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A47020 A continuation of the secret history of White-hall from the abdication of the late K. James in 1688 to the year 1696 writ at the request of a noble lord ... : the whole consisting of secret memoirs ... : published from the original papers : together with The tragical history of the Stuarts ... / by D. Jones ... Jones, D. (David), fl. 1676-1720. 1697 (1697) Wing J929; ESTC R34484 221,732 493

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through the Park in a Chair to Whitehall and from thence carried by Water under a Guard to Sir Robert Cotton's House at the back end of Westminster-Hall the Judges in the mean time met in the Painted Chamber attending upon their President Serjeant Bradshaw in his Scarlet Robe who had the Sword born before him by Col. Humphrey the Mace by Serjeant Denby and twenty Men with Partizans for his Guard When they came into the Court the President sat him down in a Crimson Velvet Chair of State fixed in the midst of the Court with a Desk before him and a Cushion of Crimson Velvet thereon and the Seats on each side of him were Benches covered with Scarlet-cloth And after silence made the Great Gate of the Hall was set open for any to enter in after which Col. Thompson was commanded to bring forth the Prisoner who was conducted with twenty Partizans and other Guards and was by the Serjeant with his Mace received to the Bar where was a Red Velvet Chair set for him He looked sternly upon the Court and up to the Galleries then sat him down but presently got up again and looked downward on the Guard and multitude of Spectators not shewing the least regard to the Court all the while then was the Act of Parliament read over for the Trial of Charles Stuart King of England by the Clerk who sat on the right side of the Table covered with a Turky Carpet placed at the feet of the President upon which lay the Sword and Mace and the several Names of the Judges in the Roll were called over and Eighty answered to their Names When that was over then the King's Charge was brought wherein he was accused in the Name of the People of England of Treason Tyranny Murders Rapines c. and more especially for levying War against the Parliament And the President stood up and said Sir You have heard your Charge containing such matters as appears in it and in the close it is pray'd that you answer to your Charge which this Court expects The King replied By what Authority did they bring him to a Trial who was their King against the Publick Faith so lately given him when he commenced a Treaty with both Houses of Parliament Urged them to shew what Lawful Authority they had to call him to an account which if they did he would readily answer otherwise advised them to avert the Judgments that might hang over their heads for such their proceedings against him The President rejoyned that he was called to an account by the People of England by whose Election he was admitted King The King here insists upon his inherent birth-right and that the Kingdom was Hereditary for above a thousand years and that he stood more apparently for the Liberty of the People of England by rejecting an unlawful and arbitrary Authority than the Judges or any other whatsoever did by asserting of it That no Lords appear'd there who to constitute a Parliament should have been present and some King also but that neither the one nor the other nor both the Houses of Parliament nor any other Judicature on Earth had any Authority to call the King of England to account much less some certain Judges chosen by his accusers masked with the Authority of the Lower House and the same proculcated However he wills them again to produce their Authority and he would not be wanting to his Defence for as much as it was the same offence with him to acknowledge a Tyrannical Power as to resist a lawful one But the President made answer That he was not to question the Jurisdiction of the Court that they were satisfied with their Authority as it was upon God's Authority and the Kingdom 's in doing of Justice and that this was their present work To which the King said That it was not his own nor their apprehensions neither that ought to decide it and so the President ordered the Prisoner to be taken into Custody and then the Court adjourned till the Monday following being the 22. of January to the Painted Chamber and from thence to the same place again and the King was carried back in the same manner as before to St. James's The Court accordingly met on Monday in the Painted Chamber and there considering the King's Resolution to deny the Jurisdiction of the Court or of that which did constitute it of which debate they had no proper cognizance nor could they being a derivative power which made them Judges from which there was no Appeal they therefore order that if the King offer to dispute the same again the President should tell him That the Commons of England Assembled in Parliament had constituted that Court whose power might not be permitted to be disputed by him and that if he refused to answer it should be accounted a Contumacy to the Court that if he answered with a Salvo his pretended Prerogative above the Court he should be required to give a Positive answer yea or no that he should not have a Copy of his Charge till he owned the Court and declared his intentions to answer This being concluded on the King is again brought to the Bar in the same manner where the Solicitor Cook moved that the Prisoner might make a positive answer or that the Charge might be taken pro Confesso and so the Court proceed to Justice and the President did briefly repeat the passages of the last day and commanded the King to answer to the Articles of Charge unless he had rather hear the Capital Sentence given against him But the King still persisted to Interrogate concerning their Authority that he had weighty Reasons why he should not acknowledg this new form of Judicature that they had no Law for it and that they could not have an extraordinary Authority Delegated from the People seeing they had not consulted so much as every tenth Man in that matter But the President put him in mind of his doom and told him the Court was abundantly satisfied of their Authority nor were they to hear any Reasons that should detract from their Power And when the King urged to give in his Reasons in Writing it would by no means be admitted and so the President commanded the Prisoner to be taken away The third Days Trial which was Tuesday was in effect the same as the last mentioned in respect to the Court's demands and the King's answer so that the Court adjourned till next Morning at Ten of the Clock but the Examination of Witnesses and other intervening business prevented their then sitting so that it was Saturday Morning January 27. before they assembled and 68. of the Judges answered to their Names As the King was brought into the Court the Soldiers cried for Justice and Execution and the King desired to be heard a few words and so goes on to shew how a sudden Judgment could not be soon recalled c. But the President magnified the Patience the Court had had
of St. Andrew's House and made use of all the Bishop's Furniture and other Accomodations as if they had been his own for he had a little before revolted from their Faction and that the Earl might engage the King the more he suffered him to wallow in all kind of sensual Delights But yet he obtained not his End neither in regard the Kings Domesticks were corrupted by the adverse faction headed by the Queen and the Earl of Arran It was not long e're Dowglass outed his two Colleagues and assumed the whole Regency to his own hands distributing Civil and Ecclesiastical Preferments unto his kindred and followers at pleasure to the injury of diverse others who had no power to resist The Earl of Argyle did indeed voluntarily withdraw himself from the Triumvirate And Lennox tho' he followed the King yet finding the Dowglasses share all Beneficial Offices amongst themselves he gave many Testimonies of his ●islike and that his mind was quite alienated from them But they confident of their power slighted the Reports and ill will of others In the mean time the King tho' he were used more indulgently then was fit for him that so he might be the longer kept in Subjection unto their Wills yet notwithstanding by little and little growing weary of their Government and being also alienated from them by the accusations of his own Domesticks who charged them some times truly and sometimes otherwise always interpreting their doubtfull Actions in the worse sence whereupon he held secret Caballs with such as he could trust concerning vindicating himself into his Freedom and Liberty And having understood the dissatisfa●●ion conceived by the Earl of Lennox against the proceedings of the Dowglasses he stuck not to open his mind and make him privy of his Designs And while they were consulting about the Time Place and Manner of Accomplishing the same Dowglass was making divers expeditions against the Country Rovers but with no great Success so that at length about the End of July he resolved to carry the King into Tiv●otdale as supposing his presence would be advantageous to strike a terror into the licentious Thus an Assembly being held at Jedburg all the heads of the chief Families round about were called together by the Kings order and Commanded to apprehend those Criminals every one within his own precincts of which they had then a list given them Thus while the minds of all were merry and Jocund they who had a Design to free the King from the pupillage of the Dowglasses thought that a good opportunity to effect it● because one Walter Scot being not far from Jedburg had great Clanships in the Countries thereabouts and had engaged in their interests And thus they laid their project Walter was to invite the King to his House and there he was to remain with his own good liking till greater forces came in at the noise of the thing But their design by what followed seemed to have been discovered either by chance or some private intimation whereupon the King was carried back to Mulross yet Walter was not discovered but proceeded on strait in his Journey to the King When he was a little way off the frightful News was brought to the Dowglasses that Walter was at hand Well Armed himself and accompanied by a great Troop of Armed Men so that there was no Question to be made but he being a factions man and withal Valiant and audacious did intend some mischief insomuch that they presently ran to their Arms. Dowglass tho inferior in number yet knowing what Men he had of his own were choise ones and that he had besides several valiant Persons of the Family of the Carrs and Humes in his train with John Hume and Andrew Car their principalls he did resolved to give them Battle When they were just ready to engage Dowglass Commands George Hume to alight from his Horse and to manage his part in the fight who answered he would not No not if the King himself Commanded him This struck some damp upon the Dowglasses however to make a Virtue of necessity they fell on with very great Fury as men who had their King and who was the price of the Combat to be spectator the Earl of Lennox standing by the King all the while and not striking a stroke At last Walter Scot happening to be wounded his men began to give ground and at length fled out-right but the loss of Andrew Car a Person of singular eminency did very much allay the joy of the Dowglasses for this Victory and the carriage of Lennox heightned their Jealousy of him so that he thought it advisable to leave the Court and leave the King still a Captive and without hopes of Releasement The Dowglassians perceiving themselves subject to the envy of many endeavoured to strengthen their faction by the acquisition of more friends and to that end they prudently make up the old breach betwixt Them and the Hamiltons a Family abounding in Wealth Number and Greatness and admitted them into a share of the Government On the other hand the Earl of Lennox was highly in favour of most People and having privately obtained the King's Letters to most of the Nobility who he thought would have kept his Councel he mightily strenthened his Party Wherefore in a convention of his faction at Sterling where James Beaton and several other Bishops were present he openly propounded to them the design of asserting the King to Liberty which was Unanimously agreed to tho' the day appointed for mustering their Forces was not yet come Yet hearing that the Hamiltons were Assembled at Linlithgow to intercept their march it was thought adviseable to attack them before they joyned with the Dowglasses and accordingly Lennox with what present force he had with him marched directly towards them But the Himiltons having got intelligence that the Earl would march out of Sterling that day early in the morning had called the Dowglassians out of Edenburg to their assistance before But the King to favour Lennox as well as his own Liberty as he thought did besides other obstacles somewhat ●etard them by pretending himself not well so that he got up later out of his Bed that day then ordinary And besides marched very slowly and upon the way would often turn aside to ease nature as if he had been troubled with a Lask And when George Dowglass had in vain flattered him to make more hast at last he broke forth in these menacing words saying Sir Rather then our Enemies should take you from us we will lay hold on your body and if it be rent in pieces we will be sure to retain one part thereof Which words made such an impression upon his mind that when the Dowglasses were banished some Years after and that he had some inclination to recall the rest of them yet he could not endure to hear any body speak of a Reconciliation with this George The Hamiltons betwixt fear of the Enemies approaching and hope of
Eighty no less than Fifty Ships were missing for seven days But this was but the beginning of the Misfortunes of this Miserable Expedition for the Confusion of Orders was such as the Officers and Soldiers scarce knew who to Command or whom to Obey so that when they came to Cadiz a Conquest which would have paid the Charge of the Voyage and to the Honour of the English offer'd it self for the Spanish Shipping in the Bay lay unprovided of defence so as the surprising of them was both easie and feasible but this was neglected and when the Opportunity was lost Sir John Burroughs Landed the Army and took a Fort but was forced to quit it because of the Disorder and Intemperance of the Soldiers who upon that return'd on Board again and sailed away for England re insecta which occasion'd no small clamour from the People and especially in that none was punished for Mismanagement But how dishonourable soever this Expedition was the King and his Minister lost much more Reputation by lending a Fleet to the French King to beat that of the Rochellers under Monsieur Sobiez the Great Duke of Roan's Brother whereby a foundation was laid to ruin the Protestant Interest in France and which all the power that e're they could afterward make when the Tables were turned could not relieve though the Duke himself who was much sitter for the Delicacies of a Court than the toyls and stratagems of War was at the head of it and perished by the hands of Felton at Portsmouth just as he was ready to Embark the second time in person for that purpose It 's true the design was pursued by the Earl of Lindsey who several times attempted to force the Barricadoes of the River before Rochel but all in vain or if he had it would have been to no purpose for the Victuals wherewith they should have been relieved were all tainted and all the Tackle and other Materials of the Fleet defective so that they could not stay long there The many and unheard-of Violations of the Priviledges of the Subject by Loans Benevolences Ship-money Coat and Conduct-money c. with the continual Jars between this King and all his Parliaments during his Reign so as that there has been scarce three days of mutual harmony between them throughout which cannot be said of any other King since the Conquest how bad soever his Imprisoning Fining and banishing of the Members and his riding the Nation for above fifteen years together by more than a French Government because they are noted else where I think no where so well as in the History of the four last Reigns Written by that Learned Gentleman and my worthy good Friend when alive Mr. Roger Coke I shall not recite the same in this place as not falling exactly under the notion of this Treatise Tho I am to imform you these were the things together with the imposing the Service-Book upon the Scots where the Quarrel was begun by an Old Woman casting her Stool at the Priest when he was reading of it as they said that were the foundation of those dreadful Wars waged so many years within the Bowels of the three Kingdoms which do not fall under our present consideration neither and of the King 's subsequent destiny the Particulars whereof with some other concurring and intervening accidents we shall give you at large After the War had been manag'd between the King and Parliament with various fortune for some years and several Treaties set on foot to compose those unhappy and fatal Differences at last came the fatal day wherein the Quarrel came to be decided between them at Naseby in Northamptonshire which was on Saturnday June 14. 1645. Sir Thomas Fairfax was the Parliaments General and the King commanded his own Army in Person who in the beginning of the Fight prevailed for Prince Rupert Routed the Parliaments Left Wing commanded by Ireton but Pursuing to far left the Kings Left Wing open to be charged by Cromwel who falling furiously on and the rest Rallying obtained a most absolute Victory But among the vast number of Prisoners and Horses taken with Arms and Ammunition that which was even a greater loss to the King then the Battle was that one of his Coaches with his Cabinets of Letters and Papers fell into the Parliaments hands whereby his most Secret Counsels with the Queen which were so contrary to those he declared to the Kingdom were discovered For in one of his Letters he declared to her his intention to make Peace with the Irish and to have 40000 of them over into England to prosecute the War there In others he complained he could not prevail with his Mungrel Parliament at Oxford so he was pleased to call those Gentlemen who had stuck to him all along to Vote that the Parliament at Westminster were not a Lawful Parliament That he would not make Peace with the Rebels the Parliament without her approbation nor go one jot from the Paper She sent him That in the Treaty at Vxbridge he did not positively own the Parliament it being otherwise to be constru'd tho' they were so simple as not to find it out and it was Recorded in the Notes of the King's Council that he did not acknowledge them a Parliament Which Papers the Members took care to Print and Publish to the World and shewed by a publick Declaration what the Nobility and Gentry who followed the King might trust too and I dare say this stuck so close in the Minds of many that nothing contributed more to his Ruine then this double dealing of his Now the King's Garrisons surrender by heaps Oxford was the last which being blocked up by the Parliaments Forces the King thought himself in no security in it For the Parliament refused to admit him to come to London unless he signed their propositions wherefore the French Ambassador in the Scots Quarters advising him to throw himself into the Scots Power it was Hobson's Choice one even as good as the other and so being accompany'd by one Hudson a Minister and Mr. John Ashburnham he threw himself into the Scots hands who having got him into their Power resolve to make a double Bargain of him viz. to have him to order Montross to disband his Army and retire into Scotland and then to Sell him to the Parliament for as much Money as they could get for him The first is no sooner ask'd but granted but the bargain for the Sale of him and surely never was any King in this World so unhappy as to be sold by his own Subjects before himself being a mighty business to the Scots it lasted from the 5 th of May 1646 to January following when being concluded the Parliament who now had a full right to him after they had bought him confine him to ●oldenby-house an House of his own in Northamptonshire under a select Guard of their own choosing So that as Mr. Cook observes he that before had sifted the worthy
Members of Parliament from one Prison to another that they might not have the benefit of their Habeas Corpus's and the Constables of Hertfordshire from one Messenger to another is himself sifted Prisoner from one place to another without any hope of an Habeus Corpus And as he before by his absolute Will and Pleasure would without any Law seize his Subjects Goods and commit them to Prison as also raise Ship-money in an Arbitrary manner so he cannot now enjoy his own Estate in his own House nor has one Ship to command Soon after this the Parliament and Army began to be jealous of each other and the latter having no face of Authority to recur unto the Presbyterian Members in both Houses being three to one what do they do but send Cornet Joyce with a Party of Horse on the 4 th of June 1647 to take the King out of the Parliaments Commissioners hands and to keep him in the Army which however he might take it was not designed for his advantage tho' they seemed to lament the hard conditions the Members imposed upon him not only in his Liberty but in keeping him from his Children and Friends and now they 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 And in order hereunto they seem to joyn the King's Interests with their own and in their Declaration for Redress of Grievances declare for the King and People that the Members prefix a certain time for their Sitting and charge 11 of the leading Members that had been most forward to establish the Covenant with being guilty of High Treason and most of them fled for it The Covenanters could not but see whither these proceedings tended and therefore they had upon the 4 th of May settled the Militia of London in the hands of the Presbyterians but upon a Letter from the General or the 10 th of June to the Parliament that the Militia of London might be put into the hands of Persons better affected to the Army the Commons tamely Submitted to it and repealed the foresaid Ordinance of the 4 th of May. But the City-Men in Common Counsel Petition the Commons against this insisting upon their own Right to dispose of the Militia The Lords upon the Reading of the Petition revoke the Ordinance of the Commons of July 23 and confirm that of the 4 th of May according to the Cities desire and kept back some of the Commons till the Members within had agreed to it and enforced the Speaker to pass a Vote that the King should come to London and so both Houses Adjourned for four days In this Interval the Members who favoured the Army and the Speakers of both Houses went to the Army and there complained of the Violences put upon the Parliament and the Houses after the expiration of the four days Adjournment meet and chose new Speakers and Voted 1. That the King should come to London 2. That the Militia of London should be Authoriz'd to raise Forces for the defence of the City 3. That power be given to the same Militia to choose a General 4. And that the Eleven Members Impeach'd by the Army should take their Seats in the Parliament The Citizens hereupon proceed to raise Forces which tho' Numerous yet being raw and not fit to cope with an old Experienc'd and Victorious Army they were forced to come to Terms and comply with the Army in their demands so that in short the Speakers and Members returned again and recinded all that was done since the 26 th of July and Voted several Lords guilty of High Treason and the Lord Mayor with several other Citizens were committed Prisoners to the Tower upon the same account The King could not but conceive some hopes from these Broyls that might tend to his Advantage and indeed both Parliament and Army seem to Court him now and the Parliament sent propositions of Peace to him at Hampton-Court but Cromwel was as fearful the King should agree with the Parliament as the King was unwilling to agree to them and therefore Cormwel gave the Commissioners instructions that if the King would assent to Propositions lower then those of the Parliament that the Army would settle him again in his Throne hereupon the King returned Answer to the Parliament that he waved now the Propositions put to him or any Treaty upon them flies to the Proposals of the Army and urges a Treaty upon them and such as he shall make professes he will give Satisfaction to settle the Protestant Religion with Liberty to tender Consciences to secure the Laws Liberty and Property and Priviledges of Parliaments and as for those concerning Scotland he would Treat apart with the Scots Commissioners Upon Reading of the King's Answer a day was appointed by either House to consider of it and in the mean time they order'd the same to be communicated to the Scotch Commissioners It was affirmed in those times that Cromwel had made a private Article with the King that if the King closed with the Propositions of the Army Cromwel should be Advanced to a degree higher than any other as Earl of Essex and Vicar-General of England as Thomas Cromwel in Henry 8 time was But it seems he was so uxorious that he would do nothing without communicating it to the Queen and so wrote to her That tho' he assented to the Armies Proposals yet if by assenting to them he could procure a Peace it would be easier then to take of Cromwel than now he was the head that govern'd the Army Cromwel who had his Spies upon every motion of the King intercepts these Letters and resolved never to trust the King again yet doubted that he could not manage his designs if the King were so near the Parliament and City at Hampton-Court Therefore Cromwel sent to the King that he was in no safety at Hampton-Court by reason of the hatred which the Adjutators bore to him and that he would be in more safty in the Isle of Wight and so upon the 11 th of November at night made his escape having Post-horses and a Ship provided for him at South-hampton to that purpose But when he came to the Island he was secured by Collonel Hammond who gave the Parliament notice of it from whence the King sent to the Members for a Personal Treaty of Peace at London which after much debate was agreed to upon four Preliminaries which the King utterly rejected and so incensed the Houses that they Voted that they would make no further applications or addresses to the King That no other presume to make any application to him without leave from both Houses That whoever Transgressed in that kind should be guilty of High Treason That they would receive no more Messages from the King and that none presume to bring any Message from him to either or both Houses of Parliament or any other Person These were hard
