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A33136 Divi Britannici being a remark upon the lives of all the kings of this isle from the year of the world 2855, unto the year of grace 1660 / by Sir Winston Churchill, Kt. Churchill, Winston, Sir, 1620?-1688. 1675 (1675) Wing C4275; ESTC R3774 324,755 351

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the Fifth and the French King he was stopt before he Landed by the Duke of Gloucester and divers of the chief Nobility who coming into the very water with their Swords drawn in their hands stay'd his Boat and suffered him not to Land till he had declared Nil se contra Regis Superioritatem praetexere So likewise when (n) Sir Hen. Wotton State Observations 208. Baldwin the Greek Emperour came hither to pray aid of Henry the Third being beaten out of his Country the King sent him a Check instead of a Complement for Landing in his Territories before he had leave given him so to do being Jealous least it might be thought that he had pretended to something as an Emperour that might be Interpreted Superiority he himself being Monarcha in Regno suo as we find in the old Lawyer Baldus and descended from Ancestors that had the Imperial Stile of (o) See the Charter of the Abby of Malmesbury MCCCCLXXIV Rex Regum not only in respect of their having (p) Beauchampe King of the Isle of Wight The Kings of Man c. Kings to their Subjects but in regard to their enjoyment of all those fundamental rights which make up the whole Systeme of Supream power by the Feudists indifferently term'd Jura Regalia and Jura summi Imperii by the Civilians Sacra Sacrorum by our own Lawyers sometimes Prerotiva sometimes (q) As being so Inseparable that they cannot be dissolved by any humane power Inseparabilia which that they may be the better understood I shall consider them as I find them (r) Clapmarus lib. 1. de Arean Imper Cap 11. divided into ten parts reducing those ten like the Decalogue of old into two General Heads of Power i. e. Leges Ponere Legibus Solutum esse 20. For the First The Kings of this Isle have ever been the Lawgivers it is to be understood that however the Kings of this Isle have been pleas'd for the better and more equal Administration of Justice to Indulge the three Estates of the Kingdom who were heretofore call'd their Great Council but since the Parliament with the priviledg of making enlarging diminishing abrogating repealing and reviving all Laws and Ordinances relating to all Matters whether Ecclesiastick Capital Criminal Common Civil or Maritime yet it must be understood after all that neither houses of Parliament now both joyn'd together have in themselves no power as of themselves to do any thing without him much less (s) That is not only to be understood to his Dis nherison but the Diminution of his Prerogative Cook 4. Part. Institut fol. 25. against him no more than the body can make use of any of its members longer than it is actuated by the Soul For from him they have their life and motion Vt Caput principium finis as the Lawyers express it is he that gives them their Inchoation Continuation and Dissolution 'T is true that each Law receives its form Ex traduce Parliamenti that is as our vulgar Statutes express it by advice and consent of the Lords and Commons who sit with the resemblance of so many Kings but they find but the grosser substance or the material part 't is the Royal Assent that Quickens and puts the Soul Spirit and Power into it A Roy's avisero only much more A Roy ne veult makes all their Conceptions abortive when he pleases So that they can be but the Law-makers but the King only is the Law-giver and therefore Stiled in the old Books The Life of the Law and The Fountain of Justice The Kings of this Isle how far above Law 21. This prerogative I speak it out of a great States-mans observation consists in this not that Kings need not observe their Laws for that were a Brutal Tyranny insupportable in the most barbarous States but that they may change them And therefore St. Augustine made that a reason why the Emperours of old were not Subject to their own Laws because saith he they might make new when they pleas'd Now if the King of England should exceed the bounds of his own Laws which if it were lawful were no way convenient for him it being that becomes the wisdome of Princes saith Cicero to consider not how much they may do but what they ought to do in which sense (t) Senec. de cons lat cap. 6. Seneca is to be understood when he said that divers things were not lawful for the Emperour himself who might do all which he pleased It might be rather said in that Case as Grotius excellently distinguishes that he did not rightly then that he went beyond his right The Restraint by his Coronation Oath being like a Silken Coard that may be stretch'd without breaking upon any extraordinary force and violence offer'd as we see it happens upon the discovery and for the prevention of any publick mischief or Inconvenience Where our Kings have De proprio Jure suspended the Laws for a time that is until by advice with his Parliaments he might formally alter or totally repeal them Add to this that every Custom which is a Branch of the Common Law is void Si exultat se in Prerogativam Regis which I suppose is to be understood of the lesser Concerns of his Prerogative in points of Pre-eminence relating to civil Actions or Priviledges personal for as the Learned in the Laws tell us no Sale of his Goods alters his Propriety no Occupancy bars his Entry into his own Lands no Laches in point of time prejudices him as it does private men Again in doubtful cases say they Semper presumitur pro Rege No Estopel binds him nor Judgments final in Writs of Right These and many more such as these there are which we may call Minima Inseparabilia but in all cases where his Prerogative in point of Government is prejudic'd there our great Gownmen hold that he cannot be restrain'd no not by an Act of Parliament nor is he to be restrain'd as I take it in lesser cases unless named And to this it was questionless that the Sage Bracton and the Learned Plowden had respect when the one said the King was above Law to'ther that he was not bound by Law and if it were not so there would be no power left in him to grant any special Charter that in its proper nature is no other than a Dispensation with the positive Laws which can be understood to be binding to the King no otherwise than according to the natural Rule of Order as they are essential to the support of his Government In which Case Kings like good Husbands may be said to be Subjectis suis Subjectos mov'd by a Principle of Affection that voluntarily limits it self according to Rules of Prudence which upon all Emergencies of State on extraordinary occasions are wrested or broken as he himself only sees cause there being a necessity upon which the common safety depends that at such times Princes should be
absolute and that no less perhaps for the Subjects sake than their own (t) Plin. vit Trajan Nil majus à te Subjecti animo factum est quam quod Imperari Coepisti and the learned Grotius gives the genuine reason for it in his Treatise of Soveraignty because saith he as no man can be limited but by something superiour to him Seven Imperial Rights Inherent in the Kings of this Isle so no man can be superiour to himself But in respect that I find Seven general Topicks of absolute Soveraignty agreed by all the Feudists We will examine the Prerogative of the Kings of this Isle with relation to each of those Particulars apart 1. Census nummorum 22. The first I take to be that unlimited power of giving the form weight allay and value to all Moneys which as it hath been always and in all Nations esteem'd a Prerogative purely Imperial so it hath been as antient in use here as the knowledg of Money it self and so uncontrolled that we find some of our Kings I speak it not to their honour since the abasement of Coin is certainly an abasing of Majesty as betraying a necessity that shews a defect in Government have impos'd upon us Copper others Tinn and (u) Hen. 8. at Bulloigne One once Leather Money making it as currant as Silver or Gold neither have any of our Kings at any time Communicated this Priviledg to any of their Subjects though some of them have had the Title of King conferr'd on them but have kept that power in their own hands as one of the great Inseparabilia not to be parted with Whereas the Kings of France who have been more prest and less provident in that point have thereby given occasion to those Allodiarii that enjoy'd that priviledg to esteem themselves as indeed they were absolute and free Princes stiling themselves accordingly Dei gratia to publish they own'd no Subjection 2. Jus Vectigalium 23. The Second Prerogative stil'd Jus Vectigalium which I take to be that (w) Seld. Dissertat ad Flet. 478. 479. Jus Caesarium first brought in by the great Lawyer Papinian Temp. Imp. Severi is diversly understood sometimes comprehending all those Duties which the antient Feudists place under the heads of Angariae and Parangariae by some extended to Plaustrorum Navium praestationes by others to those Jurafisci under which our Civilians comprehend almost all kind of Impositions and Services Pecuniary and Personal Under all or either of these considerations we find the Kings of this Isle as well entituled as any other Princes of the World both De facto and de Jure whereof there needs no other proof in the time of our primitive Kings the Britains than the Impresses on their Coins stamping sometimes an Oxe or Sheep sometimes a Blade of Corn other while Instruments of Husbandry or perhaps an Armed man or Chariot and Horses denoting as the skilful in that Science tell us the several Tributes and services to which those Moneys had respect or for which they were paid Then passing by the Romans we find amongst the Saxons the next to them this Prerogative exercis'd by several Names as first by that of (x) Fitzherbert Nat. Brev. 226. Thol or Tol a Tax pro libertate vendendi emendi Secondly by the names of Bordland Drofland Burland and Drinkland Names given according to the several Natures of the Duty they related to being generally call'd in Cromton's Translation of Canutus's Laws Firmae adjutorium that held all the Danes time and was by the Normans comprehended under the common name of (y) Mat. Paris Edw. 1. Cap 35. Ed. 3. H. 4. H. 5. Curialitas The Common Lawyers have taken it in several Senses when it respects Releif for War they term it (z) 25 Ed. 1. Aides when it is related to a civil supply they stile it Loane-money which however latter times have familiarly call'd Benevolence yet we find by the Stat. of the twentieth of Hen. the Sixth The King demanded it in right of his Soveraignty and by Law and accordingly appointed Commissioners for gathering it who extorted it with Penalties so in the seventeenth of the said King the same was demanded upon pain of Imprisonment and Confiscation of Goods 'T is true that Statute of H. 6. seems to be branded by a Repeal in the third of Queen Mary But that Law that Repeal'd it being afterwards it self Repealed the King seems now in Remitter to his antient Right a Right so antient that it suffers more perhaps by its Antiquity than any unreasonableness in the thing 24. Touching that call'd Jus Comitiorum I need say nothing 3. Jus Comitiorum it being so well known that no man can be an officer of this Realm that holds not of the King whether it be Jure Magistratus or per Deputationem either as being Commission'd by a Writ or by Patent from him Et sine Warranto Jurisdictionem non habent saith Bracton neither can any of them so much as appoint a Substitute under him but is bound to Officiate propria Persona the Justice in Eyre only excepted and that by a particular Statute for Reasons therein express'd So that by consequence the King must have also in him that 4. Jus Armorum 25. Jus Armorum which our Lawyers call the defence of the Force of Arms and all other force against the peace of the Kingdom which the Civil Law brings under those two heads Bellum decernere Foedera inire This is so inherent a right in our Kings that it seems to have been always lodg'd in Scrinio Pectoris in the Shrine of his own breast as appears by the practice of all Times but it may suffice to look no further back than that Address of the Parliament to King (a) In the fifty fourth year of that King Edward the Third where they humbly beseech him to enter into League with the Duke of Brabant and those Addresses in the eighteenth and fourty fifth year of the said King which I should have first mention'd in the first whereof they desire him to break the peace with Flanders in the other to declare against the Easterlings So in the fiftieth year of the said King praying some alteration of the Articles of peace made with the Hollanders The Kings answer was he would do what seem'd meet to himself The same Answer was given in Terminis by Richard the Second his Grand-Son on the like occasion So by Henry the Fourth in the second year of his reign Henry the sixth in the II. of his upon Petitions against Merchants Strangers that related to Violations of a Peace concluded And as by the Julian Law Lib. 3. it was deem'd Capital for any man without leave of the Emperour to take upon him to denounce War so it is declared Trayterous by our Law and void in it self if any Subject shall presume to do the like without the Kings Commission
desert Woods and Mountains where tyred with flight or vanquisht with Famine they languisht under the oppression of their boundless liberty whilst each prey'd upon the other with such uncontrouled violence as made every one as terrible to his Neighbour as his Enemy was to him This brought them under the necessity of chusing another King who proving as careless of the common danger as he was inapprehensive of his own ruin'd them irrecoverably by the same means he hoped to have preserv'd them trusting to the assistance of a Foreign Nation that did them more mischief by being their Friends then it had been possible for them to have done by being as but a little before they were their profest Enemies I. CLASS OF BRITONES Vortigern An. Ch. 446. A. Ambrosius An. Ch. 481. Vter Pendragon An. Ch. 498. Arthur An. Ch. 517. Constantine An. Ch. 543. Caridic An. Ch. 586. VORTIGERN date of accession 446 Great were the hopes conceiv'd of this Prince his Virtue greater those of his Fortune whilst being both a Christian and a Chieftain of so high note no man could doubt his Power that did not distrust his Courage But standing single and alone like a high Tree upon a large Plain it was not in the power of Fate to keep him from being blown down Neither was it so great a wonder that he should fall being exposed as he was to such lasting Storms of Hostility as that his Son VORTIMER should so overtop him who rising like a dwarf'd Plant out of a Thicket of Brambles for his whole Reign was as one continued Battel of twelve Years grew so crooked in making his way out that it was not likely he should attain to any considerable height having this necessity added to the rest of his unhappiness that by the same means he expected to be Great he was obliged to be Impious The regard he pretended to have to his Country being so incompatible with that due to his Father that nothing but his own could have prevented his Fathers death This Vortigern foreseeing by instinct of Majesty that is a compound of Fear Jea●ousie and Power and being naturally prone to fear his Friends more than his Enemies he took advantage of the common danger to prevent his own and with like rashness as that which Court flatterers call Resolution in Princes he call'd in Nine thousand Foreigners to his Assistance of the English Nation A race of People at that time grown so terrible even to the Romans themselves that their very Name made them way to Victory with these he pretended to subdue the Picts but intended to correct the Insolence and Envy of his Domestick Foes Their Leader was one Engist a politick Prince who to make his conquest sure brought along with him a fair young Daughter to be partaker of his Glory by reducing the amorous King under her power whiles he brought the clamorous People under his the weakness of both the one and the other being so notoriously known that he concluded him as little able to stand against her as they to withstand him neither was he deceiv'd in the conjecture the power of her Charms being so resistless that it was not long before the fascinated King repudiated his Christian Wife to espouse her that was a Pagan This as it aggravated the offence generally taken by his People so it particularly provoked his Son Vortimer to lay aside all obligations of Affection and Duty who neither respecting him as a Father not as a King punish'd his sin seemingly against Nature as well as Reason by a judgment no less strange and inhumane commanding that he should at once be deprived of life and honour by putting him into that condition as made them equally burthensome to him whiles he was immured betwixt two Walls within the narrow confines of such a dismal Dungeon as seeming like was yet so much worse then a Grave as the present shame and scorn worse then death Thus he continued dying all the time of his Sons life but he being slain by the Saxons by a rare accident in the fortune of Princes he recovered not only his Liberty and with it his Understanding but so far repossest himself of the affections of the People who naturally incline to pity men in misery and much more their Prince that believing him thoroughly sensible of his error and encouraged by his Example they set upon the Saxons unanimously and began a War that every body believed wou●d have ended even when it began being so merciless and bloody on both sides that 't is no little wonder how they found matter for their cruelty since equal force meeting with equal courage neither Nation yielding both must be destroy'd So fierce indeed was the execution on either side that Victory delighting in mischief seem'd to hover over both Armies as not resolv'd which deserv'd best of her The Britains strove to shut the door of Invasion the Saxons fought to keep it open and as long as they were upon even terms the Britains grapled desperately with them But the Saxons having possest themselves of several Ports by which they receiv'd continual recruits out of their own Country they not only tyred out all those that liv'd nearest the danger but which was yet more dangerous by picking one Arrow out of the Sheaf hazarded the falling out of all the rest for the gaining Kent made their way into Sussex the possession of that gave them admission into Suffolk and Norfolk the loss of those lost the North And in the end Vortigern too late finding how he was involved in the misery of his own folly not more confounded with sorrow then shame retired first into Cornwall after into Wales where he dyed as unpitied as he was miserable This extremity beat Vortigern off from his first confidence and mortified him so far that he was content to give up a third part of his Dominions that he might quietly enjoy the rest But as the pouring Water upon Fire if it do not utterly quench raises the flame higher so what he gave contributed so little to the satisfaction of their Avarice and so much less to that of their Ambition that it serv'd only to increase their desire of having more and to draw them on from one Proposal to another till they had so far wasted and weakened him in Reputation and Power that another Enemy seemingly less considerable was emboldened to put in his claim for the rest This was the present King who being a Prince of the same stock I cannot say of the same temper justled him out of the Throne at the first shock and finding him reeling prest so hard upon him that his fall made a greater noyse then his rise With this Aurelius Ambrosius came over his Brother Uter a Prince very early in action and for his fierceness sirnamed Pendragon to these the People as willingly opened their Purses as their Ports so that like two young Eagles being upon the wing they took their slight several wayes each
Since the Dukedom of Holstein in the very neck of the Chersoness where it joyns to Germany their Territories here in England were the South and West parts of the Isle whereupon they were term'd West Saxons Now as they arriv'd not all at once so neither all at one place each General waiting till Fortune made him way by which means landing in several parts of the Isle they tired out the Natives with frequent slaughters and to raise the fame of their Conquest the higher they so timed their ambition as if they would have posterity believe they had won a Kingdom for every day in the Week setting up as many distinct Monarchies as they had Letters in the (l) SAXONIA name of their own Countrey This Heptarchy of theirs was formed after the ancient optimical model of Government used by most of the Northern Nations of the World amongst whom the right of Soveraignty was not measur'd by any Line of Descent from Royal Progenitors but considered according to the primitive (m) Virtut● l●●● a●tio Rule of vertue set up by the Stoicks wherein that of Fortirude had the start in point of esteem and reputation of all other good Qualities whatsoever as being the most useful for those active times none being admitted to the trust of Governing but such whose Swords had made them passage to that honour through the bowels of Fame these therefore they stil'd Cyning or Koninghz each of these titles signifying men of power and spirit conduct and courage And as these good Qualities made the people first in love with them so it made them themselves so far in love with the way of their own preserment as to prefer it before all other affecting more adopted than natural Sons and not seldom nominating such for their Successors in case of minority as well as deficiency as were nearer them in proficiency of parts than proximity of blood This however it seem'd most unnaturally natural for that 't is observ'd inocculated Grafts prove better than those which spring out of the S●ock introduced such a kind of co-equality betwixt the Kings and those of the first rank of their Subjects that they that were nearest to the Throne often took the boldness to step in first till by frequent Usurpations the power of Majesty was so checkt that though there were some one or other all the time of the Heptarchy who for dignity sake had the Prerogative to be stil'd Rex Anglorum which was no less than Rex Regum at that time as much as to say King of all the rest of the Kings yet not any one of these Monarchs were able to effect any such entire Consociation for the security of the whole as to settle any one form or order of Law currant amongst them till Alfrid more Majorum after the custom of his Ancestors the Germans did as Tacitus testifies of them Jura per Pagos reddere every County till his time holding their Customs apart as they had receiv'd from those Roytelets their particular Founders without the obligation to any universal Law but what was Canonical which was not the least cause they labour'd so long in vain under the various pressures of envy necessity and chance being driven to and fro like the Sea from whence they first came the nature of which restless Element is to lose ground in one place as it gets in another and urg'd with alternate Revolutions after they had lost all their Interest in their own Countrey to be in hazard of being irrecoverably lost here whilst they were forc'd to maintain a War against the Britains their common Foe the Danes their accidental Foe and themselves the intestine Foe and therefore the most dangerous by how much they themselves made the breach at which the other entred who watching his time as the Ichnewmon that creeps into the mouth of the Crocodile whilst he is gaping to devour his prey made a passage through their bowels before they could swallow up the Britains and gain an entire conquest over them This lookt like a judgment inflicted upon them by that Nemesis that was the just revenger of the Britains wrongs to whom they were of all others the most pernicious enemies for contrary to the practice and policy of those that were before them as well as of those that came after them they refus'd all commerce communion or mixture with them extinguisht their Religion totally silenc'd their Laws rejected their Language and in conclusion took from them their very Name as well as their Countrey Neither stopt they here but dissolving all regard rendred Barbarism wholly triumphant whilst fury and ignorance met in conjunction In fine being irreconcileable to whatever could be call'd civil or sacred they not only took from the Men their Lives from the Women their Honour from both their Liberty but defac'd all Monuments devoted to piety or peace and if they did not wholly demolish them yet they prophan'd the holy things not seldom sacrificing the Sacrificers upon their own Altar And which made the Persecution the more dreadful was that it was not to be pacified by any Offering or prayers for one hundred and fifty years together so far as to have the least regard to Sex Age Degree Quality or Relation whatever till their bruitish spirits were quite tired out with continual slaughters and butcheries But after that light which shineth in darkness guided them to the knowledge of that blessed Truth whose meekness miraculously allay'd their rough natures they became so flexible and obedient to the principles of their new Faith as men that thought they could never expiate their former inhumanities but by an excess of zeal they did as immoderately wast themselves in repairing the ruines they had made raising so many new Structures that the number as well as the beauty so far exceeded all those of former times that it might have been said of this Isle as once of Rome that it seem'd but one great Monastery the piety of their Kings so surmounting their policy that many of them turned their Scepters into Crosiers and exchang'd their Crowns for Miters their Princes thinking it a greater glory to be made Priests than their Priests thought it to be made Princes Thus they conquer'd themselves before they had half conquer'd the Britains and as 't is observable how by their contention for Heaven they were happily brought to imitate it in that wonderful work of the Circulation of the Globe effected by the power of that truly divine Science the Art of Navigation first reduc'd into practice by them whereby they had the honour to be the first that resolv'd the Non ultra of the Ancients into a Plus ultra discovering another World which neither the Greeks nor Romans ever knew So it is more than probable that if they had quietly enjoy'd the benefit of their Conquest here at home after it came to be entire and absolute without that interruption they had from the Dana who finding them busi'd in
