his lands and good forfeited as appeares in the Pleas of Parliaments 18. Edward 1. and he was banished the Kingdome as unworthy to live in that state against which he had so much offended By Parliament Sir William Thorpe chiefe Justice of the Kings Bench in Ed. 3. times having of five persons received five severall bribes which in all amounted to but one hundred pounds was for this alone adjudged to bee hanged and all his goods and lands forfeited The reason of the Iudgement is entred in the Roll in these vvords Because that as much as in him lay he had broken the Kings Oath made to the people which the King had intrusted him withall By Parliament holden Anno. 22. Hen. the second assembled at Nottingham and by advise thereof the King caused the Kingdome to be divided into 6 parts and Justices Itinerants appointed for every part with an Oath by them to be taken for themselves to observe and cause inviolablie to be observed of all his subjects of England the Assises made at Claringdon and renued at Northton By Parliament In the 11. of Edw. the first the Dominion of Wales was united to the Crowne of England in the Parliament in Anno 16. of Edw. the first 1289 upon the generall compes made of the ill administration of Iustice in the Kings absence by divers great Officers and Ministers of Iustices these penalties were inflicted upon the chiefe Ministers thereof whose manifest corruptions the batred of the people to men of that profession apt to abuse their science and authority the necessity of reforming so grievous a mischiefe in the Kingdome gave easie thereunto by the Parliament then assembled wherein upon due examinations of their offences they are fined to pay to the King these sums following First Sir Ralph Hengham chiefe Justice of the higher Bench seaven thousand markes Sir Iohn Loveton Justice of the Lower Bench three thousand markes Sir William Bromton Iustice sixe thousand markes Sir Soloman Rochester foure thousand markes Sir Richard Boyland foure thousand markes Sir Thomas Sadington two thousand markes Sir Walter Hopton two thousand markes These foure last were Justices Itenerants Sir William
Saham three thousand markes Robert Lithbury Master of the R●lls one thousand markes Roger Leicester one thousand markes Henry Bray Escheater and Judge for the Jewes one thousand markes But Sir Adam Stratton chiefe Baron of the Exchequer was fined in foure and thirty thousand markes These fines as the Rate of money goes now amount to neere three hundred thousand markes a mighty treasure to be gotten out of the hands of so few men which how they could a masse in those dayes when litigation and Law had not spred it selfe into those infiuit wreathings of contention as since it hath may seeme strange even to our greater-getting times In the Parliament Anno 2. of Edward the third held at Nottingham that great aspirer Mortimer was accused and condemned and sent up to London and drawne and hanged at the Common Gallowes at the Elmes now called Tiburne In the 50. yeare of the raigne of Edward the third Anno Dom. 1376 was held a Parliament at Westminster which was called the great Parliament where were divers complaints exhibited by the Parliament charging the Kings Officers with Fraud and humbly craving that the Duke of Lancaster the Lord Latimer then Lord Chamberlaine Dame Alice Peirce the Kings Concubine and one Sir Richard Sturry might be removed from Court their complaints desires are so vehemently urged by their Speaker Sir Peter la Moore that all these persons were presently put from Court By Parliaments all the wholesome fundamentall Lawes of this Land were and are established and confirmed By Act of Parliament the Popes power and Supremacie and all superstition and Idolatry and abrogated abolished and banished out of this Land By Act of Parliament Gods true Religion worship and service are maintained and established By Act of Parliament the two famous Vniversities of Cambridge and Oxford have many wholesome and helpfull Immunities By Parliament one Pierce Gaveston a great favorite and notable misleader of K. Edw. 2. was removed banished and afterwards by the Lords executed So were Hugh Spencer the Father and Hugh the Sonne By Parliament Empson and Dudley two notorious polers of the Common-wealth by exacting penall Lawes on the subjects were discovered and afterwards executed By Parliament the damnable Gun-pouder Treason hatched in Hell is recorded to bee had in eternall Infamie By Parliament one Sir Giles Mompesson a Moderne Caterpiller and poler of the Common-wealth by exacting upon Inholders c. was discovered degraded from Knighthood and banished by Proclamation By Parliament Sir Francis Bacon made by King James Baron Veralam and Viscount St. Albanes and Lord Chancellor of England very grievous to the Common-wealth by bribery was discovered and displaced By Parliament Sir John Bennit Judge of the Prerogative Court pernicious