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A33686 A detection of the court and state of England during the four last reigns and the inter-regnum consisting of private memoirs, &c., with observations and reflections, and an appendix, discovering the present state of the nation : wherein are many secrets never before made publick : as also, a more impartiall account of the civil wars in England, than has yet been given : in two volumes / by Roger Coke ... Coke, Roger, fl. 1696. 1697 (1697) Wing C4975; ESTC R12792 668,932 718

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ordered it that before the King should come at it he should pass through a Room wherein he had placed four Tables and upon each Table lay 5000 l. in Silver when the King came into the Passage he started and was amazed at the sight having never before seen such a Sum he asked the Treasurer the meaning of it who told the King It was the Boon he had given Sir Robert Carr Swounds Man the Oath he usually swore but five thousand should serve his turn and so for that time the Treasurer saved the King the other fifteen thousand Pounds To support these Favourites and other of the King's Country-men of less Note was all the King's Care notwithstanding his Foreign Affairs or his Proclamation at his first coming to London against Monopolies or his Speech at the opening of the Parliament But since Money cannot be had by Parliament other means must be found out There were many ways used for raising Monies during this Interval of Parliament First Monopolies which swarmed more than in any King's Reign before Secondly Payments for new invented Knighthoods never before heard of in England in Times of Peace called Baronets the Prince was 1000 l. and the King to quicken the Market promised to make but 200 of them tho when this Market was done he kept it up all his Life-time after Thirdly Tho the Baronets paid for their Honours yet the King issued our Commissions for reviving the old Obsolete Laws for making Men which could expend 40 l. per Annum to compound for not being Knighted Fourthly Payments for being made Knights of Nova Scotia Fifthly The purchasing of English Honours at certain set Prices a Baron at 10000 l. a Viscount at 15000 l. an Earl at 20000 l. Sixthly Payments for Scotish and Irish Honours I do not find set Prices of these Scotish Honours of the same Title to have the Precedence of an Irish as a Scotish Baron Viscount or Earl to have the Precedence of an Irish and tho an English Honour of like Degree had the Precedence of either of the other yet if either of the other had a higher Title he should precede an English Peer under a less as a Scotish or Irish Viscount shall precede an English Baron so such an Earl shall precede an English Viscount Seventhly Compositions upon defective Titles Eighthly Compositions for Assart Lands Ninthly Monies for making Prince Henry Knight Tenthly Monies to marry the Lady Elizabeth to the Palsgrave Eleventhly A Benevolence Twelfthly Monies borrowed upon Privy-Seals and never repaid besides Sales of Lands Woods and Fee-farm Rents c. During this Interval of Parliament was perpetrated a most horrible Murder upon the Person of Sir Thomas Overbury which is the more remarkable if it be considered how far tho the King detested the Fact Favourites had the Ascendant over the King and how the King influenced the Causes of this Murder and that the Story may more intirely consist it will be necessary to borrow a little of common Fame Sir Robert Carr was made Viscount Rochester the 25th of March 1610 and upon the 22d of April following was made one of the King's Privy-Council and having the Ascendant above all other Favourites over the King he chose a Council of some Persons how to advance himself in this great Power Of these Sir Thomas Overbury a Gentleman of brisk and lively Parts was the chief who had as much an Ascendant over the Lord Rochester as he had over the King and as Rochester was a Favourite so was Thomas Earl of Suffolk who had a Daughter named Frances married to Robert Earl of Essex Son of Robert cut off in the last Year of Queen Elizabeth who after was General of the Army raised by the Parliament in the late Civil Wars Tho of disagreeing Humours the Earl and Countess were of agreeable Years when they were married both about the Age of twelve Years and now had lived above ten Years without any Carnal Knowledg of one with the other as both confessed when the Countess sued for a Divorce whereto the Countess was intolerably bent and if publick Fame may be credited and which is attested by a Writer of the first 14 Years of King James his Life chap. 7. she entred into a Conspiracy with one Ann Turner to have poisoned the Earl But how cold soever the Countess was in her Affections to the Earl they were not less on fire to my Lord of Rochester and that these