dispend a thousand Marks a day which I have the rather noted to shew how the Kingdom flourish'd as well as the King gaining as all wise States do by their layings out for the whole Revenues of the Crown in his Grand-fathers days were esteem'd to be not much above a hundred thousand Marks a year Five years the French King continued Prisoner here in England time enough to have determin'd the Fortune of that great Kingdom and dissolv'd their Canton'd Government into parts had it not been a Body consisting of so many strong Limbs and so abounding with Spirits that it never fainted notwithstanding all its loss of Blood but scorn'd to yield though King Edward came very near their heart having wounded them in the most mortal part their Head The Scotch King could not recover his Liberty in double the time being the less able to redeem himself for that he was upon the matter but half a King the other half being in the possession of Baliol who to secure a Moyety to himself surrendred the whole to King Edward whose Magnificence vying with his Justice he gave it back again upon Terms more befitting a Brother then a Conqueror shewing therein a Wantonness that no King perhaps besides himself would have been guilty of nor probably he neither had either his People been less bountiful to him or Fortune less constant which to say truth never forsook him till he like his Father forsook himself leaving all Action and bidding adieu to the World ten years before he went out of it declining so fast from the fortieth year of his Government that it may rather be said his famous Son Prince Edward commonly call'd the Black Prince reign'd then he and happy 't was for him that when his own Understanding fail'd him he had so good a Supporter who having it in his power to dispose of Kingdoms whilst he liv'd ought not to be denyed after he dyed the honour of being esteem'd equal to Kings in the Prerogative of a distinct Character Begin we then the Date of his Government from the Battel of Crassy which happening in the Sixteenth year of his Age makes the Computation of his Glory to commence near about the same time his Fathers did who however he was King at fourteen rul'd not till after Mortimer's death by which Battel he so topt the Fortune of France as his Father had that of England that he may be said to have taken thereby Livery in order to the Seisin of that Kingdom And after the Recovery of Calais it may be said the Keys of the Kingdom rather then of that Town were deliver'd into his hand for that he therewith open'd all the Gates of almost every Town he came to till the King of France incompassed him like a Lion in a Toil with no less then 60000 of the best Men of France and brought him to that streight that it seem'd alike disadvantageous to sight or yield and which made the danger more considerable as things then stood England it self was in some hazard of being lost with him here he seem'd to have been as well accomptable to his Country as to his Father for his Courage and Discretion and how well he acquitted himself appears by the Sequel when forcing Hope out of Despair like fire out of a Flint he necessitated his Men to try for Conquest by shewing them how impossible 't was for him to yield and by that incomparable Obstinacy of his made Fortune so enamour'd of his Courage that she follow'd him wherever he went while his Sword made its way to Victory and his Courtesie to the Affections of the Conquer'd whom he treated with that regard and generosity that many of them were gainers by the loss being dismiss'd with honourable Presents that made his second Conquest over them greater then the first the King of France himself being so well pleas'd with his Bondage that he return'd voluntarily into England after he was redeem'd to meet two Kings more that might be Witness of his Respect and Gratitude In short he was as King of England on the other side the Water as his Father was on this side keeping so splendid a Court in Acquitaine that no less then three Kings came to visit him too all at once these were the King of Majorque Navar and Castile the last of which craving Aid of him against an Usurper who was back'd by an Army consisting of no less then One hundred thousand men if the Writers of those times say true was re-instated accordingly by his single power to shew the World that he could as well make Kings as unmake them His second Brother who had the Title of King by marrying with the King of Castile's Daughter and Heir being principally indebted to him for the honour of that Title and it prov'd a fatal Debt both to him and his Son Richard the Second costing the one his Life the other both Life and Kingdom too for as himself never recover'd the health he lost in undertaking that Expedition so his Son never recover'd the disadvantage put upon him afterward by his Uncle Lancaster who by that means having got the Regency of his drooping Father King Edward who tyred with Action rather then Age fatally submitted to the loss of more years of his Government then he got by his unnatural Anticipation from his own Father and suffer'd himself to be buried alive as we may say under his Cradle put fair for setting his Nephew aside but wanting a Colour for so apparent an Injustice his jealous Father the Black Prince having declar'd him his Successor in his life time to prevent all tricks he thought it enough to make way for his Son to do it and accordingly put such an impression of dislike upon the innocent Youth at his very first Edition as prov'd Indelible in his riper years for the very same day he was presented to take his Grandfathers Seat in Parliament as Heir apparent to the Crown being then but eleven years old he taught him to demand a Subsidy purposely to turn the Peoples blood who were then big with their Complaint of Taxes But possibly he is made more splenetick as well as more politick then he was for it was scarce possible to make the Youth more odious then he had made himself before by disgusting those two potent Factions of the Church and the City of London who to shew how weary they were of his governing the old Child his Father would not after his Death let him longer Rule the young Child his Nephew but purposely depos'd him to the end as they said that he might not depose the other Thus this great King ended as ingloriously as he began who having stept into the Throne a little before he should 't is the less wonder he left it a little before it was expected he would especially if we consider that in out-living the best Wife and the best Son in the World he had a little out-liv'd himself being so unfortunate
better Neither was he less fortunate then forward in Peace as well as in War So that as upon the one side he look'd like Caesar or Augustus rather both of whom as they were armed with Lightning so their Pardons went ever before and after their Swords so on the other side he was not unlike those two famous Legislators Solon and Licurgus who principally regarding the People were yet so wise for themselves as with the publick safety to secure their own Authority for he was an excellent Judge of times and seasons and knew when to strain up the Laws to his Prerogative and when to let down his Prerogative to the Test of the Law And though 't was observ'd never any man lov'd his own way nor his own will better then he nor perhaps ever had so much Reason to do it being as another Solomon wiser then his Counsellors and yet they perhaps as well chose as ever any Kings Counsellors were yet we find he was sometimes content to part with both for the more orderly administration of Justice leaving the disposition of his Mint his Wars and his Martial Justice things of absolute power not to say the Concerns of his unsetled Title which was yet of higher and tenderer consideration to the wisdom of his Parliaments And least the thing called Propriety which is the same to the Subject as the Prerogative to Majesty should be thought to suffer in the least he gave himself the trouble of hearing many Causes at his Councel-board where sitting at the Fountain of Justice assisted by the most learn'd as well as the most reverend Professors of Law and Conscience it was not to be suppos'd that any Cause could lose any thing of its due weight and allowance yet it seems the Common Lawyers unwilling the determination of Meum and Tuum should go besides their own Courts traduc'd him with distrusting his Judges in matters of Common Right as the Souldiers complain'd of his not trusting his Generals in point of common Security And some there were who would have aggravated it to a Grievance however 't was apparent to be rather their own then the Peoples who are apter to complain of the chargeableness then the due Administration of the Laws But these Causes being for the most part heard in the Vacation time 't is possible he had in his Thoughts something beyond their reach with respect to the splendor of his Court and the profit of the City to which as he was alwayes a Friend so by this dispatch of Justice while there was no other Courts sitting he drew such a concourse of Clyents to Town as kept up a kind of Term all the Year round and so quickned Trade that by adding to theirs it increas'd his own Wealth to that degree that amongst other Reasons given of his neglecting the benefit of the Discovery of the Indies first offer'd to him by Columbus 't was not the least that he had no want of Money and having made himself a Member of the City that by the benefit of that Community he might find his account as well in their Chamber as his own Exchequer and prove as after he did the only Dragon that kept their Golden Fleece sharing with Solomon himself in those two great points of Glory to be reputed the wisest and richest King of his time 't is no wonder he should by Works Immortal as he did make his way to Immortality leaving his Son Henry nothing to do but to inherit his envied Felicity HONI · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE Now as he began his Reign at the time when every thing begins to grow and blossom it being in the Spring of the Year as well as of his Age so the Season complying with his Constitution made it hard for him to resist the heat of his blood yet we do not find that he ingaged in any War abroad till he had secured Peace at home making his Justice as renown'd amongst his People by revenging their wrongs as he made his power afterward when he came to revenge his own executing Empson and Dudley as a terrour to all Promoters to shew he did not esteem them faithful Servants to his Father that had so betraid their Country Which Act of Justice being clos'd with another of Universal Grace in restraining his Prerogative to inlarge the Subjects Confidence and Affection made him so clear a Conquest over all Discontents arising by the Oppression of his Predecessor that having nothing more to do at home he bethought himself of what was to be done abroad Providence offering him a Projection suitable to the greatness of his mind to render the esteem of his Piety no less famous then that of his Justice by undertaking to rescue the Pope out of the hands of the King of France as a Dove deliver'd out of the Talons of a Vulture who having already drove him to Covert as we say that is besieged him in his City of Bononia and having his Confederates the Emperour and King of Spain ready at hand to make a retreive doubted not but to devour him in a very short time This as it was a Design of Super-errogating Merit so it carried in it no less of Advantage then Glory giving him a fit occasion to shew at once his Zeal and Power and in serving him to serve himself upon him in the promotion of his Title to France it being no small addition of Credit to his Claim that his Ho●iness as an Earnest of his Spiritual Benediction had bestowed upon his Majesty the forfeited Stile of Christianissimus However before he would move himself in Person out of England he thought it necessary to prevent any Motion of the King of Scots into England who he knew would be ready to bruise his Heel as soon as he advanced to break the Serpents Head and accordingly he got not only a confirmation of that Excommunication which Julius the Second had formerly granted against the said Scotch King in case he broke his League with him the Curse whereof followed him to his Grave for violating his Faith he died in the attempt but obtain'd a plenary Indulgence for all that should assist him Thus arm'd as it were with the Sword of God and Gideon he entred that goodly Kingdom and long it was not ere he got the Maiden-head of that Virgin City Tournay who having repuls'd Caesar had the Testimony of her Pucillage written upon its Gates as the only Town had kept her self unconquer'd from that time but now was forced to yield to him by the Name and Title of Roy tres Christien as appears by the Original Contract yet exta●t The same day he receiv'd the News of the † James the Fourth slain in Flodden-field Scotch Kings death who attempting as I said before to divert the War lost his Life and 't was happy he lost not his Kingdom too a Victory so seasonable and super-successful that Fortune as enamor'd of him seem'd to prostitute her self
Indos The first possession we had of New-England being principally ascribed to that of his here in Old England both that Virginia and Bermudas three of our most famous Plantations however discover'd before his time having in no measure recover'd so much strength as to make good the Ground they laid Title to till influenced by his Wisdom The chief Town therefore of Virginia the chief Plantation being in honour of his Memory call'd James town by which remote Land-mark if we take the Dimensions of his Greatness considering the Ocean he commanded betwixt this and that other World which was no less properly his Dominion then the Terra Firma beyond it We need not wonder at the Learned Grotius his making him a Rival with Neptune since his Trident was nothing so glorious as t'others three Scepters tria Sceptra Profundi Grot. Silvar lib. 2. In magnum Coiêre Ducem Licet omnia Casus Magna suos metuunt Jacobo Promissa Potestas Cum Terris Pelagoque manet HONI · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE DIEV ET MON DROIT Neither was it the least cause of his Misfortunes that he had a War devolv'd upon him by his peaceable Father without any means to carry it on so that to save a Sister he in some sort hazarded the loosing himself the ill beginning of the Recovery of the Palatinate being the first if not the principal Cause of loosing as after he did his own Dominions beyond all Recovery For as it was evident that his Parliaments taking the first Occasion from his Necessities to put what price they pleas'd upon their Supplies made this the first Occasion of a breach betwixt them so 't is as evident That the King of France taking his measure of his weakness by that of their strength was tempted to provoke him to a second before he had ended the first War which he not being able to sustain was necessitated to stoop to such low Conditions as prov'd the Foundation of a more Fatal War at home then that he declined abroad Thus the sower Grapes his Father eat set his Teeth on edge and however the same Fruit is said to have cost his elder Brother his Life yet when he came to declare what 't was he lov'd best he preserv'd the * The French before the Spa●●st Lady Vine before the Pomgranate whether as judging it more flexible or certainly more fruitful is not known but it appears by what follow'd that he rather pleas'd himself in that choice then his People who as they ever preferr'd Spanish before French Wine so their aversness to the French Nation made them not only pass by many unbeseeming Censures upon the Match not condering they deny'd him that Liberty every private man of them contested for but malitiously to charge the Innocent Queen with all the Ills that follow'd afterward as oft as his Parliaments and he differ'd which was as often as they met and that was not seldom for he had no less then five in fifteen years who notwithstanding never any Prince desired more to give them satisfaction were all very froward and ill dispos'd towards him The very first he call'd shewing themselves not willing to understand him and the second behav'd themselves so that he was asham'd to own he understood them and at the third meeting either understood one another so well that they began to quarrel the fourth gave him the Justle and the fif●h made it good by fighting him Neither were the States of Holland shorter sighted then the K. of France who as they were false to their own and naturally hated all Kings so they took Occasion to fish in our troubled Waters breaking in upon his Soveraignty at Sea as his own Subjects upon his Prerogative at Land which though it were as great an Affront to the whole Nation as to him yet the grand Representatives of that time took so little notice of it that one would have thought they had designed to have exprest no less disdain of his then the Roman Senate did of the Government of the Decemviri Qui nequid eorum Ductu aut Auspicio prosperè gereretur vinci se Patiebantur saith Tacitus for when he came to demand aid of them they not only deny'd him but left him in a worse Condition then they found him making him as great a Sufferer in his Reputation as he was in his Right And that which made this Misfortune the more notorious was That the same Course he took to make the matter better made it worse For having no ready money to set out a Navy nor means to get any he was forced to make use of a little Treasure-trove if I may call it for which he was beholding to his Attorney-General Noy who incouraged him to lay a Tax upon the People by the dubious Authority of an antiquated and as it was afterward call'd Arbitrary Law whereby the Kings of England heretofore had power given them to impose a Naval Tax in case of eminent danger by Sea A Law which at the first making was judg'd to be as reasonable as necessary being intended to prevent the frequent Incursions of the Danes before the Norman Conquest but all Fears of that Nature having vanish'd so long since to revive it now was look'd on like the drawing forth of an old rusty Sword which gave such a wound to the Liberty of the Subject that though it were not very deep rankled to that degree as notwithstanding the many good applications afterward to heal it the inflammation could not be taken off till it turn'd to a Gangreen Thus whilst he resolv'd to do nothing but by Law the legality of his proceedings is taken for an act of the highest Tyranny Neither was this the worst on 't to see his Fleet as it were dry-foundred at Land before it could put to Sea for the Parliament instead of maintaining his busied themselves wholly in asserting their own Rights bringing them to the old Standard of Magna Charta and the Petition of Right Which however it seem'd to be bad enough in the Intention all Circumstances then consider'd proved yet worse in the Explication being constru'd not long after to the prejudice of his Right of Tonnage and Poundage in discussing whereof they committed a Violence upon themselves which declared what they intended upon him by leaving a President that as much out-lasted their Cause as the Cause did their Priviledge shutting up the Doors of their House as if guilty that they deserv'd to be disturb'd till they had fully vented their Passion in some menacing Vores that urg'd him to dissolve them by such a kind of Force as was every whit as rare as their Insolence the breaking up their Doors for so he was fain to do before he could get Entrance though himself was there in Person to demand it making so great a noise that it was heard not only thorow every part of the discontented City but Kingdom and the sound became the more
to both yet neither was so tortur'd between the Consideration of what was safe and what was Just that it appear'd in bringing the Earl they had brought him to Tryal and put him into such an Agony as shook the very Foundations of the Government And this Hesitation of his prov'd to be the Groundwork of three the most Important Jealousies that ever troubled any State the Parliament thereupon declaring themselves dissatisfied in the Security of their Religion Proprieties and Priviledges to the clearing whereof they made not long after three as strange Proposals 1. For the Extirpation of Bishops 2. The Establishment of a Triennial Parliament 3. The Delivery of the Militia into their Disposal This Contumacy of theirs taking its rise from the Confidence they had in their Brethren the Scots who all this while continued in Arms upon the Borders for want of money to disband them eating like a Fistula Insensibly into the Bowels of the Kingdom he made it his first care to cure that Malady wherein he proceeded with that great judgment and skill that in paying them off the Parliament gave the Money but he the Satisfaction having thereby so far recover'd the good Opinion of those People however they came to be perverted afterward that as soon as he arriv'd in their Country whither he went in Person presently after the Peace was concluded they gave him two notable Instances of their Duty and Submission The first Publick in reviving that good old Law there which made it Treason for any to Leavy Arms without the Kings Leave and Commission The second Private in the discovery of the five Members here that had been the principal Engineers to draw them into England But whilst he was busie in quenching the Incendiations of Scotland behold a more dreadful Fire breaks out in Ireland the Matter whereof was so prepa●'d that there appear'd very little or no smoak of Suspition till it was all in a Flame and which made it more terrible was That the Rebels pretended to take their Rule from the English as their President from the Scots in defending their Religion Proprieties and Liberties by Arms all which being as they said undermined not knowing how soon the Blow might be given they thought it justifiable enough to prevent what they could not withstand Now to prove that their Religion was in danger they urg'd the Preparatory Votes and Menaces of the House of Commons in England and for the proof of the Impairing their Liberty and Proprieties they referr'd to the Remonstrances of those in Scotland who made it the first motive of their rising that they were like to be reduced to the slavish Condition of Ireland in being brought under the Form of a Province and subjected to the insupportable Tyranny of a * The placing a President ov r the Councel of State being the Ground of that Fear Lord Lieutenant And now to add a Varnish to this Colour they declar'd for Preservation of the Kings Rights as well as their own swearing to oppose with Life Power and Estate all such as should directly or indirectly indeavour to Suppress the Royal Prerogative of the King his Heirs and Successors or do any † Referring to the Proceedings of the Parliament in England who had but a little before taken away the Tonnage Poundage the S●ipmoney Court of Wards High Commission-Court and were earnestly contesting for the Militia c. Act or Acts contrary to the Royal Government This Declaration of theirs was written with a Pen of Iron in Letters of Blood as believing that no Rebels in the World had more to say for themselves then they at least that they had much more matter of Justification then either the Scots or English could pretend to who justified themselves by seigning only to suspect what t'other really suffer'd under Neither perhaps had the World so condemned them all Circumstances considered had there not appear'd a Self-condemnation within themse●ves by counterfeiting a * Whi●h that it might be the more authent c● they take off an old Seal from an Absol●te Patent to Far●ham-Abby which they annex'd to it Commission from the King to justifie this their Arming falsly bragging that the Queen was with them and that the King would very shortly come to them Which as it was a base and abject piece of Policy that lost them more Credit when it was detected then it got them Repute while it was believ'd so it was malitious towards the King to that degree with respect to the Condition he was then in that it cannot otherwise be thought but that having murther'd so many of his Protestant Subjects they had a mind to murther him too The Consequences of that great Suspition it brought upon him being such as he could never recover the disadvantages it fastned on him till he fell finally under the power of those Sons of Belial who destroyed him for no other Reason but to destroy Monarchy it self So that he was not much mistaken who confidently averred It was the Papists brought him to the block the Presbyterians that tuck'd up his hair and the Fanatick that cut off his head Whereof he himself was so sensible that the very last words he us'd as if to shew he alike abhorr'd either of them was to profess He dyed a Christian according to the Profession of the Church of England as he found it left him by his Father foreseeing that he should suffer more by Reproach then by the Axe After which he resigned himself to the fatal stroke with that cheerfulness as shew'd he believ'd by removing that Scandal only he should get a greater Victory over his Enemies when he was dead then ever they got over him whilst he was alive The ill news of Ireland drew him with all imaginable haste out of Scotland But before he could come to the Consideration of that great Affair he was prevented by the Parliaments renewing their old Complaints who found a slight occasion of quarrel to introduce other matters that they knew would widen the Difference beyond all reconciliation for his Majesty having taken publick notice of a Bill that was depending in the House whereby he thought his Prerogative pinch'd to which therefore he offer'd a Provisional Clause with a Salvo Jure to himself and the people to prevent all Disputes at the passing of it they interpreted this to be so high a violation of their Priviledge that they pray'd to have the Informers brought in to condign punishment Seconding that Petition with a Remonstrance against all those whose Affection or Interest they thought might be serviceable to him under a new coyn'd name of Malignants which they ranged into three Classes 1. Jesuited Papists 2. Corrupted Clergy-men and Bishops 3. Interested Counsellors and Courtiers concluding thereupon 1. That no Bishops should have any Votes in Parliament 2. That no People should be imploy'd about him but such as they could confide in 3. That none of the Lands forfeited by the Irish Rebels should be