towards him advised him now at length to submit otherwise he should hear the Sentence of Death resolved on by the Court against him but he still refused to plead and desired he might have liberty to say some things for the good of the People before both Houses but the President said this would but delay and retard Justice But the King answered that he had not sought occasions of delay else he would have made a more Elaborate contestation of the Cause but that there could be no hurt in a delay of a day or two rather than precipitate Judgment which might lay the Nation under perpetual Miseries and so desired to withdraw and the Court to consider The King was carried to Cotton-house and the Judges withdrew to the Court of Wards and in half an hour returned and when the King insisted still that he might be first heard before his Parliament and not prevailing the President went on and shewed how contumacious he had been how hateful his Crimes were and asserted the Parliamentary Authority producing Examples both Domestick and Foreign especially out of Scotland wherein the People had punished their Kings and then affirmed that the Power of the People of England was not less over their King That the Guilt of this King was greater than of all others as being one who according to Caligula's wish had attempted to cut off the neck of the Kingdom by waging War against the Parliament for all which he was in his Charge called Tyrant Traytor Murderer and a Publick Enemy to the Commonwealth and that it had been well if that any of those terms might have been spared At which words the King said How Sir but the other went on and argued that Rex est qui bene regit Tyrannus qui populum opprimit and so lodged Arbitrary Government on him which he sought to put upon the People That his Treasons were his breach of trust to the Kingdom as his Superior and was therefore called to an account Minimus majorem in judicium vocat That his Murders were many as being guilty of the Blood shed in the War between him and his people which could not be cleansed but by the Blood of him who shed that Blood he wished him to have God before his Eyes and called God to witness that the Court came meerly out of the Conscience of their Duty to that place and imployment which they were resolved to effect and called for God's assistance in his Execution Here the King made a motion to speak but was told his time was now past and his Sentence was coming on which the President commanded to be read under this form Whereas the Commons of England in Parliament have appointed them an High Court of Justice for the Trial of Charles Stuart King of England before whom he had been three times Convented and at the first time a Charge of High Treason and other Crimes and Misdemeanors was read in the behalf of the Kingdom of England c. as in the Charge which was read throughout to which Charge he the said Charles Stuart was required to give his Answer but he refused so to do and so exprest several passages at his Trial in refusing to answer for all which Treasons and Crimes this Court doth adjudge that the said Charles Stuart as a Tyrant Traytor Murderer and Publick Enemy shall be put to death by severing his Head from his Body And then the President said the Sentence now read and published is the Act Sentence Judgment and Resolution of the whole Court to which the Members of the Court stood up and assented by holding up their Hands Then the King was taken away and the Court broke up As the King was lead along some of the Mobb carried it very rudely and unchristianly towards him and that Night which was Saturday January 27. he was Lodged in Whitehall next day the Bishop of London Preached before him in his Chamber and the same day the President and all the Members of the High Court of Justice fasted in the Chappel at Whitehall On Monday Morning he was conveyed to St. James's and in the mean time Sir Hardress Waller Colonel Harrison Colonel Dean Commissary General Ireton and Col. Oaks were to consider of the time and place for Execution and the President and Judges met on Monday Morning Jan. 29. in the Painted Chamber who together with the Committee resolved that the open Street before Whitehall was the fittest place that the King should be there Executed on tho next day between Ten and Two a Clock upon a Scaffold covered with Black The King who was now apprehensive of the approach of his fatal end exprest his desires by a Member of the Army That in regard Sentence of Death was past upon him and that the time of Execution might be near that he might see his Children and so receive the Sacrament and to prepare himself for Death and that the Bishop of London might pray with him in private in his Chamber all which was granted him When the fatal day appear'd which was Tuesday Jan. 30. about Ten of the Clock in the Forenoon he was called upon to come forth from St. James Palace now his Prison and was Conducted on Foot over the Park to Whitehall Guarded with a Regiment of Foot part whereof marched before the rest behind with Colours flying and Drums beating his private Guard of Partizans being next him Dr. Juxton Bishop of London on the one side and Col. Tomlison on the other they went up by the Stairs to the Park Gallery and so into his Cabinet-Chamber where he continued at his Devotion and refused to Dine only about Twelve-a-Clock he Eat a Bit of Bread and drank a Glass of Claret From thence he was conveyed into the Banquetting-House and the Great Window Enlarged out of which he ascended the Scaffold the Rails whereof were hung round and the Floor covered with Black with the Block and Axe set in the middle and the Executioners wearing Vizzards standing by He looked round about upon the People who were kept a considerable distance off by the thick Guards and Troops of Horse that beset the Scaffold and turning to the Officers and more particularly to Col. Tomlison begun with what necessity there lay upon him to say somewhat lest his silence might be made an argument of his guilt and with a Protestation of his innocency in reference to any design he had to retrench the just Priviledges of Parliament yet acknowledged his punishment to be just from God and instanced only in his giving way to the death of the Earl of Strafford appealed to the Bishop of London who stood by for his forwardness to forgive his Enemies yet professed a great concernedness for the Weal of the Kingdom shewed how the then Managers of the State were in the wrong to think to govern by the Sword advised them to restore his Son to the Inheritance of his Ancestors and the People to their Rights and due Liberties
rising in Wales were soon beaten so were the Surry Essex and Kentish Forces without any reinforcements from him as was designed and when he Landed some forces for the relief of Deal-Castle they were vanquished almost as soon as Landed This with the taking of Colchester by Sir Thomas Fairfax sent him back again to his Sister the Princess of Orange to the Hague Here it was that he was first Entertained with the horrible news of his Father's Tragical death and then saluted by the name of King but a forlorn Man and without any Subjects to govern for now the Rump Parliament ruled the Roast in England and had assumed to themselves the Supream power of the Nation by the name and title of the Commonwealth of England but this procedure of theirs did not relish well with the Scotch Covenanters and especially now they found that those Persons in the English Parliament that had been most forward in establishing the Solemn League and Covenant between both Nations were not only laid aside but clapt up into nasty PRISONS Wherefore being willing to lay hold on any Twig the Scots resolve not to put up the supposed injury tamely but to try their Fortune with the Rump by Arms and to that end agree to invite the King over to take Possession of his ancient Kingdom of Scotland but yet tye him so by vertue of the Treaty with him to take their Solemn League and Covenant as a Testimony of his sorrow for his Father's Sins and to banish all those out of his Court who would not take the Covenant or bare Arms for his Father But they could not have found a Plant as Mr. Coke observes more unlikely to produce the Fruit of Repentance or to establish Presbytery than himself however over Shooes over Boots prepare he does to waft himself over for Scotland To be a King in fact he desired above all other things and in June 165O landed at the Spey in the North having scaped a scouring for some of the Rump Ships lay in wait for him as he passed the Sea and narrowly mist him In some time after he was solemnly Crowned at Scone but alass it was no long-liv'd Dignity and he had but little Joy of his Crown for Cromwel had entred Scotland with the English Army and having beaten the Scots in several smaller Rencounters did at last upon the 8 of September utterly overthrow the much more numerous Kirk Army at Dunbar commanded by old General Lesley killing 3000 of them in the Battle and pursuit and taking 9000 Prisoners with all their Baggage and Ammunition with above 200 Colours To augment these Miseries the King who was very squeamish in Religion and could not submit to the rigid discipline of the Kirk runs from Scone towards the High-lands after whom ran Montgomery promising if he would return the Kirk would remit part of the Discipline and so he came to St. John's Town But here was no lasting Tranquillity for him for tho' in this time he raised a very numerous Army yet the Kirkmen being beaten at Dunbar as aforesaid by the English began to rail bitterly against those who had called the King in too hastily before he had given true signs of Repentance and they assumed the Kingly Authority so far as to make such Generals of the Kirk Army as they thought sit But Cromwel in the mean time prevails in his Conquests and tho' Scotland were a cold Climate yet he made it too hot for the King and his Army to hold long there and therefore he slips with them to England by the way of Carlile but was followed close at the heels by Lambert and Harrison and soon after by Cromwel himself with the main Army But he arrived at Worcester City with little opposition and there Cromwel came up with him where they joyned Battle but as all his attempts before in his Fathers Cause had proved succesless he met with no better Fortune now he fought in his own Cause nor indeed hardly ever did in all his Life-time by Arms for here his Army was utterly Routed by Cromwel that very day twelve Month he had beaten the Scots at Dunbar 3550 whereof were killed with Duke Hamilton and General Forbes and 5000 taken Prisoners of which number were the Earls of Rothes Kanworth and Kelly the Lords Sinclaer and Mon●gomery General of the Ordinance and soon after David Lesley who fought not or but little in the Battle was Routed by Colonel Lilburn and together with Lauderdale the Lords Kenmoure and Middleton taken Prisoners The poor King seeing all now irrecoverably lost about six in the Evening marched out at St Martin's Gate leaving all that was valuable but his Life behind him as a prey to the Enemy and being come to a place called Barbon-Bridge he consults with the few followers he had with him what to do among whom it was resolved he should endeavour to get back into Scotland and one Walker who belonged to the Lord Talbots Troop was made choise of to be his Guide Northward But Walker being at a loss when he came to Kinver-Heath and not knowing which way to go the King consulted with the Lords yet about him whither he might repair with most safety to take a few hours rest in regard he found himself quite worn out and spent whereupon the Earl of Derby advised him to go to Bosoobel where in his Flight from Wiggan to Worcester he met with a trusty Person and where there was great conveniency of Concealment This being agreed to Mr. Gifford who knew the way best was appointed to conduct him thither but he proposing to carry him first to White-Ladies a house about half a mile from Boscobel where he might repose himself a while and then take farther Resolutions this was consented to and thither they immediately repaired and were readily entertained by George Pendrel the youngest of the five Brethren By this time the King found himself extream hungry and very much tired with his long and hasty march and here it was that he rubbed his hands and face with the foot of the Chimney had the locks of his hair disorderly cut off and was stripped of his blew Ribbon buff C●at and other Princely Ornaments which to prevent a discovery were buryed under Ground and his Case now was not imparallell to his Great Ancestor Robert Bruce King of Scotland who for fear of Edward I. King of England was forced to sculk in the High-Lands and there to live for a time more like a Brute Beast then a Man much less a Prince as we have noted towards the beginning of this History The Kings fine Shirt was also exchanged for a course Canvass one borrowed of one Martin and a suit of Cloaths answerable to it of Richard Pendrells put on by him and then he assumes the name and imployment of a Woodman and so with Richard with a Bill in his hand he went into the Wood while the other Brothers went out to scout It was not above
less of them in proportion to the Troops of his own Subjects and this after his full re-settlement on the Throne And not only so but shall deliver up Dover Castle Plymouth and Portsmouth to be Garrisoned by French Soldiers as cautionary Towns for the security of performance Seventhly That in regard of the Situation of the Irish Ports and their conveniency for the French Fleets as also in consideration of the agreement of the Irish with the People of France in Religion He shall after his full restoration to the English and Scotch Kingdoms be obliged to give Ireland to the French King in full compensation of all the Moneys he has already expended or shall expend further in his Quarrel and for vindicating of his right to his Dominions But that however because of the Scituation of the Islands of Sicily and Sardinia in the Mediteranean for the English Navigation and Trade into the Levant the sly Monsieur hath obliged himself to conquer those Kingdoms for the late King at his own Expence and with his own Arms and to give them up entirely to him in lieu of his Kingdom of Ireland Eighthly That still towards the furthering a stricter Friendship and Allyance between the two Nations of England and France and for perpetuating a mutual amity and sincere Correspondence If in case by the Violent or Natural Death either of King William or Prince George of Denmark or both of them one or both of the Princesses Royal shall become Widdows and that their Persons can be seized That then they shall be convey'd with all expedition and secrecy into France and be put into the French King's Power and shall there be Married Nolens Volens to such Prince or Princes as he shall appoint or think fit for them Ninthly That the Eldest or Surviving Issue of such Marriage shall succeed to the Crowns of Ireland and Scotland and England only to remain to the pretended Prince of Wales with the American Plantations Thus My Lord I have now given you the Stipulations so much desired by you I 'le leave your Lordship to descant and make such use of them as your known Wisdom and Ability shall direct for the good of the King and Country and shall reserve some further things which I cannot conveniently Write now and which relate to this subject to another opportunity and in the mean time I am and ever shall remain My Lord Your Lordships most Humble and Faithful Servant Paris Aug. 19. 1689. N. S. LETTER IX Some Reflections upon King James's League with the French King with an account of some further terms agreed upon between them in relation to the English Protestants in Ireland My Lord THis Court is mighty uppish upon the success of the late King James or I may more truly say their own in Ireland which if totally reduced by their conjoint Arms is to be one day their own as appears by the seventh Article stipulated between the two Kings and of which I gave your Lordship an account in my last And 't is not doubted but the Count d' Avaux hath already taken Livery and seisin of it privately in his Majesty's Name And that it is really so I am not only assured of by the said Articles but the same is more then probable by the great care and exactness that is had at Brest and other Ports of the Ocean to keep an account of all the Cloaths Arms Ammunition and Provisions that are shipped off there for Ireland and which according to some of the accounts stated and transmitted hither somewhat whereof I have had the opportunity to have a slight view of are set down at such extravagant rates as if they designed in a short time not only to ballance the account with him for Ireland but to make him considerably their Debter over and above for the carrying on another Game But they may chance to reckon without their Host in this as well as all the rest I pray God keep King William and his Royal Consort and may she and her Royal Sister be never so unhappy as to fall into the French power as your Lordship sees has been again conserted by the Ninth and last Article If ever it should so happen which God of his Mercy avert and that any such Match or Matches shall come to pass and issue come thereof my Friend hath secretly whispered me That then the pretended Prince of Wales is not like to be long liv'd But I still trust all these towering hopes of our Enemies will evaporate into Smoak and that their designs shall have as little Effect upon the lives and fortunes of our true Princes as their contrivances against the Religion and property of their Subjects shall become abortive and fruitless and whom they have agreed upon to treat in the following manner First That all possessors of Lands in Ireland that are of the Protestant Religion and will not turn Papists shall be bound to sell their Estates at a set price to the French King who shall let them out to the old Irish proprietors at certain Quit-rents and services that shall in a reasonable time reimburse him of the purchase Money Secondly But still to shew their good Nature and Lenity it s agreed that all Protestants that will shall have leave freely to depart with their Effects whither soever they please And lastly That such as will stay shall have liberty of Conscience granted them for the space of Twenty Years till the Country shall be fuller stockt with French Catholicks and other Papists I am well satisfied your Lordship will not think these Machinations a matter of nothing but as a good Patriot which you have shewed your self to be in the most Arbitrary times will stir up your self and honest Countrymen to obviate them seasonably which I as heartily wish as I have little reason to doubt it who am My Lord Your faithful and most Obedient Servant Paris Octo. 27. 1689. N. S. LETTER X. Of King James's Army in Ireland and Duke Schomberg's with Cardinal Bouillon's Motion for a Contribution for the support of the former My Lord THE raising of the Siege of London-derry and the landing of the English Army without interruption in Ireland under Duke Schomherg with other successes and advantages are so far from discouraging this Court in their hopes of a speedy conquest of that Kingdom that they have already in the Cabinet vaunted it to be as good as their own and that perhaps they need not stay for another Campaign to re-establish the late King upon the Throne of England and put themselves in an entire possession of the other Kingdom according to the full extent and meaning of the Stipulated Articles which I have formerly transmitted to your Lordship But because Money here is very hard to come by in such a proportion as to answer those vast Expences they are at to carry on the War upon the Continent which must be got at any rate they have resolved to carry on the Irish