Flames might soar in an equal height the Countess by the help of Mrs. Turner procures one Doctor Foreman as he was called to bewitch Rochester into equal Desires of mutual Love with the Countess and now Familiarity between the Countess and Rochester becomes publickly scandalous However the Earl continued his Love to the Countess but withal acquainted her with the Dishonour she brought upon him and more upon her self by her loose Life which was now become so publickly taken notice of this was so far from reclaiming the Countess that it stung her to the quick and instead of Reformation she by Letters to Mrs. Turner who the Countess says is all her hopes of Good in this World and by her to Dr. Foreman whom she calls sweet Father and subscribes her self his Affectionate Daughter Frances Essex endeavours to procure the Doctor to bewitch the Earl to Frigidity towards her Sir Francis Bacon in his Charge against my Lord Rochester after Earl of Somerset at his Trial for the Murder of Sir Thomas Overbury gives Sir Thomas hard words as That there was little in him that was solid for Religion or Moral Vertue but was wholly possest with Ambition and vain Glory and was loth to have any Partners in my Lord of Rochester's Favour and that to flatter my Lord in his unlawful Love with the Countess of Essex Sir Thomas had made his Brags that he had won Rochester the Love of the Countess by his Letters and Industry But these stoln Pleasures could not satisfy the Countess's Desires and that she might enjoy them to be compleat she endeavours since the Design of poisoning the Earl did not succeed to make way to her Desires of marrying Rochester by suing out a Divorce against the said Earl which she acquaints Rochester with and Rochester and the Countess acquaint the Earl of Northampton who before was privy and consenting to the Familiarity between them and was easily induced to join in procuring a Divorce Tho this was agreed between them yet the Viscount would not proceed further till he had consulted Sir Thomas Overbury protesting he the Viscount would do nothing without his Advice Sir Thomas told him The marrying the Countess would not be only hurtful to his Preferment but helpful to subvert and overthrow him and who would being possest of so great Possibilities as he was so great Honours and large Revenues and daily in expectation of others cast all away upon a Woman noted for her Injury and Immodesty and pull upon himself the Hatred and Contempt
Lord Keeper par 2. fol. 14 15. tit 14 15. The Lord Keeper at Woodstock was censured by the Duke and his Creatures for this the Keeper therefore unsent for comes to Woodstoock and thus applies himself to the Duke My Lord I am come unsent for and I fear to displease you yet because your Grace made me I must and will serve you though you are one that will destroy that which you made let me perish yet I deserve to perish ten times if I were not as earnest as any Friend your Grace hath to save you from perishing The Sword is the Cause of a Wound but the Buckler is in fault if it do not defend the Body You brought the two Houses hither my Lord against my Counsel my Suspicion is confirmed that your Grace will suffer for it What 's now to be done but to wind up a Session quickly The Occasion is for you because two Colleges in the Vniversity and eight Houses in the Town are visited with the Plague Let the Members be promised fairly and friendly that they may meet again after Christmas requite the Injuries done to you with Benefits not Revenge for no Man that is wise will shew himself angry with the People of England I have more to say but no more than I have said to your Grace above a Year past at White-hall confer one or two of your great Places upon your fastest Friends so shall you go less in Envy and not less in Power Great Necessities will excuse hard Proposals and horrid Counsels St. Austin says it was a Punick Proverb in his Country Ut habeas quietum tempus perde aliquid At the Close of the Sessions declare your self to be forwardest to serve the King and Commonwealth and to give the Parliament Satisfaction Fear them not when they meet again in the same Body whose ill Affections I expect to mitigate but if you proceed trust me with your Cause when it comes into the House of Lords and I will lay my Life upon it I will preserve you from Sentence or the least Dishonour This is my Advice my Lord if you like it not Truth in the end will find an Advocate to defend it The Duke replied no more but I will look to whom I trust and flung out of the Chamber with Menaces in his Countenance Mr. Rushworth fol. 202. says that the Keeper told the Duke in Christ-Church when the Duke rebuked him for siding against him in that he engaged with William Earl of Pembroke to labour the Redress of Grievances That he was resolved to stand upon his own Legs and that the