death Jus Vitae Necis The Kings of this Isle the First Anointed Christian Kings 9. And as the Quatuor Vncti were before all other Kings so I take it that the Kings of this Isle ought to have the preference amongst them for that they were the first (g) Rhivallus ap Tooke in charism Sanct. Cap. 6. anointed Christian Kings as appears by the undeniable Testimony of the learned Gildas in his Book De excidio Britanniae written above a thousand years since which I take to be beyond any Remain of the like Extant in any Records of the Eastern or Western Empire (h) De Comitiis Imperat Cap. 2. Onuphrius would have that Ceremony to begin in the East with the Emperour Justin circ Ann. 525 but most of the learned Writers upon this Subject differ in opinion from him supposing he was more beholding for that honour to the gratitude of the Orthodox Clergy whom he always favour'd then to any real truth or Certainty in the thing The vulgar Historians will have it to begin in the West with the Merovignian line amongst the French but neither does Du Hailan Tilly nor those of the best Authority agree to it Regino and Sifridus go no higher then King Pepin who they say was the first anointed by Boniface Arch Bishop of Ments Ann. 750 which mistake may possibly be better understood by distinguishing betwixt the Ceremonies of the Regal and those of the Ecclesiastical Unction the last being no more but a sacred complement us'd in those times as a preparatory designation to an expected Regality whereof our own History is not without some Instances in which we find that Egbert Son to the great Mercian Offa was anointed in the life time of his Father Ann. 780 which was twenty years before Charlemaine who is suppos'd by most Writers to have been the very first King of the Francks anointed by Leo the Fourth Ann. 800. The like we read of Elfred the Son of Egbert anointed by the same Pope near about the same time in the presence of his Father but taking it to be as early in use with them as they themselves would have it thought to be yet falls it short of the times of our King Arthur affirm'd by J. of Monmouth to be a King anointed Cirea Ann. 505. and perhaps with sufficient Reputation if his be consider'd with the concurrent Testimonies of Bede and Malmesbury who prove the frequent use of it here not long after as likewise that of St. Oswald the most Christian King Ann. 635 that was two hundred years before Pepin As for the Kings of Jerusalem and Scicily however reckon'd in the Rank of the four yet were they not in being for near five hundred years after the honour they had therein being by composition with the Pope to whom they humbled themselves for this advancement so far as to declare themselves content to hold their Kingdoms of the Church whereas both Ours and those of France claim'd only by divine Right confirm'd if the Traditions of that age might be credited by manifestations from Heaven the Oil that consecrated those of France being brought down by a Dove in a Golden Viol and continu'd many hundred years after unwasted at Rheims that of ours being said to have been confirm'd to be coelestial by three distinct manifestations in three different Ages which certainly were as much abus'd themselves as they abus'd us if they conspired to transmit an untruth to us no more to their own advantage The first in the time of St. Oswald before mention'd when 't is said that there descended a great Quantity of holy Oil like Dew from Heaven and fell upon him by the sight and scent whereof for it perfum'd the place divers People were converted to the faith as (i) Bede Hist Aug. lib. 3. c. 3. Bede affirms The Second was at the time when the English Line were cut off by the Danes beyond any hope of Recovery the Danes being in quiet Possession of the Throne when St. Peter appearing to the holy Monk Brightwold assur'd him that England was God's Kingdom for whose Successors he would take due care and at the same time gave him a little Cruise of Oil telling him further that whomsoever he anointed therewith that man should be King and have power to heal the People by his Touch which was accordingly perform'd in the Person of Edward the Confessor on whom the Monk privately bestow'd the holy Unction with which he received likewise the gift of healing that disease call'd by Physitians (k) Now called the Kings Evil See Polidor Virgil. Hist 8. Scrofula continu'd to our Kings in a wonderful manner to this very day insomuch that 't is notoriously known how a Maid at Deptford born blind by reason of that distemper was cur'd by no other visible means but the Touch of a Cloath dipt in the blood of the late King Charles the Martyr The Third Manifestation was in the time of Henry the Second who having banisht St. Thomas Beckett the Virgin Mary appear'd to the holy Exile as the Clergy of that age stiled him and delivering into his hands another Golden Viol in form of an Eagle assur'd him that all the Kings who were anointed with the oil therein should be Patronizers of the Church and as long as they kept that Sacred Viol this Blessing should rest upon them that if any of their posterity should happen to be beaten out of their Kingdom they should be peaceably restor'd again Which Oil Walsingham an Author of unquestionable Credit affirms to have remain'd unwasted to the time of Henry the Fourth who saith he was anointed therewith but amongst other the dismal mischiefs attending the fatal War of the two houses of York and Lancaster this was not the least that it gave opportunity to some Sacrilegious hand unknown to convey this Viol away who stealing the Gold could not yet rob us of the Blessing which hath been miraculously made good to us in the happy Restauration of our present Soveraign Charles the Second of whom we may say with respect to this providence as the Poet in another case (l) Horace Hic posuisse gaudet In him likewise we find that other blessing confirm'd in the gift of healing that noisome disease afore mention'd which by long continuance of time having become Hereditary hath now got the known name of the Kings-Evil so call'd because it is hardly to be cur'd by any other human means but by the Kings touch only whereof we have every day so many and great Examples that I shall forbear to say what might perhaps be pertinent enough to this Subject The Kings of this Isle the First Christian Kings in the World 10. But besides that of their Chrism there hath been a further Circumstance of personal Excellence peculiar to the Kings of our Nation above most not to say all other Princes in respect to the Sanctity of their blood as deriving their (m) Bale
did not offend him so neither did he desire that his Authority should offend them but as soon as this Austin came hither he found yet more matter of Amazement For part of the Isle being Pagans and part Christians these last seem'd to him to be more inhospitable than the other at least they were so far from submitting to his Legatine Authority after the Ignorant Pagans had own'd it 1 Cor. 14.1.11 that as St. Paul expresses it by not understanding one another each seem'd to the other alike Barbarian whereby it so fell out that they fell from Arguments to Arms and he having no probability of Subjugating them under his Jurisdiction Baptiz'd almost as many of them in (r) He caused 1200 Monks of the Brittains to be murthered at one time Blood as he did in Water but as it appeared that he brought them no new Faith so neither would they suffer him to bring in any new Lawe amongst them defending their own Church so well with their own Cannons that neither he nor any of the Roman community could break in upon them or infringe their liberty in the least for the space of near five hundred Years when Henry the Second reducing both State and Church under like Paction of Servitude forc'd them by the laws of Conquest to part as well from their Ecclesiastical as Civil Rights and at the same time they became no Church to become no People being so Cantoniz'd with England that they were no longer considerable which had yet been Impossible for him to have Effected had he not at the same time he set up his own declared against the Pope's Supremacy But to proceed from that of the Britaines to consider the Primitive State of the English Church it may yet be allow'd for good Prescription and that we know is a (s) Lit. Sect. 170. Title implies a long continued and peaceable Possession derived ab Authoritate Legis if it can be made out that any of the Saxon Kings converted by the aforesaid Austin from the time of the Proto-Christian King Ethelbert himself until the Norman Conquest did at any time so far Agnize the Pope's Authority as to forbear the Exercise of any part of that Spiritual dominion which they challenged Proprio Jure For as it is evident that they did constrain as well Ecclesiasticks as Laicks to submit to the final determination as well of Spiritual as Civil Pleas in their temporal Courts so they not seldome made the Ecclesiastical Censures without and sometimes against the Consent of the Bishop if it displeased them even after Excommunication pronounced and did they not (t) Leg. Alfred cap. 8. p. 25. dispense even with the Offences themselves if they were only (u) As were Priest Marriage Basterdy Non-residency Pluralities c. Mala per accidens and not mala in se as the Casuists distinguish Nay did they not permit even Nuns to marry against the usual practice of those Times and the Judgment of the Church doing many other things of the like nature which whoso reads M. Paris Florentius Eadmerus c. will find more at large than becomes the brevity I design and all this they did without any Exception or Scandal or to use (w) Baronius Tome 3. Anno 312. N. 100. Baronius his own Phrase Sine ullâ Ecclesiarum Labe. Indeed such was the plenitude of their Ecclesiastical Power that each King of them was as the Priest pray'd at their (x) See the old formula continued til H. 6. time Coronation that they might be Sicut Aaron in Tabernaculo Zacharias in Templo Petrus in Clave as appears by their several Edicts yet Extant Some for the better Observation of the (y) Leg. Alured C. 39. P. 33. Lords day Some for the due keeping of (z) Bede lib. 3. Cap. 8. Lent Others for the right administration of the (a) Jornal l. 761. C. 2. Sacraments the Regulation of (b) ●eg Canut C. 7. p. 101. Matrimony and ascertaining the degrees of (c) Leg. Alured u● sup●a Consanguinity Some for permitting Divorces others for perfecting Contracts in fine they did whatever might become the wisdom and honour of such as had the sole care of the Church all Christian Obedience being enforced Providentiâ Potentiâ Regis as (d) Hoveden fol. 41● Hoveden expresses it or as we find it in some (e) 2 H. 4. N. 44. Records Justitiâ fortitudine Regis for however the Bishop was always joyn'd in Commission with t●e Lay Magistrate as having in him Jus Ordinis as some (f) Bel●arm Pontif. lib. 4. Divines call it yet this was not so much in affirmation of his Ecclesiastical as for Prevention of his disputing the Regal Authority and to take off all clashing (g) Treisden Eccles Juris Regis Inter Placita Regis Christianitatis Jura that is to say in M. Paris's own words ne contra Regiam Coronam dignitatem aliquid statuere tentaretur Episcopus who was to the King as the Arch-Deacon to him Tanquam Oculus Regis as t'other was tanquam Oculus Episcopi But the greatest Instance of all was that of the (h) Jan. Anglor lib. 1. Pag. 85. Investiture of the Bishops by the King who gave them the Ring and the Pastoral Staffe the antient Emblemes of Supream dignity and Authority which he himself had accepted at his Coronation the first signifying the Power of Joyning such an one to the Church the last denoting the Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical in Foro interiori or as some term it in Foro animae but he kept the Scepter in his own hand as the proper Ensign of that Jus Potentiae or Soveraign Power by which he stood particularly obliged to defend the Church to which King Edgar doubtless Referr'd when he told his Bishops at a general Convocation Ego Constantini vos Petri gladium habetis in manibus and as Christ commanded Peter as soon as he had drawn his Sword to put it up again so did he as Christ's Representative forbid St. Dunstan who would be thought St. Peter's to sheath his weapon when he began to draw upon the Lay Magistrate and would have been medling with those things that were (i) as Socrates expresses it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 forbidding any Inquity to be made de peccatis subditorum Add to this that in all general Councils the King himself presided Tanquam Papa Patriae Thus Ina for I chuse to begin with him because Baronius stiles him Rex maxime Pius presided in the great Synod at Winchester An. 733. by the Title of (*) Tom. 9. Anno 740. N. 14. Vicarius Dei (k) Jornal Lib. 761. Edgar at another meeting gave the Law to all the Clergy Tanquam (l) Vide Tit. Gar. Edgar Pastor Pastorum The like did Ethelred under the stile of (m) Eadmer 146. 16. Eadmer 155. 6. Vicarius Christi after him again Canute presided in another Council at Winchester by the Title of (n)
Leg. Canut l. 26. p. 106. Dei Praeco once and another time at Southampton under the stile of Divini Juris Interpres neither was Edward the Confessor behind any of them when he made his Ecclesiastical Laws by the Title of (o) Leg. Ed. Confes C. 17. p. 142. Vicarius Summi Regis These Titles I have the rather mention'd to shew what divine Office was esteem'd to be in the King properly who having a mixture of the Priest and Prophet with that of his Kingship was obliged to be solicitous tam de (p) Leg. Inae in prefat p. 1. apud Jorvalens Col. 761. 41. Salute animarum quam de Statu Regni as Jorvalensis expresses it and however our wise Law-makers heretofore not to say Law-masters who were very nice in wording all the antient Statutes relating to the Supremacy have not thought fit to stile the King a Spiritual Person although they knew him to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but Persona mixta cum Sacerdote And accordingly it is well Argued by a Modern (q) Vid. Lib. Intit Animadver upon the Book Intit Fanaticism Fanatically Imputed to the Catholick Church by Dr. S. Writer of no mean note That his Authority must be Equivalent with any of those Popes at least who were Laicks at the time they were chose ●o that Supream Dignity For whilst there is no Qualification in their Office of Papacy to render them so far Ecclesiastical as to consecrate any Bishop personally but that of Necessity they must do it as he notes by their Bull it must necessarily follow that that Bull being a deputation granted to some Bishop to do the Office for him differs very little if any thing from that of the Kings Commission in the like Case And if it had been otherwise Understood in former times it had been in the power of his Vnholiness to have extinguish'd the Function of Bishops in any Princes Dominions whatever The first Pope who found out a way to supplant the Kings Authority in Ecclesiasticis by seeming to support it was Nicholas the Second one of the most subtil of all the Roman Prelates Contemporary with Edward the Confessor one of the weakest of our Kings who created a Title to himself by Implication whilst he perswaded the King to accept of a Bull of Confirmation from him whereby granting him (r) Vide Twisden ut supra Plenam Advocationem Regni omnium totius Angliae Ecclesiarum he made that seem to be of grace only from him which before was of right in the King Of which Artifice his Successor Gregory the Seventh took no small advantage when he put in for a share of the Supremacy with William the Conquerour making that single President the Found to Claim 1. The Investiture of Bishops which I take to be that directum Dominium held by the King Jure Patronatus in acknowledgment whereof the Clergy pay him their first fruits 2. The benefit of the Annates which was a Chief Rent out of all the Spiritualities 3. The Power of Calling Synods by which he might Impose upon the Government 4. The Right of Receiving Appeales to Rome which overthrew all the Kings Courts 5. The sole power of disposing and translating Bishops which made them his Homagers and Feifes 6. The Power of altering and dispensing with Canons 7. The Priviledg of Sending a Legate to reside here as a Spiritual Spy to detect all the Secrets of State and be a kind of Check-mate to the King himself But William the Conquerour as he was a Prince that was apter to invade other mens Rights than to part with any of his own so finding his prerogative sufficiently guarded by the antient Laws of the Land then call'd the Laws of King Edward which was not the least Reason he continued so many of them as he did would by no means yield to him so long as he lived his Son William Rufus continuing yet more obstinate who after the death of the aforesaid Gregory surnam'd Hildebrand would admit of no Pope but what himself approved of So that for eleven years together there was no Pope acknowledged here in England which may be a good president for any that shall hereafter hold as some of their Catholick Doctors have as far as they durst affirm that there may be Auseribilitas (s) See Dr. Dun 43 Ser. preach'd on the 5 Nov. at Pauls cr●ss Papae neither would he permit appeals or any Intercourse to Rome which when Anselme Arch-Bishop of Canterbury being a natural Italian attempted to bring about he first rifled him and then banish'd him neither was his brother Henry the First less tenacious of his Right as appears by those Instructions given to his Bishops when they went to meet Calixt the Second at the Council of Reimes whom he forbad in the first place to appeal to the Pope upon any grievance whatever for that himself he said would be sole Judge betwixt them 2. He commanded them to tell the Pope plainly if he expected his antient Rent here he would expect a Confirmation of his antient Priviledges 3. He directed them to salute the Pope and receive his Apostolick Precepts Sed superfluas Inventiones regno meo inferre nolite The Contest betwixt the Arch-Bishop Becket and Henry the Second shews what temper he was of for he opposed both the Pope and the Bishop so long that they had undoubtedly cast him out of the Church but that they fear'd he would not come in again only King John who therefore stands a singular example of Infamy designing to make himself higher than any of his Predecessors by stooping so much lower quit his being King to make himself a Tyrant in order whereunto he voluntarily laid down his Diadem at the feet of Innocent the Third's Legate becoming thereby guilty of such an unparalel'd vileness and abjection of spirit that nothing can excuse but the known distraction that was upon him when wrack't betwixt two Extreams of hate and fear his Enemies pressing hard upon him whilst his Friends forsook him he to avoid the being split upon either Rock cast himself upon the Quick-sand of the Popes protection submitting to an act of Pennance that shew'd the weakness of his Faith more than of his Right his renouncing the Supremacy at that time being no more to be wondred at than his renouncing Christianity it self at another time but his Son recover'd the ground his Father lost when he brought the whole Kingdom to resent the Indignity so far as to Join with him in demanding satisfaction of the same Pope and not content with a bare Disclaimer forc'd the insolent Legate to flie the Kingdom timens pelli sui as the Record hath it neither stopt they there but voting that submission of his Father a breach of his Coronation Oath entred so far into the Consideration of the whole matter of the Pope's Usurpation as to make that Statute of Proviso's which after brought in those other 27 and 38 Edw.
third Monarch of the English II. date of accession 534 KENRICK his Son succeeded him both in the Kingdom and Monarchy III. date of accession 561 CHEVLIN his Son was the fifth Monarch but his Power being not adaequate to his Fame he in 33 years time could not so settle himself but that he was dispossest by his Brother IV. date of accession 592 CEARLICK who being not so good at keeping as in getting the Kingdom into his hands was himself depos'd in like manner by V. date of accession 598 CHELWOLPH Son of Cuth fifth Son of Kenrick a Prince worthy the Greatness he inherited who notwithstanding he was assaulted by the Picts and Scots and East-Angles all at once kept his Ground and left it to his Successor VI. date of accession 622 KINGILLS a Prince famous for his piety and courage who left his Son VII date of accession 643 KENWALD to succeed him whose beginning may be compar'd to the worst his ending to the best of Kings renouncing first his Faith after his Wife both which though he afterwards retain'd yet the sin stuck so close to him that the first left him without a Kingdom the last without a Son whereby VIII date of accession 675 ESWIN of the Line of Chelwolph took place who for six years kept out the right Heir IX date of accession 677 KENWIN younger Son of Ringills who utterly expuls'd all the Bri●ains and forc'd them to seek their safety in those inaccessable Mountains of Wales whereby his Successor X. date of accession 686 CEADWALD had so much leisure as to fall upon his nearest Neighbours the South-Sexe and weaken them so far that they were forc'd to yield to his Successor XI INE worthily esteem'd the greatest Prince of his time and the most magnificent yet withal the most humble he dyed in a Pilgrimage to Rome nominating XII date of accession 762 ETHELWARD the Son of Oswald the Son of Ethelbald descended from Kenwa●d his Successor who reign'd fourteen years and left the Scepter to his Brother XIII date of accession 740 CUTHRED whose heart being broken by seeing his Son murther'd the Crown came to XIV SIGEBERT one whose vices were less obscure than his Parentage who murthering one of the best of his Friends was himself slain by one of the basest of his Enemies a Swineherd whereby XV. date of accession 755 KENWOLFE succeeded a person worthy of better sate than he met with being slain by the hand of an Outlaw at a time when he did not expect and consequently was not prepar'd for death and so XVI date of accession 784 BITHRICK succeeded the last King of this House lineally descended from Cerdick who being poyson'd by his own Queen this Kingdom came to Egbert the Son of Ingils and Brother of Ine who reduc'd the whole Heptarchy into a Monarchy and therefore worthily led the Van to the absolute Monarchs of England THIS was the third Kingdom of the Heptarchy and deservedly so call'd if we consider the largeness of its extent which measur'd by the Line of Circumvallation reach't if some of our modern Geographers say true above 700 miles in compass being commonly call'd the Kingdom of the West-Sexe by Bede the Kingdom of the Genevises by Cambrensis from Genesius Grandfather to Cerdick who had the honour to be esteem'd the first Founder of it although in truth he rear'd but a small part of this stately Fabrick the rest being the work of Time and Fortune and came not to perfection in almost 500 years He was for his fierceness sirnam'd the Dragon possibly in imitation of the British Kings who had that title and having beaten * The Britaine call'd him M●●ge Co●●●●● Natanleod the Dragon of the Western Britains forc'd him to retreat and leave 5000 of his people behind him in possession of no more of their own ground than serv'd to make them one common Grave from whom 't is thought he took this Shield of the Dragon He was thereupon declar'd the third Monarch of the English men his Son Kenrick was the fourth and his Grandson Cheulin the fifth Each of these shar'd with him in the honour of being the first raisers of this Kingdom the establisher of it was King Kenwin the ninth Monarch who expuls'd all the Britains the first that enlarg'd it was Ceadwald the tenth King who having made his way to the Conquest of Kent by that of the South-Sexe left his Successor Ine worthily therefore sirnam'd the Great to give his Neighbours a true estimate of his power by that of his wealth and a measure of his wealth by that of his munificence whereof there needs no other instances than in the Foundation of the Abbey of Glastenbury the Furniture of whose Chappel only took up 2835 pound weight of Silver and 337 pound weight of Gold a vast sum for those days which being for the ornamental part only could not be comparable to that which was left for the endowment He Founded also the Cathedral Church of Wells the West part whereof is perhaps one of the most stately Fabricks in the known World Yet neither of these are more lasting Monuments than those of his Laws translated for their excellency by the learned Lambert into Latin as being the Foundation of what we are govern'd by so long since This was he that gave the first Eleemosinary Dole of Peter-pence to the Church of Rome which was exacted in the next Age as a Tribute In this mans Reign this Kingdom was at its heighth declining after his death insensibly till the time of Egbert who being the Darling of Fortune as well as of his own Subjects and a Prince of great towardliness after he had corrected his youth by the experience he had in the Wars under Charles the Great being the first of all the Saxon Princes that were educated abroad he got so far the advantage of all his home-bred Contemporaries that he easily soar'd above the common height of Majesty and beat up the seven Crowns into one which placing on his own head he not only gave those Laws but that Name to the whole Isle which continued till King James his Reign who uniting Scotland to the rest of the Terra firma not reduc'd altered the style of King of England into that which only could make it greater writing himself King of Great Britain to which August and most Imperial Title we now pay homage and may we ever do so THE ORDER OF THE KINGS OF EAST-SEXE IV. I. date of accession 527 ERCHENWIN the Son of Offa Great-Grandson of Sneppa third in descent from Seaxnod third Son of Woden the common Progenitor of the Saxons began this Kingdom with the happiness of a long Reign which however it be seldome desir'd was certainly very advantagious to his Successor II. date of accession 587 SLEDDA who thought the readiest way to keep what his Predecessor got was to add to it what his Successors were not like to keep a Peace with the Kings of Kent his next Neighbours
wherein his Clemency so interpos'd betwixt his Wisdom and his Power that it is hard to judge whether he rul'd more by Awe Art or Affection tying them to no Rule or Order which he did not with more severity impose upon himself So that what Martia● sayes of Fronto may be applyed to him That he was Clarum Militiae Tog●que decus there being that harmony in his natural Constitution as inclined him to that gentle Science of Musick which as it served him to good purpose in his utmost extremity so it brought him to such a strict habit in keeping of Time that to make himself sure of every moment of his whole life he divided the Day into three equal spaces allowing the first to the business of Devotion the second to the care of Nature and the third to that of his State of each of which he was so excellent a manager that he is not undeservedly placed in the first rank of the Conditores of this Nation And if he were not the first Founder of Oxford which cannot be conceiv'd without apparent injury to the memory of his Grandfather whom the Annals of Winchester commemorate as the greatest Patron that ever the Muses had there yet we cannot deny him the glory of being one of those great Patrons or Foster-fathers whereof there were many almost in all Ages from the very time of the Britains whose beneficence Alexander Necam celebrates with much gratitude who nourisht up Learning and learned Men and gave Incouragement to all those who studied knowledge And this he did in such unsetled and disorderly Times when he had much ado to bear up himself with all the helps he had from the Wisdom and Courage of all about him the Troubles of his Reign being so incessant like one continued Storm that he was as is said before once forc'd to quit the Stearn another time to cut the Cable and never enjoy'd so much tranquillity as to be able to put out all his Sayls so that it was esteem'd a great good luck that he was not wreckt since he could not reach his Port which doubtless he owed to the Faith of his People the universality of whose Affections supply'd the defects of his Power being as superstitious in the confidence of his good Fortunes as Caesars Souldiers are said to have been of his who never thought themselves in danger while he was safe nor ever thought him the less safe for being in the midst of danger Who would not follow him into the Field Who cannot chuse but conquer though he yield Whose Sword cut deep yet was his wit more keen Some Fence ' gainst that but this did wound unseen To thee is due great Elfrid double praise To thee we bring the Laurel and the Bays Master of Arts and Arms. Apollo so Sometimes did use his Harp sometimes his Bow And from the other Gods got this Renown To reconcile the Gauntlet to the Gown But who did e're with the same Sword like thee Execute Justice and the Enemy Keep up at once the Law of Arms and Peace And from the Camp issue out Writs of Ease EDWARD THE ELDER date of accession 900 AS Elfrid was thought to be dead long after he was living so long after he was dead he seem'd to live still in the Person of this his Son Edward who was so like him that he might rather have been call'd Elfrid the Younger then Edward the Elder being so immediate a Successor to his Vertues as well as his Titles that 't was not discernable whether the Peoples grief or joy was greater out of the apprehensions they had of the loss of the one or the hopes conceived by the fruition of the other In Learning he was his Fathers Inferiour in Courage his Equal but in Fortune his Superiour For however he was attach'd on all sides by tumultuary Troops of Danes who by this time were grown very numerous and were a People of that stomach and patience that they grew greater by being lessned and which is strange to tell prosper'd by being beaten yet he acquitted himself so well of them that they got no more Ground from him than what might be allowed them for their Graves which they purchas'd at the price of their blood and measur'd out by the length of their Swords However the first provocation he had to arm was from his own flesh and blood an Enemy so much more dangerous for that he had something of his own Nature in him this was Ethelward the Son of Ethelbert his Fathers second Brother who having been declar'd Clyto which amongst the Saxons was as much as Caesar amongst the Romans that is to say the Heir Apparent he thought it not so much an Injury to be put besides the Right of Succession by his two Uncles as an Indignity to be disappointed by a Cosin who however surnam'd the Elder was in truth the Younger of the two a●d perhaps according to the Rule of those times had the weaker-Title This spark of Indignation being kindled in his Breast was quickly blown into a Flame and wanting not matter to nourish it was easily kept up at its height by other mens discontents as well as his own who urging him to arm without due consideration of King Edwards Possession Power and Reputation all great Check-mates to Rebellion brought him and themselves under a necessity of craving help from the common Enemy who having no other way but by this division to preserve themselves intire readily accorded to acknowledge him King Upon this the two Rivals meeting at a place call'd St. Edmunds-Ditch gave Battel to each other where King Edward got the Victory but lost the day the Battel being so equally poys'd that it not being known which had the better either side was suppos'd to have the worst of it King Edward lost the greater number of men King Ethelward the most considerable for both himself and the Danish General his Colleague were slain their Bodies lying conceal'd under such vast heaps of the English that their dishonour seems to be cancell'd by those that conquer'd them Upon this there was a Truce concluded with the Dane I cannot call it a Peace since the shortness of it made it seem no more then a Repose to take breath to fight again during this Cessation Fame partial to the English had so divu●g'd the loss of the Enemy that the Countess of Mercia Sister to King Edward and as nearly related to him in Fortune as in Blood arm'd her self like another Zenobia and fell upon those that were nearest her Country who by the death of two great Princes Cowilph and Healidine gave her Brother time to refresh his tired Forces But he as doubting his Sword might rust if it were put up into the Sheath bloody pursu'd his Successes with so indefatigable a Rage that all those of East-Anglia dreading the Consequences of being conquer'd compounded for their own Lives by giving up that of their King chusing rather to be disloyal than