the Dirt and Mire and at last threw them into the Flames The Bells were rung in several Parishes the great Guns roared from the Bastile and in short for compleating the farce nothing was omitted which was usually done upon the most solemn occasions neither was this rejoycing confined to the narrow bounds of one day but lasted several Neither could the publick news from Holland and other parts that expresly imported the contrary make them abate one jot of their vain credulity nay the questioning the truth of it was almost a crime unpardonable And because nothing should be omitted to enforce the belief of it upon all that seemed in the least dubious the Opinions of the learned Physicians who I must tell your Lordship did not want practice upon this occasion were hotly urged for it and who for the most part mercenarily agreed to resolve their patient's Questions in the affirmative viz. That the wound of a Cannon Bullet was mortal from whence it was inferred as a natural consequence that because King William had received such a wound he must of necessity be dead of it Nothing could be more vain and frivolous than to tell them of the number of People that have had their Leggs and their Arms shot off by a Cannon Bullet and yet have lived in a good state of Health for a long time after for to this it was readily answered That all that was alledged upon that head was formerly true enough but that now Chirurgery was quite another thing and from that time forward whoever was but touched with a Cannon Bullet though the skin were but only a little rased was condemned to die Strange is the effect of prejudice my Lord and how easily do Men believe what they would have to be so but I shall not detain your Lordship any longer with so ridiculous a Narration though I question not your kind acceptance of it from My Lord Your Honours devoted and most faithful Servant Paris Aug. 10. 1690. N. S. POSTSCRIPT Just now there is a report spread up and down that the late King is to go forthwith on board the French Fleet and to endeavour to land in England where they are very confident to find a very considerable party that will declare for his interest but whether there be any such design in reallity I cannot yet penetrate into I am My Lord Yours c. LETTER XVI The French Court mightily concerned at the Proceedings of the Duke of Savoy and his declaring for the Confederates yet try one stratagem more to bring him to their side My Lord I Do not find notwithstanding whatever I subjoined in my last to your Lordship of a Descent or some such thing upon England that the same is any more talked of but generally concluded to be at this instant impracticable neither do the affairs of Britain seemingly half so much perplex this Court as those of Savoy at this Juncture I do not doubt but your Lordship may have heard of many attempts made by them to keep the Duke from falling in with the interests of the Confederates and especially that of the King of England but the last and sliest Effort of all is what but few know and an account thereof I know cannot but be pleasing to your Lordship now I have nothing more material to inform you of Monsieur de Croissi as I suppose your Lordship knows very well being the grand Minister of State in this Country for Forreign Affai●s finding by his secret intelligence that the Duke of Savoy had declared for the Confederates hastened to give the King an account of it whereupon two of the Duke's Ministers were somewhat confined but after a little consultation upon the matter the King thought it advisable to give his subtil Minister orders to confer with the said Embassadors once more yet so to order it that it might not look like a formall conference or a thing concerted before hand Croissi ordered his matters so well that he met them one day in the street when he told them that he wondered he never could see them that Madam de Croissi had thought they would have come and drink a dish of Coffee with her to which purpose he would invite them to his House at such an Hour The Ministers to be complaisant and being not accustomed to deny Ladies such Civilities willingly accepted his offers and promised to wait upon the Lady at the hour appointed which they did accordingly and the Venetian Embassador who had the word given him meet there also but made as if it had been by meer accident After they had discoursed of several things too and fro by the bye the Venetian Minister very dexterously turned the discourse into the Battle of Fleuri and the Engagement at Sea against the English and Dutch Fleets and so took occasion to aggravate to the utmost of his Eloquence the advantages which his most Christian Majesty had reaped thereby and to lessen at the same time as much as he could the power of the Confederates From thence passing forward to the affairs of Italy he laboured to shew how difficult a task it was for the Spaniard to resist the Arms of the most Christian King and laid the chief stress of his Arguments upon the pressing desire which both the Pope and the Venetians had to prevent the fire of War from flaming over the Alps and so take hold of all Italy To all which decoying Discourse Monsieur de Croissi said no more but only so much as he adjudged necessary to shew the Venetian Embassador spoke nothing but what was true for fear least the Savoyards would have occasion to discover the concertship between them and that the Venetian said nothing but what the Monsieur put into his Mouth However it seems the Savoyards were not so stupid but that they apprehended quickly a good part of the Truth And therefore being unwilling to engage themselves in long disputes to no purpose they thought it sufficient to answer once for all that the Duke their Master had made choice of his side and that no consideration whatsoever could oblige him to fail in his promises to his imperial Majesty King of Spain and the rest of the Confederates And if the Court are so highly perplext for the ill success they have had upon the Duke and his Ministers the common Vogue is they are not a whit less at Monsieur Tourville's Conduct after his Sea Victory that he has made no more improvement of it but I can say nothing positively upon this head and therefore shall only subscribe my self My Lord Your Lordships most Humble and Faithful Servant Paris Sept. 1. 1690. N. S. LETTER XVII Of close designs hatched in France of Monsieur de Tourville and the rumour of his being disgraced for his Conduct and of the reports concerning the Dauphins's marrying again My Lord NEver were frequenter Consults held than at this time here both as to the Sea and Land Affairs and the King's time is
yet the Ministers have endeavoured to dissemble it with much Application and would make the drooping People believe it was a thing so inconsiderable as that it is in a manner quite repaired already and that their Fleet is already so reinforced as to be in condition not only to obviate the attempts of the Enemies Navy But after they have taken on board some Necessaries to put out to Sea and provoke them to a second Engagement To which end they have Published a List of Seventy Men of War besides F●ig●●s c. that they pretend to have ready which I shall not trouble your Lordship with a Coppy of because I know it to be false And if the French Ministers are thus put to it to support their Master's Credit at this Juncture they are almost past all hopes at St. Germans where the late King and his disappointed Followers are arrived and who have nothing now to sollace themselves with but the happy delivery of his Queen of a Daughter Which second production it s hoped may overcome the obstinacy of Mens minds and make them at last believe the first was Genuine But if there were a cloud of unlucky circumstances that attended the former there is one already known to have accompanied this also viz. that the Delivery was so quick that Madame who was in this City and made all the hast she could to go to the Labour as soon as ever she had notice of it could not yet get thither soon enough The affairs of Flanders and other parts where the War is I forbear to touch on as supposing your Lordship has an exact account of all the Transactions that happen sooner and more truly too than I can inform you from hence where most things to their disadvantage are as cunningly veiled over as the successes are magnifyed wherefore I shall take my leave of you till something momentous does occur and only subscribe my self My Lord Your Lordships most Humble and Devoted Servant Paris June 30. 1692. N. S. LETTER XXVII Conjectures of the French designs in the year 1693. against the Allies and of their Incendiaries to burn the Confederate Cities My Lord I am fully satisfyed what a great noise the scarcity of Bread in France makes in England and the other confederated Countries the misery indeed from that and other concurring causes is very great but yet what may seem to some less intelligent than your Lordship very little less than a Paradox is that the face of the Court is as splendid and gay as ever I have known it in the time of France's highest prosperity and nothing is talked of there my Lord but the mighty Armies they have on foot by Land and their great forwardness to enter upon Action as well as their their great power on the other Element I am assured the King will very shortly leave Versailles in order to be at the head of one of his Armies but whether he designs for Germany or the Neatherlands is yet a secret tho' the Vogue is that the intended Journey is for the latter and that provision is making for his Reception at Compeign and Valenciennes which I am told having occasioned a certain Courtier a day or two ago to say that that road leads directly for Flanders and the same discourse coming quickly to the King's Ears he made answer That a Man might go from Valenciennes to Germany Your Lordship may make what judgment you please upon the Expression I le leave it wholly to you and shall at present only further inform you that as I have formerly given you some account of what Fires have been kindled in several Cities of the Empire Hungary c. by the agency of this Court I have more than a suspition that the same practise is again set on foot and that there are very many incendiaries entertained by these Ministers to put the same in Execution in diverse parts of the Confederate Countries And I do desire your Lordship to believe that there is no villany they will boggle at for the compassing of their accursed ends as there is none but what I am very forward to discover to your Honour and proud of an opportunity so to do who am My Lord Your Lordships most Humble and Obedient Servant Versailles April 14. 1693. N. S. LETTER XXVIII Of Proposals of Peace made by France to the Emperor and Empire in the year 1693. My Lord THe successes of the French Arms since the commencement of this unhappy War against the Empire of Germany does not hinder this Court as I am well assured to make overtures of Peace on that side particularly the motions whereof the Confederates are narrowly to watch to prevent the fatality of such a disjunction in their present Allyance The Swedes are very busy in promoting the Work and the terms that are offered are to this purpose as I had them communicated to me by a particular hand First That in general the King desires That the Treaties of Westphalia and Nemeghen may remain in full force and vigour Secondly That the Truce concluded at Ratisbonne in August 1684. for 20 Years may be changed into a defensive Treaty of Peace with such alterations as are here after explained as First That in recompence of the City of Strasburg which the most Christian King is in possession of and designs to keep Mont Royal and Trarback shall be rased and restored to the Prince to whom they belong provided that neither of them be re-fortifyed for the future Secondly That all the Works of Fort Louis and Hunninghen that are beyond the Rhine shall in like manner be demolished Thirdly That Phillipsburg with the fortress thereof shall be restored as also Friburg in the same condition they are in at present Fourthly That Heidelburg shall be given up to the Elector Palatine and all the dependances of the Palatinate notwithstanding the claim of his Sister-in-law the Dutchess of Orleans to several Lands and Fiefs therein which losses the King will take upon him to repair And as for Saar Louis Biche and Homburg he is willing take condescend to any equivalent for them of equal Revenue to the Elector Fifthly That as for Re-unions if Commissioners appointed on each side shall not be able to adjust them in a limi●●ed time the French King will refer himself to the arbitration of the Republick of Venice I am further informed my Lord that Cardinal Fourbin has orders to sollicite this point also with the Pope and to acquaint him how willing the King is to compose the affairs of Europe and those of Italy in particular and that himself shall have plenary Power to draw and regulate the conditions provided that in the first place the Restoration of the late King James be absolutely concluded upon with which I shall also conclude this Letter from My Lord Your Humble Servant Paris Aug. 11. 1693. N. S. LETTER XXIX Of Libells in France against the Government c. My Lord I am not to give your
that our History may appear to be all of a piece and void of Breaks as much as may be Walter therefore had a Son named Alane who as they say follow'd Godfrey of Bullogn into the Holy Land in the Year 1099. Alexander was his Son who begat Walter Stuart he had Issue Alexander whose Son was John the Father of Walter Stuart that marry'd the Daughter of King Robert Bruce and begat on her Robert Stuart call'd in the Scotch Chronology Robert the second King of Scotland but he was the first Stuart that was advanced to the Throne of that Kingdom But before we can fairly come to give you an exact Account hereof it will be necessary to premise a short Scheme of the Contests between the said Baliol and Bruce because somewhat interwoven with the Affair of this Family Upon the disastrous death of Alexander the Third who broke his Neck as he was gallopping his Horse at Kingcorn over the West-clift of the place near the Sea-side and left no Issue but had only a Grand-child by his Daughter in Norway very young and who died soon after Scotland fell under an Interregnum for the space of six Years and nine Months as Buchanan computes it for so long it was between the Death of Alexander and the declaring of John Baliol King of Scotland and in the mean time you may be sure there wanted not Pretensions to the Crown and the case briefly was thus William King of Scotland had a Brother named David Earl of Huntington and great Uncle to this Alexander the III. which David had three Daughters Margaret marry'd to Allan Lord of Gallaway Isabel to Robert Bruce Lord Annadale and Cleveland and Adda to Henry Hastings Earl of Huntington now Allane begat on his Wife Margaret a Daughter named Dornadilla marry'd in process of time to John Baliol after King of Scotland and two other Daughters Bruce by his Wife Isabel had Robert Bruce Earl of Carrick as having married the Inheritrix thereof but as for Huntington he laid no manner of Claim Now the question was whether Baliol in right of the eldest Daughter or Robert Bruce being descended of the second but a Male should have the Crown he being in the same Degree and of the more worthy Sex The Controversie was tossed up and down by the Governors and Nobles of the Kingdom for a long time but at last upon serious deliberation it was agreed to refer the whole matter to the decision of Edward the I. King of England which he was not a little glad of For resolving to fish in these troubled Waters he stirs up eight Competitors more that he might further puzzle the Cause and at length with twenty four Councellors half Scots half English and a great many Lawyers so handled the Business that after a great many cunning delays he secretly tampers with Bruce who was then conceiv'd to have the better Right of the Business that if he would acknowledge to hold the Crown of him he would adjudge it in favour of him But he generously answering That he valued a Crown at a less rate than for the wearing of the same to put his Country under a Foreign Yoke Edward turns about and makes the same motion to Baliol who did not stick to accept of it Baliol having thus gotten a Crown as unhappily kept it for he was no sooner invested with it and done Homage to King Edward according to Agreement but the Aberthenys having slain Mackduff Earl of Fife he not only pardon'd them the Fact but gave them a piece of Land that was in Controversie between them Whereupon Mucduff's Brother being enraged makes a Complaint of him to King Edward who sent for him used him so that he made him rise from his Seat at Parliament and go to the Bar and answer for himself He hereupon was so enraged at this manner of Usage that when King Edward sent to him for Assistance against the French he absolutely refused it and proceeded so far as to renounce his Homage to him This incensed King Edward to the quick and so with an armed Power he hastens to Berwick where he routed the Scots took and kill'd to the number of Seven Thousand of them among them most of the Nobility of Fife and Lowthian and some time after gave them also a great Overthrow at Dunbar which occasion'd the immediate surrender of the Castle of the said place into his Hands After this he marches to Montross where Baliol was brought to resign up both himself and his Crown to King Edward all the Scotch Nobility at the same time doing him Homage The Consequence whereof was that Baliol was sent Prisoner to London and from thence after a Years detention into France But while Edward was possess'd of all Scotland one William Wallace arose who tho' but a private Man bestirred himself in the publick Calamity of his Country and gave the English several notable Foyls This brought King Edward into Scotland again with an Army and falling upon Wallace routs him who was overcome with Emulation and Envy from his Countrymen as well as power from the Enemy upon which he laid by his Command and never acted after but by slight Incursions but the English Army after this being beaten at Roslin Edward comes in again and takes Sterling and makes them all render him Homage Robert Bruce Son to the foresaid Bruce that contested with Baliol for the Crown was in King Edward's Court and him the King had often promised to put in possession of the Crown But Bruce finding at last that all his promises were illusory and nothing but smoak he enters into a Confederacy with John Cummin sirnamed the Red how he might get the Kingdom but being basely betray'd by him to King Edward he had much ado to make his escape and when he was got into Scotland the first thing he did was to stab Cummin at Drum●reis and then got himself Crown'd King at Scone Never did any Man come with greater disadvantage to the possession of a Crown or underwent greater Hardships for the sake of it He was beaten over and over by King Edward's Troops forced to flee to the Highlands with one Companion or two and to lurk in the Mountains in great misery as if he had been rather a Beast of prey than a rational Creature And while he was in this miserable State it is storied of him by Fourdon That being in a Morning lying down on his Bed in a little Cottage whither he was glad to retire and make the same his Pallace he espies a Spider striving to climb up into her Web which she had spun to the roof of the House but failing of her purpose the first time she attempts it the second and third time and so on to the sixth and last wherein she accomplishes it and gets in the King who as well as his Companion had all the while view'd the Action said Now let 's get up and hasten to the Lowlands to try our Fortunes
once more we have attempted it in five rencounters already and fail'd but in the sixth we shall prevail and so having gather'd some Force together he advanced towards Sterling where he gave Edward the II. who was then King of England such a Defeat as Scotland never gave the like to our Nation and so continued War with various Fortune with Edward the III. till at last Age and Leprosie brought him to his Grave But some time before his Death he got the Crown settled upon his Son David then a Child and for want of his having Issue upon Robert Stuart his Sister's Son and this by Act of Parliament and the Nobles sware to it accordingly His Son David of between eight and nine Years old inherited that which he had with so much Difficulty and Danger obtain'd and wisdom kept He was in his Minority govern'd by Thomas Randolf Earl of Murrey whose severity in punishing was no less dreaded than his Valour had been honoured but he soon after dying of Poyson and Edward Baliol the Son of John coming with a Fleet and being strengthned with the assistance of the English and some Robbers the Governor the Earl of Mar was put to the Rout so that Baliol makes himself King and David was glad to retire into France Amidst these Parties Edward the III. backing of Baliol Scotland was pitifully torn and the Bruces in a manner extinguished till Robert Stuart afterward King of Scotland with the Men of Argyle and his own Friends and Family began to renew the claim and brought the Matter into a War again which was carry'd on by Andrew Murray the Governor and afterward by himself so that David after nine Years Exile adventured to return where making frequent Incursions he did at length in the fourth year after his Return march into England and in the Bishoprick of Durham was routed and fled to an obscure Bridge shewed by the Inhabitants to this day where he was taken Prisoner by John Copeland and continued so for the space of eleven Years Soon after his Releasment and Return home he calls a Parliament wherein he enacted several Laws for the punishment of such as had fled from him at the Battle of Durham and more particularly levelling at Robert Stuart as being one of them who had been the Cause of that great Overthrow He got that Act passed in his Father's time whereby the Crown was appointed for want of Issue of his Body lawfully begotten to descend to the said Robert Stuart to be repeal'd and John Southerland Son to Jane his youngest Sister made Heir apparent in his stead and the Nobility swore to the observance of the said Law This made the Earl of Southerland so confident of the matter that he gave almost all his Lands away among his Friends and Acquaintance But alas he was wretchedly mistaken for his Son being afterwards one of those sent as Hostages into England for the security of the payment of King David's Ransom he died there of the Plague and Robert Stuart attain'd the King's Favour again and succeeded as Heir to the Crown being the first of the Name of the Stuarts that ever sway'd a Scepter But things did not go on so smoothly with Robert Stuart upon the Death of Southerland his Competitor first and of King David afterward but that he met with another Rub in his way from William Earl of Dowglas who when the Lords were assembled at Lithguo about the Succession came thither with a great Power and urged he ought to be preferr'd before Stuart as being descended from the Baliols and Cummins But finding at length that his own Friends and particularly the Earls of March and Murray his Brethren with the Lord Erskein who all three were in great power as being Governors one of Dunbritton another of Sterling and the third of Edinburg opposed him he thought it most advisable to desist from his Claim And so Robert Stuart was Crown'd at Scone on Lady-day in the Year 1370. being the 47th Year of his Age. But that Dowglas might be a little soothed up under his present Disappointment and kept from disturbing the common Tranquillity the King bestows Euphemia his eldest Daughter in Marriage upon him Whether it were thro' an advanced Age or Sloth we find he did but little since his Accession to the Crown but his Lieutenants and the English were perpetually in action during the course of his Reign which was according to Buchanan nineteen Years and four and twenty Days And tho' it's true we do not find his Death to have been violent or any ways accelerated by Grief of Heart but natural in an old age having lived seventy-four Years yet surely he laid the Foundation for the many Parricides Fratricides and other dreadful Calamities that befel his Posterity in a very great measure by preferring his Illegitimate Children by Elizabeth Moor his Concubine before those he had lawfully begotten on Euphemia Ross his Wife And the Case was briefly thus At the time of his attaining the Crown the foresaid Euphemia Daughter to Hugh Earl of Ross was his lawful Wife by whom he had two Sons Walter afterward created Earl of Atholl and David Earl of Strathern but before he was married he kept one Elizabeth Mure for so the Scotch write the Name as his Concubine and had by her three Sons John Earl of Carrick Robert Earl of Ment●ith and Fife and Alexander Earl of Buchan with several Daughters Now Queen Euphemia departed this Life three Years after her Husband became King who forthwith marry'd Elizabeth Mure his old Paramour either to legitimate the Children he had by her which it seems was the manner in those days or else for old acquaintance her Husband Gifford for you must know he had got her matched to cover her shame dying about the same time as the Queen had done This step drew on another and there was no stoping now but the Children formerly begotten on this Woman in Adultery must have the Crown entailed upon them by Parliament in prejudice to the other two who by any thing that appears in History were finer Gentlemen and fitter as they had a juster Claim to govern then either of these I know the Lord Viscount Tarbert in a late Pamphlet has taken upon him to vindicate the Legitimacy of Moor's Children against all the Authority of the Scotch Historians who lived at or near those times and ever since who could not be ignorant of so material a thing as this and to this end he Cites several Records It 's not my business to answer his allegations but I am sure the Records would never have named John that afterwards succeeded Tanquam haeres if he had been true and undoubted Heir And so I leave any one to judge if the Records do not thereby make much more against his Legitimacy than it does for it But right or wrong the Sluts Will must be gratified and so John succeeds his Father in the Scottish Kingdom but not by the