to the Commonwealth in his place was discovered and displaced By Parliament Lyonell Cranfield sometimes a Merchant of London made by K. James Earle of Middlesex and Lord Treasurer of England hurtfull in his place to the Common-wealth was discovered and displaced By Parliament one Sir Francis Mitchell a jolly Justice of Peace for Middlesex in the Suburbes of London another notable Canker-worme of the Common-wealth by corruption in exacting the penall Lawes upon poore Alehouse-keepers and Victuallers c. was discovered degraded from Knighthood and utterly disabled for being Iustice of Peace By Parliament Spaines late fraud was discovered and by Act the two Treaties with that perfidious Nation for the match of the Prince our now gracious King and restitution of the Palatinate were dissolved and annihilated both which had cost the King and his Subjects much monie and much blood We may remember that that sage Counceller of State Sir William Cecill Lord Burleigh and Lord Treasurer of England was ofttimes heard to say Hee knew not what an Act of Parliament might not doe which sage saying was approved by King James and by his Majestie alleaged in one of his published speeches Which being so now the face of Christendome being at this present so torne and miserably 〈◊〉 and the Christian World distracted the Gospell in all places almost persecuted both Church Common-wealth where the Gospell is professed in all places beyond the Seas lying a bleeding as we may say and we our selves at home not without feare and danger To conclude what good may we not hope and pray for by this present and other ensuing Parliaments the onely meanes to rectifie and remedy matters in Church and Common-wealth much amisse The Character RIchard Son of the valiant and vidorious Edward the blacke Prince was borne at Burdeaux and grand-child to King Edward the third being ●1 yeeres old began his Reigne the 21. day of June in the yeare of our Lord 1377. and was crowned King at Westminster the 16. of July In beauty bounty and liberality he ●a●re passed all his Progenitors but was overmuch given to ease and quietnesse little regarding Military matters of Armes and being young was most ruled by you●g Counsell regarding little the Counsell of the sage wise men of the Realm● which thing turned this Land to great trouble and himselfe to extreame misery For being first disgraced by his Cousin Henry of Bullingbroke Duke of Hereford son of John of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster he was at length by him with the generall consent of the whole Parliament deposed from his Crown and Kingdome the 29. of September 1399. and committed to prison and afterwards wickedly murdered For being sent to Pomfret Castle to be safely kept and Princely maintained he was shortly after by King Henries direction and commandment who feared lest his estate might be shaken whiles King Richard liv'd wickedly assaulted in his lodging by Sir Piers of Exton and 8. other armed men from one of which with a Princely courage he wrested a ●rown Bill and therewith slew 4. of them fought with all the rest untill comming by his owne Chaire in which the base cowardly Knight himselfe stood for his owne safety he was by him stricken with a Pole-Axe in the hinder part of his head that presently hee fell downe and dyed when he had raigned 22. yeares 14 weekes and 2 dayes More Memorable things done by Parliaments BY Parliament Richard Montague since made Bishop of Chichester and now Bishop of Norwich his pernicious Booke entituled Apello Caesarem First confuted by Doctor Carlton then B. of Chichester and divers other Reverend Orthodox Divines was displayed and by Proclamation dated 1628. the booke was called in and prohibited and he the said Montague was discovered to be a notable unorthodox man c. By Parliament Roger Manwayring D. of Divinity Parson of St. Giles in the Fields and the Kings Chaplaine was discovered to be an unorthodox man and brought on his knees to the Bar of the Honourable House of Parliament and the booke of his two seditious Printed Sermons against Parliaments entituled Religion and Allegeance was by Proclamation called in and prohibited and he the said Manwayring was censured and deprived of his Livings not to come neere the Court nor to exercise or use any Ministeriall Office c. But notwithstanding soone after the fatall dissolution of that Parliament 1629. He the said Manwayring by the power of a little great Prelate was not onely restored to his former Livings but soone after hee was preferred and made Deane of Worcester afterwards a Bishop and is now Bishop of St. Davids the first Bishoprick in Wales And in as much as so many Memorable things have bin done by Parliaments somewhereof in former Times have indeed done no lesse than write Wonders for Reformation of Corruptions and Grievances exemplary Executions in the State and Common-wealth And seeing th'other day viz. 