hold out than while it was preserv'd by the Courage of such active Princes as those that appear'd upon the Throne the four last Descents following who spight of Fate made good their Ground for an hundred years without any Interruption to the course of honour save by the Interposition of Edwin whom yet the hatred of the Clergy is suppos'd to have made worse than he was EDWARD the Martyr date of accession 975 THE Globe of Soveraignty like that of the Earth is so plac'd that it never stands still but as the Ocean the Emblem of human frailty has its Ebbs and Flows its Falls and Swellings so hath it its Turnings Tumblings and Revolutions No sooner were Edgar's Halcyonian daies done but there appear'd new Signs of the old Troubles and Commotions which like the meeting of contrary Tides prest in each upon other with dreadful noise and Tumult the Laiety opposing the Clergy the Nobility scorning the Populacy and they again dividing from one another But amongst the rest no Feud seemed so fatal as that betwixt the two Unhappy Sons of this so happy Father the one trusting to his Primogeniture t'other standing upon his Legitimacy the right of either being so equally ballanc'd that there wanted only the affections of the Multitude to turn the Scale either way whilst the Clergy favour'd the Eldest the Temporal Lords the younger The head of the Church-Faction was the A. B. Dunstan then and all the time of the last King chief Minister of State Principal of the Lay Faction was Ordgar the great Earl of Devon back'd by the Queen Mothers Party So equal was the power so pressing the necessity on either side that both Consented to stand to the determination of a Publick Convention of all the States at London Accordingly a Parliament was held at Westminster where the bold St. Dunstan not tarrying for the result of any Debate upon the point De Jure set the Crown upon the head of Edward the Elder Brother and so presented him De Facto to the Assembly as their lawful Soveraign which confident Act of his either satisfying or surprizing those of the opposite Party met with an universal submission every Body acquiescing and dissembling their discontent except the Queen only who being his Step-mother could not forget much less forgive an injury so grievous to the Son of her own Body turning therefore her passion of Ambition into that of Revenge she broke over all the bounds of Nature and Right to find the nearest way to the Throne nor wanted she a dismal opportunity however taken from a pretence of humanity and kindness to set up her Darling by the murther of this guiltless Prince who coming alone estray'd from Hunting and altogether unattended to visit her at her Castle of Corffe in the Isle of Purbeck was by her Command slain by an Assassme that took the advantage to stab him in the Reins of the Back as he was drinking her Health at the gate on Horse-back the helpless Youth finding himself wounded clapt spurs to his Horse in hopes to have out-rid her malice but his Spirits failing he fell out of his Saddle and so unfortunately that his Foot fastned in the Stirrup at which his poor Beast affrighted became alike accessary though not alike guilty of his death by dashing our his Brains before that Life had got its passage through his wounds So perished this harmless Prince in the infancy of his Royalty as well as of his Age being rather sacrific'd than slain by a kind of double Death without so much as a single Crime laid to his charge the same malice that envy'd him the honour of being a King becoming instrumental thereby to the dignifying him with the glory of being a Martyr the Charity of those times or rather the Affection of the Clergy leaving him enshrin'd in the Kalendar of Saints Which shews how deplorable his death was wherein the whole Nation were so much more sufferers than himself that it may be truly said that the Same stroak which took away his Life gave the Deaths wound to the English Monarchy bringing upon them the misery of being in Bondage to a Stranger Nation of all other the most cruel and insolent who ow'd their Rise next the immediate determination of Providence to nothing more than the unexpected Fall of this hopeful Prince with whose blood they may be said to have mixt the Morter of that Foundation they after laid taking the same advantage of the Sins of the English as they before of those of the Britains and breaking in upon them as they upon t'other with a Resolution not so much to conquer as to confound them which may be some Excuse for the cruelty of the next King that massacred so many of them in cold blood whilst who like Sampson in the midst of his Enemies thought there was no way left but removing the Pillars of the house and perishing together with them ETHELRED date of accession 978 'T IS easie to imagine by the Title of Martyr given to the last King what Reflex his Death had upon this who like an ill-set plant unhappily plac'd in the same Room from which the other was taken never could recover any firm rooting and consequently never thriv'd being continually wind-shaken from the very first moment that he was set up and vext with uncessant troubles the Sword never departing from his House as 't is reported St. Dunstan preaching at his Coronation boldly foretold till the common Enemy became Master of his ill-got Glory repaying him with the misery of loss and that infelicity which always attends it shame and reproach For 't is observ'd that notwithstanding there were scarcely any King that ever setled the constitutions of his Government upon firmer principles that fought his Battels with braver Resolution that encountred all Emergencies of State with like indifferency and temperance yet neither could his vigilance or valour his prudence fortitude or patience so prevail against Destiny but that all his designs were stifled in the birth or frustrated at the very point of dispatch as if Heaven had decreed to lay such a curse upon the wickedness of his Parent as should weigh down all the merit of his Vertues and ●●ast the hopes conceiv'd from them One while Famin was his Foe another time Pestilence and it was not rare for the very Elements themselves to fight against him it being more than once or twice that he had a kind of Battel with Heaven it self for his Fleets were in danger of being fired by unexpected Lightning and Thunder-Storms neither was it for a little time that he thus strugled with the perverseness of his Stars hoping the malignity of their Influences might spend it self in due season but finding they gave him no opportunity or incouragement to perform any worthy Action for several years together having plac'd all Glory so far above the reach of his Sword that 't was impossible he could at the same time appear to be
himself of Northumberland Godfrid his younger Brother held Mercia but King Athelstan fell upon both and took from the last his Life from the first his Kingdom which was recovered again not long after by his Son VI. date of accession 946 ANLAFF the Second thereupon esteem'd the third King of the Northumbers His reign was not long for his Subjects weary of continual wars set him besides the Saddle to make way for VII date of accession 950 ERIC the Third or as some call him IRING Son of Harold the Grandson of Gurmo King of Denmark recommended to them by Milcolmb King of Scots but he being elected King of Sweden the Northumbers submitted to Edgar the younger Brother or next in succession to Edwyn and from that time it continued a Member of the English Crown till about the year 980 when VIII date of accession 980 ANLAFF the Third understanding they were affected to his Nation arriv'd with a fresh Supply and making his Claim was admitted King but being over prest the Title came to IX date of accession 1013 SWAIN King of Denmark who made this his first step to the Eng●ish Throne into which as he was mounting death seiz'd on him and kept the Room empty for his Son Knute DANES Absolute Kings OF ENGLAND I. date of accession 1017 KNUTE was deservedly surnam'd the Great as being the very greatest and most absolute King that ever England or Denmark knew those of the Roman Line only excepted for he was King of England Scotland Ireland Denmark Norway Sweden and Lord of a great part of Poland all Saxony some part and not a little of Brandenburgh Bremen Pomerania and the adjacent Countries most of them not to say all besides Denmark and Norway reduc'd under his Obedience by the valour of the English only upon his death Denmark and Norway fell to his Son Hardycanute the rest as Sweden c. devolv'd upon the right Heirs whilst England was usurp'd by his Natural Son II. date of accession 1036 HAROLD surnam'd Harfager or Golden Locks who being the Elder and having the advantage to be upon the place entred as the first Occupant thereby disappointing his legitimate Brother III. date of accession 1041 KNUTE surnam'd the Hardy design'd by his Father to be the next Successor to him as bearing his Name though upon tryal it appear'd he had the least part of his Nature for he had not the Courage to come over and make any claim as long as Harold liv'd and after his death he drown'd himself in a Land-flood of Wine losing all the Glory his Predecessors had gotten by wading through a sea of blood which made the way to his Throne so slippery that those English that came after him could never find firm footing But upon the very first Encounter with the Norman caught such a Fall that could never recover themselves again This Gurmo came out of Ireland I take it in the second year of King Elfrid not without a confident hope of making good his Predecessors Conquest which had cost already so much blood as made his desire of Rule look like a necessity of Revenge the Monarchy of Denmark it self being put if I may so say into a Palsie or trembling Fit by the loss of the Spirits it had wasted here So that he came with this advantage which those before him had not That the Cause seem'd now to be his Countries more then his own who therefore bore him up with two notable props Esketel and Amon men of great Conduct and known Courage the one of which he plac'd as Vice-Roy in Northumberland t'other in Mercia And having before expelled Burthred the Saxon he fixed himself in East-Anglia as being nearer to correspond with Denmark and most commodious to receive Re●ruits Upon his first advance against King Elfrid Fortune appear'd so much a Neuter that either seem'd afraid of other and striking under line preferr'd a dissembled Friendship before down-right Hostility And to shew how much the edge of their Courage was rebated they mutually accorded to divide the Land betwixt them Gurmo was to be Lord of the North and East Elfrid to hold the South and West part of the Isle The politick Dane after this suffered himself to become what the English would have him to be a Christian to the intent that he might be what he would have himself to be absolute changing his Pagan name of Gurmo into that of Athelstan which being of all others the most grateful to the Saxons he render'd himself by that Condescension so acceptable to the whole Nation that they consented to his Marriage with the fam'd Princess Thyra King Elfrids vertuous Sister by whom he had Issue Harold Blaatand that liv'd to be King of Denmark after himself and another Knute whom he left in Ireland to make good the Acquests of the first Gurmo there a Prince of so great hopes and so belov'd by him that the knowledge of his death being slain at the Siege of Dublin gave him his own for he no sooner apprehended the tidings thereof by the sight of his Queens being in mourning but he fell into such a violent fit of Grief as left him not till he left the World whereby the Crown of Denmark fell to his Son Harold the Title and Possession of East-Anglia with its Appurtenances he bequeath'd to his Brother Eric who having perform'd the first Act of Security to himself in having taken an Oath of Allegiance of all his Subjects suffer'd them to perform the last Act of Piety towards him in giving him all the Rites of an honourable Interment at Haddon in Suffolk which place it seems he purposed to make the Burial place of all the East-Anglian Kings But this Ambition of his beginning where it should have ended with a design of assuring to himself more honour after he was dead then he was able to make good whiles he was living ended as soon as it began as will appear by his Story following Tantum Religio potuit suadere malorum Upon which his Queen frighted with the horrour of their Inhumanity fled back to her Brother Athelstan to seek from his Power Justice Protection and Revenge whiles Anlaff took upon him to be King The Equality of Power as well as of Ambition ripen'd the Factions on both sides very fast by the heat of their Contest But before they came to Maturity there was a Parliament conven'd at Oxford that took the matter into consideration where the Lords fearing that the Question if delay'd might be decided by Swords and not by Words out of a deep sence of the lingring Calamities of a new War all the wounds of the old being not yet cured or at least not so well but that the Scars were yet fresh in many of their Faces they declar'd for the King in possession but with such a wary form of Submission as shew'd they did it rather out of regard to themselves then him whereupon Goodwin produced the deceased Kings Will in opposition to theirs but the
regard they had to the living being more prevalent then that of the dead the Queen urged her Articles of Marriage by which it was covenanted that her Children should Inherit to which their Lordships had all subscrib'd which being acknow●edged by the Arch-bishop of Canterbury the principal Verb in the Sentence his Authority led the sense of the whole Clergy and having as he was Legate the Scepter and Crown in his hand he laid them down on the Altar challenging the Usurper to take them up thence if he durst whereupon King Harold as quick of Apprehension as he was nimble of Foot allai'd this Thunder-clap with a shower of Go den Promises vowing to defend the Churches Rights with his Blood for which as he gave some Pledges in publick but many more as 't is thought in private so he carried the Cause with more Facility then Applause And now being fix'd I cannot say setled not without the suspi●ion of some foul play on Earl Goodwin's part whose unexpected Subm●ssion she●d that he had either quit his Wisdom or his Honesty he began he ple●sure of his Reign with that of Revenge and as he dreaded those Sons of the Queen she stood not for to wit those of the English Line Edward and Alfred more then him she did so he found out a Bait accor●ingl● to draw the youngest of them who was the on●y man of Spiri● and o●rage within his reach by the temptation of a feigned Letter as from his Mother that invited him over into England to head an Army against the Usurper for so he was pleas'd to call himself when it serv'd his own turn assuring him there wanted neither hearts nor hands to serve him The Person who was to give him the first Reception after landing was the unsuspected Goodwin who pretending to conduct him privately to his Mother betray'd him into the Vulture's power who immediately put out his eyes manifesting to the World the necessity those have to be cruel that dare be unjust For as Ambition is that illustrious sin that claims Kinred with every great Vice so it hath this Prerogative above them all in respect of its noble Extract that the deeper 't is dyed the better colour it takes and of all Colours so none so natural to it as that Crymson Si jus violandum est regnandi causa violandum For he that cannot rule himself well may yet rule others better and make satisfaction for being an ill man by becoming a good King But this was not Harold's intention the Ills that he seard could not be secur'd but by those he did and therefore he provided for greater first banishing the innocent Queen after consiscating all her Estate to his own use and having little apprehensions of any danger from that dull Rival the elder Brother who seem'd to affect a Myter rather then a Crown he turn'd his thoughts toward his own Brother Knute resolving to reach h m by poyson under a gilded Pill which he believ'd he could not want hands to administer whilst the Furies were in Confederacy with him to secure the ill-got Greatness they had bestowed upon him Several persons were corrupted with golden promises of great Preferments in case they could effect the black deed but Providence being more kind to him then he to himself prevented his further guilt by putting an end to his loathed life which yet had concluded happily enough if either his infamy had ended with himself or himself had been at rest when he ended But being the Peoples terrour whiles he was alive the King his Adversary that succeeded him took that advantage to make him their scorn after he was dead raking up his Ashes out of the Dust where it was laid to expose it to another Element as restless as was himself whereby though in effect he did no more but rob the Worms to gratifie the Fishes yet the Common sort judging there was something more of Inhumanity in the manner then perhaps of Injustice in the matter of the Revenge it melted down their hate into a kind of pity and as their spight for the most part ends with their fears so forgetting their own they became so sensible of his wrong that from that time they withdrew their affections from that King and had doubtless expos'd him had he not prevented it by exposing himself to some danger as great as that he met with ENGLISH EDWARD the Confessor date of accession 1042 THE Danish Line being broken off before the ambitious Goodwin could fasten his Hook to it and all claim on that side made void by the immediate Revolt of Norwey and their dissentions at home he had only this advantage and it was a great one to make his own choice out of all the English that pretended to the right of Succession and to take whomsoever he thought would be the fittest mold for him to cast the Model of his own designed Greatness in The first in right to the Crown were Prince Edward and Edmond the Sons of Ironsides but the remoteness of their Persons being of greater consideration then the nearness of their Titles having ever since the death of their Father continued as Out-laws in Hungary to which Crown they were so nearly allyed that he was put beside all hope of tampering with them he prefer'd their Uncle Edward one of the younger Sons of Ethelred a Prince so soft and plyant that he seem'd to be fram'd by Nature for every Impression that was to be put upon him to him therefore he gave up the Crown and with it as a Bribe a Jewel perhaps of greater value if it had been rightly us'd or understood his vertuous Daughter Edith a Lady of so incomparable person and parts that he might be very well confident he had made all cock-sure as we vulgarly say knowing that whenever he came within the Circle of her Arms he must be so charm'd if he had any thing of man in him as never to be able to get loose again This assurance made our Politician very bold with his Son in Law that boldness quickly turn'd to Arrogance that Arrogance attracted great Envy and that Envy rais'd great Opposition Those of the Nobility that were men of Action became his Rivals in Glory performing as great things against the Scots as he and his Sons could do against the Welch whilst those that were men of Counsel made it their business to counter plot his Intreagues wherein they likewise prevail'd so far as to prefer Gemensis Bishop of London the very greatest Enemy he had to be Arch-bishop of Canterbury but he being a Norman which crossed a wise Ordinance made at the coming in of the King that no stranger should be admitted into any place of Profit or Trust Goodwin made it the Kingdoms grievance more then his own and rather then want an Occasion to puzzle the short sighted Multitude he took a very slight one from an accidental Fray at Canterbury between the Towns-men and some of the Followers of
Bowl once put besides its Byass goes the further from its Mark the more 't is inforced THE FIFTH DYNASTY OF NORMANS OF NORMANS THE Normans so call'd by the French in respect of the Northern Clime from whence they came heretofore call'd * Dionis Patav l. 8. c. 4. Scandia since Norwey were another Branch of the antient Cimbri seated near the frozen Sea whose Country being too barren to nourish so fruitful a People they disonerated their Multitudes wheresoever force could make way for them Some stragling as far as the Mediterranian others farther Southward some few lost in the Frozen Sea attempting the Desert Isles far Northward but most following the Sun infested their Southern Neighbours About the time of Charles the Great they began to grow very troublesome by their frequent Pyracies making several Inroads into England but especially into France pressing so hard upon Lewis the Holy that he was fain to empty all his frontier Garrisons and quitting the Maritime draw them into the interior and more considerable parts of his Empire as the Spirits are drawn to the heart upon all Commotions to preserve life Their Successes in Germany England Scotland and Holland having made them so bold that they doubted not to advance as far as Paris where after divers disputes with Charles the Bald Charles le Grosse and Charles the Simple which concluded with an honourable Composition they six'd their two Chiefs Hastang and Rollo in the most fertile and best parts of that goodly Country the first being made Earl of Charters the last Duke of Neustria from him call'd afterwards Normandy the seventh in descent from whom was Duke William better known to us here by the Name of The Conquerour who with like confidence and not unlike Injustice invaded England as his Ancestors did France pretending a Donation of the Soveraignty from his near Kinsman King Edward the Confessor confirm'd as he alledged by his last Will and Testament in the presence of most of the English Nobility a pretence that could have been of no validity had it not been back'd by more then humane Power to disinherit Edgar Atheling who as being of the whole English Blood was rather Heir to the Kingdom then to the King and so by no Law could have his Right collated to a Stranger but the use he made of it was to convince the World that he had more Reason not to say Right to demand than Harold to detain the Crown who having put Prince Edgar besides the Succession desied the Justice of all Mankind as he was an Usurper and so it was a design worthy his Sword who had so fortunately vanquish'd even before he wrote Man those great difficulties at home given by the Opposition of Domestick Rivals no less puissant and populous then Harold to put him at least out of Possession But that which seems strange and was questionless a great surprize upon Harold was the conjunction of the Peers of France in an Action that was so apparently hazardous to the greatness of their own State every addition to so near and dangerous a Neighbour grown long before too powerful being a kind of diminution unto them whereof there can be no probable Cause assign'd beyond their natural affectation of Glory and wantonness of Courage but that Influence which the Conquerors Father in Law Baldwin Earl of Flanders had by being then Governour of the King and Kingdom of France who not only ingaged most of the grtatest Persons there as the Duke of Orleance the Earls of Champaigne Blois Brittain Ponthieue Maine Nevers Poictiers Aumale and Anjou but drew in the * Henry IV. Emperour himself and many of the German Princes to side with him This Preparation being such as it was it cannot be thought that the English lost any honour by mingling blood with men of that Quality and Condition the sound of whose Names was perhaps little less terrible then that of their Arms much less takes it from the reputation of their Courage to have he●d up the dispute but for one day only having fought it out as they did till the number of the slain so far exceeded that of the living as made the Conqueror doubt there would not be enough left to be conquer'd Who knows not that Fate made way for the Normans where their Swords could not guiding them by a Series of Successes near about the same time to the expectation of an universal Empire having but a little before made themselves Lords of Apulia Calabria Scicily and Greece and inlarged their Conquests as far as Palestine But what we allow to the Courage we must take from the Wisdom of the English that being subdued they continued Nescia vinci vexing the Conqueror after they had submitted to him by such continual Revolts as suffered him not to sheath his Sword all his Reign or if he did urged him to continue still so suspicious of their Loyalty that he was sorc'd alway to keep his hand upon the hilt ready to draw it forth having not leisure to intend what was before established much less to establish what he before intended So that they put upon him a kind of necessity of being a Tyrant to make good his being a King Yet such was the moderation of his mind that he chose rather to bind them stricter to him by the old Laws then to gall them with any new guarding his Prerogative within that Cittadel of the Burrough Law as they call'd it from whence as often as they began to mutiny he batter'd them with their own Ordnance and so made them Parties to their own wrong and however some that design'd to pre-occupate the grace of Servitude gave him the ungrateful Title of Conqueror which he esteem'd the greatest misfortune his good Fortune had brought upon him thereby to proclaim his Power to be as boundless as his Will which they took to be above all Limitation or Contradiction yet we find he suffered himself to be so far conquer'd by them that instead of giving to he took the Law from them and contentedly bound himself up by those which they call'd St. Edward's Laws which being an Abbreviation of the great triple Code of Danique Merke and West-Sexe Laws was such a form of Combination as he himself could not desire to introduce a better and if any thing look'd like absolute 't was his disarming them when he found them thus Law-bound hand and foot After which he erected divers Fortresses where he thought fit dispos'd all Offices of Command and Judicature to such as he could best confide in and by that Law of Cover feu obliging them to the observation of better hours of Repose then they had formerly been us'd to gave himself more rest as well as them As for his putting the Law into a Language they understood not whereby they were made more learn'd or less litigious then they were before it was that the Lawyers only had cause to complain of whose practise at the first perhaps was a