Man as the Chancellor and without delay raises Forces and Besieges him in Edenburg Castle He perceiving the danger had no other way left but to send to the Earl of Dowglass for his Assistance Dowglass disdains them both and would not be concerned The Chancellor seeing this agrees with the Governor and he was still to keep the Castle and his Chancellorship Not long after died Dowglass and was succeeded by his Son William who kept a greater port and retinue than his Father But things could not hold long in this State for the Chancellor disdaining that the Governor should take the whole Administration upon him leaves him and the King at Sterling where he then was and repairs to Edenburg and there imploys all his Wits how he might recover the King from the Governor and after he had well thought of it he rides one morning with four and twenty Men in his Company to the Park of Sterling where he knew the King was a Hunting and that the Governor was absent at Perth He found the King with a very small retinue and saluted him very dutifully and finding him in some surprize at the Company he exhorted him in a few words as the time would permit to be of good cheer and fear nothing that they were come to deliver him from his Captivity that he might be no longer under the Government of another but take the Administration into his own hands and much to the same purpose All which the King received with a pleasant aspect either because the motion pleased him as desirous to Rule or to dissemble the fear he had of the Chancellor and so went with him to Edenburg The Governor upon his return was horribly surprized at the News but being now unable to remedy the matter by the means of friends he and the Chancellor came to an Accommodation again and the result was that the Governor should still continue in his Office and the King remain in the keeping of the Chancellor as at first So that the freedom before tendred to him and with which he seem'd to be well pleas'd was now but a meer illusion being as much a Captive as ever And if the King was no better for this Agreement It proved fatal to the Earl of Dowglass Both Governor and Chancellor dreading his power now conbine together to ruine him and to that End a Parliament must be called where several Complaints were made against Dowglass and his followers But they two perswade the Parliament to send for the Earl in a friendly manner and not as a delinquent to take his place in that Assembly And by the Governors contrivance Honourable Letters were directed to him in the Name of them all full of soothing expressions intimating his own Person was so far from being in any danger by such his attendance in Parliament that if any of his Friends or Family had chanced to be guilty of any disorders all should be frankly remitted This bait took the young Gentleman and so with his Brother David and an handsom retinue sets forward for Edenburg the Chancellor the better to cloak the Treachery rode out many miles from Edenburg to meet him Caressed and Entertained him splendidly on the way at the Castle of Creichton and to blind him the more there in the most friendly and tender manner in the World began to advise the Earl in what concerned his Duty towards his Prince and the Honour and Glory of his Family and this showed him on to Edenburg tho' things could not be carried on so coverlly between the Governor and Chancellor in the management of this intrigue but that some of the Earls Friends began to smell a Rat and advised him not to go to Edenburg But finding him quite averse to Counsel and void of all suspicion they urged him to send his Brother David back to the End he might not hazard the whole Family under the fortune of one stroke as his Father had before admonished him upon his Death-Bed But all in vain and so to Edenburg Castle they came where the Governor meets him and Carressed him highly and because he should now think his Entertainment every ways suitable to the semblance made of it all along he was set to Dine at the King's Table but latet Angus in herba the Earl before he h●d well half Din'd was strangely surprized with the sight of a Bulls Head set before him which in those Days was a certain sign of Death whereat being about to rise from the Table he and his Brother David were immediately seized by Armed men set there for that purpose carried into the Court yard and there forthwith beheaded It was said the King in whose presence this was done and who now was entring into years of Maturity and Discretion lamented his Death bitterly for which the Chancellor severely rebuked him but however it was in this case it 's most certain he afterwards most barbarously murdered one of this Earls Successors with his own hands as you 'l see by and by This Earl of Dowglass was Succeeded in his Estate and Honours by his Unkle James Dowglass Baron of Abercorn who is Succeeded by his Son William who to prevent the division of the Inheritance Married the only Sister of the last William Beheaded who was Stiled the fair Maid of Gallaway This Earl flourishing in Estate and Honours and finding the King take the Administration of the Government upon himself came to Sterling and in a short time grew into high Favour with him insomuch that through his perswasion the Chancellor and Governor were not only discharged from their Offices but put out of the Council and their Friends banished the Court and themselves Summoned to appear before the King and upon default proclaimed Rebels so that now the Tables are quite turn'd Dowglass Rules all and the King suffers minority under him in his Just Age as he really did under the others during his nonage himself and his Kindred and Friends possessing all places of profit and Preferment in the Kingdom But the Earl having I know not what crochet in his brain must needs go into Italy and a Noble retinue he had with him but leaves his Estate during his absence to be managed by his Brother the Earl of Ormond His back was no sooner turned but his Enemies set all their Engines on work to put him out of the Kings Favour and good Esteem and prevailed so far upon him as to put out an unreasonable Summons requiring the Earl to appear within forty Days or else he should be put to the Horn and so his Lands were seized on to the Kings hands The Earl being advertised hereof returns with all speed and was again received into Favour But happening to go into England without leave this incensed the King highly against him yet upon submission was again reconciled But there was nothing could reconcile him and the Chancellor Creichton envy brought them to make attempts upon each other's life and at last the Earl
was so put to it that he was forced to flee out of Edenburg to save his own life whereupon he enters into a Confederacy with his Friends for his own security which together with some Depredations made in the Lord Ferres Lands by some of the Earls Tenants without redress from him upon Complaint made thereof enraged the King to an high degree against him But sore disorders still increasing through the Earls not punishing of the offenders at last Ferres makes an inroad by way of reprisal into his Lands was taken and by the Earls command was put to Death tho' the King by an Herault commanded the contrary so that upon serious Deliberation the King finding his power unsufficient for curbing him had no other way left than to send to him in a most Courteous manner to come to him who was then in Sterling Castle The Earl apprehensive of some design upon his Person refused without he had an assurance of safe Conduct under the Kings great Seal which being Granted he came and was received with a great semblance of good Will by the King who to●k him into a Room by themselves and there after some other Admonitions expostulated with him about the Confeder●cy he had entred into with the Earl of Crawford and others and would have urged him to forsake the same Alledging it was no ways Honourable for him but hurtfull and tho' he took it very ill at his hands yet he allowed him the Liberty to dis●null it tho' himself had full power to command it Dowglass was very obsequious in all things 'till this business of the League came in Question whereunto he did not Answer distinctly but would have put it off 'till he had discoursed with his Confederates thereupon neither could he well see at present what could be in that League which could be offensive to the King that he should insist so much upon his breaking of it whereupon the King who it's likely had already determined to commit the perjur'd Fact tho' his flattering Courtiers would have his displeasure only to arise from the Earls present stubborness said if you will not I will break it and without any more ado struck him with his Dagger in his breast those that stood at the Door hearing the bustle rushed in and dispatched him by many wounds His Brethren and Kindred being at first surprized and then exasperated at the horridness of the Fact and the faithless proceedings of the King towards the Earl flew to their Arms and made no less than a Civil War of it which was waged between the King and them with various Fortunes at last the King prevailed which brought great Destruction and Calamity upon that Noble Family of the Dowglasses And then it was that King James began to Reign as the Historian says their greatness having been hitherto a Check upon him But his Civil broils were scarce ended when he was brought to engage in the fatal controversy which happened in England between the Houses of York and Lancaster He at first sided with King Henry VI against Richard Duke of York but afterward faced about Upon the Duke's promise that Cumberland and other Lands should be restored unto him that had been in the possession of his Ancestors if the Duke prevailed and so assisted the Yorkians having therefore raised an Army as he was entering into England he was for a time diverted cunningly by an English Gentleman who took upon him to be the Pope's Nuncio His Speech Habit and Retinue were perfectly Italian and to make the matter more plausible with the Cloak of Religion he had a Monk along with him and so with the Popes Counterfeit Letters they approached to the King and charged him to proceed on no farther and threatned him if he did to curse him For that the Pope to the end the War might be carried on against the Common Enemy of Christianity with greater vigor having now Composed all differences in Europe was set upon Accommodating this matter in Britain That they indeed were sent before to preadmonish him but that another Legate would quickly follow with an Ample power to Compose the Civils Discords in England and to procure satisfaction for the injuries sustained by the Scots This bait took him and so he Disbanded his Army But alas nothing could divert this Prince's now impending Fate for being soon after advertised of the trick put upon him by the foresaid Counterfeit Nuncio he re-assembles his Army and because he could not directly Joyn with York's Forces He marches to the Siege of Roxborough and having quickly master'd the Town lays close Seige to the Castle which made a brave defence The Duke and his Companions having in the mean time prevailed sent to give King James thanks for his Assistance desire him now things were amicably terminated to return home least the English being incensed they should be forced to march against the Scotch Army The King having received the Message asked those that brought it whether the Duke of York and his Friends said any thing in relation to the promises they had made when he came into their Assistance but finding no satisfaction in that point he proceeds with great Fury to assault the Castle and Batters the Walls with Cannon which began then to be much used as they were much dreaded and being very forward and intent upon his work one of his Guns being over-charged burst and a slice thereof struck the King dead to the ground and hurt no other besides himself a strang fatality that brought him to his end when he had lived twenty nine Years and of them Reigned twenty four Anno. 146● He left three Sons behind him James that Succeeded him Alexander Duke of Albany and John Earl of Mar who were a plague to one another while alive and not one of them died a natural death as we shall shew in its proper place James III. a Minor of seven Years old as his Father before him came to the Crown and at first fell under the Care and Regency of his Mother as did the whole Kingdom a Woman after the decease of her Husband James II. that lead a Scandalous life keeping one Adam Hepborn who was himself a Married Man for her Gallant but death put an end to her Lewdness and Government together about three Years after Then he came into the hands of the Boyds who Ruled the roast for a long time but at last made a fatal Catastrophe he took to Wife Margaret Daughter to the King of Denmark and Norway Anno. 1469. And about this time began to Exercise the Royal power himself He involved himself at first with the Affairs of the Church and not long after became miserably enslaved with the predictions of Astrologers and Witches to which he was strangely addicted and which brought not only destruction upon his kindred but also at last upon himself which we shall now prosecute as they fell out in order He was on a time it seems informed by some
long e're they seized upon the Kings Evil Councellors that were about him and sent them all away save only John Ramsey a very young man that clung to the King and who intreated for him that he might be spared The rest were lead to Judgment and with the loud cries of the Army calling for Justice upon those miscreants were hanged out of the way and such forwardness was shewed to have them dispatched speedily that when they wanted Ropes upon such a sudden occasion every one was ready to offer his Horses Halter or the Reins of his Bridle for that purpose These Wretches were charged with many private injuries and among the more publick ones was their advising the King to Coin base Copper Money which the Common people by way of reproach called Black-Money and that this was the principal cause of the scarcity that was in the Land the want of Trade and many other Calamities too long to be incerted To the Kings charge was laid the unjust death of the Earl of Mar his Brother his advancing of Cockram a Mason to the said Earldom his practising of Magick and resolvedness to destroy his Relations This done they returned to Edenburg and appointed the King himself to be kept in the Castle of the said City by the E. of Atholl and in the mean time they send to the English Army for a Cessation of Arms for three Months The Duke of Albany was honourably received into his Country again and had the Castle of Dunbar with the Earldoms of March and Mar conferred upon him and was withal Proclaimed the Kings Lieutenant General While things were in this state the English take the Castle of Berwick the Town having been surrendred to them before The Duke of Albany making a faint of relieving the same but did nothing At length the Duke accompanied with the Chancellor Archbishop of St. Andrews and others went to Sterling to pay the Queen and Prince a visit they had not been there long when the Queen entering into a secret Conference with the Duke unknown to the rest about the King's Confinement and urging how noble and generous as well as advantagious an act it would be in him to imploy his power for his releasement he consents to the undertaking and so returning to Edenburg besieged the Castle and took it remov'd the Earl of Athol and so sets the King and all his Servants at liberty for which extraordinary favour the King shewed him great tokens of his affections but they were not long-lived for the remembrance of old offences are of greater force in a degenerous and impotent mind than fresh kindnesses And to foment his jealousies he had always those at his Elbow who never ceased to upbraid the Duke to him of affecting too much popularity and to construe the same as an infallible sign of his intentions to snatch at the Crown when ever a fit opportunity presented The Duke who was not ignorant of those jealousies entertained of him and at last finding there was a design formed against him of no less than taking away his Life and that as appeared by poyson withdraws privily into Dunbar Castle And the King as conscious of his evil doings fearing the displeasure of his Nobles hereupon withdraws also into the Castle of Edenburg where the Earls of Angus Buchan and others forsook him and assisted the Duke But the King being haunted still by his Evil Spirits I mean those vile fellows whom he had again placed about his Person he summoned the Duke and his adherents to appear and answer for such treasonable Crimes as he had to lay to their Charge and withall prepared an Army to Besiege Dunbar which the Duke having notice off he flies into England And afterwards being accompanied with the Earl of Dowglass and others was engaged to invade the Marches of his own Country but meeting with ill success and being checked by the King of England for his ill Conduct he grew sullen thereupon and withdrew secretly into France where not long after according to the usual fate of his Family running at Tilts with Lewis Duke of Orleans he was wounded with the splinter of a Spear and thereof Dyed So that here is two of them gone the fate of the third is now approaching with winged hast For the King having once got a Peace with the English and the Castle of Dunbar into his hands which seemed for some time to put a check upon his exorbitance he returns to his old haunts gives himself over not only to be guided by Favourites and mean Persons as before who were his Leeches to drain his Subjects to satiate his covetous desires but to unlawful pleasure with loose Women Among the men Favourites John Ramsey saved as you have heard before by the Kings importunity from an Halter was chief This Man having been advanced to the dignity of Lord Stuard K of the ing's Houshold and endowed with many large demesns became so elated in mind that not being content with that large fortune nothing would serve but he must have an order that none besides himself and his Companions should go armed in those places where the King resided designing by this devise to fortifie himself and his Faction against the Nobility of the Kingdom whom he found to go frequently armed themselves and accompanied with such as were well provided for their defence But this Edict procured him more hatred than it wrought fear in his Enemies In the mean time the King minded nothing as much as to gratifie his mind with the blood of those who were thought to be the Authors of Rebellion And seeing he could not bring about his purposes he endeavours to surprise them by cunning for feigning to be reconciled to one of them after another he entertained them with that gentleness and in so soothing a manner as came below the Dignity of a Prince to do Others of them who excelled in Riches and Power he accumulated with Rewards and Honours making David Lindsey Earl Crawford Duke of Montross and George Earl of Angus he would have frequently in his Company carrying it so by communicating his secret Counsels unto him as if he were throuhgly reconciled But his Rewards and Blandishments had but little effect upon any of them in respect to any opinion his Sincerity for they who knew his disposition doubted not but all that semblance of Goodness and Favour tended to no other end than either to surprise them one after another or to set them at variance one against another which when he had got the chief of Nobility to Edenburg did more clearly appear for having sent for Dowglass to him into the Castle he shewed him what a brave opportunity he now had to be revenged on them for if he did but secure the Heads of the Factions and punish them the rest would be quiet That if he lett his opportunity that presented it self slip he could never afterward hope for such another Dowglass who well knew that the Kings mind