Duke should answer If that be your Resolution look you stand fast Where Mr. Rushworth had this I cannot tell but this being so unlike the Keeper's Carriage to the Duke both in King James's time and after and also to the Narrative before set forth by the Bishop of Litchfield who being the Keeper's Chaplain could have a better Inspection herein than Mr. Rushworth could have had but especially since the Reasons which the Keeper put into the King's hands which you may read in the Life of the Keeper par 2. tit 18. to satisfy the King of his Carriage while the Parliament sate at Oxford being so contrary to what Mr. Rushworth says I incline rather to believe the Bishop However the Commons presuming to enquire into Buckingham's Actions are censured at Woodstock for spiteful and seditious and therefore not fit to continue but to be dissolved which being understood by the Keeper with Tears and Supplications he implored the King to consider there was a time when his Father charged him in the Keeper's Hearing to call Parliaments often and to continue them though their Rashness might sometimes offend him that by his own Experience he never got good by falling out with them But chiefly Sir said he let it never be said that you kept not good correspondence with your first Parliament do not disseminate so much Unkindness through all the Counties and Boroughs of your Realm The Love of your People is the Palladium of your Crown Continue this Assembly together to another Session and expect Alteration for the better if you do not the next Swarm will come out of the same Hive The Lords of the Council did almost all concur with the Keeper but it wanted Buckingham's Suffrage who was secure that the King's Judgment would follow him against all the Table Thus far the Bishop But there was another Cause which the Bishop does not mention but Mr. Rushworth does fol. 336. which caused the hasty Dissolution of this Parliament Captain Pennington was come to Oxford from delivering the Fleet into the French Power to give an Account of the Reason of it but by the Duke's means was drawn to conceal himself and not to publish in due time his Knowledg of the Premises as it shortly after appeared and if this should have been made known it would not have been in the Power of the Keeper to have brought off the Duke from Sentence or the least Dishonour so upon the 12th of August the Parliament was dissolved but before their Dissolution the Commons made this following Declaration WE the Knights Citizens and Burgesses of the Commons House of Parliament being the Representative Body of the whole Commons of this Realm abundantly comforted in his Majesty's late gracious Answer touching our Religion and his Message for the Care of our Health do solemnly vow and protest before God and the World with one Heart and Voice that we are resolved and do hereby declare that we will ever continue most Loyal and Obedient Subjects to our most Gracious Soveraign Lord King Charles and that we will in a convenient time and in a Parliamentary way freely and dutifully do our utmost Endeavours to discover and reform the Abuses and Grievances of this Realm and State and in like sort to afford all necessary Supply to his most excellent Majesty upon his present Occasions and Designs Most humbly beseeching our said dear and dread Soveraign in his Princely Wisdom and Goodness to rest assured of the true and hearty Affections of his poor Commons and to esteem the same to be as we conceive it is indeed the greatest worldly Reputation and Security that a just King can have and to account all such as Slanderers of the Peoples Affections and Enemies to the Commonwealth that shall dare say the contrary But the mighty Buckingham shall not only dare to say but dare to do the contrary so much easier is it in such a Reign for a Favourite to ruine a Nation than for a Nation to have Justice against a Favourite Here let 's stay a little and see what state the King had brought himself to within less than five Months after he became King First he took Mountague to be his Chaplain a virulent seditious ill-natur'd Fellow to protect him from his Contempt against his Metropolitan and the Parliament for publishing new-fangl'd Opinions to the Disturbance of the Peace