their Gentility by Charters from St. Edward and others from King Edgar whose Pedigrees do yet fall short of many of the Welch by many Descents In fine from the Normans we first learn'd how to appear like a People compleatly civiliz'd being as more elegant in our Fashions so more sumptuous in our Dwellings more magnifick in our Retinue not to say choicer in our Pleasures yet withal more frugal in our Expences For the English being accustomed to bury all their Rents in the Draught knowing no other way to out-vie one another but as a † Jaq. Praslin Progmat French Writer expresses it by a kind of greasie Riot which under the specious Name of Hospitality turn'd their Glory into Shame began after the Conquest to consume the Superfluity of their Estates in more lasting Excesses turning their Hamlets into Villes their Villages into Towns and their Towns into Cities adorning those Cities with goodly Castles Pallaces and Churches which being before made up of that we call Flemmish Work which is only Wood and Clay were by the Normans converted into Brick and Stone which till their coming was so rarely used that Mauritius Bishop of London being about to re-edifie Paul's Church burn'd in the Year 1086. was either for want of Workmen Materials or both necessitated not only to fetch all his Stone out of Normandy but to form it there So that we may conclude if the Conqueror had not as he did obliged the English to a grateful continuance of his Memory by personal and particular Immunities yet he deserv'd to be Eterniz'd for this that he elevated their minds to a higher point of Grandeur and Magnificence and rendred the Nation capable of greater Undertakings whereby they suddenly became the most opulent and flourishing People of the World advanc'd in Shipping Mariners and Trade in Power External as well as Internal witness no less then two Kings made Prisoners here at one time one of them the very greatest of Europe whereby they increased their publick Revenues as well as their private Wealth even to the double recompensing the loss sustain'd by his Entry whilst himself however suppos'd by that big sounding Title of Conqueror to have been one of the most absolute Princes we had got not so much ground while he was living as to bury him here when he was dead but with much ado obtain'd a homely Monument in his Native Soil THE ORDER AND SUCCESSION OF THE Norman Kings I. date of accession 1066 WILLIAM I. known by that terrible Name of the Conqueror gave the English by one single Battel so sad experience of their own weakness and his power that they universally submitted to him whereby becoming the first King of England of the Norman Race he left that Glory to be inherited by his second Son II. date of accession 1087 WILLIAM II. surnam'd Rufus who being the eldest born after he was a King and a Native of this Country succeeded with as much satisfaction to the English as to himself but dying without Issue left his younger Brother III. date of accession 1100 HENRY I. surnam'd Beauclark to succeed in whose Fortune all his Friends were as much deceiv'd as in his Parts his Father only excepted who foretold he would be a King when he scarce left him enough to support the dignity of being a Prince As he set aside his elder Brother Robert Duke of Normandy so he was requited by a like Judgment upon his Grandson the Son of his Daughter Maud who was set aside by IV. date of accession 1135 STEPHEN Earl of Blois his Cousin but she being such a woman as could indeed match any man disputed her Right so well with him that however she could not regain the Possession to her self she got the Inheritance fixed upon her Son V. date of accession 1155 HENRY II. Plantaginet the first of that Name and Race and the very greatest King that ever England knew but withal the most unfortunate and that which made his misfortunes more notorious was that they rose out of his own Bowels his Death being imputed to those only to whom himself had given life his ungracious Sons the eldest whereof that surviv'd him succeeded by the Name of VI. date of accession 1189 RICHARD I. Coeur de Leon whose undutifulness to his Father was so far retorted by his Brother that looking on it as a just Judgment upon him when he dyed he desired to be buried as near his Father as might be possible in hopes to meet the sooner and ask forgiveness of him in the other World his Brother VII date of accession 1199 JOHN surnam'd Lackland had so much more lack of Grace that he had no manner of sense of his Offence though alike guilty who after all his troubling the World and being troubled with it neither could keep the Crown with honour nor leave it in peace which made it a kind of Miracle that so passionate a Prince as his Son VIII date of accession 1216 HENRY III. should bear up so long as he did who made a shift to shuffle away fifty six years doing nothing or which was worse time enough to have overthrown the tottering Monarchy had it not been supported by such a Noble Pillar as was his Son and Successor IX date of accession 1272 EDWARD I. a Prince worthy of greater Empire then he left him who being a strict Observer of Opportunity the infallible sign of Wisdom compos'd all the differences that had infested his Fathers Grand-fathers and Great-Grand-fathers Governments and had questionless dyed as happy as he was glorious had his Son X. date of accession 1307 EDWARD II. answer'd expectation who had nothing to glory in but that he was the Son of such a Father and the Father of such a Son as XI date of accession 1328 EDWARD III. who was no less fortunate then valiant and his Fortune the greater by a kind of Antiperistasis as coming between two unfortunate Princes Successor to his Father and Predecessor to his Grandson XII date of accession 1377 RICHARD II. the most unfortunate Son of that most fortunate Father Edward commonly call d the Black Prince who not having the Judgment to distinguish betwixt Flatterers and Friends fell like his Great-Grand-father the miserable example of Credulity being depos'd by his Cosin XIII date of accession 1399 HENRY IV. the first King of the House of Lancaster descended from a fourth Son of Edward the Third who being so much a greater Subject then he was a King 't was thought he took the Crown out of Compassion rather then Ambition to relieve his oppress'd Country rather then to raise his own House and accordingly Providence was pleas'd to rivat him so fast in the Opinion of the People that his Race have continued though not without great Interruption ever since His Son XIV date of accession 1412 HENRY V. was in that repute with the People that they swore Allegiance to him before he was crown'd an honour never done to any of his Predecessors
by taking off his Caution so that after Dinner he would needs go hunt in the New Forrest and taking his Bow to shoot a Deer in that ominous place where before a * His Brother Richard Brother and a † The Son of Robert Duke of Normandy his elder Broth r. Brothers Son of his had both met with violent Deaths Tyrel his Bow-bearer being plac'd right against him as the best Marks-man let fly an Arrow that glancing against a Bough miss'd the Deer and found out him Pectus dum perforat ingens Ille rapit calidum frustrâ de Vulnere Telum Unâ eademque viâ Sanguisque Animusque sequuntur Being thus quietly stated he sweetned his Government by taking off all Taxes to shew his Beneficence and some of the principal Taxers to shew his Justice By the first he pleas'd the Multitude in point of Relief by the other the better sort in point of Envy and Revenge gratifying their Spleen by sacrificing the griping Bishop of Durham a man who being rais'd from a base Condition by baser means had attained to the honour of being Chief Minister to his Brother King William and was grown learn'd in the Science of selling Justice by the distribution of whose Bribes he brib'd those whom he thought fit to make his own Ministers neither thought it he enough to be an English man himself without assuring the State that he intended all his Posterity should be so too and therefore to the end to make sure the wise men that were as apt to be jealous as the weaker sort to be querulous he married Maud Sister to the Scotch King and Daughter to Margaret Sister to Edgar Atheling the right Heir of the English Blood a Lady that brought him an Inheritance of Goodness from her Mother and a good Title of Inheritance from her Uncle Thus firmly did he intrench himself before his Brother whom he had made a King in fame only that he might the easier make himself a real one return'd home who arriving unlook'd for was welcom'd by the Nobility of Normandy with more then ordinary Joy by whom being inform'd of what was done in England he made it the business of the first year to provide an Army and in the second landed it at Portsmouth in order to the recovery of his lost Right whereof he was the more assur'd in respect of those of the Norman Nobility here as he thought inclin'd to him who mov'd with revenge or discontent would be glad of any Occasion to Revolt This as it was a storm King Henry saw at a distance so he provided so well for it by cutting off all Assistances that Duke Robert and those with him doubting the success and seeing themselves certainly lost if they prevail'd not it being in his power to fight them where he pleas'd and when upon his desire to save the effusion of Christian Blood yielded to Articles of Peace the Substance whereof was this That Henry being born after his Father was rightfully King and being now invested in the Crown by act of the Kingdom should enjoy the same during life and pay Robert 3000 Marks per Annum as an Earnest of the Reversion after his Death in case Robert out-liv'd him With these Conditions Robert rather blinded then satisfied returns back again into his own Country and it had been well if he had never been blinded otherwise But such is the frenzie of Ambition that it suffers not unhappy Princes to consider either what they ought to do or what to suffer whilst like the Superior Orbs they are hurried with restless Motion without understanding by what Intelligences they are actuated Finding himself fallen from the height of his Expectation into some degree of Contempt with his own Subjects he assai'd by Profusion which some call Liberality to raise his Reputation at least to disguise his Impotency spending so freely that the Nobility fearing the Revenues of the Dutchy would not suffice to support his vanity complain'd thereof to King Henry who to shew his own power and t'others weakness sent for him over to chide him and indeed reprehended him so sharply as if he had been his Father and not his Brother and as if he would have him to know he rather expected the Reversion of the Dukedome after his death then to be accomptable to him for the Kingdom after his own and whether it were that he threatned him with a Detention of his Pension or drew him being of a yielding Nature as most indigent men are to give him a release for some inconsiderable Sum of ready Mony is not certain but so it was that upon his return he could no longer conceal the indignation he had conceived at it but took the very first Occasion to shew it by joyning himself with some mutinous Lords who having before begun an unsuccessful Combustion in England had fled over thither to commit what Outrages they could there King Henry for a while pretended himself touch'd in Conscience with the foulness of a Fraternal War but was indeed apprehensive that such trivial Injuries as the taking a few Castles was not worthy the trouble of drawing him over in Person at least not worth the charge of entring into such a War as might justifie the requiring his Dukedom for a satisfaction but having let them alone till he believ'd his sufferance had elevated them beyond the temper of hearkning to any conditions he then took his time to chastise their folly and by one single Battle upon the very same day and in the very same manner as 't is reported that his Father just forty years before won England he won Normandy and having made his brother prisoner depriv'd him first of his liberty after of his country and lastly of that which was dearer than either the light of his Eyes requiting his attempt which was but natural to escape out of prison with a punishment that was of all other most unnatural and as much beyond death as it was short of it which inhumanity to his brother though it was perhaps but a just judgment from Heaven upon him for his inhumanity to his Father whose life he had twice attempted being wilfully blinded by the King of France yet 't was such as was altogether undeserv'd as from him for t'other had him fast enough within his power circumscrib'd by all the rules of Hostility besieged within a Fort and half starv'd he was so far from pressing upon him that he pittied him and broke with his brother Friend to save his brother Enemy Poor Prince Robert how was he betraied by the goodness of his own Nature and tempted like a Child to save the bird which was to pick out his Eyes How did he live to see himself buried before he was dead invelop'd in dark and dismal thoughts whilst he contemplated his Sons loss with more affliction than his own a forward Prince born to two Crowns but now reduc'd to that necessity to borrow one to buy him bread So long
much better success than he that the victorious Empress was forc'd to give place to the more victorious Queen and so hardly escaped that to save her life she was content to be reckon'd amongst the dead being carried off in a Coffin as if she had been kill'd and so forc'd to leave him a prisoner behind that was indeed the life of her Cause the Earl of Gloucester her Brother and her General whose liberty being set against that of the Kings both sides became even again in the list of their fatal Contention And now the Kings Party labours to recover what they had lost those of the Empress her Faction strove only to keep what they had gain'd till both having tired out and almost baffled the Courage of their partakers at home sought for recruits abroad Maud sends into Normandy the King into Flanders each side seems to fright from this time forward not so much for Victory as Revenge But whilst they fright the people with a noise of their great preparations the bubble of expectation swollen to its full height broak and the hopes of either side sunk so low by the death of Prince Eustace Son and Heir to the King and that of the Earl of Gloucester the only pillar which supported the Empress this the party by whom that the party for whom the War was first begun not to say miantain'd that they concluded a Peace for want of strength rather than of stomach all things ending as they began by determination of the free vote of the people who in an open Parliament at Winchester parted the Stakes as evenly as they could giving to King Stephen the Crown during life to Henry Son of Maud and as some think by him the reversion expectant after his death who if he were not his Natural was thereupon made his adopted Son and so ended the troubles of this King which seem to have been so agreeable to his nature that as soon as they ceased he ceased to live surviving the War no longer than just to take leave of his Friends being evicted by an Ejectione firmâ brought against him by Fate to let in the Son of his Enemy after he had held the possession notwitstanding the continual Interruption given him nineteen years with great prosperity though little or no peace witness those many works of Piety done by himsel or others in his time there being more Instances of that Nature during his short Raign than had been in many years before He was the first King of the Plantaginets and began his Raign as the Great Solomon who was near about his Age did his with the choice of wise Councellors to take off all objections against his youth with the expulsion of all Strangers to take off all objections against his being a forrainer with the resumption of all aliened Crown Lands to take of the fear as well as the necessity of Taxes which as it increas'd his reputation no less than his revenue so he pleas'd many with disgusting but a few After this he pluck'd down all those Castles which being erected by King Stephen's permission had proved the nurseries of the late rebellion and he did it with the less clamour in respect the people thought it contributed as much to their quiet as to his own Lastly by expelling those false Lords that contrary to their oath given to his Mother took part with the Usurper Stephen he at once satisfi'd his Revenge and confirm'd the opinion conceiv'd of his Justice and Piety Thus having got the start in point of honour as well as of Riches of all the neighbour Princes his Contemporaries one would have thought so prosperous a beginning must have concluded with as prosperous an ending but it sell out quite otherwise for to the rest of his Greatness was added that of having great troubles and troubles of that durance as ended not but with his life Nor could it well be otherwise for he was of a restless spirit seldome without an Army seldomer without an Enemy but never without an Occasion to provoke one for he was a great ingrosser of glory whereby being necessitated to set himself against every one every one set themselves against him and the confederations against him were so well timed that in one day they invaded him in England Normandy Acquitain and Britain but that which made his unhappiness seem singular was that the greatest part of his Enemies were those of his greatest Friends I mean not such as were of remoter relations as subjects servants confederates or allies c. but those of nearest propinquity his brother his wife his own children such as were flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone so that he could not possibly sight for himself without fighting against himself like those who to preserve life are constrain'd to dismember themselves wherein the malice of his Fate seem'd to exceed that of his Foes whiles it drew more cross lines over his Actions than Nature had drawn over his Face rendring all his undertakings so disasterous that even when he had the best on 't he seem'd yet to have the worst on it and lost his honour though he got his enterprize Thus when he recover'd the Earldome of Northumberland from David King of Scots and the Dukedom of Anjou from his brother Geoffry the first by the power of his Wisdom the last by the wise management of his power both which contests ended not without giving to each of them full satisfaction for their pretentions yet one brought upon him the clamor of injustice t'other the scandal of Avarice two vices ill beseeming any man worse a King So in the dispute he had with the Earl of St. Giles about the County of Tholosse which was his Right though t'others Possession he was fain to ask peace of one that he knew was unable to carry on the War and after he brought him to his own terms was himself so hamper'd with the same Fetters he put upon him that in conclusion he suffer'd no less in the opinion of his wisdom than he had before in that of his power So when he married his Son Henry to the daughter of his great Enemy the King of France with a prudent design of being reconcil'd to him in a nearer combination he found that instead of keeping him out of his Territories which was all he had to care for before the Match he had now let him into his House to do him more mischief with less difficulty there being more danger by his undermining than battering whiles himself permitted the pit to be made in which the foundation of his Sons greatness was to be laid to whom having given too early an expectation of his Kingdom by allowing him the title of King without being able to give him the Grace to tarry for his death he found when 't was too late that a Crown was no estate to be made over in Trust yet this he did not by chance neither as one transported by any Fatherly
his Friends charging all his misfortunes upon disloyalty of the Earls and Barons that refus'd him aid whom therefore he fin'd first the seventh part of their Goods after that the thirteenth part of all their Moveables and not content with the aid of their Purses forced them at last with the hazard of their Persons to attend him in the prosecution of a no less chargeable then disadvantageous War where the recovery of part of his own indangered the total loss of their own Estates This as it was grievous to the Subject in general so more particularly to the Nobility being most of them descended out of Normandy and by his ill management shut out of their ancient Inheritances there had no other satisfaction for their Losses but by improving what was left here who finding themselves thus doubly damnified were inraged to that degree that using a Martial freedom sutable to the necessity of that stimulation by which they were urg'd they began to recollect all the wrongs done them by his Grandfather Father and Brother and to shew they were in earnest insisted upon renewing the great Charter of their Liberties neither were they unprovided of Arguments or Arms this contumacy of theirs being countenanced by the sullen Retirement of his own Brother Jeoffry the Archbishop who chose rather to cast himself into voluntary Exilement then submit any longer to his Tyranny In vain now demands he Pledges of their Faith whilst they believed him himself to have none Sending to the Lord Bruce for his Son to be deliver'd as an Hostage to him he receiv'd an answer from the Mother which it seems exprest the affections if not the sense of the Father That they would not commit their Son to his keeping who was so ill a keeper of his own Brothers Son which rash return cost him afterward his Estate her her life with the loss of two for the saving one only Child a Revenge so fully executed that it could meet with no counterbuff but what must come from Heaven Here began the breach that disjoynted the whole frame of his Government the King resolving to keep what by advantage of time and s●fferance he had got the Barons continuing as obstinately bent to recover what their Predecessors had so tamely lost Both sides prepare for War and whilst they face and parle like men loath to ingage yet scorning to quit their Cause either alike confident to hope the best and not unlike active to prevent the worst a new accident parted them by presenting a new Enemy which made the War give place as it were to a single Combat The Pope not allowing the King the Priviledge of Nominating a Successor to the deceased Arch-Bishop of Canterbury he makes a Truce I cannot call it a Peace with his Domestick Adversaries to try his Fortune with his Forreign Foe The Contest was not like that of Jacob and Esau who should be born first but like that of Caesar and Pompey who should be uppermost Now as desire of Rule brought these two great Champions into the List so the confidence each other had in his strength and skill to handle his Weapon made them unreconcileable The Pope made the first Pass who threatning to interdict the Kingdom was answer'd with a Menace of confiscating all the Lands of the Clergy and banishing their Persons The second Thrust given by his Holiness was a Threat of Excommunication of the Kings Person To this he returned that he would utterly disavow his Authority Thus far they were upon the even Terms and as it were hit for hit upon the next Pass they closed and as men desperately bent either maked good his Charge The Pope shuts up the Church doors the King those of the Cloysters the first took away all the Sacraments leaving the dead to bury the dead without Priest Prayer or Procession The last seized on all the Ecclesiastical Revenues and disposed them into Lay-hands Whilst they were thus in close grapple the King of France appeared as second to the Triple Crown Had the Barons then stept in as second to their King they had not only made good their own Honour as well as his but probably had secur'd the Liberties they contended for without any force there being more to be hoped for from this Kings Generosity then his Justice but which was most degenerous and leaves a stain upon their memory never to be washed off they finding him thus overlaid turn'd all their points upon his back poyson'd with the venome of the most opprobrious Calumnies that ever Majesty suffer'd under the Infamy of being not only a Tyrant but an Infidel all which he was fain to bear with more Constancy of Mind then Fortune But as we see a wild Boar when beaten out of breath chuses rather to dye upon the Spears of the Hunters then to be wearied by the Dogs so his Rancor turning into disdain he yielded to his Nobler Enemies and chose rather then not have his Revenge upon them whom he thought God and Nature had put under his dispose to humble himself to the Church hoping as 't is thought by their Keys to unlock the Rebels Power but over-acting his Revenge he stoop'd so low that the Crown fell from his Head which the Popes Legate taking up kept three dayes before he thought fit to restore it verifying thereby the Prediction of a poor innocent Hermite who foretold that there should be no King of England which however it was true yet being in some sense untrue too 't was in the Prerogative of him who never spar'd where he could shed Blood to make his own Interpretation which cost the poor Prophet his Life The Barons finding him thus incens'd and seeing how to make good his Revenge he had quit his Soveraignty they resolv'd to quit their Allegiance to make good their Security intending to call in the Dolphin of France and swear Fealty to him whilst the Common People were left to their Election whether to take the wrong King that promis'd to do them Right or the right King that persisted to do them so much wrong who as little understanding the Principles of Religion as the dictates of Reason the Bonds of Command and Obedience that should hold them together seem'd so wholly slackned that there was upon the Matter no other Tye on them then that of their Interest which sway'd them variously according to the divers Measures they took of it But as there are many Ligaments in a State that bind it so fast together that 't is a hard thing to dissolve them altogether unless by an universal concurrence of Causes that produce a general alteration thereof it being seldom seen of what temper soever Kings are but that they find under the greatest desertion imaginable a very considerable Party to stand by them upon the accompt of Affection or Ambition Honour or Conscience so this King the first of England we find put to this streight had yet many Members of Note and Power besides his chief