but on he goes towards Edenburg and there takes a review of his Army and hastily marches towards the English Borders takes in several lesser places and Ravages the nighest parts of Northumberland In the mean time the King quite contrary to the premonition aforesaid being ensnared with the Beauty of a Noble Captive she was Hern's Wife of Ford neglected Military Discipline and his Army lying idle and in a Barren Country where Provisions were very scarce a great part of them in d●scontent disband and forsake the Service so that there were none but the Nobles with their Kindred and a few Tenants that staid behind For the greater part were of opinion they should not tarry any longer in a Country that was so Poor and withal Plundered but rather to Besiege Berwick which they had left behind them since the taking thereof alone would be much more Honourable and advantagious than all the adjacent Garrisons and that the taking thereof would not be difficult seeing the Town and Castle were unprovided to make any considerable resistance The King who supposed there was nothing too hard for his Arms especially now the English were imployed in the French Wars and being buoy'd up by the flattery of his Courtiers judged he could do that easily in his return but while he lay loitering at Ford came an English Herauld into his Camp requiring him to appoint a day and place where both Armies might give Battle whereupon the King calls a Councell of War wherein the greatest part were of opinion that it was most advisable they should return home least they might with so small a Force hazard the State of the whole Country especially seeing they had already obtained sufficient Renown Glory and Riches and fully satisfied the League of Friendship made with the French neither could there be any appearance of reason that they who were now so much diminished in their number and so weakned with the Fatigues they had undergone should now be exposed to so great a multitude of English daily increasing with Re-inforcements for it was Rumored then that the Lord Thomas Howard was arrived in the English Camp with Six Thousand old Soldiers from before Turwin And for the further inforcing hereof it was moreover added That if the King did depart the English Army must necessarily seperate and could not be drawn together that Year again as being to march from the remotest Parts of the Kingdom But and if the King must needs fight that then it were more advisable he should do it in his own Kingdom keeping the appointment both of the Time and Place always in his own Power But when the French Ambassador and such Mercenary Courtiers as took French Pensions opposed these Arguments the King who was eager for Battle and to hasten his own Ruin was easily perswaded to wait for the Enemy in that Place In the mean time when the English did not advance and engage at the day appointed by the Herault the Scotch Nobility laid hold of the opportunity afresh to go to the King before whom they laid the matter home again Alledging That the reason why they declined Battle was an Artifice of the Enemy only to gain time 'till all their Forces were come together while the Scotch dwindled away more and more and therefore it was high time they should have recourse to the like Pollicy and since the Enemy failed of their word it was no ways disgracefull to the Scots either to return into their own Country without giving them Battle or to Fight within their own Limits of which Councel the first was infallibly the best but if that were not approved off there was abundant reason for to execute the latter for seeing that the River Till was not foardable for some Miles space and could not be past by the Army but by one Bridge there a few might be able to resist a great multitude besides if part of the English Army were past the Bridge the same might easily be broken by Engines conveniently placed for that purpose so as to obstruct the passage of the rest to relieve them who of necessity must be cut to peices But so was the King taken with his own Conceit that you had as good have talked to a dead Man as to him upon this head And therefore he slightingly said That if the English Army were an Hundred Thousand strong he would Fight them With which rash Answer the Nobility were very much displeased Whereupon Archibald Dowglass Earl of Angus a Man that far excelled the rest of the Nobles both in Years and Authority endeavoured in a gentle Oration to alter the King's Resolutions enlarges upon and shews the reasonableness and advantage of the former Counsells given him by the Nobility for he made it appear that the King had been punctual in the League with France and gratified their Request in that he had now turned the English Arms before bent against the French against himself and against his own Country and had so ordered his own Affairs that those great Armies should neither injure France nor endamage Scotland seeing they were not long able to keep the field in those cold Countries and a Barren Soyl Unfurnished of necessaries for the support of Life through the Calamy of the late Wars and which at best produced but little Corn but Winter was drawing near which in those Northern parts was felt betimes And continued the Earl as for the French Ambassadors urging of us to come to a Battle I cannot think that should be looked upon as either new or strange by us that a Foreigner who hath no respect to the publick good of this Kingdom but to the private interest of his own Nation should be so lavish of other Mens blood And besides his Request is unreasonable and impudent for he would have the Scots do that which the French King a Person of the highest Prudence thinks not fit to do for his own Kingdom and Honour neither should the miscarriage of this Army be looked upon by him as a small loss because they were not so numerous for all those are here who excell either in Virtue Authority and Counsell and if these be once lost the surviving Commonalty will become an easy prey to the Conquerors What is it not at present safer and withal more profitable to protract the War For if Lewis thinks that the English can either be exhausted by Expences or wearied with delay what can be better as to the present State of things than for us to enforce the Enemy to divide their Forces that we may keep one part of their Army to watch and look after our motion making a continual shew of our readiness to make Incursions and by putting of them under a constant apprehension thereof ease the burden of the French by our Labour and Vigilancy and I think those men who I fear are more Valiant in Words than in Actions have sufficiently Consulted for their Glory and Renown under which names they would
Castle with the King and Queen in it and so takes the poor King from the Mothers Bosom appointing him to be kept and managed as he pleased Upon which Hume and his Brother William flee into England and the Queen with her Husband soon followed them the Regent was concerned at their departure sets all his Engines at work to procure their return which Dowglass the Queens Husband and the Humes soon after did but Alexander Hume contrary to many large promises being Summoned to appear before the Assembly of Estates refused to come and thinking himself aggrieved encouraged Tories to commit great Outrages in the Neighbourhood for which being like to be called to an Account by an Armed Power he was perswaded to surrender himself so was Committed to the Custody of James Hamilton Earl of Arran his Sisters Husband at Edenburg with a charge that himself should be esteemed a Traytor if he suffered him to escape But Hume perswades Hamilton to make his escape with him and to make a Party so as to enter upon the Government himself he being the next Heir after the former Kings Children in regard he was born of a Sister of James III. and therefore it was more Just he should enjoy the next place to the King then John who its true was the Son of a Brother but born in Exile and in all other things a perfect Foreigner and one that could not as much as speak the Scottish Language With them joyns John Stuart Earl of Lennox with many of his followers but the Earl was soon after reconciled to the Governor and it was not long before Hamilton and Hume returned also to Court and had an amnesty for all that was past Hume and his Brother in a little while after upon some new suspicion the Governor had of them but mostly as 't was thought upon the Calumny of John Hepborn aforsaid their implacable Enemy were Seized Condemned and Executed the people looking on and judging they had hard measure The Regent having brought things into a tolerable state of Settlement Constitutes seaven Deputies whereof the Earl of Angus was one and goes over into France where he staid five years which were full of rapine scuffles and inquietude but I do not find but that the young King continued all this while in the same hands But the Regent finding that in his absence the Dowglasses had mightily prevailed he in order to prevent further seditions sends the Earl of Angus head of that Family into France and another of the name to Rome who died by the way and next Year after his return raised an Army to invade England in Favour of the French But the Nobility opposed his Design and so he was forced to Disband and quickly upon that goes into France again The English Army in the mean time enter Scotland carry all before them and take Jedburg and endeavour by their Navy to intercept the Regent in his return but herein they failed and he with the followers he brought with him from France Compleats another Army actually invades England and Besieged the Castle of Work But finding a vigorous resistance and withal Winter approaching breaks up his Siege The Spring following he calls an Assembly of the Nobles tells them the causes why he must needs go again into France but promised them a speedy return yet he never did For the young King upon Advice from his Mother and most of the Nobility enters upon the Government himself and so vacates the Regents power And now the mystery of iniquity begins to work for tho' the King had assumed the Royal Power yet he and his Kingdom shall be Subject to the Will of others as much and more than before You have heard how Archibald Dowglass had been sent by the Regent into France who hearing of this alteration at home sent one Simon Penning an active Person and one in whom he confided very much to the King of England to perswade him to let him to return home through his Dominions which was granted for it seems King Henry was well enough pleased at the diminution of the Authority of so active a Person as the Duke of Albany and at the change made in Scotland so that the Earl was entertained by him in a very Courteous manner and dismist Honourably But his return did variously affect the minds of the Scots for seeing all the Publick business now transacted by the Conduct of the Queen and the Earl of Arran a great many of the Nobility the head whereof were John Steward Earl of Lennox and Campell Earl of Argyle taking it in very ill part that they were not admitted to any part of the publick Administration received the Earl of Angus with high expressions of Joy as hoping by his aid either to gain over the Power of the adverse faction to themselves or at least to abate their pride On the other hand the Queen who was alienated from her Husband was much concerned at his arrival and sought by all means to undermine him Hamilton also out of the relicts of his own Hatred was none of his Friend besides he feared least Dowglass who he knew would not be content with a second place should mount the saddle and make him truckle under so that he strain'd to maintain his own Dignity and opposed him with all his might They kept themselves therefore within Edenburg Castle and tho' they had seen very well that many of the Nobility affected alterations yet considing in the strength of the place and the Authority of the Kingly Name a sorry defence they thought themselves secure from all force In the mean time the opposite party held a great meeting of the Nobles where they chose three of their own Faction to be Guardians both of King and Kingdom and who should they be but the Earl of Angus John Steward Earl of Lennox and Colen Campell Earl of Argyle And using great Celerity in their business first they passed the Forth and caused James Beaton a shrewd Man to joyn with them who perceiving the strength of the party durst not stand out From thence they went to Sterling and Conferred all publick Offices and imployments upon such as were of their own gang only and afterwards directed their march for Edenburg which they entred without any resistance For it was not Fortifyed at all and immediately fell to work with the Castle about which they cast a small Trench and Besieged it The Defendants who had made no Provision for a Siege surrender'd up both it themselves King and all All were sent away but the King who now had more especially three new Masters before named and who take the whole weight of the Government upon their Shoulders They agreed among themselves that they would manage it by turns each of them attending four Months a piece upon the King who was their prey But this Conjunction was neither hearty nor of long duration Dowglass his turn was first served who brought the King into the Archbishop
aid at hand had set themselves in array at the Bridge of the River Aven which is about a mile from Linlithgow and placed a small Guard upon the Bridge to secure the Pass and drew up the rest of their Forces at the brow of the Hi●● which they knew the Enemy must pass Lennox seeing that this passage over the Bridge was stopped Commanded his Men to pass over a small River a little above by the Nunnery called Manuell and so to beat the Hamiltonians from the Hills before Dowglass's Forces had joyned them The Lennoxians advanced towards the Enemy thorough thick and thin but were much incommoded by the others throwing of Stones down the Hills upon them and when they came to handy strokes the word was given that the Dowglasses were at hand and indeed they from their march ran in hastily into the Fight and soon carried the Day so that Lennox's Men were grievously wounded and put to flight The Victory was used by the Hamiltonians with much cruelty and among the Number of the slain was the Earl of Lennox himself highly lamented by all Persons and more especially by the King himself who now saw no visible hopes of ever retrieving his Liberty and could not choose but see how fatal his presence was to all that attempted it Now the Dowglasses are Lords paramount and carry all before them those that had taken up Arms against their King as they phrased it for fear of a Tryal were forced to compound with them for money or to put themselves into the Clanships of the Hamiltons or themselves and such as refused they utterly ruined yea and the Queen her self thought fit to retire to a place of Secrecy least she should fall into the hands of her Husband whom she hated But fury abating with time and the Dowglasses being severally intent upon other matters and concerns and secure as they thought as to the Kings Departure from them gave him at last an opportunity to gain his Liberty which all the former attempts of his Friends could not effect for him They believed now that his mind was fully Reconciled to them by those Blandishments and Immoderate Pleasures they had indulged him in and besides thought that if he were minded to remove there was no faction strong enough to oppose them neither was there any strong Garrison whither to retire but only to Sterling Castle which was allotted to the Queen for her Habitation And then it was deserted for a time by the Queens Officers when she hid her self for fear of the Dowglasses and when the tumult was a little appeased 't was somewhat Fortified but rather for a shew then any real defence The King having obtained some small relaxation saw that this must be his only refuge and and therefore he deals privately with his Mother to exchange that Castle and the Lands adjoining for other Lands as convenient for her and providing all other requisites as private as he could the Dowglasses not being so intent as formerly in their watch over him he retired by night with a small retinue from Falkland to Sterling whither he soon sent for some of the Nobles to come to him and others hearing the News came of their own accord so that now he seemed sufficiently secured against all force Then he issued out a Proclamation that the Dowglasses should abstain from all the Administration of publick affairs and that none of their Dependants should come within 12 miles of the Court upon pain of Death This Proclamation was quickly seconded with an Assembly of the Nobles at Edenburg where they had such Terms offered them as they would not accept whereupon their Offices were taken from them and themselves Summoned to attend the Parliament at Edenburg But they knowing the danger Endeavoured to seise upon Edenburg and dissolve the Parliament but failed in the attempt So that th● Earl of Angus retired to his Castle of Tan●allon and the Parliament proceeded in their business and the Earl with his Brothers Relations and intimate Friends were out Lawed They on the other hand being enraged at these proceedings and seeing all hopes of Pardon cut off betook thems●lves to open force and Committed all sorts of Outrages upon the Lands of their Enemies and with their Horse advanced many times to the very Gates of Edenburg so that the City was almost besieged by them The King thinking to unroost them all at once raises Forces and lays siege to Tantallon Castle but all that ever he could do could not take it At length the Dowglasses finding the Hamiltons and the rest of their Friends fail them found it necessary to retire for their better safety into England from whence came Ambassadors shortly after about settling a firm Peace between both Kingdoms and with the same labour to procure the Restitution of the Dowglasses King James was mighty desirous to have Tantallon Castle in his Power and at the same time his mind as averse to the Restoration of the Dowglasses and for that reason the matter was convassed too and fro for some Days and no temper of Accommodation could be found out But at length they came to this That Tantallon Castle should be surrendered to K. James a Truce between both Nations for five Years and the other demands in referrence to the Dowglasses he promised to grant under his Signet When the Castle was surrendered according to Composition the King failed of his Royal Word and not one of the Dowglasses were permitted to return which was foul prevarication in him and a stain that will not easily be blotted off his Memory seeing this was a principal matter in the Agreement and the Equivalent for the Castle The Truce about half expired was infringed by a War between both Nations which the French Ambassador endeavoured to compose and about the same time James transacts with the French King and afterward with the Emperor about a Match which was like to endanger his life For the Hamiltons almost confident of the Succession yet looking upon it a long way about to stay either for Fortuitous or Natural dangers to befall him and fearfull in case he married he might have Lawfull Issue of his own studied to hasten his Death by Treachery a fair opportunity was offered them to effect it by his Night-walkings to his Misses having but one or two in Company but however it were they ne'er could put their purpose in Execution The Emperor's offers were rejected and at last he went over himself into France to seek him a Wife and brings over along with him Magdelen Daughter to Francis the French King but she died soon after and had no issue The Death of Magdalen did but whet his desires to get him another Wife and to that End he dispatched Cardinal David Beaton and others into France to treat of a Match between himself and Mary of the House of Guise Widdow to the Duke of Longeville by whom he had two Sons and a Daughter of whom you 'll hear by
next Day in the Morning he was commanded away from thence to Sterlin again which Order for his return was the more reflected on because at the very same time Bothwell was carryed out of the place where be Lodged to the Queen's Lodging in the Face of all the People and tho' neither of them were well recovered she from her Sickness and he from his Wounds yet they Journeyed first to Kels● then to Coldingham and next to Cragmillen not caring for the Reports that were spread of them by the way and 't was observed that the Queen in all her Discourse professed that she could never live unless she were Divorced from the King and ever and anon said a Divorce might easily be obtained if the Popes Bull were recalled whereby leave was given them to Contract the Marriage against the Papal Laws but seeing this matter was not like to succeed as she expected she left of other Methods and applyed her Mind wholly to his Murder And as a Manifestation of her Affections to Bothwell and her Hatred to her Husband when a little before Winter the Ambassadors of England and France came to be Witnesses at the Baptism of the Prince she strove both by pecuniary and all other industrious ways that Bothwell should appear the most magnificent of any among all her Subjects and Guests at the Entertainment whereas her Lawful Husband at the Baptism was not allowed necessaries yea was forbid to come in sight of the Ambassadors his Servants also appointed for his Daily Attendants were taken from him and the Nobility forbid to pay any observance to him But in her present carriage and comportment in times past by how much the more implacable she was towards him by so much the more did the People pity him by seeing a Young and an harmless Gentleman thus reproachfully used and yet not only to bear it patiently but even to endeavour to appease her Rage by the Servilest Offices he could perform that so he might gain some Degree in her Favour As for his Apparel and Dress she threw the Fault upon the Embroiderers Goldsmiths and other Tradesmen tho' it was but a false shamless pretence For it was well known to every body it was her doings Whereas for Bothwell's Ornament she wrought many of them with her own Hands besides the Foreign Ambassadors were advised not to enter into any Conference with the King tho' they were in the same Castle together for the most part of the Day The young Gentleman being thus uncourteously used exposed to the scorn of all and his Rival honoured before his Face resolved to retire to his Father to Glasgow who as some conceived had sent for him and that nothing might be wanting on the Queen's part to shew her accustomed Hatred at his departure She took away all the silver Plate which he had used ever since he was Married and put Pewter in their stead besides she gave him Poison before his departure that so the Evil might be more secret if he died when absent from the Court but the Poison wrought sooner than those who gave it supposed it would for he had scarce been gone a mile from Sterling when such a grievous Pain took him all over his Body that it was very apparent his Disease was not usual but fraudulently design'd but he no sooner came to Glasgow but that the mischief did manifestly discover it self for there arose blue Pustules all over his Body with so much Pain and Torment that there was little hope of his Life and when James Abernethy an able faithful and experienced Physician was consulted about his Distemper he made present answer that he had taken Poison Hereupon he sent for the Queen 's Domestick Physician but the Queen would not suffer him to go fearing lest his Skill might Cure him and she was not also willing that many should know of his being Poisoned When the Ceremonies of the Baptism were over and the Company by degrees gone home the Queen was private with Bothwell and scarce any other company at Drummond and Tullibardin a Nobleman's House where she spent some days about the beginning of January and so returned to Sterling and pretended daily to go to Glasgow but at the same time expected to hear every Minute of the Kings Death and to prevent the worst she resolved to have her Son in her own Power and that her design might occasion no suspicion they began to find fault that the House wherein he was kept was inconvenient that in such a moist and cold place he might be subject to Rheums but the true cause of his removal was far otherwise for 't was very plain that the place whither he was carried was far more obnoxious upon the aforesaid account by being scituated in a low marshy Ground having a Mountain betwixt it and the Sun rising whereupon the Child scarce seven months old was brought in a very sharp Winter to Edenburg but when she there heard that the King was recovered as having overcome the Poison by the vigour of his Youth and strength of his Natural Constitution she renewed her Plot to destroy him acquainting also some of the Nobility therewith In the mean time News was brought her that the King designed to fly into France or Spain and that he had spoke about it to the Master of an English Vessel which was then in the Frith of Clyde Hereupon some thought that an opportunity was offerred her to send for him and if he refused to come to kill him out of the way yea some offerred to be her Agents in the thing and all of them advised that the Fact should be privately committed and that it should be hastened before he was perfectly recovered of his Illness The Queen having already gotten her Son into her Possession that she might also have her Husband in her Power though not as yet agreed in the design how he should be made away resolved to go to Glasgow having as she imagined sufficiently cleared her self from his former suspicions by many kind Letters she had lately sent him but her Words and Deeds were not both of a piece for she took almost none with her in her Retinue but the Hamilton's and other Hereditary Enemies of the King In the mean time she commits to Bothwell's Care to do what was Contributary to the Design at Edenburg for that place seemed most convenient for them to act this Hellish Tragedy and also to conceal the Fact when 't was perpetrated For there being a great Assembly of the Nobles the suspicion might be put off from one to another and so divided between many And now when the Queen had tried all the ways she could to dissemble her Hatred at last by many Chidings Complaints and Lamentations she could yet scarce make him believe that she was reconciled to him but comply he does and so though hardly yet recovered from his Sickness was brought in a Litter to Edenburg to the fatal place designed for his Murther