has not now one Ship to command One would think the Covenanters had their Game sure enough now those in Scotland had got rid of Montross and full of Money and those in England had got the King in their Power and the King's Army utterly subdued and both Kingdoms united into one solemn League and Covenant so that both may sing their Requiem for many Years But see the Instability of Human Affairs where they are not founded in Truth and Righteousness for the Scots Directory Catechism and Government sorted as ill with the English Genius as Laud's Liturgy Canons and High Commission did with the Scots and the rigid Execution of them as insolent and tyrannical as the Proceedings in the Star-Chamber and High-Commission and these being general equally offended all and tho the Cavalier Party being under the Hatches said little yet the Brawls and Invectives between the Presbyterians and other Parties were as fierce as between the Arminians and Orthodox in Laud's time so that things were not like to continue long at this rate The Parliament having the King now in their Power the Scots gone yet Ireland I mean the English Interest in it in a very deplorable State and being apprehensive of the Temper of the Army whose Principles were Anti-Presbyterian and that they might in some measure ease the Countrey of maintaining the whole Army resolved that 12000 of the Army should be sent over into Ireland to be commanded by Major General Skippon and 6000 Horse 2000 Dragoons and 6000 Foot to be kept up in England and commanded by Sir Thomas Fairfax Cromwel was aware of what the Members designed and the Members were as jealous of Cromwel and therefore would not dispense with the Self-denying Ordinance that he should be in the Army however Cromwel had his Agents in it and by the Ministers and other zealous Independants foment their Jealousies that the Parliament designed to disband them without Payment of their Arrears and in this Ferment they chose two out of every Regiment which they called Adjutators to whom they gave Power to hold Councils and judg what was fit to be done for the common Good These Adjutators were called Levellers who cried up Liberty and the Power of the People and assumed to themselves a Power in their Councils above what the Colonels claimed The Proceedings of the Adjutators startled the Parliament and in a great measure the Colonels and Officers of the Army so that unless Cromwel did appear in the Army and by his Authority did restrain the Licence which the Adjutators assumed they sat very loose in their Places Cromwel knew this as well as they and that the Adjutators struck at his Authority as well as the Officers so that when there was a Debate in the House of Commons how to suppress the Adjutators Cromwel professed and called God to witness That he was certain the Souldiers would at the first word of his Command if he were among them throw down their Arms at the Parliament's Feet and solemnly swore that he rather wished himself and his whole Family burnt than that the Army should break out into Sedition And the House had so little Wit as to believe him and so sent him down to appease the Army Hereupon Cromwel order'd a general Muster of the Army upon Hownslow-Heath where the Army was divided and the Levelling Party refused to come under Cromwel's Command whereupon Cromwel sent to the Levellers to send some to treat of their Grievances which they did and when they came Cromwel with an undaunted Boldness pistoll'd three of the most forward of them and seized the rest and then the Levelling Part of the Army submitted The Sectaries of which the Army was composed tho they had the Sword in their Hands yet had no face of Authority to recur to the Presbyterian Members in both Houses being three to one they therefore send Cornet Joyce with a Party of Horse to Holdenby who the 4th of June 1647 which was in less than four Months after the Members had brought the King thither take the King out of the Parliament-Commissioners Power and keep him in the Army And now this poor Prince for so he may be truly called since he who before by his absolute Will and Pleasure would take his Subjects Estates has now no Power to get his own is fallen into the Hands of another sort of Flatterers than in the former yet these intended him no more good than the former viz. only to gratify their Ambition Avarice and Treachery by making use of the King's Name These seem to lament the hard Conditions the Members impose upon him not only in his Liberty but in keeping him from his Children and Friends and allow him both professing they would never lay down Arms until they had put the Scepter into his Hands and procured better Conditions for his Friends In order hereunto they seem to join the King's Interest with theirs and in their Declaration for Redress of Grievances declare for the King and People and that the Members prefix a certain time for their sitting so that a new Parliament may be called and thereby the Nation settled upon sure Foundations Here you may observe a new Face of the Parliament's Affairs quite inverted for the Army were as much in love with their being so as the Parliament was of their sitting And now the Army which was rais'd only to do the Parliament's Journey-work would only allow the Members a certain time for their sitting And because Denzil Hollis Sir Philip Stapleton Sir William Lewis Sir John Clotworthy Sir William Waller Sir John Maynard Major General Massey