maintenance of their Authority the King himself was compell'd by Oath as he was a Man a Christian a Knight a King Crown'd and anointed to uphold them and acquit them of their Legal Obedience whensoever he went about to infringe the great Charter by which they held this Prerogative Here they had him bound up hand and foot with that Curse upon him which his Father of all others most dreaded and with which his Flatterers most terrified him whenever the Dispute of Liberty came in question of being a King without a Kingdom a Lord without a Dominion a Subject to his Subjects for they had invaded his Majesty usurp'd his Authority and made themselves so far Masters of his Person that they might seize it whenever they pleas'd to declare for a Common-wealth And now to make the Affront more notable as if they had forgotten what was the Fundamental Grievance on which their Usurpation was grounded the Entertainment of Strangers they take a Stranger to head them making Monford who was a French man by Birth and Descent their Chief who having designs of his own different from theirs as the Earl of Gloucester his Compeer found when 't was too late indeavour'd so to widen all Differences betwixt King and People that if possible there might never be a right Understanding betwixt them The King therefore well knowing his Malice and not being ignorant of his Ambition fell first upon him causing the Lord Mortimer to break in amongst his Tenants who quickly righted himself upon those of Mortimer's with whom the Prince thereupon took part as Llewellin Prince of Wales with t'other The Prince takes Brecknock-Castle Monford that of Gloucester and after that those of Worcester and Shrewsbury from whence he marched directly to the Isle of Ely without Resistance The King fearing his approach to London like those who to save their Lives in a Storm are content to sling their Goods overboard demanded a Peace and willingly yielded up all his Castles into the hands of the Barons to the intent they might be as a publick Security for the inviolable Observation of the Provisions of Oxford conceding to the banishment of all the Strangers that were left This Condescention of his however occasion'd rather a Truce then a Peace of which he had this benefit to gain time till he could be better provided A Parliament being hereupon call'd at London the freedom of Debate there renew'd the Quarrel and each side confident of the Justice of their Arms at Northampton they came to Battel which however it was well fought yet the worst Cause had the worst Success The Barons were beaten and amongst other Prisoners of note that were then taken was the young Monford the Heir and Hope of his Father Leicester and Fortune thus uniting with Authority made the Barons stoop though they could not submit to beg the Peace they had before refus'd wherein being rejected with scorn they became desperate who were before but doubtful which Leicester perceiving and being a man skilful in such advantages took that opportunity to bring them to a second Battel in which he supply'd his want of Hands with a Stratagem that shew'd he had no want of Wit placing certain Ensigns without Men on the side of a Hill not far from the place where he gave the onset whereby he so fortunately amuz'd the Enemy that he easily obtain'd a Victory and such an one as seem'd to turn the Scale beyond all possibility of Recovery For in it were taken the King himself his Brother the late King of the Romans the Prince and most of the principal Lords and by killing Five thousand of the common People on the place he so terrified all the rest of the Royal Party that for a year and an half afterwards no body durst look him in the Face all which time he spent in reducing the Kingdom under his own dispose putting in and out whom he pleas'd and filling up all places Military and Civil with Creatures of his own carrying the King about with him as a skilful Rebel to countenance the Surrender of Towns and Castles to him continuing thus the insolence of his Triumph till it swell'd to that disproportionate Greatness that his Confederate Gloucester began to be jealous if not afraid of it and out of that Distrust quarrel'd with him upon pretence of not having made equal distribution of the Spoil nor Prisoners charging him to have releas'd whom he pleas'd and at what rate without the consent of the rest of the Confederacy urging further that he did not suffer a Parliament to be conven'd as was agreed betwixt them to the end himself might be Arbitrary Lastly objected that his Sons were grown Insolent by his Example and had affronted several of the adhering Barons who would have satisfaction of him During this Dispute the Prince by connivance of some of the discontented Faction broke Prison to whom Gloucester joyn'd himself and rallying together the scatter'd Parties that had long attended the advantage of such a turn they made themselves so considerable that in short time they were able to bring the business to a poise Leicester put it to the Decision of another Battel but not without apparent dispondency as appears by what he said when they were going to give the first Charge for he told those Lords that were nearest him That they would do well to commit their Souls to God for that their Bodies were the Enemies However he omitted nothing that might speak him as he was a brave and valiant General till his Son first and after himself were slain at the instant of whose fall there happen'd such a Clap of Thunder as if Heaven it self had fought against him and that none could have given him his death but that power to which he owed his life And so the King was rid of him whom he once declar'd to have been more affraid of then of Lightning and Thunder a Person too great for a Subject and something too little to be a King But had he as he was descended from the stock of * His Father was Simon youngest Son of Simon Earl of Fureux descended from Almerick base Son of Robert sirnam'd the Holy King of France Kings master'd the Fate of this day he had undoubtedly made himself one and broke off the Norman Line to begin a new Race not less noble This happy Victory gave the King some ease but 't was not in the power of any Force to give him perfect rest whilst the distemperature of the Time was such that the Wound which seem'd perfectly heal'd broke out afresh Gloucester himself though he had deserted his old Competitor Leicester would not yet quit the good old Cause but imbracing the very first Occasion of Discontent he met with retired three years after from Court and having got new Forces sinds out new Evil Counsellors to remove Mortimer the great Man of merit with the King is now become the Object of his Envy and rather then not have
as often as any advantage was offer'd to him during the Barons War playing fast and loose sometimes as an Enemy otherwhile as a Friend as it made for his turn and having it alwayes in his Power by being in Conjunction with Scotland without which he had been inconsiderable to disturb the Peace of England at his pleasure never neglected any occasion where he might gain Repute to himself or booty for his People Upon him therefore he fastened the first Domestick War he had entring his Country like Jove in a storm with Lightning and Thunder the Terrour whereof was so resistless that that poor Prince was forc'd to accept whatsoever terms he would put upon him to obtain a temporary Peace without any other hope or comfort then what he deriv'd from the mental reservation he had of breaking it again as soon as he return'd whereunto he was not long after tempted by the delusion of a mistaken Prophesie of that false Prophet Merlin who having foretold that he should be crown'd with the Diadem of Brute fatally heightened his Ambition to the utter destruction both of himself and Country with whom his innocent Brother the last of that Race partaking in life and death concluded the Glory of the ancient British Empire which by a kind of Miracle had held out so many hundred years without the help of Shipping Allyance or Confederation with any Forreign Princes by the side of so many potent Kings their next Neighbours who from the time of the first entrance of the English suffer'd them not to enjoy any quiet though they vouchsafed them sometimes Peace Wales being thus totally reduced by the irrecoverable fall of Llewellen and David the last of their Princes that were ever able to make resistance and those ignorant People made thereby happier then they wish'd themselves to be by being partakers of the same Law and Liberty with those that conquer'd them he setled that Title on his eldest Son and so passed over into France to spend as many years abroad in Peace as he had done before in War in which time he renew'd his League with that Crown accommodated the Differences betwixt the Crowns of Scicily and Arragon and shew'd himself so excellent an Arbitrator that when the right of the Crown of Scotland upon his return home came to be disputed with Six some say Ten Competitors after the death of Alexander the Third the Umpirage was given to him who ordered the matter so wisely that he kept off the final Decision of the main Question as many years as there were Rivals put in for it deferring Judgment till all but two only were disputed out of their Pretensions These were Baliol and Bruce the first descended from the elder Daughter of the right Heir the last from the Son of the younger who having as 't was thought the weaker Title but the most Friends King Edward privately offered him the Crown upon Condition of doing Homage and Fealty to him for it the greatness of his Mind which bespoke him to be a King before he was one suffer'd him not to accept the terms whereupon King Edward makes the same Proposition to Baliol who better content it seems with the outside of Majesty accepted the Condition But see the Curse of ill-got Glory shewing himself satisfied with so little he was thought unworthy of any being so abhor'd of his People for it that upon the first occasion they had to quarrel with his Justice as who should say they would wound him with his own Weapon they appeal'd to King Edward who thereupon summon'd him to appear in England and was so rigid to him upon his appearance he would permit none else to plead his Cause but compell'd him in open Parliament to answer for himself as well as he could This being an Indignity so much beneath the sufferance of any private Person much more a King sunk so deep into his Breast that meditating nothing after but Revenge as soon as he return'd home securing himself first by a League and Allyance with the King of France to whose Brothers Daughter he married his Son he renounced his Allegiance and defied King Edward's Power no less then he did his Justice This begat a War betwixt the two Nations that continued much longer then themselves being held up by alternate Successes near three hundred years a longer dated difference perhaps then is to be found in any other Story of the World that Rancor which the Sword bred increasing continually by the desire of Revenge till the one side was almost wholly wasted t'other wholly wearied Baliol the same time King Edward required him to do Homage for Scotland here prevailed with the French King to require the like from him for his Territories there this began the Quarrel that the Division by which King Edward which may seem strange parting his Greatness made it appear much greater whilst himself advanc'd against Baliol and sent his Brother the Earl of Lancaster to answer the King of France Baliol finding himself overmatch'd as well as over-reach'd renew'd his Homage in hopes to preserve his Honour But King Edward resolving to bind him with stronger Fetters then Oaths sent him Prisoner into England whereby those of that Country wanting not only a Head but a Heart to make any further resistance he turn'd his Fury upon the King of France hastning over what Forces he could to continue that War till himself could follow after But Fortune being preingaged on the other side disposed that whole Affair to so many mistakes that nothing answered Expectation and which was worse the Fame of his Male-Adventures spirited a private person worthy a greater * Wallis Name then he had to rise in Scotland who rallying together as many as durst by scorning Misery adventure upon it defied all the Forces of England so fortunately that he was once very near the redeeming his despairing Country-men and had he had less Vertue might possibly have had more success For scorning to take the Crown when he had won it a Modesty not less fatal to the whole Nation then himself by leaving room for Ambition he made way for King Edward to Re-enter the second time who by one single Battel but fought with redoubled Courage made himself once more Lord of that miserable Kingdom all the principal Opposers Wallis only excepted crowding in upon Summons to swear Fealty the third time to him This had been an easie Pennance had they not together with their Faith resigned up their Laws and Liberties and that so servilely that King Edward himself judging them unworthy to be continued any longer a Nation was perswaded to take from them all the Records and Monuments whereby their Ancestors had recommended any of Glory to their Imitation Amongst other of the Regalia's then lost was that famous Marble Stone now lodg'd in Westminster-Abby wherein their Kings were crown'd in which as the Vulgar were perswaded the Fate of their Country lay for that there was an ancient Prophesie
Ingraven on it which denoted that wherever that Stone shou d be placed there should the Scotch Dominion take place a Prediction verisied in our days in the Person of King James the Sixth the first of their Kings ever crowned here With this he took away likewise all their Books and Bookmen as if resolved to rob them of all sense of Liberty as well as of Liberty it self only the brave Wallis continued yet Lord of himself and being free kept up their Spirits by the Elixir of his Personal Courage mixt with an Invincible Constancy and Patience till being betray'd by one of his Companions a Villain sit to be canoniz'd in Hell he was forc'd to yield though he would never submit first to the King after to the Laws of England which judging him to dye as a Traytor eterniz'd the Memory of his Fidelity and Fortitude and made him what he could never have made himself the most glorious Martyr that Country ever had No sooner was he dead but Robert Bruce Son to that Robert Earl of Carric who was Competitor with Baliol appeared as a new Vindictor who escaping out of the English Court where he had long liv'd unsuspected headed the confused Body which wanted only a King to unite them in Counsel Power and Affection but unfortunately laying the Foundation of his Security in Blood murthering his Cosin Cumin who had been one of the Competitors upon pretence he held correspondence with King Edward the horror of which fact was aggravated by the manner and place for he took him whilst he was at his Prayers in the Church it cost him no less blood to wipe off that single stain then to defend his Title the Partakers with the Family of Cumin who were many mighty and eager of Revenge joyning thereupon with the English against him This drew King Edward the fourth time personally into Scotland who had he suffered his Revenge to have given place so far to his Justice as to have pursued Bruce as an Offender rather then as an Enemy he might possibly have done more in doing less then he did but he not only sacrific'd the two innocent Brothers of Bruce making them after they became his Prisoners answer with their lives the penalty of their Brother's Guilt but declar'd he would give no Quarter to any of his Party whereby he not only drove them closer together but arm'd them with Desperation which as it hath a keeper edge then hope so it wounded so deep and inraged them to that degree of Courage as not only to give the greatest Overthrow to the greatest Army that ever the English brought thither but to repay the measure of Blood in as full manner as it was given or intended and in the end broke the great Chain of his well laid Design which was to have in●arged his Power by reducing the whole Isle Wales being taken in a little before under one Scepter with no less respect to the quiet then the greatness of England but maugre all his Power or Policy they let in a Race of Kings there that found a way to conquer his Successors here without a stroke of which he seems to have had some Prophetick knowledge upon his Death-bed when he took so much care to make his Revenge out-live himself by commanding his Son Edward to carry his Bones round about that Country having just begun his fifth Expedition as he ended his life and not suffer them to be buried till he had vanquish'd it wholly Thus this great King who spent most of his time in shedding others Blood was taken off by the excessive shedding of his own for he dyed of a Dissentery and like Caesar who terrified his Enemies with his Ghost seem'd not willing to make an end with the World af●er he had done with it but which never came into any Kings thoughts before or since resolv'd to Reign after his Dominion was determined being confident that his very Name like a Loadstone which attracts Iron to it would draw all the English Swords to follow its fate till they had made good that Union which he with so much harshness and horror had accelerated but as Providence which more respects the unity of Affections then the Unity of Nations did by the * Burrough on the Sands in the Bishoprick of Durham Place where he dyed shew the frailty of that Foundation he laid whilst he liv'd all his Glory expiring with himself so Nature as in abhorrence to the violation of her Laws by the effusion of so much blood as he had shed the most that any Christian King of this Isle ever did turn'd the Blessing she gave him into a Curse whilst she took from him before his Eyes three of his four Sons and the only worthy to have surviv'd him and left him only to survive who only was worthy never to have been born And now whether it was his Fault or his Fate to dote thus upon Gaveston who being only a Minister to his Wantonness could not have gain'd that Power he had over him to make himself so great by lessening him without something like an Infatuation the matter of Fact must declare For before his Coronation he made him Earl of Cornwal and Lord of Man both Honours belonging to the Crown at his Coronation notwithstanding the Exceptions taken against him by all the Nobility he gave him the honour to carry King Edward's Crown before him which of right belonged to a Prince of the Blood to have done and after the Coronation he married him up to his own Niece the Daughter of his second Sister Jone de Acres by Gilbert Clare Earl of Gloucester having indeed rais'd him to this pitch of Greatness as tempted him to raise himself higher being not content with the Power without he might a●so share in the Glory of Soveraignty most vainly affecting the Title of KING and if he were not King of Man as he desired he was at least King in Man ruling both there and in Ireland like an absolute Prince not without hopes of a fair possibility of being if the Kings Issue had fail'd King of England after him which Hope made him Insolent and that Insolence Insupportable so that the Lords finding it bootless to expect Justice from the King against him resolv'd to do themselves right and without more ado let fly a whole volley of Accusations at him This first forced him to part from the King and being separated they found it easie to make him part from himself for it was not long before he fell into their hands being taken Prisoner by the Earl of Pembroke who chopt of his Head a dea●h however esteem'd to be the most honourable of any other was to him questionless the most grievous in that it made him stoop who never could endure to submit This violent proceeding of the Lords as it shew'd a roughness of the Times suitable to that of their own Natures so it was the first occasion of the second Civil War of England
which broke out like a Fire that being long smother'd was all in a Flame as soon almost as it was perceiv'd and however Fate for some time seem'd to make a Pause whether she should begin the Tragedy which she could not end turning the Storm another way by several Invasions from Scotland which held long enough to have diverted the virulent humour and let out blood enough to have cool'd all their heat allaying it so far that easie Intercessions prevail'd to keep them asunder for some years yet nothing could so stop the Course of Nature but that the monstrous Issue when it was come to its birth forc'd its way the Discontents that had been so long ripening even from the time of this Kings Great-grand-father breaking out like a Boyl surcharg'd with Anguish and Corruption which was no sooner emptied by the death of one but it was fill'd with Rancor and Envy by the Entertainment of New Favourites As Gaveston before so the two Spencers afterward the Farher and the Son took upon them to Monopolize his Grace and were thereupon generally charg'd with the odious design of bringing in an Arbitrary Government with imbezeling the Treasure of the Nation and doing several ill Offices betwixt the King and Queen maintaining their own by apparent wrong to the Estates of other Lords particularly of the Earls of Hereford and Mortimer out of whose hands it seems they had bought some Lands which lying convenient to their Estates was in the first place offered to them These though they were such Objections as relating but to particular Persons perhaps not without particular Reasons might be excus'd if not justified yet being heaped up together made a general grievance and the Earl of Lancaster the Bell-weather of Rebellion at that time thought it worthy the Barons taking up of Arms to punish them The King answer'd for them and undertook they should come and answer for themselves the Father he said was imployed by him beyond the Seas and the Son was guarding the Cinque Ports according to his Duty and therefore he thought it was against Law and Custome to condemn them unheard But nothing would satisfie their Accusers without a Declaration of Banishment and though the President was such as might as well affect themselves as their Posterity yet Hatred being no less blind then Love they preser'd their present Revenge before the Fears of a future inconvenience All differences being thus compos'd I cannot say calm'd an accidental affront given to the Queen by one that was over-wise in his Office put all again out of order beyond recovery A Castelan of the Lord Badlismers at Leeds denying her Majesty Lodging there as she was passing by in her Progress out of a Distrust she might possess her self of the Castle and keep it for the King she exasperated the King to that degree that he besieged the place took it and in it the politick Governour whom without legal Process he hang'd up presently and seizing all the Goods and Treasure of his Lord sent his Wife and Children to the Tower This was taken for so great a violation of the Liberty of the Subject that being done by the King himself nothing could determine the Right but the Sword and accordingly they met the second time in Arms where Fortune was pleas'd to confirm the Sentence given by the King by giving up into his hands many more considerable Lives then that for which they were hazarded amongst the rest was that of the Earl of Lancaster himself the first Prince of the Blood that ever was brought to the Block here in England and with him fourteen of the Principal Barons none of which were spar'd but forc'd to give up their Lives and Estates as a Reward to the Victors And not long after the Spencers were recall'd and re-stated who finding the publick Treasure wholly exhausted and a chargeable War yet continued with Scotland thought it but necessary to make such Retrenchments as might enable his Majesty to carry on that great Work wherein he had been so unlucky without oppressing the People amongst the rest they presum'd unfortunately to abridge the Queen lessening hers as they had done the Kings Houshold-Train by which Improvident Providence they so irritated her being a Woman of a proud vindictive Spirit that she privately complain'd thereof to the King of France her Brother who took that occasion to quarrel with the King about his Homage for Gascoigne and upon his Refusal possessed himself of several Pieces there and notwithstanding all that Edmond Earl of Kent could do whom his Brother the King sent over with sufficient Strength as 't was thought to repell him by force continued his Depredations there this bringing a Necessity that either the King must go over himself or the Queen the first to compel or the other being his beloved Sister to mediate with h●m for a Truce each equally inconvenient to the Spencers who thought not sit that the King should go in respect of the general and were as loath the Queen should in respect of her particular discontent They chose the least of the Evils as they judged and sent over her who having a great Stomach and but a small Train meditated more upon her own then her Husbands Vindication and accordingly put an end to the difference betwixt her Brother and him but on such terms as afterward made a wider difference betwixt him and her self The Conditions were these that K●ng Edward should give to the Prince his Son the Dutchy of Acquitain and Earldom of Ponthein and send him over to do the King of France Homage for the same which was to excuse that Homage before demanded from himself and thus she pretended to have found out an expedient to save the honour of both Kings in allowing each his end But having by this sineness got her Son into her own power she gave her self so wholly up to her Revenge that she suffer'd her self to be led by a hand she saw not through the dark Paths of dangerous Intreagues managed by those who having other ends then hers did work beyond though under her Authority Principal in her Councel as being so in her Affections was young Mortimer a Servant fit for such a Mistress and such a Master as this Queen and her Husband who having escaped out of the Tower where he had been long a Prisoner and as he thought very injuriously in respect he render'd himself to Mercy before the great Battel with the Barons and by his Submission contributed much to the Kings gaining that Victory contriv'd with her how to set up the Prince and with him himself and because the Earl of Kent was upon the place they made it their first business to work off him to the Party Here began that fatal breach from whence the World concluded that this unhappy King having lost one half of himself could not long hold out before he lost the whole it not being reasonable to expect that his Subjects should be truer