or Bier turn'd up side down and brought by Porters into the Palace where she her self view'd the Body which was the most beautiful and comliest of the Age. The Nobles that were present desired that a Royal and Magnificent Funeral should be made for him But she good Woman caused him to be carryed out by Bearers in the Night to be buryed in no manner of State and that which increased the Indignity the more was that his Grave was made near David Rizzio's as if she had designed to Sacrifice the Life of her Husband on purpose to appease the Ghost of that base Varlet There were two surprizing Prodigies hapning at that time which are worthy of Relation and were Construed as being very Ominous to that poor Prince one of them a little preceded the Murder and thus it it was One John Londin a Gentleman of Fife having been Sick for a long time of a Fever did the Day before the King was Murdered about Noon lift up himself a little out of his Bed and as if he had been in great Astonishment cry'd unto such as stood by him with a loud Voice Go help the King for the Parricides were just now going to Murder him And a while after he called out with a Mournful Tone Now 't is too late to help he is already Slain and the Person himself died soon after the other did accompany the Murder it self There were three of the Familiar Friends of the Earl of Athol the King's Cousin who were Men of Reputation for their Valour and Fortunes that had their Lodgings not far from the King 's who when they were asleep about Midnight there seem'd a Man to come to Dugal Stuwart who was next the Wall and to pull his Hand over his Beard and Cheek so to awake him saying Arise they are offering Violence to us upon which he presently awakes and considering of the Apparition with himself another of them Cries out presently in the same Bed Who kicks me Dugall answered perhaps 't is a Rat which us'd to walk about in the Night whereupon the Third who was not awake got up presently out of his Bed and was a going to run away asking Who was that had given him a Box on the Ear Which words were no sooner spoke by him but that one seemed to go out of the House by the Door not without some Noise While they were descanting together on what they had heard and seen the Noise of the King's House that was blown up drove them all into a great Fright The Earl of Athol highly resented the King's Murder and so did Murray which put both of them in danger of their Lives nay Bothwell understanding that Murray was Sick at his own House of the Gout did under a pretence of Visiting him design to Murder him as he had done before but Murray had removed a little before to his Brother Robert's House and so escaped and now the Queen and Bothwell are as unseparable as their Shadows and take a full swing of their pleasures but the Arrival of the French Ambassador and his insisting how infamous the King's Murder was among Strangers put some damps upon their Enjoyments besides they were not a little sollicitous concerning the Rumours spread of Bothwell being concern'd in the Fact and how to avoid the Danger and clear of all suspicion was now become the main Head of their Consultation There was a Design laid before to have him try'd and acquitted for presently upon the King's death Bothwell and some of his Complices came to the Earl of Argyle who was Hereditary Capital Judge in Criminal Causes and first pretended they were wholly ignorant of what was done and wondered at it all as a New unheard of and incredible thing then they proceded to the Examination of it and to that end Summoned some poor Women out of the Neighbourhood but they stuck between Hope and Fear being uncertain whether they ought to speak or hold their Peace but tho' they were very cautious in their words yet uttering more then was expected they were dismist as having spoken nothing upon any certain Ground and as for their Testimony it was easie enough to dispute it whereupon some of the King's Servants whom the Fire had not destroy'd were sent for and being interrogated concerning the Ingress of the Assassines answered That the Keys were not in their Power and it being urged on them again in whose Power then They reply'd the Queens whereupon the further Examination was put off as they pretended but indeed was quite supprest for they were afraid if they went any further the Court Secrets would become all publickly known And yet to set a Gloss upon the Matter a Proclamation was Published and a Pecuniary Reward was offered to the Discoverers of the King's Murder but who durst be so bold as to Impeach Bothwell seeing he was to be the impleaded the Judge the Examiner and the Exacter ef the Punishment too Yet this fear which stopped the Mouths of divers single Persons could not bridle the Multitude for Libells were Published Pictures made and Night-hawkings and Cries were uttered whereby the Parricides might easily understand that their whole Design was discovered who projected the Wicked Fact and who was assistant to put the same in Execution and the more the People were forbidden the more did their Grief make them speak and tho' the Conspirator seemed to despise these things yet they were so inwardly prick'd and touch'd that they could not dissemble their Sorrow And therefore committing the Examination about the King's Death in which they ought to have proceeded they fell more severely and in earnest upon another Guest and that was against the Authors of Libels or as they called it the Calumniators of the Earl of Bothwell and this they so severely prosecuted that they spared no Pains nor Cost the●e and made it Capital not only to Sell but even to Read those Libells when they were Sold but they who endeavoured to bridle the Tongues of the People by threatning Capital Punishments to them were not satisfied with the King's death but still retain'd their Hatred against him though now in his Grave For the Queen gave her Husbands Goods Arms Horses Apparel and other Houshold-stuff either to his Fathers Enemies or to the Murderers themselves as if they had been forfeited into her Exchequer And as these matters were openly acted so many did as publickly inveigh against them so that a Taylor who was to fit some of the King's Cloaths for Bothwell's Body was so adventurous as to say now he saw the Old Country Custom verified that the Executioner had the Cloaths of them that suffered by his Hands But tho' these things wrought no small disquietude to the Parricides Day by Day yet nothing stuck so close to them as the Dayly Complaints of the Earl of Lennox who though he would not adventure to come to Court by Reason of Bothwell's Power accompanyed with the highest Luxury yet he so earnestly
pleased over the King 's Natural Subjects but he must mock and deride with the ignorant multitude the Danish Ambassadors also and use them with all the despight imaginable for it seems they knowing his former meanness in Swedeland made no great Court to him which raised his Fury this was quickly perceived by some about the King whom the Earls Practices and Insolence had disobliged and who failed not to let the King know it and for all the Earls Ascendency made him somewhat to decline in Favour which another accident gave a helping hand to for Sir Francis Russell upon some disorders that fell out upon the Borders happening to be slain of the English side Mr. Woton the English Ambassador who stood in competition with the Earl for the King's Favour took occasion to lay the blame upon him alledging that the Laird of Fernihast who was Warden of the Scots Borders had Married the Earl of Arran's Brothers Daughter and that the said Earl had caused the slaughter to be committed that the Borders might break loose Wotton was seconded by others in this complaint so effectually that the Earl was committed prisoner to the Castle of St. Andrews where having remained for a few days he got by the intercession of the Master of Gray whom he won with fair promises to be his Friend It 's strange he should find any who had disobliged every Body leave to retire to his own House and here the King played a Noble prank but whether he used it as Lex talionis for the sham-Ring Arran had put upon Walsingham as aforesaid and which he durst not otherwise punish I am not certain but it looks like his little tricks which notwithstanding he dignified with the name of Kingcraft for when the Earl was upon his journey homeward he sends to him with all possible diligence for to lend him a great Gold Chain which he knew he had got from Sir James Belfour which weighed 57 Crowns to be given to the Danish Ambassadors which if the Earl had refused to do he would it's likely have lost the King and in delivering of it he lost his Chain Arran being thus retired makes several attempts to recover his former station and the King it was observed retained a Favour for him and would have been content to have Himself and Kingdom still Governed by him he was once again admitted to Court but others had stepped in and the King had not power to remove them so that the Earl after long retirement and discontent was surprized at last by James Douglass at Parkhead and slain by him in revenge of the death of the Earl of Morton his Unkle and but little care taken to punish the same many thinking it indeed strange that he should be permitted so long to live who had carried it so arrogantly and insolently towards all Men in the time of his Ascendency at Court but several other Accidents intervened before the Earls Exit The next Man that had the chief Credit and Management of Affairs was Mr. Wotton the English Ambassador but tho' the King begun now to be Governed by a Favourite and a Forreiner under this Character yet it did not end here as you shall hear by and by when the Scene is transplanted into England Wotton knew as well as any Man alive how to humour him in his pleasures and such familiar access had he at all times to his Person that he attempted to have brought in the banished Lords whose Interest he had espoused not without the direction to be sure of the English Court secretly into his presence in the Parish of Sterling at such a time as they should have so many Friends at Court that he must have remained once more at their Devotion but all things did not so concur as to put this Enterprize in practice so it was laid aside and Mr. Wotton essayed a Second but more desperate attempt which was to Kidnap Jemmy out of the foresaid Park into England see Sir James Melvill but Sir Robert Melvill coming to a timeous Knowledge hereof took measures to prevent it which made the English Ambassador withdraw home without bidding of them once a good night the Lords for all this enter the Borders being assisted by the Lords Hamilton Maxwel Hume and several others and advance to the number of Three thousand Men towards Sterling entring the Town without any opposition where they were no sooner arrived but there appear'd two Factions with the King in the Castle the one favouring the Lords whose part the King took as if he had really desired the Lords should have come thither in this manner to tear his Minions from his Heart and so once more the King is in their Power which they exercised with great moderation only a few were committed for the present to the custody of some Noblemen and so a Parliament was called as the best expedient to heal all their breaches Things continued in some sort of Concord for a little while and the Convicting and Beheading of the Queen his Mother in England seemed to possess all their Minds with amazement at the Fact for the present tho' I do not find he did at all resent it but this was no sooner over but there appears a new Faction at Court headed by the Earl of Huntley whose aim was at the removing of the Master of Gray and Maitland the Chancellor with their Adherents but finding it was not so easily to be effected Huntley Bothwell and others contrived to seize the King's Person and to keep him in their custody but this proving Abortive the noise of the Spanish Invasion which was dreaded in Scotland as well as in England seemed to lay all Animos●t●es aside for the present but this blowing over the King's Thoughts seemed to be taken all up about Marrying the Sister of the King of Denmark was the Lady proposed and Queen Elizabeth consulted with thereupon who disswaded him therefrom and said she had Interest with the King and Princess of Navarr and that she would imploy the same for effectuating of a Marriage between him and the said Princess but the King was bent upon the former and because he found the Chancellor and some others oppose it he could not or would not be seen openly to controul them but dealt secretly with some of the Deacons of the Craftsmen of Edenburg to form a Mutiny against the Chancellor and some of the Council threat'ning to kill them in case the Marriage with the Daughter of Denmark were hindred or any longer delayed whereupon the Earl of Marshal was sent thither with Power to Treat about the said Marriage but withal in so stinted and limited a degree contrived by the Craft of the Chancellor and his Faction that he was necessitated to send the Lord Dinguall back from thence to desire either liberty to return hence or to have sufficient Power to conclude the Treaty when he came he hapned to find the King at Aberdeen without the Chancellor c so
that what he could not do while he was present he was able to effect with much ado in his absence surely never was any King so ridden as he and the Messenger returns with full power which brought the Treaty quickly to a Conclusion and so the Queen with a goodly Train was sent away towards Scotland but stay a little she did not so soon arrive as you may think for you 'll be apt to enquire the reason of it pray take it along with you and think it not a digression It seems the Admiral of Denmark who had the Charge to Convoy this Royal Bride happening to strike one of the Bailiffs of Copenhagen whose Wife was a Witch she consulting with her Associates in their Black Art concluded in order to be revenged on the Admiral to raise a terrible Storm which lasted for several Days and drove their Ships with great danger and violence upon the Coast of Norway where they were forced to stay because of the continuance of the said Tempest for a long time and a Scotch Gentlewoman whose name was Jane Kennedy and sent before in a Vessel to meet the Queen by the King's Orders was drowned about the same time in a Storm on the Scotch Coast raised by two Scotch Witches who confest the Fact as Sir J. Melvill says it 's like there is a Sympathy in Witchcraft as well as in some other things and now you shall hear of the most valiant Act that e'r King James was guilty of for being very impatient and sorrowful that the Queen was so long a coming this Knight Errant resolves to commit himself to the raging Seas to encounter Shipwrack Storms Witchcraft and what not so he might set free and enjoy his beloved Lady and who should wind himself into his Favour and become his errant●Companion in this Voyage but the Chancellor the only Man of all others who most opposed the Match and whom he himself a little before would have got murdered because of that and none but such as the Chancellor pleased must be made privy to this Expedition and that the Adventure might appear to be brave at all points it must be undertaken the beginning of Winter which was ordinarily the most perilous season of the year Storms they met with throughout and the last day of the Voyage was more terrible than all the rest but at length the Witch was laid and they arrived safely in Norway where the Marriage was Consummated but the Kingdom of Scotland might have been spirited up into the Second Region of the Air or laid with a spell into the bottom of the deep for that Winter for no Arguments could perswade him to return before next Spring from Norway he went by Land to the Danish Court where during his abode he was constantly infested with the janglings of his Courtiers who were divided into two Factions headed by the Earl of Marshall and the Chancellor who strove for Precedency but the Chancellor prevailed here as he did upon the King's return hence carrying all before him appointing who should and who should not come to Court and in short so handled the King and all his Affairs that his Majesty quite forgot upon his return the promise he had made in the High Kirk of Edenburg that he would Become a new Man and take the Government into his own hands and now comes another piece of Witch Pageantry that menaced his Majesty's Life the story was as followeth There were some Women taken up in Louthian which they called Witches and among others one Amy Simpson who it was said charged the Earl of Bothwell as being concerned in some vile Practices to bewitch the King and that she in company with nine more of their Gang met one night at a place called Preston-Pans where the Devil being present and standing in the midst of them a Body of Wax was formed by the said Amy Simpson wrapped up in a Linnen Cloth which she delivered into the hands of of his Devilship who after he had pronounced his Verdict delivered the same back again to the said Amy Simpson she to her next Neighbour and so to every one round saying This is King James the Sixth ordered to be consumed at the instance of a Nobleman Francis Earl of Bothwell some time after they met again by Night in the Church of North Berwick where the Devil in a Black Gown with a Black Hat upon his Head came and Preach'd to a great company of them out of the Pulpit the scope of his Discourse tended to wh● mischief they had done how many they had got to their Opinion since the last meeting what success the melting of the Picture had and so forth and because an old silly poor Plow-man among them whose Name was Gray Meile happen'd to say that nothing ailed the King God be Thanked the Devil gave him a great blow and when they all reasoned and marvelled that their Practices had no better effect upon him the Devil answered in French Il est un homme de Dieu Certainly he is a Man of God When he had finished his Admonitions he came down out of the Pulpit and as a further instance of his Authority and good Manners he caused all the company to come and kiss his Arse which they said was cold as Ice his Body hard like Iron his Face very terrible to behold his Nose like an Eagle's Beak with great burning Eyes his Hands and Legs were hairy having Claws upon both Hands and Feet like a Griffin and spoke with a low Voice Some of these Haggs further deposed that there was one Richard Graham who had a Familiar Spirit who could both do and tell many things chiefly against the Earl of Bothwell whereupon the said Graham was apprehended brought to Edenburg and examined before the King the fellow owned he had a Familiar Spirit but said he was no Witch and did not frequent their company but when it was answered that Amy Simpson had declared that he had caused the Earl of Bothwell to address himself to her he granted that to be true and farther confess'd that the Earl coming to the knowledge of him by the means of Elfe Machallown and Barbary Naper two Edenburg Women he sent for him and required his assistance to make the King love him and to the effect gave him some Herb or Drug with which he willed him at some convenient time to touch the King's Face which practise not meeting with the desired effect the Earl would have engaged the said Graham by his Art to destroy the King bu that he alledged he could not do that himself but recommeded it to the foresaid Amy Simpson who was a notable Witch and could gratify his Desire therein Hereupon the Earl was committed to Edenburg-Castle from whence after he had sollicited in vain to come to his Trial alledging that the Devil was a Lyer from the beginning and ought not to be credited nor yet the Witches who were his Sworn Servants he at
length makes his escape over the Castle-Wall and retired to Cathness where being strengthned by other Male-contents who were desirous to fish in troubled Waters he attempts to surprize the King and to kill the Chancellor his inveterate Enemy and to that end enters the King's Palace one Night late about Supper time by the passage of an old Stable not without secret intelligence of some about the King's Person assoon as they had got within the close of the Palace they cried Justice Justice a Bothwell a Bothwell and had infallibly been Masters of the whole had it not been that James Douglass who was one of them after he had taken the Keys from the Porters entred into the Pastery Lodge to relieve some of his Servants who were detained there upon suspicion of having an hand in the slaughter of his Father the old Laird of Spot where the Porters made some resistance which occasioned a noise and tumult sooner than the Enterprizers had designed the King Chancellor and others were horribly allarmed at this and knew not what to do Bothwell with Mr. John Colvill and others made directly to the Queen's Chamber door where they supposed the King to be but the Door was valiantly defended by Harry Lins●y Of Kilfans Master of the Queens Houshold but the Earl prevailing at last broke open the Doors with Hammers and Colvill brought Fire to burn it the King in the mean time was conveyed to the Tower above the said Chamber the Chancellor who was in his Hall at Supper when he heard the first noise sled unto his Chamber and made the door fast upon him shutting out Sir Robert Melvill who supped along with him and who was forced to retire to another empty House where he continued all the while out of harms way and the Chancellor with his Servants that continually shot out of the Windows made such a resistance as that the Assailants were forced to retire Melvill says that when they first entred into the Palace he was at Supper with the Duke of Lennox who immediately took his Sword in hand and would have rushed upon the Enemy but having no company and finding the place already full of the Enterprizers they were forced to fortify their Doors and Stairs with Tables Forms and Stools and be spectators of all that hurly-burly for the space of an Hour together hearing and beholding by Torch-light out of the Duke's Gallery their reeling and rumbling with Halberts clashing their Culverins and Pistols the blows of their Malls and Hammers and crying continually for Justice now there was a passage between the Chancellor's Chamber and the Duke of Lennox's by a pair of Stairs by which the Chancellor came up and desired admittance in to the Duke the Duke by Sir James Melvill's advice told the Chancellor that for himself he was welcome to enter in but desir'd he would cause his Men to stay at the nether Door and resist as long as they could this the Chancellor took in ill part and so retired again to his own Chamber but in the mean time while all these things were in agitation word was brought to Sir Andrew Melvill Master of the King's Houshold of the enterprize and danger the King and Chancellor was in without speedy relief who procuring all the succor that the time would permit from the Cannon Gate and knowing there was a secret passage through the Abby into the Palace entred with his Men by the same in Armour whereof when the Earl of Bothwell and his followers had notice they stole silently through the Galleries unto that part where they first entred the Palace and chancing in their retreat to meet with John Shaw the King 's Master-Stabler they slew him and his Brother being in a rage that their enterprize had met with such bad success however some of them were taken by Sir Andrew and executed the day following The King almost dead with fear would stay no longer at Dalkeith but in all haste gets to Edinburgh where continual Plots were laid to surprize him and such enmity arose among the Courtiers and more especially among the Duke of Lennox and the Chancellor that it must have a King of other guess courage than King James for to reconcile and compose them the Chancellor one while being forced to retire but brought in again and ruled the roast afresh but it was not long before private Animosities engendring publick Calamities had like to have brought the King into greater danger than any wherewith he had been hitherto menaced for the Earl of Huntley was at variance with the Earl of Murray the Earls of Ca●●hu●st and Sunderland together by the Ears and the Lords Hamilton and Angus at great strife which discord was chiefly occasioned because most of them had obtained Commissions with large Priviledges over other Lands as well as over their own and this at last terminated in an open hostility when the Council was advertised hereof they set a day wherein first the Earls of Murray and Huntley should appear there being a Gentleman of the Name of Gourdon shot by the Earl of Murray out of the House of Farnue both parties came strongly attended and for fear of mischief were ordered to keep their Lodgings lest any tumult should arise the Chancellor who now managed all Affairs advised the King to require Security from both the Earls for their good behaviour for the future to keep them both asunder by detaining the one at Court for a time and sending the other home but Sir James Melvill was for a present Agreement between both Parties and judged the King might easily effect it but the Chancellor taunted so at Sir James for his advice that he was forced to give way and so Huntley according to the Chancellor's project was sent home who now wanting his Competitor so triumphed and took so many advantages over the Earl of Murray's Land as gave him just occasion of complaint but meeting with no redress to his grievance he retired from Court and grew so discontented that he fell in with the designs of the Earl of Bothwell who was still a hatching of mischief Huntley came no sooner to know that his Adversary was an Outlaw with the Earl of Bothwell but he returned again to Court with a design to gain some further advantage over him but the Lord Ochiltrie with the King's consent endeavoured to accommodate Matters between them and make them Friends and so Murray was brought to a place called Dunibirsil as being near at hand for the better effectuating of an agreement Huntley hearing of his arrival applys himself to the King for a Commission to pursue the Earl of Bothwell and all his Adherents with Fire and Sword which the King grants him and being armed with this Power the first thing he does was to Murder the Earl of Murrey his Adversary at the foresaid place which it seems was his own House this horrid Fact was generally regretted and the granting of such a Commission was justly interpreted