Mr. Glyn Colonel Walter Long Colonel Edward Harley and Mr. Ant. Nichols were the leading Men in the House of Commons for establishing the Covenant and disbanding the Army the Army charge them with High-Treason the Charge against them was Cant after the Mode of the Times That they obstructed the Business of Ireland to have acted against the Army and against the Laws and Liberties of the Subject and were Obstructers of Justice Here you may see into what a Labyrinth of Distraction and Confusion Men run when they forsake the ways of Justice and Righteousness For when Mr. Hollis and Colonel Long 4 Car. were imprisoned for performing the Trust reposed in them by their Country they had the Testimony of a good Conscience for their Support and the known Laws for their Protection and here they knew what to trust to and so they insisted upon the Laws and by them in due time were delivered from their Imprisonment but now the Laws and Constitutions of the Nation were broken down and they charged at random by the Army they had no Defence to recur to but for Safeguard fled beyond Sea What became of Colonel Long I cannot tell but Mr. Hollis never return'd till after King Charles the Second's Restoration and Sir Philip Stapleton being suspected to have the Plague was shut out of Calais and 't was said dy'd in a Ditch
called the Vpper but The Other House of Parliament Nothing could have madded the Republicans more than this Other House of Parliament What said they have we fought to Depose the Prerogative-Creatures the Lords those Limbs of Tyranny who so lorded it over the Free-born People of England and shall we submit to these Creatures of Cromwel to usurp the same Tyranny over us and the Free-born People of England Nor did this end in Words only but the Republicans conspire to make an Insurrection against Cromwel but were discover'd and dispersed by Cromwel for which Cromwel committed Lawson afterward Sir John Harrison Rich Sir Robert's own Father Danvers and several other Officers And one Sundercome more boldly attempted to have killed Cromwel as he should pass from White-hall to Hampton-Court and to that purpose had prepared a Blunderbuss loaded with twelve Bullets to shoot him out of an Arbour as he should pass in a narrow Way in Hammersmith but one Toop who seemed to conspire in it discovered this to Cromwel and so Sundercome was taken and condemned for High Treason by Cromwel's Law made this Parliament but Sundercome escaped the Execution being found dead in his Bed before Nor did this and the Other House agree better than Cromwel and the Commonwealth-Men this scorned the Other House as having no Authority from the People and were as vain as useless so that to prevent further Heats Cromwel adjourns them for six Months I 'll vie this Cromwel against Tarquin Agathocles either of the Dionysius's or any of the Roman Athenian or Sicilian Tyrants that he was a more arrogant and boundless Tyrant than any or all of them For if Tyranny be either Sine Titulo viz. To arrogate a Power over another which he hath nothing to do with or ab Exercitio to be bound by no Laws then both ways Cromwel was a greater Tyrant for Tarquin had a Title and his Vices were rather personal and particular than tending to subvert the Roman Laws and Constitutions So were the Vices of Agathocles and both the Dionysius's c. Whereas Cromwel's Title was only from some corrupted Officers of an Army raised by his twice deposed Masters and what Widdrington begirt him with So tho Cesar and his Successors did assume to themselves an Imperial Power which did not well sute with the Consular and Tribunitial Dignities yet they never made a Pack of Senators to do whatsoever they would have them nor forced or corrupted the Free Voices of the Romans in chusing such Tribunes as the Emperors pleased and permitted the Roman Laws to have their free Course Whereas Cromwel made a Parliament as 't was called of his own Nomination and tho he called two more yet they met by Elections utterly unknown to our Laws and Constitutions and when they met he would suffer none to sit but such as would own his Authority By our Laws the King cannot tax the Subject but by Consent in Parliament whereas Cromwel by his Instrument of Government of his own Will alone taxed the Nation to maintain him an Army of Twenty Thousand Foot and Ten Thousand Horse and after taxed the Cavaliers a tenth Part of their Estates It 's the Birth-right of every English-man not to be punished in his Person Liberty or Fortune but by Judgment of his Peers or the Law of the Land and these to be done by Legal Officers whereas this Cromwel without any Law imprisoned and took away Mens Lives and Estates by a new thing called A High Court of Justice never heard of in this Nation before the Rump and himself the Judges whereof were of his own naming and his Janisaries the