to him then his Wife especially since the right Heir took the wrong side Upon the first apprehension he recall'd them home but upon second thoughts he forbids their Return at first he seem'd impatient of their absence as the only Friends he could conside in but on a sudden he dreads their approach as the most Mortal Enemies he had forbids their landing by Proclamation and sets out no less then three Admirals to prevent it they in like manner whilst he prest for their Company delay'd their Recess but when they found themselves banish'd grew as impatient of being kept out The King of France not owning so vile a design so as to give any ready assistance to it they withdrew into Holland whose Earl being a rich and politick Prince upon the contracting Prince Edward to his Daughter he furnished them with Money and Shipping to transport them Landing at Harwich they were so welcom'd by the discontented Nobility that the poor King foreseeing the ensuing danger and not finding that Faith in the Londoners which he expected withdrew into the West in order to passing over into Ireland but meeting with a Storm at Sea that threatned as eminent danger as that by Land he was forced to comply with the contrary Winds and direct his Course towards Wales where destitute of Councel as well as Courage he lay obscurely till his Majesty extinguish'd like a Torch held downwards His Son though he was as yet under Wardship himself was made Guardian of the Kingdom a Title so much greater then that of King by how much he had the Superiority over both readily was he prevail'd with to take away the lives of the two fatal Favourites the Spencers so that 't was thought he would not be over-modest in taking the Crown after it being so easie a Temptation to consent to depose him who had already upon the matter depos'd himself However Nature prevail'd so much over Ambition contrary to all their Expectations or Grace rather over Nature that he refus'd to accept it till his Father might be prevail'd with to give it him as a Blessing who thereupon resign'd it but with such a moving Meekness as for the present time melted the very Queen her self and seemingly touch'd her with so much Regret at the Renuntiation that the Bishop of Hereford the great Engineer of this prosperous Treason doubting her Constancy in point of Malice to be as uncertain as her Faith in point of Affection or perhaps rather dreading the young Kings Piety back'd with the old Kings power hastned his Death by all means possible but finding himself for some time disappointed by the force of Providence or the strength of his Nature which neither ill Air ill Diet nor want of Rest could impair he put him into the hands of two Miscreants sit to be imploy'd in so black a Purpose to whom he inclos'd in a Letter one onely Line which was so twist up as might serve to strangle any Prince whatever comprehending a double sense to warrant them and excuse himself if need were the words were these Edvardum regem occidere nolite timere bonum est This being not pointed the Devil who invented it instructed them in the true meaning of the damnable Oracle which accordingly they put in execution with so much cruelty and horror that never King died as this poor Planet-struck Prince did having a Pipe thrust up into his Fundament to the intent that the Marks of their Violence might not be perceiv'd outwardly and through that with a red hot Iron they penetrated his Bowels to his Heart yet was not this Death possibly more miserable or grievous to him then his Life after he became forsaken of all his Subjects Friends and Allies in general and particularly of his own Wife Son and Brother not to say of himself too if so be we do not reckon them a part of himself considering with what strange abjection he resign'd first his Crown after his Life For to say truth never was King turn'd out of a Kingdom or out of the World as he was Many Kingdoms have been lost by the chance of War but this Kingdom as one observes was lost before any Dy was cast for it no blow struck no Battel fought lost before it was taken from him whilst by betraying himself first he taught others to do it after strange Riddle of State that a Crown should be gain'd forcibly yet without force violently yet with consent both Parties agreed yet neither pleas'd for he was not willing to leave his Kingdom and he that was to have it as unwilling to take it without he gave it him the Queen was not pleas'd he should part with it without he parted with his Life too judging that by having a part he might recover the whole or that her self having parted with the whole could not intitle her self to any part but by his Death and therefore having taken the Kingdom from him openly there was a kind of necessity of taking away his Life secretly Poor Prince how unkindly was he treated upon no other account but that of his own over-great kindness Other Princes are blam'd for not being rul'd by their Counsellors he for being so who whilst he liv'd they would have thought to be a Sot but being dead they could have found in their hearts to have made him a Saint How far he wrong'd his People doth not appear there being very few or no Taxations laid upon them all his time but how rude and unjust they were towards him is but too manifest But their Violence was severely repaid by Divine Vengeance not only upon the whole Kingdom when every Vein in the Body Politick was afterward opened to the endangering the letting out of the Life-blood of the Monarchy in the Age following but upon every particular Person consenting to or concern'd in his Death For as the Throne of his Son that was thus set in blood though without his own guilt continued to be imbru'd all his Reign which lasted above fifty years with frequent Executions Battels or Slaughters the Sword of Justice or his own being hardly ever sheath'd all his time So 't is said that the Queen her self dyed mad upon the apprehension of her own in Mortimer's disgrace who was executed at Tyburn and hung there two dayes to be a spectacle of Scorn His Brother Edmond had this punishment of his Disloyalty to be condemn'd to lose his Head for his Loyalty it being suggested and happy it had been for him if it had been prov'd that he indeavoured the Restoration of his Brother his death being imbitter'd by the mockery of Fortune whilst by keeping him upon the Scaffold five hours together before any Body could be found that would execute him he was deluded with a vain hope of being saved The Fiend Tarlton Bishop of Hereford who invented the cursed Oracle that justified the murther dy'd with the very same Torture as if the hot Iron that fear'd his Conscience had been thrust into
his Bowels Of the two Murtherers one was taken and butcher'd at Sea t'other dyed in Exile perhaps more miserable And for the Nobility in general that were Actors in the Tragedy they had this Curse upon them that most of their Race were cut off by those Civil Discords of their divided Families to which this strange violation gave the first beginning not long after HONI · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE DIEV ET MON DROIT He was a Prince of that admirable composure of Body and Mind that Fortune seem'd to have fallen in Love with him and as she contributed much to the making him a King and yet more to the preserving him so so she eleva●ed him so far above the reach of Envy or Treachery that all the Neighbour Princes dazled with the splendor of his Glory gave place to him not so much out of any sense of their own defects as of his power whereof they could not but have some glimpse as well as himse●f who from his very first Ascent unto the Throne had a prospect of two Crowns more then he was born to the one placed within his reach which was that of Scotland to which there needed no more but an imaginary Right to gain him the Possession the other more remote which was that of France but better secur'd in respect of a reputative Title which however oppos'd could not be deny'd To the attaining the first there was a fair opportunity offer'd by the unreconcileable contest of two well-match'd Rivals whose Right and Interest were so evenly poys'd that the least grain of his Power might turn the Scale either way to the Recovery of the other there was yet a fairer Opportunity given him by the Revolt of Philip of Artois one of the first Princes of the Blood of that Kingdom and Brother in Law to the present King Philip de Valois who being incens'd by a Judgment given against him for the County of Artois recover'd by his Aunt the Dutchess of Burgoigne came over into England with a Resolution to set aside his Title who had before set aside his Neither wanted he a Power suitable to his desired Revenge for being well acquainted with the secrets of that Kings Councel all which he reveal'd to King Edward and being able to give him good security for the affections of several of the chief Governours there that depended on him 't is no marvel he so quickly blew that spark of Glory which he found wrapt up in the Embers of King Edward's ambitious Thoughts into such a Flame as threatning the Destruction of that goodly Country made all Christendom afraid of the Consequence The great Question of Right betwixt the two greatest Kings of Europe being thus set up which in effect was no more then this Whether the French King should take place as Heir Male of the Collateral and more remote Line or the English King as Heir of the Female but direct Line and one degree nearer Those of the other side the Water obstinately refus'd to tye their Crown as they said to a Distaff to which King Edward reply'd he would then tye it to his Sword Upon this they joyn'd Issue and both sides prepar'd for the decision by Arms. King Philip had a double advantage of the English first in the Loyalty and Affections of the French as being their Natural Prince secondly by the authority of the Salique Law which however it was not so clear but that it might admit of much dispute yet being back'd with a Possession which made up eleven of the twelve Points controvertable there having been a Succession of three Sons of Philip le Bell Queen Isabels Father by whom King Edward claim'd each inheriting Successively as the next Heir Male notwithstanding each of them left Daughters by which the present King Philip came now in as Heir Masculine it seem'd so like an adjudged Case that King Edward thinking it better to cut the Knot then lose time in trying to untie it resolv'd to put it to the Determination of a Battel This Resolution of his was so lowdly proclaim'd every where abroad as well as at home that like Thunder before a Storm the very noise of his Preparations made all Christendom shake and so shake that it fell into Parties the Princes of each Country round about like Herdsmen before a Tempest flying some to one side some to another all seeking rather to shelter themselves then to add any thing to the Party they flew to With the English King took part the Emperor and all the Princes of Germany of the first Rank the Arch-Duke of Austria and the Earl of Flanders only excepted whose People yet were on this side for their Trades sake the Earl of Holland the Dukes of Brabant and Gelders the Marquess of Juliers the Arch-bishop of Cologne and Valeran his Brother and divers of the more Northern Princes With the French were the King of Bohemia the two Dukes of Austria and the Earl of Flanders before mention'd the Bishop of Metz the Marquiss of Montferrat the Earl of Geneva the Duke of Savoy and divers of the Princes of Italy to the number saith Du Hailan of 10000 Persons and which perhaps was more considerable by how much he was nearer then all the rest was his inraged Brother in Law David Bruce King of Scots a weak but a restless Enemy who had reason to take part with the other side for that he as t'other fought against a Competitor too King Edward having set up Baliol to vie with him What the number of the English Forces were is not certain unless we may guess at them by the Charges of their Entertainment which as Walsingham tells us cost us not so little as One hundred thousand pounds Sterling in less then a years time a vast Sum for those days but very well repaid with the Glory of the two Confederate Kings Ransoms who being both taken Prisoners and brought into England the first to wit the King of Scots redeem'd himself for 10000 Marks the last to wit the King of France payed for his Liberty Three millions of Crowns of Gold whereof Six hundred thousand were laid down presently and Four hundred thousand more the Year after and the Remainder the next two years following The Captivity of these two Kings at one time shews at once the Power and Glory of this great King who riding triumphant on the wings of Fortune never wanted the means to make or continue himself Victorious and prevailing no less over his own Subjects then over his Enemies these subdued by his Wisdom as those by his Courage Some have made it a doubt whether he got more by his Scepter or his Sword the benefit of Ransoms abroad notwithstanding the many Princes taken Prisoners being much short of the Aids given him at home so that they that have taken the pains to state his Accompts reckon that out of that one single Imposition upon Wool which continued Six years he was able to
being to advise at the price of his own Head the Arch bishop of York like a man of great Faith was of Opinion to sight them with such present Strength as the King had trusting to the Justice of the Cause the Dukes of Ireland and Suffolk men of Action but wanting the means were for delivering up Calais to the French King to purchase his Assistance But the Majority of Voices coming from such men whose Fears made them rather wise then honest were for appeasing the Enemy with fair promises till there were a fit opportunity to suppress them the first Proposal was thought very hazardous the second much more besides there was such a bitterness in the Pill that no preparation could make the King to swallow it who not knowing what effect it might have when it was done utterly rejected it upon which they secretly withdrew that gave the Counsel and left him to himself Whereupon the Lords Regent found an opportunity to be admitted to a Parley with him who producing to him Letters from the King of France which they had intercepted pursuant to the Design of bringing in a Forreign Enemy they mov'd him no less by shame then dread of the Consequence to consent to the calling another Parliament Upon the day of the Convention the King came not to the House being infinitely troubled in his mind at News he had just then received of the Earl of Derby's Intercepting the Duke of Ireland who being gone as far as Chester in order to his passing into that Kingdom was set upon by the said Earl and totally defeated who hardly escaping fled into the Low-countries where not long after he dyed The Lords heightened with this Success sent a very harsh Message to him letting him know that they attended him there and if he would not come to the House according to promise they would chuse another King that should hearken to their faithful advice This though it were in effect no other but to tell him they would depose him without his consent if he would not come and consent to be depos'd yet having no Retreat from it but down a steep Precipice he chose rather to comp●y and put himself under the mercy of Providence then under the uncertainty of their Mercy Upon his first appearance they presented him with a black Roll of those whom he call'd his Friends they his Enemies some to be prescrib'd some to be imprison'd and others banish'd and in this last List there were not only Lords but Ladies found Delinquents Some were accus'd of imbeziling his Treasure others of purloyning his Affection all for robbing him of his Honour whereupon some were to be try'd for their Lives others for their Fortunes and all for their Liberties but in respect of their other great Affairs which were in order to what followed they referred it to the succeeding Parliament not unfitly call'd the Parliament that wrought wonders which contrary to all other Parliaments that used to swear Obedience to the King requir'd an Oath of him himself to observe such Rules and Orders as they should prescribe to him Here now we have this unfortunate Prince brought to the last year of his Rule though not of his Reign beginning then to enter into his Wardship as he call'd it when he thought he was just got out of it All power was put into the hands of the Dukes of Lancaster and Gloucester who managed all Treaties abroad concluded War and Peace as they thought fit and were indeed absolute in every point but the Command of their own Passions and uncontroulable by any but themselves The Duke of Lancaster having now digested the Kingdom in his thoughts procures the Dutchy of Acquitaine to be setled on him as an earnest of what was to follow being the Inheritance of the Crown and descended on the King from Prince Edward his Father and having married up the King to a Child of eight years old by whom 't was impossible he could have Issue with a Portion that scarce defraid the Charge of the Solemnity he secur'd his own Pretensions by Legitimating three of his Bastard Sons in case his lawful Issue should fail The Duke of Gloucester had the same Ambition in his heart as well as the same Blood in his Veins but Nature having put a disadvantage upon him by placing him so far behind being the sixth Son of King Edward the Third he was forc'd to gratifie his Envy instead of his Ambition and rest content with the hopes of doing his Brother a Mischief when time serv'd without any great probability of doing himself good Accordingly he made a Faction who conspir'd with him to seize the King his two Brothers Lancaster and York and to put them all up in Prison and after to execute divers Lords whom he thought to be more his Enemies then their Friends but the end of his Treason being to be himself betray'd by those he made use of Lancaster came thereby to stand single like a great Tree which being at its full height spread his Limbs the wider and grew to be so conspicuous that the succeeding Parliament desired to shelter themselves under the shadow of his power hereupon he reduced the number of the thirteen Regents to seven only which being all his Confidents he with them concluded aforehand all Affairs of moment and directed how they should pass in Parliament An Example not less mischievous to the Kingdom then the King so that now there wanted no more to make him the Soveraign but the putting on the Crown But see the uncertainty of humane Glory Having just finished the great work of his Usurpation an unexpected blow from that invisible hand that turns about the great Wheel of Causes broke the frame of his projection in pieces His Son Henry Duke of Hereford accused by the Duke of Norfolk of Treason was forc'd to purge himself by the Tryal of Combat a Law that might condemn but never acquit him since it was only possible to discharge himself of the danger but never of the suspition of the Crime This being urg'd so far that they were both brought into the List there was no way left to avoid the uncertainty of the Fight but banishment of both wherein though the Duke of Lancaster got the favour to make the Exile of his Son but temporary when the others was perpetual yet the affront that Fortune seem'd to give him by this accidental Disgrace came so near his heart that his Son had no sooner taken leave of his Country but he bid adieu to the World and so left the King once more Hors de page Thus Time and Fortune seem to have conspir'd in vindicating the wrongs of this abused Prince ridding him at once of those two great Corrivals in Power whose Authority had so far outweighed his that they kept him in the condition of a Minor till they had made the People believe him insufficient for Government the one being remov'd beyond all possibility the other beyond all
probability of Return whereby he became so much at ease in his own thoughts that being upon the wing again he thought himself not only Master of himself but of every body else and now despising all after-claps he seized upon all the Dukes Estate to his own use which as it look'd like a Revenge now he was dead that might have past for a piece of Justice if he had been living so it gave many cause to pity the Duke his Son who otherwise could have been well enough content never to have seen him more Neither was this the worst on 't but apprehending from what the King did to him what possibly he might do to any of them they made his particular suffering the ground of their Publick Resentment which Hereford took upon the first bound and made that good use of it that when he came after to claim the Crown that it appear'd the best colour of Right he had was from this wrong whereof yet the King was no way sensible who as I said before despising all dangers at home directed all his Caution to those abroad only taking with him young Henry of Monmouth the Duke of Hereford's and since his Fathers Death Duke of Lancaster's Son and Heir into Ireland whither he went to suppress some Rebels This however it seem'd to be an occasion of Glory which the Bravery of his Youth could not suffer him to pretermit whilst those petty Kings who were eye witnesses of his disproportionate Power taught their undisciplin'd People Obedience by the Example of their own Submission yet it prov'd an empty Affectation and so much more fatal in the Consequence by how much it was scarce possible to conceal much less recover his Error till the Exil'd Duke of Lancaster took his advantage of it who finding him out of his Circle return'd into England with that speed as if he had been afraid lest Fortune should change her mind before he could change his condition Great was the concourse of People that congratulated his Arrival neither was their confluence less considerable for Quality then Number the Archbishop of Canterbury banish'd for being one of the Confederates with the Duke of Gloucester the Earls of Northumberland Westmoreland Darby and Warwick the Lords Willoughby Ross Darcy Beaumont and divers others besides Knights and Esquires of great Repute in their Countries who offer'd to serve him with their Lives and Fortunes and as they mov'd they increas'd so fast that the Duke of York left Regent during the Kings absence thought it convenient to attend him at Berclay Castle and from thence to Bristow where the first Tragedy began for there finding the Earl of Wiltshire the Lord High Treasurer with Sir Henry Ewin Sir Henry Bussy both men of great note of the Kings party they arraign'd them there for misgoverning of the King and having smote off their Heads proceeded to imprison the Bishop of Norwich Sir William Elmeham Sir Walter Burleigh and divers others upon the same account setting up a direct Tyranny which continued six Weeks before the King by reason of contrary winds heard any thing of it Upon the first notice given him he made a shew of being so little concern'd at it that he declar'd he would not stir out of Dublin till all things fitting for his Royal Equipage were made ready but understanding afterward that they had seiz'd several of his Castles he sent over the Earl of Salisbury to make ready an Army against his landing promising to follow him in six dayes after but the Wind or rather his Mind changing the Earls Forces believing he might be dead disbanded again and left their unfortunate General to himself Eighteen dayes after this the King arriv'd who finding how things stood for they had taken off the Heads of several of his chief Councellors imprison'd the principallest of his Friends and gotten the possession of many of his strong Forts and Castles his Heart so fail'd him on the sudden that he immediately gave Command to the Army that was with him to Disband and so degenerate were his Fears that when he could not prevail with them to quit him for they all resolv'd to dye in his Defence and being mov'd with no less Pity then Duty to see him so dejected solemnly vow'd never to leave him he most wretchedly gave them the Temptation to break their Faith by leaving them first withdrawing himself by night unknown to Conway Castle where he understood the Earl of Salisbury was But as a King can no more hide himself then the Sun which however eclipsed cannot be lost so it was not long ere the Duke of Hereford found him out and drawing his Forces to Chester sent from thence the Earl of Northumberland to assure him of his Faith and Homage upon Condition he would call a free Parliament and there permit Justice to be done to him Here Fortune seems to have made one stand more to give him time if possible to recover himself but he instead of giving an Answer worthy the Dignity of a King did what was indeed unworthy a Private man begging of the Earl to interpose with the Duke for him that he might only have an honorable Allowance to lead a private life deposing himself unexpectedly before t'other could have the time and opportunity however he might have the thought to do it solemnly The notice hereof did not a little surprize the Duke when he heard of it who doubting least there was something more in it then he perceiv'd wisely kept himself within the bounds of seeming Obedience and treated his Majesty with all imaginable respect till they arrived at London then under pretence of securing him he lodg'd him in the Tower where he made him the Instrument of his own destruction by calling a Parliament that had no other business but to arraign his Government and impeach him and accordingly Articles were drawn up against him which shew how small a matter turns the Scale when Power is put into the Ballance against Justice The chief of them were as followeth 1. That he had been very profuse a very grievous Crime in a King so young 2. That he had put some to death that conspired to depose him 3. That he had borrowed more money then he was well able to pay the first King that ever lost his Crown for being in Debt and yet was not to be said he was altogether a Bankrupt that had in his Coffers when he dyed the value of Seven hundred thousand pounds 4. That he said the Law was in his Breast and Head and perhaps the Lawyers would have made it good if they durst who have given it for an Axiome of the Law that the King is Caput Principium Finis Justitiae 5. That he chang'd Knights and Burgesses of Parliament at his pleasure by making those Peers of the Realm whom he thought worthy the honour 6. That he said the Lives and Goods of his Subjects were under his power which shews what confidence he had in their