22. of February there was that correspondence and happy agreement betwixt his sacred Majesty and both the houses of Parliament now sitting which made the Evening of that Day crowned with Bone-fires and Bells-ringing for joy Let us not cease to pray and beseech the Lord of Hosts still so to unite the heart of the Kings Majesty to the Parliament his great Counsell that the Upper and Lower Houses may unanimously agree and be reciprocally united to the Kings that many matters now much amisse in Church and Common-wealth may be reformed and this Yeare may be accounted Annus Aureus and that this present Parliament begun this Yeare may be inscribed and engraven in Marble and in Letters of Gold By Parliament the Earle of Strafford Deputy of Ireland grievous to the Common-wealth was discovered and after an Honourable Trya●l was attainted of high Treason for which hee suffered death May the twelfth 1641. SACRED TO MEMORY POSTERITY THE LONG EXPECTED HAPPY PARLIAMENT Begun MDC.XL Ended and made a Session Vivat Rex Floreat Regnum Bene valeat Parliamentum Hallelujah FINIS
RICHARDUS II ANGLIAE ET FRANCIAE REX DOMINUS HIBERNIAE ETC. The true pourtraieture of Richard the 2. King of England and France Lord of Ireland and Prince of Chester he raigned 22 yeres was deposed and murther'd at Pomfraict Cast at the age of 33 yeares Buried first at Langley and 14 yeares after by K Henry the ●th 〈◊〉 to Westminster and their was honourably interred A TRVE RELATION OF THAT MEMORABLE PARLIAMENT which wrought Wonders Begun at Westminster in the tenth yeare of the Reigne of K. RICHARD the second Whereunto is added an Abstract of those Memorable matters before and since the said Kings Reigne done by Parliaments TOGETHER With a Character of the said amiable but unhappy King and a briefe Story of his Life and lamentable Death Printed in the Yeare 1641. AN HISTOIRCAL NARRATION of that Memorable Parliament begun at Westminster 1386 in the tenth year of the Reigne of King RICHARD the Second THis present occasion so opportunely be fitting me I am resolved to treat of that which hath beene omitted and slipped out of memory long since concerning divers and sundry changes and alterations in England in former times Nor will it be any way burthensome to write of that whereby every good and carefull Reader may learne to avoid diversities of miseries and the danger and feare of cruell death I will therefore speake of that which hath laine hid in the darksome shade of forgetfulnesse concerning men who have been led away by the deceitfull path of Covetousnesse and have come to a most shamefull and ignominious death a famous example to deter all men from practising those or the like courses ABout the yeere of Christ 1386 at such time as Richard the second of that name then in prime of his youth swayed the Imperiall Scepter of our Realme there flourished famous in his Court certain Peeres though some of them not of any honourable descent yet favoured by fortune by name Alexander Nevill Archbishop of Yorke Robert Vere D. of Ireland Michael de la Pool Earle of Suffolk then Lord Chancelor Robert Tresilian Lord Chiefe Justice of England and Nicholas Brambre sometimes Major of London These men being raised from meane estates by the speciall favour of the King and advanced to the degree of Privie Counsellors were the men who had the onely rule of the Common-wealth which they under the King governed for some small space with careful diligence meriting thereby deserved commendations But not long did they thus steere the Ship of the Kingdome for many of them being of inferiour ranke by birth not having their veines dignified with the streams of noble blood they were the sooner enticed with the libidinous baits of voluptuousnesse and infected with insatiable itch of avarice insomuch that despising the authority of the King and neglecting the commoditie of the Realme but onely desiring to keepe up the Revenues of the Kingdome so wrought that by their policie the King is impoverished the Treasure exhausted the Commons murmure at the multiplicity of Tenths Levies and Subsidies the Peeres repine to see themselves disgraced and their inferiors honoured and in a word the whole Kingdome endures an universall miserie The nobility seeing the miserable estate wherein the Kingdome lay bleeding as it were to death urged their King to summon a Parliament which was done shortly after In which amongst many other acts the afore-named Michaell de la Poole is dismist of his Chancelourship and being accused of divers and many points of injustice as briberie Extortion and the like he was sone after cast into the Castle of Windsor and all his Lands which were of no small Revenue were confiscated to the King Neither did the Parliament here give over but provided further for the whole state by the mutuall consent of the King and Prelates Barons and Commons with an unanimous conjunction they constitute and