Soldiers his Military Executioners But it may be objected Cromwel had reason for erecting his High Court of Justice having been so ill used by Jurors for he had by them tried John Lilburn twice for High Treason and Sir John Stawel thrice who were acquitted by these Juries yet neither of them could be discharged from their Imprisonment which by Law they ought to have been But that which madded Cromwel most and made him utterly out of love with Juries was that three Men Davison Holder and Thorold being apprehended upon Suspicion of endeavouring to bring in the King were committed Prisoners to a Provost Marshal and these having obtained leave of the Provost to walk abroad under the Guard of a Souldier they would have wheedled the Souldier to have made their Escape which the Souldier refusing they killed him Cromwel who before designed to have sacrificed these Men by a High Court of Justice having as he thought a more plain Proof of Murder against them than he had for their endeavouring to bring in the King would now try them at Common Law by a Jury When they came upon their Trial they pleaded Not Guilty and upon their Trial the Question was Whether they were legally committed which if the Jury found they were to find them guilty of Murder if not they could find it but se defendendo or at highest but Manslaughter and the Jury found them not legally committed and so acquitted them of Murder This put Cromwel so out of conceit with Juries that he never after made use of them in Capital Cases However by this he might see he was as little regarded by the Body of the Nation as by his discarded Officers and the Commonwealth-Men Nor was Cromwel a better Governour in Church than State for he prostituted all Orders of Christianity and so little regarded things dedicated to Sacred Uses that he made St. Paul's Church a Garison for his Souldiers and a Stable for Horses and his Want of Money was as Great as the Love of the Nation was little This being a forc'd-Put he 'll try once more what he can get by a Parliament and that it may be a Free Parliament it should be made up of the other House and Republicans were permitted to sit in this Thus qualified they met upon the twentieth of January 1657. Never was such Brawling heard the Republicans brawling against Cromwel's Creatures in this House and both against Cromwel's Lords in the other House so that it may be truly said of this Parliament That this did out-babble that of Barebone's as far As these above those Men in Number are viz. Above Three-fold more Cromwel therefore not able to endure their Jangling longer and having got not a Groat by them suddenly dissolved them and shall never call another To make this Tragedy a little comical Cardinal Mazarine was as little a Slave to his Word as Cromwel and endeavoured to enlarge the French Dominions by as unworthy means as Cromwel did to establish his About this time a Party of the Garison of Ostend with the Privity of the Governour held Intelligence with Mazarine and after with Cromwel to betray the Town to the French wherein Cromwel was to have his Share Mazarine was to send a Land-Army commanded by Marshal d'● Aumont and Cromwel was to provide a Fleet to transport them and the
into Terms about it he was sure it might be done and desired Sir William to make a short Turn to the Prince and try if he could perswade the Prince to it But Sir William excused it and desired Mr. Hide now Earl of Rochester who was then at Nimeguen might do it but I don't find any thing came of it About the latter End of September as before noted the Prince took his Journey for England and landed at Harwich and from thence came to New-Market where the Court then was where he was kindly received by the King and Duke who both invited him often into Discourse of Business which the Prince avoided industriously so as the King bid Sir William ask the Prince the Reason of it the Prince told him he was resolved to see the young Princess before he enter'd into that Affair and get to proceed in that before the other of Peace whereupon the King to humour him left New-market some Days sooner than he intended and came to London The Prince at first sight was so pleased with her Person and all those Signs of such a Humour as had been before described to him that he immediately made his Suit to the King and Duke which was well received and assented to but upon Condition the Terms of Peace abroad might be first agreed to between them The Prince excused himself and said he must end his first Business before the other The King and Duke were both positive otherwise that that of Peace should precede but the Prince continu'd resolute for the former and said His Allies were like to have hard Terms of Peace as things stood and would be apt to believe he had made this Match at their Cost and for his part he would never sell his Honour for