Queen of Scots that his Son William was Created Earl of Gowry in King James's Minority and two years after fell into actual Rebellion at Dundee for which he was Beheaded at Sterlin in 1584. but Sir James Melvill who had as good an opportunity to know this Affair as any man says The Earl of Gowry was related to the King in high Favour and by the villanous Contrivance of a Court Faction cut off for little or no fault and seems to censure his hard Fate and not to excuse the King himself in his proceedings against him The Earl's Eldest Son named John was not long after restored in Blood and had leave to Travel and Sanderson said he had a Manuscript containing that the Earl at Padua caused an Hand and Sword aiming at a Crown to be used for his Device and that the Earl of Argyle acquainted King James that he found a Prophesie at an House in Orleans in France where the Earl of Gowry had had Lodgings that he should with too much love fall into Melancholly have great Power and Rule and Die by the Sword After his return that he carried himself very Haughtily and being too big for Court observance retired to his Family leaving his Brother Alexander who was made Gentleman of the King's Bed-Chamber to play the Courtier and Cloak the Design and thus according to Sanderson's Relation was the Conspiracy formed The Earl sent his Brother Alexander from St. Johnstown where he lived to the King at Faulkland to entice him to come thither with as much Privacy as could be and commands one of his Servants Andrew Henderson by Name to go with his Brother and one Andrew Ruthwen to the Court which they in the morning did being the 5th of August 1600. and as the King was putting his Foot into the Stirrup to go a Hunting Alexander informed him that he had apprehended one lately come from beyond Seas with much Gold about him and several suspicious Letters to some Popish Lords advising his Majesty to receive the Money and the Letters and to examine the Person who was in safe Custody at his Brother the Earl's House but ten miles of and this with as much speed and privacy as could be to which the King assents and that he would go at Noon while his Attendants were at Dinner Alexander hereupon dispatched Henderson to give the Earl notice that the King would be there about Noon and that the Business took so well with him that he had clipt him about the Neck that he had but a slender Retinue as the Duke of Lennox Sir Thomas Erskin and about a Dozen more Well said the Earl Get on your Plate Sleeves for I must take an Highland Robber The King staying at his sport of Hunting somewhat longer than was expected the Earl had half Dined when Andrew Ruthen aforesaid came in haste and acquainted him the King was hard by and presently after came in Alexander and Bloire who withdrew to consult and sent Henderson for the Earls Gauntlet and Steel Bonnet the King quickly followed and was received by the Earl who conducted him into Dinner In the mean time Alexander bids Henderson fetch the Keys of the Chambers from one Rynd and presently after one Cr●uston calls Henderson to come to the Earl who commanded him to do whatever his Brother Alexander should bid him which was to be locked up in the round Chamber and to stay there silently till his return When the Dinner was near over and the King eating some Fruit and the Lords and other Attendants gone to eat Alexander begs of him to make use of that opportunity and withdraw to dispatch the Business and up he leads him through four or five Rooms locking every Door as he passed behind him until they came to the round Chamber where Henderson stood armed They were no sooner entred but Alexander pulls out Henderson's Dagger held it to the King's Breast and said with a stern Countenance Now Sir you must know I had a Father whose Blood calls for Revenge and you must Die surely if this had been true the very fright must have killed King James but to proceed the King seeing his danger deals gently with his fury excuses himself from the guilt of his Death by his then Infancy advising him not to lay violent hands on the Sacred Person of his Sovereign pleading the Laws of God and Man and his Merits in Restoring his Brother to his Estate and Honours by Breeding his Sister the nearest in the Queen's Affections and by his Reception of himself to be of his Bed-Chamber and withall promising Pardon for all that was past which so wrought upon Alexander for the present that he left the King in Henderson's Custody untill he returned back from his Brother having first taken an Oath of the King not to stir nor cry out and so locks them both in Alexander being gone Henderson in the mean time relented and swore he would not kill him but presently Alexander returns with a String in his Hand and said Sir There is no Remedy By God you must Die and so strives to Bind him Nay says the King I was Born free and will not be Bound and so struggling together Alexander got the King's Head under his Arm and clapped his Hand upon his Mouth which the King bit by the Thumb and dragging him to the Window bad Henderson open it where the King cryed out to the back Court Treason where the Duke of Lennox Earl of Mar and others were in pursuit of him it having been given out that he was gone the back way into the Park As soon as they knew it was the King they ran to the Chamber where he Dined but could find no entrance In the mean time John Ramsey Groom of the Bed-Chamber and Sir Thomas Erskin endeavoured to get up by the Turn-Pike back-stairs being directed thither by a Boy of the House who saw Alexander ascend that way and forcing one Door open found them panting Ramsey immediately draws his Fauchion and run Alexander in the Belly being bid to strike low for the King found him armed with a Coat of Mail and so with the assistance of Sir Thomas Erskin Doctor Herres and one Wilson quickly dispatched him whilst Henderson slipt out of the way but the danger was not yet over for perceiving by the noise of unlocking the Doors that the Earl himself was coming to assault them they advised the King to withdraw into the Lobby but first cast the King's Coat over the Dead Body which was no sooner done but the Earl enters by his double Keys attended with seven of his Servants the foreway and his Case of Rapiers and his usual Arms ready drawn to whom Erskin to divert him from his purpose earnestly said What do you mean my Lord the King is killed and points to his Brothers covered Body bleeding on the Floor at which Gowry stoops dropping the points of his Weapons when suddenly Herres assaulted him with his Sword and being
seconded by Ramsey struck him to the Heart yet not so readily but that the Earl thrust him into the Thigh assisted by Cranston who wounded Erskin and Herres in the Hand and they him through the Body and lived only long enough to be hanged and quartered Then came in the Lords and the rest of the Company and after having surveyed the Earl's Body they found it did not Bleed till a Parchment was taken out of his Bosom with Characters in it and these Letters which put together made Tetragrammaton having been told as the Story went his Blood should not be spilt as long as he had that spell This is the substance of the Conspiracy I will not descant upon the many Absurdities and incoherent Circumstances couched under this Relation but will leave it to the Readers Censure and tell you only that most Authors that have mentioned it seem to turn the Tables to lay the Assassination at the King's door and one I find Sir J. H. saying he Blasphemed God for his pretended Deliverance once a year all his life after but Mr. Wilson is a little more modest who expresses himself hereupon to this purpose This year August 5. being the first of the King's Reign in England had a new Title given to it the King's Delivery in the North must resound here whether the Gowries attempted upon the King's Person or the King upon theirs is variously reported It may be he retained something of his Predecessor and great Parent Henry VII that made Religion give way to Policy oftentimes Cursing and Thundring out the Churches Fulminations against his own Ministers that they might be received with the more intimate Familiarity with his Foreign Enemies for the better discovery of their Designs I will not say the Celebration of this Holy-Day had so much Profaneness for Fame may be a Slanderer but where there is a strength of Policy there is always a power of wordly Wisdom that manages and sways it Now we are to transplant the Scene into the Southern part of the British Isle for our bright Occidental Star Queen Elizabeth of famous Memory having for the space of above forty four years shined in our British Horizon and darted out the Rays of her Renown to the remotest parts of the habitable Globe and now exchanged an Earthly for an Heavenly Diadem King James succeeded her in all her Dominions who being both a Protestant and a Pacifick King diverted the Fears of the English and made some Allay of Grief in their Hearts for the lost of their Nursing Mother and Sovereign Lady who though she were glorious and happy almost in all her Affairs during the course of her long Reign yet she may be truly said to have been much more celebrated after her Death for the Vices of others and Male-Administration of this and the succeeding Reigns erected a more lasting Monument of Renown and contributed a more indelible lustre to her Fame than any of the worthiest Atcheivements of her Life so that it may be as truly said of her as it was of old by Suetonius concerning that brave Roman Germanicus Auxit gloriam desideriumque defunctae insequentium temp●rum atrocitas Here for a time we are to expect nothing but Shows Pageants Creations of Honours of which King James was never no niggard and all manner of Jollity but the advancement of some so far disgusted others who thought themselves neglected that it produced him a Conspiracy as the Authors of that Age know not what to make off it was apparent the muddy Waters were stirred but it was with such a mixture that little could be visible in it For Sir Walter Rawleigh the Lords Cobham and Grey were Protestants Markham Baynam and the two Priests were Popish the Charge was that they had endeavoured all in Conjunction to introduce Popery to seize the King and Prince and to set the Crown up-the Head of the Lady Arabella Steward younger Brother to Henry Lord Darnley both Sons to Matthew Earl of Lennox by his Wife Margaret Daughter by the Earl of Angus to Margaret the Mother of James V. and Daughter of Henry VII But this was a sorry foundation to go upon and so the superstructure thus huddled together could not last long wherefore the execution of some and Imprisonment of the rest quickly dissipated this Cloud and all was Serene again and Halcion days But here give me leave to say somewhat as well in Vindication of the Memory of that true Englishman and Noble Gentleman Sir Walter Rawleigh who was Condemned for this Conspiracy and Beheaded many years after when he had been General by the King's Commission and had by that Power over the Lives of many others contrary to the Civil Law which says He that hath Power over the Lives of others ought to be Master of his own as to shew the perversion of Justice in that Reign and the poorness of the King's Spirit to be gull'd at that rate by his Ministers in this as well as other Particulars Sir Walter was Tryed at Winchester and made a brave Defence All the material Evidence brought against him was the Lord Cobham's Accusation which he only desired might appear viva voce and he would yield without any further Defence but that would not be granted for they knew full well Cobham would not or could not accuse him you must know Wade then Lieutenant of the Tower and a great Creature of the Earl of Salisbury's had tampered with Cobham about the aforesaid Accusation of Rawleigh knowing Cobham's weakness but that would not do and therefore he circumvented him one day by getting of him to set his Name in a blank piece of Paper and so filled up the Accusation himself Salisbury Rawleigh's great Enemy being thus armed against him urg●d Sir Walter several times to yield upon the producing of his Accusation under Cobham's own Hand Sir Walter answered he knew Cobham's weak Judgment and did not know how far he might be imposed upon but was confident he would not accuse him to his Face and therefore would not put his Life upon that hazard and thus the Trial held till nine at night at last his Fate carried him against his Reason and he yielded upon the producing his Hand which was immediately done and it was in truth his Hand but none of his Act. It happened some years after this that Queen Anne fell into a desperate and 't was believed incureable fit of Sickness and ●hen the Skill of all her Physicions had failed Sir Walter by his long Studies having arrived to an admirable Perfection in Chymistry was sent to who undertook and performed the Cure for which he would receive no other Reward but that her Majesty would procure certain Lords to be sent to Cobham to examine him Whether he had accused Sir Walter Rawleigh of Treason at any time under his Hand The King at the Queen's Request as in Justice he could do no less sent six Lords viz. the Duke of Lennox the Earls of
Morning his Carriages must go through the City on the Sabbath-day before with a great deal of clutter and noise in the time of Divine Worship which coming to the Ears of the Lord Mayor he commanded them to be stopped and this carried the Affairs of the Carriages with a great deal of violence into the Court and having represented the business to the King with as much asperity as Men in Authority crossed in their Humors could express the same it put the King into a great Rage Swearing He thought there was no more Kings in England but himself but after he was a little calmed he sent a Warrant to the Lord Mayor commanding him to let them pass which he obeyed with this Answer While it was in my power I did my Duty but that being taken away by a higher Power It 's my Duty to obey which the King upon second Thoughts took so well that he thanked him for it And now the Troubles of his Daughter and Son-in-law by assuming the Crown of Bohemia come on apace which ended not only in the loss of that Crown but even of his own Patrimony the Palatinate and together with the Match with Spain for his Son Prince Charles perplex'd the remainder of his Reign and wrought him continual trouble having spent more Treasure upon Embassies when the former then would have raised and maintained a sufficient Army to recover his Son-in-law's Patrimony owning in his Speech to the Parliament Jan. 20. and the Eighteenth year of his Reign that my Lord Doncaster's Journey upon that account had cost him Three thousand five hundred Pounds but he was very modest and minced the matter being indeed ashamed to tell the whole Summ which amounted to a far greater proportion and may be guessed at by the following Relation When he Landed at Rotterdam his Expences the first Morning before he went to the Hague in the Inn where he lay came to above Two hundred Pounds now this splendid and expensive Living coming to be known by the Inn keeper of the Peacock at Dort c. hoping he would make that place in his way to Germany made great preparations for him of his own head without any other Order but my Lord taking his way by Vtrecht the Inn-keeper followed him complaining heavily how he was baulked in his expectations and what Charge he had been at to provide for his Lordship which at length coming to the Lord's Ear he commanded his Steward to give him Thirty Pounds and never tasted of his Fare and it was credibly assured by some of his Retinue that his very Carriage could cost no less than Threescore Pounds a day for he had abundance of young Nobles and others in his company so that upon a modest computation of the whole expence of his Journey it could amount to no less than Fifty or Threescore thousand Pounds while he was at the Hague some advised old Maurice Prince of Orange our King William's Great Unkle to Feast him Yes Yes said the Prince Bid him come when the Steward had notice hereof how the Prince took no farther notice of the matter he attended the Prince and told him there would be great preparations expected for the Ambassadors Ordinary Meals were Feasts and he had a very numerous and splendid Train of Nobles and Gentry that did accompany him Well said the Prince Prepare me a Dinner such as I used to have and let me see the Bill of Fare when the Steward brought the Bill the Prince liked it very well but the Steward said Sir This is but your ordinary Diet now you should have something exttaordinary because this is an Extraordinary Ambassador the Prince thinking what the Steward said to be something reasonable and finding but one Pig set down in the Bill commanded him to put down another Pig and that was all the additions he would make for knowing the Ambassador to be a Scotch Man and that they generally hate Swines flesh it seems he thought nothing a fitter Entertainment for him than a couple of Pigs but the King 's mincing of these matters his many Carresses Huffs and Protestations would not do with the Parliament for there was such a multiplication of Grievances and infringments of the Peoples Liberty and such a backwardness from the Court for the redress of them that at length they were dissolved in displeasure and this set every Man's Tongue loose upon him that tho' the King loved Hunting above all other exercises and had many good Hunters about him yet all these and the strength of a Proclamation to forbid talking of State Affairs could not refrain them from mouthing it out that Great Brittain was become less than little England that they had lost strength by changing Sexes and that he was no King but a Fidlers Son otherwise he would not have suffered so many disorders at home and so much dishonour abroad and the story of David Riccius saith Wilson written by Buchanan the King 's own Tutor had been like to die in every Englishman's Opinion if it had not had a new impression by these miscarriages These Domestick Troubles together with the many delays and dissatisfactions he received from Spain and Rome about the Spanish Match begot him so much trouble and vexation of Spirit that pressing upon his Natural Temper it wrought some Fits of Melancholy in him which those about him with facetious Mirth would strive to mitigate and having exhausted their store or not making use of such as were more pregnant Buckingham and his Mother instead of Mirth fell upon Prophaneness thinking thereby to please him and perhaps says Wilson they were only mistaken in the unseasonableness of the time being not then suitable to the Humour for they caused Mrs. Aspernham a young Gentlewoman of the Kindred to dress a Pig like a Child and the old Countess like a Midwife brought it into the King in a rich Mantle And then Turpin who had Married one of the● Kindred whose Name was renowned for a Bishop in the Romances of the Emperor Charlemaigne was drest like a Bishop in a Sattin Gown Lawn Sleeves and other Pontifical Ornaments who with the Common-Prayer Book began the Words of Baptism one attending with a silver Bason of Water for the Service The King hearing the Ceremony of Baptism read and the squeeking noise of the Brute Animal which he most abhorred turned about to see what Pageant it was and finding Turpin's Face which he very well knew drest like a Bishop and Buckingham whose Face ●he most of all loved stand for God-Father he cried out Away for shame what Blasphemy is this and turning aside with a frown turned all the sport and jollity they expected to a cold damp of Spirit Neither did the Prince's going into Spain any ways mend the matter but made it every way worse and worse for in stead of Consummating he and Buckingham quite broke off the Match which King James had so much set his rest upon but what was worst of all