give plenarie and absolute power to certain Commissioners as well of the Spiritualty as of the Temporalty for the ordering and disposing of the publique affaires according as shall seeme best and most necessary for the desperate estate of the Commonwealth to depresse civill dissentions and to pacifie and appease the grudgings of the people Of the Spiritualty were chosen the Arch Bishop of Canterbury the afore-named Bishop of Yorke the Bishop of Ely lately made Chancelor of England the Bishop of Winchester Bishop of Hereford Lord Treasurer Bishop of Exeter Abbot of Waleham and the Lord John of Waltham Of the Layty were elected the Duke of Yorke the Earle of Arundel the Lord Coltham the Lord scroope and John Devoureux Knight these as men eminent in vertue were chosen by the generall Suffrage and sworne to carry themselves as dutifull and obedient subjects in all their actions And it was further enacted That if any should refuse or disobey the Ordinances so made for publique good the punishment of his first offence should be the confiscation of his goods and for the second the losse of life Thus disposing all things for the best the Parliament being dissolved every man returned to his own house Soone after the afore-named Chancelor with others of their Confederates being moved with implacable fury against the Statute of the late Parliament they buzzed into the Kings eares That the Statutes lately enacted were very prejudiciall to the honour of his Crowne and much derogatory to his Princely Prerogative insomuch that he should not have power without the consent of the new appointed Commissioners to doe any thing befitting a King no not so much as to bestow a Largesse a principal means to gain the peoples love upon any though never so well deserving By these and other the like impious instigations with which the Devil as never unmindfull of the end of those who by their lives doe prove themselves did continually supply them they practised to annihilate and disanull these Acts of the Parliament which seemed any wayes to abbreviate or curbe their usurped authority And first by their serpentine tongues ambitious projects flattery painted out with glosing discourses and covered over with the shadow of vigilancie for the good of the Kingdome they so bewitched the Noble inclination of the youthfull King whom they induced to beleeve that all the ill they did was a generall good that hee began to distaste and at last to abhorre the last passed Acts as treacherous Plots and most wicked Devices Next they studied how to ingrosse all or the most part of the Wealth and Riches of the Kingdome into their owne Coffers and to the same end dealt so cunningly yet pleasingly with the King that hee gave to the D. of Ireland John of Bloys the Heire of the Duchie of Britaine and his Ransome to others Townes to others Cities to others Lands to others Mony amounting to the summe of 100000 Marks to the great impoverishment both of King and Kingdome Neither did these King-eaters and Realme-devourers any thing regard it but setting unskilfull and insufficient Captaines and
rigour of the Law in case of that nature would not afford But the Judges charged him to answer severally to every point in the Articles contained Whereunto Brambre answered Whosoever hath branded me with this ignominious mark with him I am ready to fight in the Lists to maintaine my Innocencie whensoever the King shall appoint And this he spake with such a fury that his eyes sparkled with rage and he breathed as if an Aetna had lay hid in his brest chusing rather to die gloriously in the field then disgracefully on a Gibbet The Appellants hearing this couragious Challenge with resolute countenance answered That they would willingly accept of the Combat and thereupon flung downe their Gages before the King and on a suddaine the whole company of Lords Knights Esquires and Commons flung down their Gages so thick that they seemed like Snow in a Winters day crying out Wee also will accept of the Combat and will prove these Articles to be true to thy head most damnable Traytor and so they departed for that day And although the Appellants were not idle in the night yet on the next day to aggravate their Appellation against the Conspirators there came divers Companies of the Citie of London complaining of the manifold injuries they had suffered by Brembre and other Extortioners and Exactions wherewith they had been dayly charged and yet they protested that they did not accuse him either for hate to his person or for love feare or hope of reward from his enemies but onely they charged him with the truth But before they proceed with his tryall they were stayed by most unfortunate Tressilian who being got upon the top of an house adjoyning to the Palace and had descended into a gutter onely to looke about him he was discovered by certaine of the Peeres who presently sent some of the Guard to apprehend