a Wife But the King and Duke continued in their Resolution for three or four Days In the Obstinacy of these contrary Resolutions between the King Duke and Prince Sir William Temple chanced to go to the Prince one Evening after Supper and found him in the worst Humour he had ever seen him in and told Sir William he repented he ever came into England and resolved he would stay but two Days longer if the King continued in his Mind of treating upon the Peace before Marriage and that before he went the King must chuse how they must live hereafter for he was sure it must be like either the greatest Friends or the greatest Enemies and pressed Sir William to let the King know so next Morning and give him an Account what he should say upon it Next Morning Sir William told the King all the Prince had said to him and the ill Consequences of a Breach between them considering the ill Humours of so many of his Subjects upon our late Measures with France and the Invitations made to the Prince by several of them during the late War The King heard Sir William with great Attention and when he had done said Well I was never deceived in judging of a Man's Honesty by his Looks and if I am not deceived in the Prince's Face he is the honestest Man in the World and I will trust him and he shall have his Wife and you shall go immediately and tell my Brother so and that 't is a thing I am resolved on Sir William did so and the Duke at first seemed a little surpriz'd but when Sir William had done the Duke said the King shall be obey'd and I would be glad all his Subjects would learn of me to obey him From the Duke Sir William went to the Prince and told him all this Story At first the Prince seem'd diffident but soon embraced Sir William and told him he had made him a very happy Man and that unexpectedly and so he left the Prince to give the King an Account of what passed and in the Prince's Ante-Chamber met my Lord Treasurer who undertook to adjust all the rest between the King and the Prince which he did so well that the Match was declared that Evening at the Committee before any other in the Court knew any thing of it When the Match was known the Nation entertained it with an universal Joy yet the French Ambassador and my Lord Arlington were displeased at it the French Ambassador because he had not given his Master an Account of it and my Lord Arlington because nothing of near such moment had passed and he not acquainted with it and within two or three Days after the Marriage was consummate The Prince having so happily gained the first part of his Design in coming into England the Terms of Peace were agitated immediately and Sir William Temple was admitted to be present at the Debates The Prince insisted upon the Strength and Enlargement of a Frontier on both sides of Flanders otherwise he said France would end this War with the View of beginning another and carrying Flanders in one Campagn The King was content to leave that Business a little looser upon Confidence that France was so weary of the War that if they could get out of it with Honour they would never begin another in this Reign that the King was past his Youth and lazy and would turn to the Pleasures of the Court and Buildings and leave his Neighbours at quiet But the Prince thought France would not make a Peace now but to break the present Confederacy and to begin another War with more Advantage and Surprize that their Ambition would never end till they had all Flanders and Germany to the Rhine and thereby Holland in an absolute Dependance upon them and us in no good one and that Christendom could not be left safe by the Peace without a Frontier as he proposed for Flanders and the Restitution of Lorain as well as what the Emperour had lost in Alsatia Sir William Temple told the King that in the Course of his Life he had never observed Mens Natures alter by Age or Fortune but that a good Boy made a good Man a young Coxcomb an old Fool and a young Fripon an old Knave that quiet Spirits were so and unquiet would be so old as well as young that he believed the French King would have always some Bent or other sometimes War sometimes Love sometimes Building but was of the Prince's Opinion that he would ne'r make Peace but with a Design of a new War after he had fixed his Conquests by the last The King approved of what Sir William had said and the Points of Lorain and Alsatia were easily agreed to by the King and Duke but they would not hear of the Restitution of the County of Burgundy tho it were part of the Spanish Netherlands which the King was obliged to protect against France by the Treaty of Aix as what France would never be brought to yet the Prince insisted much upon it which the King imagined was by reason of the Prince's own Lands in that Country which are greater and more Seignurial than those of the Crown of Spain there