the Duke did so wind himself into the Affections of the Prince that he governed the Son now as Despotically as ever he had done the Father and this had another Misfortune attending of it that the rising Sun was now Worshipped and the old King neglected which yet he had not power to redress and which no doubt hastned his Fate as we are now just ready to relate unto you The King who was the most impatient of all Men to be told of his Faults was so out of love with Parliaments for that very Reason that by his Good-Will he would never have called another but Dire necessity which has no Law brought him once more to it and so a Parliament was Summoned to meet on the Twelfth of February Anno 1623. but that same morning as a kind of Presage of his own Destiny the King missed the Duke of Richmond's Attendance who being a constant observer of him at all times the King did now as it were want one of his Limbs to support the Grandeur of His Majesty at such a Solemnity and calling for him with great Earnestness he dispatched a Messenger to his Lodgings in all haste where the King's Command and the Messengers importunity made the Dutchess his Wife somewhat unwillingly go to his Bed-side when drawing the Curtain she found him Dead in his Bed the sad News whereof was carried with that violence to the King that he would not Adorn himself that day to Ride in Pomp to the Parliament House but put it off till the nineteenth of February Dedicating some part of that time to the memory of his dead Servant The Parliament sate at the time appointed and upon Buckingham's fine Narration about the Spanish Match advised the King to break off the Treaty with Spain which the King himself seemed forward to promote being now got quite into the Prince and Duke's Toll and sets a Treaty of Marriage on Foot with France But before the entire Consummation of the same as the Duke of Richmond was the long so now the Marquess of Hamilton was the short forerunner of the King's Death both which 't was believed were forwarded by the same hand The Marquess Died with very presumptuous Symptoms of being Poisoned his Head and Body swelling to an excessive bigness and the Body being all over full of great Blisters with variety of Colours the Hairs of his Head Eye-brows and Beard came off with a touch and brought the Skin with them great Clamour there was about it in the Court so that Doctors were sent for to view the Body but the matter was hudled up and little said of it only Doctor Eglisham a Scotch Man was something bitter against the Duke as if he had been Author of it 'T is certain That the Marquess's unwillingness that his Son should Marry the Earl of Denbigh's Daughter the Duke's Niece made a difference between them with some other concurring Accidents which however did not in this King's time break out into a Reflection upon the Duke being bound up close more as it was thought by his Power than his Innocence Not long after this the King going to his last Hunting Journey to wit the last of the year as well as of his Life he fell sick of a Tertian Ague which if we believe the Proverb is not dangerous in the Spring and had a few Fits of it having this Ague upon him the Countess of Buckingham who Trafficked much with Mountebanks and whose Fame had no good savour tampered with him in the absence of the Doctors and the Duke her Son when in the Judgment of the Physicians the Ague was in the decline did apply Plaisters to the King's Wrists and Belly and did also deliver several quantities of Drink to him and told him they were approved Medecines though some of the King's Physicians did disallow thereof and refused to to meddle further with the King till the said Plaisters were removed which the King much complained off and was glad to have it pulled off tho' with part of the Skin along with it It 's certain the King found himself much worse after the said application and that an high Fever Droughts Raving Fainting and an intermittent Pulse followed thereupon and 't is manifest he was himself suspicious of foul play upon him for when one of his faithful Servants saw him in one of his Fits and to comfort him said Courage Sir this is but a small Fit the next will be none at all He answer'd Ah 't is not the Ague that afflicts me but the Black Plaister and Powder given me and laid to my Stomach by Buckingham And he would often say to Montgomery whom he trusted above all Men in the time of his Sickness For God's sake look I have fair Play When he was near the point of Death as Buckingham entred the King's Chamber one of his honest Servants said to him Ah my Lord you have undone us all his poor Servants altho' you are so well provided for you need not care With which words the Duke was so stung for where there is Guilt it will quickly appear that he kickt at him who caught his Foot and made his Head first come to the ground where presently rising he ran to the King's Bed-side and cryed Justice Sir I am abus'd by your Servant and wrongfully accus'd At which the poor King Mournfully fix'd his Eyes upon him as if he would have said Not wrongfully yet without Speech or Sence But before his Departure he called for the Prince his Son who rising out of his Bed something before day and presenting himself before him the King rouzed up his Spirits and raised himself up as if he meant to speak to him but Nature being exhausted he had not strength to express his Intentions but soon after Expired being upon Sunday Morning the 27th of March 1625. at Theobalds in the Eight and fiftieth year of his Age and the Two and twentieth of his Reign compleat there being more than a Presumption that he run the same Destiny with his Ancestors whose Deaths were Violent as well by Father as Mother's side which we have more particularly noted for Henry Stuart Lord Darnley his own Father was Strangled and carry'd out of his House and set under a Tree and then his House Blown up with Gunpowder his Grandfather Matthew Stuart Earl of Lenox was Shot at Sterlin of which Wound he some days after died and his Great Grandfather John Stuart Earl of Lenox was slain near Linlithgow in a Conflict he had with the Hamiltonians and the Douglasses about the Enlargement of James the Fifth The Duke 't is true did afterward endeavour to Purge himself from the foremention'd Application by alleadging he had receiv'd both the Drink and Plaister from Doctor Remington at Dunmore in Essex who had often Cured Agues and such Distempers with the same yet they were Arguments of a complicated kind and not to be easily unfolded considering that whatsoever he receiv'd from the Doctor in the
Country he might apply what he pleas'd to the King at the Court and besides had the Medicine been the best in the World the Act was Daring and no ways Justifiable in him because he wanted the Consent of the King's Physitians thereto and one of Buckingham's great Provocations was thought to be that the King now being weary of his too much Greatness and Power was about to set up Bristol his deadly Enemy against him to pull him down The Application of this Medicine was one of the 13 Articles charged afterward upon the Duke by the Parliament who rarely accuse upon false Rumour or bare Suggestion and surely he will have work to do that takes upon him to excuse the King his Successor in this Matter for Dissolving the Parliament to preserve one that was accus'd by them for Poisoning his Father especially if it be consider'd that the Commons had then Voted him Four Subsidies and Four Fifteenths which they had not time to pass into an Act. What did farther increase Mens suspicions was one Doctor Lamb a Fellow of a most Infamous conversation his frequenting to and being much imploy'd by the Countess and her Son which did at length so incense the People against him that finding him in the Streets of London An. 1628. they set upon him with Stones and Staves and knocked out his Brains as also one Butler an Irishman that pretended to be a Chymist and was very intimate with the foresaid Company I mean the Duke and his Mother and indeed the Story of his Death as was then reported is a very convincing Evidence of some secret Machination betwixt the Duke and him which made the Duke be desirous to be rid of him For Mischief says Mr. Wilson being an ingrosser is unsecured unsatisfied when their Wares are to be vented in many Shops This Man was by the Dukes means recommended upon some plausible pretence to some Jesuites beyond the Seas where he was entertain'd with a great deal of specious Ceremony and Respect in one of their Colleges and at Night being attended by them into his Chamber with much Civility which was hung with Tapestry and had Tapers burning in stretched-out-Armes upon the Wall when they gave him the Good-night they told him they would send one should direct him to his Lodging and they were no sooner out of the Room of Death but the Floor that hung upon great Hinges on one side was let fall by Artificial Engines and the poor Vermine Butler dropt into a Precipice where he was never more heard of To conclude King James was Learned and had fine Notions in Conception but could bring but few of them into Action tho' they tended to his Honour and Safety for this was one of his Apothegms which he made no timely use of Let that Prince that would beware of Conspiracies be rather jealous of such whom his extraordinary Favours have advanc'd then of those whom his Displeasure hath discontented these want Means to execute their Pleasures but they have means at pleasure to execute their desires But a late Learned Author has exprest as much contempt of his Learning as Ben Johnson did of his Poetry saying It was a Scandal to his Crown meaning his Writings against Bellarmine and Perrone about their King-killing and King-deposing Doctrines and it seems Henry 4. of France had not a much better opinion of the same who when he heard some Men Celebrating of him with these Attributes answer'd truly enough That he was a fine King indeed and Wrote little Books King James was Succeeded by His Son Charles in all His Dominions but much more so in all His Misfortunes for this was one of the unhappiest Princes that ever Swayed a Scepter There is little remarkable concerning this P●●●ce in his Infancy only he was noted as Lilly says to be very wilful and obstinate by the old Scottish Lady his Nurse and even by his own Mother Queen Ann who being told on a time he was very Sick and like to die said He would not then die but live to be the Ruine of himself and the Three Kingdoms through his too much Wilfulness And it seems the Symptoms of his Fore-Fathers Destiny appear'd in his very Face for his Picture having been presented to the then Duke of Tuscany the first sight and inspection thereof made him s●art and say He saw something in it that Presag'd a strange and violent Exit Moreover if what the said Author says be true That Laud at His Coronation at Westminster alter'd the Old Coronation Oath and framed another New one for him in the room of it it was a foul stumble at first dash It rarely happens and I think but very few Instances can be given that one and the same Person proves a Favourite to Two Princes together but it seems nothing could resist the Charmes of the Glorious Buckingham who now Governs the Son more Despotically than ' er he had done the Father and put him upon those very Expeditions that with other concurring Mismanagements made Shipwrack of His Honour at home procured him scorn and contempt abroad and hastned those Calamities which at length resolved in his own sad Catastrophe and Ruine But surely it argu'd a very mean and poor spirit in him to take him into his Bosom and to be govern'd by one that had twice in his Father's time so highly affronted and disdain'd him the first at Royston before many People by bidding of him in plain terms Kiss his A And the second time at Greenwich in the sight of about 400 Persons when lifting up his hand over his head with a Ballon Brasser and saying in most undutiful terms to him By G. it shall not be so you shall not have it The Prince answer'd What my Lord I think you intend to strike me It 's true to have forgotten and never to revenge such Injuries when he had been King had been worthy the Noble Mind of a Prince but it also became him never to have suffer'd him to come near his Court to be upbraided with the sight of so much scorn that had been so publickly offer'd him and some Criticks at Court at that time did not stick to read his future Destiny At King James's Death the Nation was rent into Four Factions viz. the Prerogative Popish Puritan and Country Party which in a short time was reduc'd into two the two former uniting their force against the other two and one should have thought it had been the business of the New King to have composed those first rather then make War abroad But King James his Body was scarce cold when Buckingham put King Charles upon a War with Spain Both of them when in that Kingdom had receiv'd so many Civilities from his Catholick Majesty that they now resolve to Invade his Country with a Powerful Fleet and a Land Army under the Command of my Lord Wimbleton but in their passage they met with a Furious Storm which so scatter'd the Fleet that of
lines to this unfortunate King who now had no more to do then patiently to submit to what time produced but how pleasing soever these Votes were to the Army the Scots and diverse parts of the English Nation were not content with them and so they rise in Arms in Essex Kent Suffolk Norfolk Wales and the North and declare for the King and People Part of the Fleet also Revolted to Prince Charles but all these Revolts were quelled by a Victorious Army in a short time But while the Army was busied abroad the Members having gotten possession of the Fleet and the City of London being well affected to them they joyn with the Scotish Commissioners and rescine the Votes of the Non-addresses to the King and appointed a conference with him at Newport in the Isle of Wight to continue for forty days and to that purpose take him out of Prison and allow him the Liberty of the Island and the King upon the matter with reluctancy enough grants the Scots and the Members their own Demands But no endeavours of his Subjects nor the joynt desires of the Scots and Members could protect this unhappy Prince from his approaching Ruine for the Army now every where Victorious over the Scots and Royalists draw together and make a Remonstrance against all Peace with the King that Justice might be done upon Him the Crown-land and Church-land might be sold to Pay their Army and that the present Parliament be Dissolved and another Called But the Members were intent upon the King's Answer to their Propositions and laid aside the Armies Remonstrance which they take as a slighting of them and then seized the King in the Isle of Wight and make Him a Prisoner in Hurst-Castle an unhealthy place and March to London putting Garrisons in Noblemen's Houses and Whitehall and Post themselves about the Pallace-yard But the Members for all this Met upon the First of Decemb. 1648. and Voted the King's Concessions to be a sufficient ground for a Peace and then Adjourn'd for a Week yet when they were to Meet again they found all the Avenues to the House beset with Soldiers who Excluded all that were not of their Faction from entring the House which were not one fourth part and made the residue Prisoners This Juncto called afterward the Rump Parliament having in this manner Purged the House Assume to themselves the Supream Power of Ordering the English Affairs Confirm the Votes of Non-Addresses and raze the Votes of having a Conference with the King and the Declaration that the King's Concessions were a sufficient ground for a Peace out of the Journals of the House and Vote First That all Power resides in the People Secondly That the Power belongs to the Peoples Representatives in the House of Commons Thirdly That the Votes of the Commons have the Force of a Law without the King Fourthly That to take up Arms against the Representatives of the People or the Parliament was High-Treason Fifthly That the King Himself took up Arms against the Parliament and therefore was guilty of all the Blood shed in the Civil War and ought by His own Blood to expiate the fame But the Ordinance for the King's Trial being sent up to the Lords for their Concurrence they Rejected it January the 2 d and Adjourned for 10 days but first sent back that they would give Answer Whereupon the Commons search the Lords Journal-Book and find these Votes 1. To send an Answer 2. That their Lordships do not concur to the Declaration 3. That their Lordships Reject the Ordinance for Tryal of the King But the Commons for all that go on and Vote the Lords Dangerous Order the King to be brought to London under a Guard Read and Ingrossed the Ordinance for his Tryal on the 6 th of January and the Manner was referred to the Commissioners who were to Try Him and to that end to Meet in the Painted Chamber on Munday January the 9 th who Resolved that Proclamation should be made in Westminster-Hall that the Commissioners were to Sit again to Morrow and that all those who had any thing to say against the King should be heard In this manner Mr. Denby who was Sergeant at Arms to the Commissioners Rode into the Hall with his Mace and some other Officers all bare attended with Six Trumpets on Horseback who Sounded in the midst of the Hall the Drums of the Guard in the mean time Beating without in the Pallace-yard at the Old Exchange and in Cheapside The Mayor Aldermen and Common Council of London Petition'd the House of Commons for Justice against the King to Settle the Votes that the Supream Power was in them and the City resolved to stand by them to the utmost and because nothing should obstruct the intended Work Hillary Term was Adjourned for Fourteen days and Proclamation made thereof in the Cities of London and Westminster and other Market-Towns but that this poor Prince might have some glimmering of hope the Scots Parliament begun January 2 d. understanding what was done at London in reference to the King's Tryal Dissent from the said proceedings and Direct some Papers To William Lenthall Esquire Speaker of the House of Commons which the House took as an Affront and Denyal of their Authority and so thought not sit to Read them but yet Voted to send Commissioners into Scotland to preserve a Good Correspondence between both Nations Several Ministers from their Pulpits Declaimed also against the Proceedings against the King's Person some of the Nobility offer'd themselves Pledges in his behalf and January 19 the Scottish Commissioners deliver'd some Papers and a Declaration from the Parliament of Scotland wherein they express a dislike of the present Proceedings and declare That the Kingdom of Scotland had an undoubted Interest in the King's Person who was not deliver'd to the English Commissioners at Newcastle for the Ruine of his Person but for the more speedy Settlement of the Peace of his Kingdoms That they extreamly Dissented and Declared against the Tryal of Him in regard of the Great Miseries that were like to ensue thereupon and desired leave to make their Personal Addresses to Him The like Papers were also Presented to the General but all signify'd nothing for the Commissioners for the Tryal proceeded to make all things in a readiness and to that purpose Order'd that the Sword and Mace tho' they had the King's Arms thereon should be brought into the Court at His Tryal and the King to be brought from St. James's where he was then a Prisoner to Sir Robert Cotton's House at Westminster They erected a Tribunal called The High Court of Justice over which was appointed One hundred and fifty Judges at the upper end of Westminster-Hall the Courts of Chancery and Kings-Bench being ordered into one and these Judges were impower'd to Convent Hear Judge and Execute Charles Stuart King of England All things being now fitted up the King on Saturday the 20 th was brought from St. James
an entire disappointment of his hopes that way and they to be so beaten as they were never before nor after by the English Fleet. Oliver Cromwel sometime after assuming the Supream Power by the Title of Protector he and Mazarine grew so gracious one with another that France began now to be too hot to hold King Charles so as he was necessitated to retire thence to the Elector of Cologn and afterwards into the Spanish Netherlands where he ordered the English Scots and Irish in those parts which amounted to between four and five thousand Men to joyn the Spaniards to attempt the relief of Dunkirk then besieged by the French and English But herein he was as fatal in his Arms as he had been all along before for the Spanish Army were utterly routed and this defeat broke his whole design so that he never after made use of Arms to recover his Inheritance but retired to Bruges where he stay'd to see the event of things The death of Oliver Cromwell together with the many changes of Government that happened thereupon in England gave new life to his hope and made him go in person to the Pyrenaean Treaty to promote his Interest from whence he returned through France to Bruxells But coming to understand that Sir George Booth and the Cheshire Men were supprest by Lambert it did not a little damp his hopes and made him return again to Bruxells from about St. Maio's where he privately lay in readiness to take Shipping for England upon the first good event of Sir George and others undertakings for him But his Crown was not to be recovered by War how then came he to be restored A grand step towards it was the Rump Parliament's Jealousie of Monk and his Jealousie of them again But what contributed most to it was the unsetled state of the Nation under the many Vicissitudes of Government that had been introduced since the death of the King his Father which made the People very uneasie and long for a Settlement upon any terms and therefore the Convention when they met in order to it on April 25. 1660. did hand overhead without any Preliminaries of asserting the Rights and Liberties of the English so manifestly violated by his Father and Grandfather restore him without any contradiction which did not a little contribute to the succeeding uneasiness of his Reign as well as the Nations trouble But restored he was as aforesaid and on May 25. following Landed at Dover and was received every where with utmost Demonstrations of Joy About October following came over the Queen-Mother seemingly to Treat about a Marriage between Mounsieur of France and her fair Daughter Henrietta Maria But it 's like the Marriage between the King and the Infanta of Portugal was no less designed which was after Consummated and wherein he was as unhappy in respect to Procreation by her as he was fruitful in what ground soever else he sowed his seed which he was Prodigal enough of But there was yet somewhat else of far more dangerous consequence to poor England and more dishonourable to the King that brought the Queen-Mother over and that was the Sale of Dunkirk to the French whose Agent she was in that fine spot of work If the King's Arms whilst an Exile in conjunction with the Spaniards were so unsuccessful in the relief of Dunkirk then Besieged by the joint force of English and French he was much more unhappy in the Sale of it afterward for 400000 l. whereof one moiety was detained for the Portion of Henrietta Maria his Sister and not to the Spaniards who were kind to him in his adverse Fortunes and had most right to it but to the French who had done all they could by their Embassador Bourdeux to hinder his Restoration and on whose side the Ballance then lay which it had been his business to have kept even as his Predecessors the Kings of England were wont to do and particularly Henry 8. and Queen Elizabeth This action I think was us unparallel'd as any can be found in our English Annals It was indeed a Charge against Mary Queen of Scots that she would have transferred her Right of Succession to the English Crown to the then King of Spain Philip 2. but that if true was giving away what was not in her power to dispose of and much such another Donation as that of the Pope's to the Emperor Charles of the Kingdom of Mexico tho with a different fate to both Nations but here was neither Donation force nor any visible necessity but a voluntary act in King Charles to the inestimable damage of England as has been but too sensibly felt to this very day You must note that the gazing World stood a little while amazed at the strange Revolution in England by the King 's easie and pacifick Restoration and with what transports of Joy he was received by the Nation then in a most Warlike posture and as much dreaded by our Neighbours and particularly by the French who had formed designs for an Universal Monarchy But now they were put to a stand to see what such a mighty power and apparently lasting Settlement in England would produce yet finding at length that here all thoughts of Military glory and extention of Dominion seemed wholly to be laid aside and all the severity of the preceding times daily degenerate to the Luxuries of an Effeminate Reign they began to reassume their former design and to prosecute the foundation Cardinal Richlieu had laid for them But that they might make sure work on 't and see that they made a true judgment of the English affairs they resolved to try such an Experiment as would throughly decide the matter and what must that be but overtures for the buying of Dunkirk which succeeding as aforesaid according to their wishes raised their hopes higher than ever of attaining their ends And because they knew well enough that the English were a powerful People by Sea and that while they retained the Soveraignty of it it would be a hard rub in their way they joyn their strength with the Dutch to dispute the Dominion of it with us but the Dutch were as unfortunate in their Allyance in the first Dutch War as the English were in the second when they joyned with them against the Dutch for excepting the time that the English Fleet was divided in the first War and that base business of burning the Ships at Chatham so much to the King and Nations dishonour the Dutch came by the worst of it in all the rest of the Engagements and it was much the same luck the English had by their Conjunction in the second War the French both times standing aloof as looking on and no doubt laughing in their sleeves to see the two most Potent Nations in the World by Sea weaken and destroy one anothe whilst they in the mean time not only saved their own stake but learned how to fight and doubted not but in time