him who entring into the house where hee was and having spent long time in vaine in looking for him at length one of the Guard stept to the Master of the house and taking him by the shoulder with his Dagger drawne thus said Shew us where thou hast hid Tressilian or else resolve thy dayes are accomplished the Master trembled ready to yeeld up the ghost for feare answered Yonder is the place where he lyes and shewes him a round Table covered with branches of Bay under which Tressilian lay close covered when they had found him they drew him out by the heeles wondring to see him as vipers use to weare his head and beard o'r-growne with old clowted shooes and patched hose more like a miserable poore begger then a Judge When this came to the eares of the Peeres the five Appellants suddenly arose up and without expressing any reason departed out of the Parliament House which bred great alteration in the House insomuch that many followed them and when they come to the Gate of the Hall they met the Guard leading of Tressilian bound crying as they came We have him we have him Tressilian being come into the Hall was asked what he could say for himselfe why judgement should not passe upon him for his treason so often committed hee became as one that had beene struck dumb and his heart was as it were hardned to the very last and would not confesse himselfe guilty of any thing And for this cause the Parliament arose deferring Brembres triall till the next day But Tressilian was without delay led to the Tower that he might suffer the execution of the sentence passed against him his wife and his children did with maine teares accompany him to the Tower but his wife was so overcome with dolour and griefe that she fell down in a swound as if she had beene dead Immediatly Tressilian is upon a hurdle and drawne thorow the streets of the Citie with a wonderfull concourse of people following him at every furlongs end he was suffered to stand still to rest himselfe and to see if hee would confesse and report himselfe of any thing but what he said to the Fryer his Confessor is not knowne neither am I able to search it out when hee came to the place of execution hee would not climb the Ladder untill such time as being soundly beaten with bats and staves he was forced to goe up and when he was up hee said So long as I doe weare any thing upon me I shall not dye wherefore the executioner stripped him and found certaine Images painted like to the signes of Heaven and the head of a devill painted and the names of many of the devills wrote in Parchment the exorcising toyes being taken away hee was hanged up naked and because the spectators should be certainly assured that he was dead they cut his throat and because the night approached they let him hang untill the next morning and then his wife having obtained a licence of the King tooke downe his body and carried it to the Grey-Fryers where it was buried On the morrow sentence was likewise pronounced against Brembre who being drawne upon a hurdle from the Tower to Tyborne thorow the City shewed himselfe very penitent humbly craving mercy and forgivenesse at the hands of God and men whom he had so grievously offended and whom he had so injuriously wronged in time past and did earnestly desire them all to pray for him when the rope was about his neck ready to be turned off a certaine young man the sonne of one Northampton asked him if hee had done justice to his Father or not for Northampton was sometimes Maior of the Citie of London more wealthy and more substantiall then any else in the Citie him did Brembre and Tresilian accuse of Treason Conspiracie against the State and condemned him to dye being dispoyled of his estate he himselfe at length hardly escaped to whom Brembre answered and confessed with bitter teares that what hee did was most vile and wicked and with an intent only to murther and overthrow the said Northampton for which craving pardon of the young man being suddenly turned off and the Executioner cutting his throat hee dyed Behold how pleasant and delightfull it is to climbe up to honour I suppose it is better to live meanely at home with quietnesse amongst poore men then to lord it amongst Princes and in the end to climb a ladder amongst Thieves it is even better to undergoe the burden then to assume the name of honour therefore whosoever that doth not regard the Lawes let them observe and consider the end of these men and with what period they finished their days These men being dispatched the Parliament discontinued their proceedings against the rest of the Conspirators till a more convenient time and tooke into their considerations other more weighty affaires of the weale publike they made the Earle of Arundell Lord Admirall giving him authority to resist and to repulse either by Sea or Land the enemies of the Crowne wheresoever he should find them And it was further agreed on