Election of the People to whom that he might appear restor'd as by Divine Providence he appointed the day of his Coronation to be upon the very same day wherein the year before he had been Banished and to hold up the Cheat he was anointed with an Oyl which as 't was pretended was deliver'd to his Father together with this Prophesie That all the Kings that receiv'd their Chrisme from it should be Champions of the Church which as the Legend holds forth coming by chance to the hands of King Richard as he was going for Ireland he would have been anointed therewith had not the Arch-bishop of Canterbury disswaded him from it as not being lawful to be anointed twice however he was resolv'd to intitle himself self so far to the vertue of it as to stile himself Defensor Fidei The only man that withstood this Kings Usurpation and would not be perswaded to swim down the Stream with the rest of the Time-serving Nobility was the bold Bishop of Carlisle who having so frankly discharged himself upon the occasion of Debating in Parliament what should be done with King Richard for as yet they had not taken away his Life though they had taken his Crown and by a Speech as eloquent as pious shew'd what was the Complexion and Face of those Jugling Times and what was expected from what was done and what was done upon the found of the present Expectations I have thought it a respect due to the honour of his singular Merit to set it down expresly as he spoke it to the end the Reader may judge whether he had not Reason enough to justifie his Passion and pity 't was he had not power enough to justifie that Reason when combining with others of the same Judgment to Restore his true Soveraign he gloriously lost himself in the Attempt and with himself the unfortunate King he would have saved The words of his Speech were as followeth My Lords THE matter now propounded is of marvellous weight and consequence wherein there are two Points chiefly to be considered the first Whether King Richard be sufficiently put out of his Throne the second Whether the Duke of Lancaster be lawfully taken in For the first How can that be sufficiently done when there is no Power sufficient to do it The Parliament cannot do it for the King is Head of the Parliament and can the Body pull down the Head You will say but the Head may bow it self down and so may the King resign It is true but of what Force is that that is done by Force and who knows not that King Richard's Resignation was no other But suppose he be lawfully out yet how comes the Duke of Lancaster to be lawfully in If you say by Conquest you speak Treason for what Conquest without Arms and can a Subject take Arms against his lawful Soveraign and not be Treason if so then whoever Arms against him successfully does it rightfully and what hope of Peace at this rate If you say by Election of State you speak not Reason For what power hath the State to Elect while any is living that hath Right to succeed but such a Successor is not the Earl of Lancaster as descended from Edmund Crouchback the elder Son of Henry the Third put by the Crown for deformity of Body for who knows not the falseness of this Allegation seeing it is a thing notorious that this Edmund was neither the elder Son nor yet Crook-backt though call'd so for some other Reason but a goodly Personage and without any Deformity and your selves cannot forget a thing so lately done * * The Earl of March who it was that in the fourth year of King Richard was declar'd by Parliament to be Heir of the Crown in case King Richard should die without Issue but why then is not that Claim made good because that Inter Arma silent Leges what disputing of Titles against the stream of Power But howsoever 't is extream Injustice that King Richard should be condemned without being heard or once allowed to make his Defence and what can we Subjects expect when our King is thus abus'd My Lords I have spoken this at this time that you may consider of it before it is too late for as yet 't is in your power to undo that justly which you have unjustly done Those last words express'd a Zeal that seem'd to have something of the same effect as that of Lightning which is said to melt the Sword without so much as singeing the Scabard For however no body that heard him appeard to be warm by what he said yet a secret Fire was shot into many of their Breasts that after it came to be thorowly kindled in their Consciences could not be extinguish'd no not with Blood so that they continued their Resentments not for their own Lives only but intail'd the Quarrel upon their Posterity even untill the House of Clarence recover'd their Right in the third Generation after Now as a Clergy-man first declar'd against this King so a Clergy-man first Ingaged against him without considering his holy Unction which made him the great Champion of the Church for however the Church-men are willing that others should belive their Miracles themselves do not this was the politick Abbot of Westminster a great Book-states-man who invited several of the Chief Nobility into a Combination to take away his Life so that Killing no Murther is no Modern Tenet and admitting what he suspected only there might be some reason for it for who would not dispatch an Enemy to God the King and the Church one that therefore had unduly made himself King that he might rob the great King of Kings of his due the ground of this Jealousie was upon certain words utter'd in the Abbots hearing whilst he was Duke of Hereford viz. That Princes had too little and Clergy-men too much upon which he concluded he would be a Persecutor of the Church rather then a Patron Neither it seems was the Abbot only of that Opinion but the Nation in general otherwise the House of Commons would not as they did afterward frame a Bill for setling the Church Lands in the Crown as believing it would be an acceptable Oblation to him Upon which this Abbot and the Bishop before nam'd and five Temporal Lords to wit the Dukes of Exeter Surry and Albemarle and the two Earls of Salisbury and Gloucester with many Knights and Gentlemen their Friends complotted to dispatch him at a publick Just or Tournament to be held at Oxford where they hop'd coming arm'd as the fashion was upon such Occasions they might as easily take him off as the Roman Senate did Caesar neither indeed was the Plot ill laid had not the same Power that set him up protected him against all their Machinations diverting the Destiny upon themselves by such a strange and unexpected discovery as shews that Secresie in Treason signifies nothing unless it could be hid from the All-seeing Eye of
Providence The Duke of Albemarle in his way to Oxford gave a needless visit to his Father the Duke of York who sitting at the Table chanced to spy something like a Scrole or Parchment in his Sons Breast whereupon he demanded what it was and being not satisfied suddenly he snatched it out with some passion and upon view finding it to be a Counterpart of the Indenture of Confederacy he ordered his Horses to be immediately made ready with intention to go to the King then at Windsor to discover the Plot to him but Youth being more active then Age the Son got before him and being himself the first Accuser of himself obtain'd his Pardon before his Father could come to prove him Guilty The rest of the Lords suspecting by his not keeping time with them that all was discover'd fly to Arms and setting up a Counterfeit Richard who they pretended was escaped out of Prison they advanced to Windsor where not finding the King for he distrusting his Cause no less then his Power had posted before to London they sell upon desperate Counsels Some were of Opinion to march to Leeds in Kent where King Richard till then was and rescue him out of Prison before their Property was found out Others thought it best to march directly up to London and set upon the Usurper before he were ready for his Defence Some again advised to make a defensive War till they might have Aid from the King of France which last Proposal took place as being most agreeable to that Irresolution which their Guilt had brought upon them and accordingly they retreated to Reading and from thence marched down to Leicester led by the hand of Destiny to receive there their fatal Doom accelerated by an Accident not less unexpected then the former For it so happen'd that the Grand Conspirators coming out of their Camp to repose themselves in the Town the Duke of Surrey and Earl of Salisbury lying in one Inne the Duke of Exeter and the Earl of Gloucester in another the Bayliff of the Town by what occasion provoked or by what Spirit directed is not known with a Party of his Fellow Townes-men set upon the two first and stormed them in their Quarters and without consideration that their Army was so near press'd so hard upon them as to kill divers of their Retinue that defended the place and indanger'd their Persons so far that the other two Lords to divert their Fury fired the Town in several places but this not prevailing to give any Relief they retired to bring their Army to rescue them but when they came there they found the same means by which they design'd to save them was the occasion of their loss for those in the Camp hearing the Noise of the Onset and seeing the Town in Flames believing it could be nothing less then the Kings Forces that had done it fled every one their several wayes and so left the distressed Duke and Earl to mercy who like two Lions in a Toil baited with Dogs dyed fighting being rather wearied then vanquished And so King Henry that never could get their Hearts living had the good Fortune to recover their Heads being dead and not long after found a way to reduce the other two under the same Fate the Abbot suddenly dying upon the apprehension of their being dissipated This last Insurrection cost so much of the best English Blood that those of the Welch Blood thought the State so much weakned by it that they might venture to wrastle a Fall with them and accordingly they put in for the recovery of their antient Liberties being incouraged by one Owen Glendour a private Gentleman of more then ordinary Reputation amongst them who mov'd with the sense of a particular Grudge of his own incited them to a general Defiance of the English And first setting upon the Lord Gray of Ruthin who had recover'd certain Lands from him at Law took him Prisoner and repossess'd himself of them after this storming the Castle of Wigmore he took the great Earl of Ma●ch Prisoner the true Heir of the Crown after the death of King Richard and prevail'd so far that had he been as skilful in keeping as he was in getting of Victories he might have made himself Master of that Greatness as would have been as much above his Enemies Prevention as his own Ambition King Henry hearing that Mortimer was taken caus'd it to be bruted abroad that it was done with his own Consent and thereupon refus'd to redeem him which so incens'd Henry sirnamed Hotspur Son of the first Earl of Northumberland of the Family of the Peircy's who had married his Daughter that he together with his Uncle the Earl of Worcester went over to Glendour and entring into a Tripartite League with him agreed to Depose the Deposer and divide the whole Kingdom betwixt them Wales that is all the Land beyond Severn Westward was to be the Principality of Glendour The Countries from Trent Northward was the Lot of the Peircy's in memory whereof the same being in the Geographical Form of a half Moon they have since given the Crescent for the Cognizance All the rest betwixt Severn and Trent Eastward and Southward was consign'd to Mortimer as his Portion Thus the Dragon the Lion and the Wolf conspired against the Antelope as he before against the Hart his Soveraign and taught by himself they assaulted him with Arms and Articles the last perhaps more dangerous then the first by how much they fought him at his own Weapons The first Article was That he had by his Letters procured Burgesses and Knights of Parliament to be chosen unduly which being one of the Arrows out of his own Quiver with which he had wounded King Richard before troubled him not a little to see it return'd back upon himself The second Article was That he had falsified the Oath made at his first landing when he swore he came over for no other end but to recover his Inheritance The third was That he had not only taken Arms against his Soveraign but having imprison'd him took first his Crown away and after his Life And lastly That ever since his death he had detain'd the Crown from the true Heir Edmund Earl of March their Allie for which Causes they defied him and vowed his Destruction This was the second Earth-quake in this Kings Reign and so much more terrible then the former in that it shuck the very Foundation of all his Greatness by the noise of their Calumniations wherewith as they batter'd him several wayes so they left him the prospect of nothing but dismal Confusion to ensue The Welch goaded him on the one side the Scots on the other those English of Mortimer's party allarm'd him every way But he that wanted not Confidence whilst he wanted a Title to aspire to the Crown when it was uncertain whether he should ever get it or no having got it could not want Courage to keep it and if he were able being
but a private man to get it from a King why should he not believe himself more able being now a King to keep it from private men especially since he that had the Right in the first place had resign'd it up to him and he that had it in the second place had so far joyn'd in the final recovery of it as to swear Allegiance to him at the time of that Resignation These Considerations were of that weight that taking warning by King Richard never to tempt any to forsake him by forsaking himself he resolved to fall up●n them before they united At Shrewsbury the Peircy's and he met they being back'd by divers Scots he by as many English himself lead up that Wing which was against the Earl of Worcester his Son Henry the Prince of Wales that against Hotspur this as it was the first Battel the Prince was ever in so here his Father taught him how to Rule by shewing him how to fight In either of which noble qualities there was never any Prince proud to be an apter Scholar then he for he slew no less then thirty six men that day with his own hand as those who followed him observ'd and as one that resolv'd to be anointed with Blood before he came to be anointed with Oyl he prest into the midst of the Battel where he receiv'd several wounds but one more remarkable then the rest by an Arrow in his Face which either he had not time or patience to pluck out till he had dispatch'd his Rival Hotspur who was the only Enemy that vyed with him for hear of Youth and Courage After this Worcester and the Douglas submitted to be his Prisoners the Day being so clearly gain'd by his single Conduct that Fortune seems to have given it to him as an earnest of those greater Victories he was to have afterward The fame of this signal overthrow made all Glendour's Forces scatter ere the King could arrive upon the place to fight them leaving him so much more a Victor by having no Victory For that in truth to have beaten him upon a fair dispute might have been understood to have been the effect of unequal Power whereas the making him fly before he came near him shews what apprehension t'other had of his invincible Courage After this there was some trouble but no great disturbance given this King by the French the Attempts they made being either so faint or successless that they rather gave his Successor an Invitation then a Provocation to invade them afterward The Resentments the Earl of Northumberland had of the death of his Son and Brother put him upon renewing the Rebellion being back'd by the Arch-bishop of York Mowbray Earl-Marshal and others but their Forces being disbanded by a trick the two last were taken and having justly forfeited their Heads for that they had no more Brains in them then to believe the King would send a General against them of their own Faction they were executed accordingly but Northumberland himself escap'd into Scotland being reserv'd it seems by Destiny for a Nobler Death he and the Lord Bardolph being both slain afterwards at Branham Moor the last Battel that was fought in this Kings time who being born to live no longer then whiles he was in Turmoyls and being inclin'd to make some expiation for all the Noble Blood he had shed to make good his Usurpation design'd at last to joyn Valour and Devotion in one Action together which before he had used but singly and accordingly took upon him the Crusado intending to submit to the Decree of Destiny which had appointed as he was told by a Figure-Caster that he should dye in Jerusalem Neither could he want a sufficient Train of Voluntiers there being so many in that Ignorant Age who were of the same Opinion with him that it was happier to perish in that Holy War then escape This made the Prince his Son who till this time had given himself the Liberty to commit such Extravagancies as ill became any man but least a Prince dishonouring himself no less by the dissolute Company he kept then by the Debaucheries they ingaged him in begin to take up in expectation of the Succession and submitting to his Father and the Laws so govern'd himself that the People might perceive he was at length become fit to govern them but whiles preparations were making for the Kings great Voyage to his long home at Jerusalem as he thought the Journey prov'd neither so long nor chargeable as was expected an Apoplectick fit seizing him whiles he was at his Devotion in the Abby of Westminster whereupon he was carried in immediately into the Abbots House and there unwittingly put to Bed in that Chamber which they call'd Jerusalem which as soon as he understood and came thereby to unriddle the place of his Death he was so wounded with the context that he never recover'd it but languishing dyed not long after having first had a taste of Divine vengeance in seeing himself deposed in a manner by his own Son before he was dead who finding him in one of his Fits and as 't was thought breathless took the Crown from off his Pillow where he kept it all his Sickness as that the very sight whereof was a kind of restorative to him which however it was return'd again with unfeigned humility yet the miss of it but for that moment only gave such a check to his Conscience that before he could bequeath it to his Son for good and all as we say he could not but acknowledge how little Right he had to it and dying submitted his Title to him that is the only Judge of injured Kings HONI · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE VNE AN PLVS The only men that were jealous of him as of his Father before him were the Clergy who suspecting he had a mind to turn Priest that is to assume all Spiritual Power into his own hands as questionless his Father design'd and become as Henry the Eighth afterwards Papa Patriae or that at least he would take some of the choicest Jewels out of their Miters to place in his Crown there being a Bill then depending in Parliament for devesting them of their Temporalities they consulted how they might divert so impendent a mischief which seem'd easier to prevent then resist and knowing by the Temperament of their own Constitutions that there was no more powerful a Temptation then that which at once gratifies a mans Ambition Avarice and Revenge they found a way to divert him from the wrong they feared to be done to them by ingaging him in a projection that was to do himself right The principal mannager of this commendable Projection was the politick Arch-bishop of Canterbury who held the Rudder of State at that time and could turn the Vessel as he pleas'd he taking occasion in the very first Parliament that was call'd by this King to start the Right of England to the Crown of
Falconbridge who with six hundred men at Arms had all the while stood conceal'd to take the first advantage offer'd them advanc'd upon the same mistake to reinforce the Battel who seeming in the Night more then they were for indeed the English suppos'd it the whole Body of the French Army return'd again upon them the King not knowing how to disperse them commanded all the Prisoners to be forthwith slain save some few Persons of Note who for common security were bound back to back This made it a bloody Victory indeed that look'd more like a Miracle before there being ten thousand of the Enemy slain and if we may believe Caxton not above twenty six of the English side P. Aemilius their own Historian saith not above ten private Souldiers two Knights and two Lords which were the Duke of York and the Duke of Suffolk that bore no proportion to the five hundred Knights and twenty six Lords lost on the other side amongst whom the Daulphin himself may be reckon'd for one though he died not on the place for struck with the apprehensions of this loss he surviv'd it a very little time after However the English got only the glory of being Victors but not a foot of ground more then they had before Providence having so ordained that King Henry should only gain a Name in Arms by his first Expedition that upon his next Arrival they might the more contentedly give him up the Crown and with it her that dazled his Eyes more then all the Jewels he found there the incomparable Lady Katherine to whose Excellency of Beauty was added that of Innocence which made her yet more desirable for a Wife then the other made her for a Mistress Not long after this Battel he return'd home as if to give and take breath and during the time of his stay here the Emperour Sigismund attended by the Arch-bishop of Rheimes gave him a personal Visit in hope to have made a Peace betwixt the two Kings at least 't was so pretended but time that is the best Expositor of all great Actions shews his coming to have had some further design in it otherwise his Mediation had not ended as it did in a League Offensive and Defensive leaving King Henry to follow Providence in the pursuit of his predestin'd Conquest who upon his second Expedition invaded Normandy and having in a short time taken in the City of Caen with most of the lesser Villes came at last to that proud Town of Roan which spent him some time longer then he expected in taking it But it prov'd not time lost for the Essay they made of their own Strength and Courage being at the beginning of the Seige no less then two thousand Persons in it most able to make Defence gave the World such proof of his that he gain'd much more in Interest then he lost in recovering the Principal there being surrendred to him upon the Fame of taking in that great City Hunflew Munster Devilliers Ewe New-castle Vernon Mant La Roch Gwyon and indeed the best if not the most part of that rich Province the ancient Inheritance of his Progenitors That which contributed much to his Success was the difference betwixt the new Daulphin and the old Duke of Burgundy The first as much disdaining that the other should have the Government of the King who was taken with a frenzy that made him incapable of Business as the other that he should have the Government of the Kingdom either thinking himself immediately concerned in the danger of the others Power neglected the Publick to abet their Private Factions The Queen Mother who could not be a Neuter took part with the Duke into whose hands she put the King purposely to curb the Daulphins pride that had most insolently seiz'd and detain'd her Jewels Plate and Money contesting for the Superiority without regard to him that put fair for subduing both But the noise of King Henry's unexpected Success in subduing almost all Normandy awaken'd them and now when 't was too late they reconcil'd to each other in hopes to drive back the English But finding that they had taken rooting in too many places to be suddenly over-turn'd the Duke of Burgundy proposes a Personal Treaty betwixt the two Kings whither came King Henry attended by his Brothers the Dukes of Clarence and Gloucester his Cosin the Duke of Exeter his Uncle the Cardinal Beauford the Earls of March and Salisbury and a thousand Men at Arms being met by the Queen Regent and her Governour the Duke of Burgundy the Earl of St. Paul and several other Persons of the greatest Quality as well Ladies as Lords who were obliged to attend her Amongst the rest and therefore indeed did the rest come that they might be as Foyls to her appear'd the Princess Katherine design'd as it fell out after to conquer the Conqueror A Lady of that Perfection both of Body and Mind that had she not been the Daughter of a King she had yet been fit to be the Wife of one No sooner did King Henry look upon her but his Heart seem'd to melt within his Breast no Arms being proof against the Darts she shot yet his Wisdom had so much the better of his Affection that he conceal'd his Passion both from her and the Observation of the French Lords till the Duke of Burgundy trifling with him upon presumption of her Charms provok'd him to give a Reply more like an English then a French King and created such a Distast as broke off the present Treaty Happy had it been for that Duke if he had closed with him although his Enemy rather then agree as he did with his Friend the Daulphin who finding his turn serv'd by him in breaking off the Treaty having no further use of his Authority rewarded his Service with a Poniard which Butchery being perform'd in the view of all the Peers of France was look'd on like a piece of Justice rather then of Tyranny in respect the Duke himself had but a little before caus'd Lewis Duke of Orleance to be taken off in the like barbarous manner Successor to this slain Duke both in his Estate and Authority was his Son Philip Earl of Carolois a Politick Prince and Temperate who finding it would be an unequal Contest between him and the Daulphin if he should avowedly indeavour to revenge his Fathers blood wisely promoted Overtures of Peace betwixt the two Crowns in order to the doing that Execution by another Hand which his own was too weak to perform Ambassadours were thereupon sent to King Henry who having been all this while a Martyr to Love was no longer able to indure the Flames within his Breast but giving it vent told the Ambassadours he would not credit their Propositions unless the Lady Katherine would joyn with them whose Innocency he knew would never abuse him Notice hereof being given to the Queen the Bishop of Arras was dispatch'd away to signifie to him that if he would come to
Troyes she should be there to be espoused to him and with her he should have the Assurance of the Crown of France after the Decease of her Father and to gain the more Credit the Bishop secretly deliver'd him a Letter from the Princess her own hand which contained in it so much sweetness as had been enough to have made any other man but himself have surfeited with Joy his happiness being now so full and compleat that he had nothing beyond what he enjoyed to hope for Upon his Marriage with her he was published Regent of the Kingdom and Heir apparent to the Crown the Articles being published in both Realms and the two Kings and all their Nobility Sworn to the observance of them only the Daulphin stood out in utter Defiance both of his Right and Power Against him therefore the two Kings his Father and Brother together with the King of Scots who was newly arrived the young Duke of Burgundy and the Prince of Orange the Dukes of Clarence Gloucester and Bedford and twenty one Earls forty five Barons and Knights and Esquires sans nombre advanc'd with an Army of French English Scotch and Irish to the number of six hundred thousand if the Historians of that time may be credited and having taken in all the Towns and Places that denied to yield they return'd to Paris where King Henry the Articles being ratified the second time and a Counterpart sent into England began to exercise his Regency by Coyning of Money with the Arms of England and France on it placing and displacing of Officers making new Laws and Edicts and lastly awarding Process against the Daulphin to appear at the Marble Table to answer for the Murther of the Duke of Burgundy But being willing to shew his Queen how great a King he was before she brought him that Kingdom he left his Brother Clarence his Lieutenant General there and brought her over into England where he spent some time in the Administration of Justice and performing such Acts of Peace as spoke him no less expert in the knowledge of governing then in that of getting a Kingdom But he had not been long here before he received the sad News of the death of his Brother Clarence who betrayed by the Duke of Alansons Contrivance into an Ambuscade was slain together with the Earls of Tankervile Somerset Suffolk and Perch and about two thousand Common Souldiers whereupon he deputed the Earl of Mortaine in his room and not long after went back again himself with his Brother Bedford to reinforce the War taking in all the Fortresses in the Isle of France in Lovaine Bry and Champagne during which time the Daulphin was not idle but industrious to regain Fortunes savour if it were possible made many bold Attempts upon several places in possession of the English But finding the Genius of our Nation to have the Predominancy over that of his own he diverted his Fury upon the Duke of Burgundy betwixt whom and King Henry he put this difference That as he dreaded the one so he hated the other Accordingly he laid Seige to Cosney a Place not very considerable in it self but as it was a Town of the Duke of Burgundy's King Henry was so concern'd to relieve it beyond any of his own that he marched Night and Day to get up to the Enemy and making over-hasty Journeys over-heat himself with unusual Travel and fell so sick that he was fain to rest himself at Senlis and trust to the Care of his Brother the Duke of Bedford to prosecute the Design who relieved the Town and forced the Daulphin to retreat as he thought a great Looser by the Seige but it prov'd quite otherwise For the loss of the Town was nothing in comparison of the loss of King Henry who died not long after and which made his Death the more deplorable was That he no sooner left the World but Fortune left the English whereof having some Prophetick Revelation 't is thought the knowledge thereof might not be the least reason of shortning his Dayes by adding to the violence of his Distemper For 't is credibly reported that at the News of the Birth of his Son Henry born at Windsor himself being then in France even wearied with continual Victories he cryed out in a Prophetick Rapture Good Lord Henry of Monmouth shall small time Reign and get much and Henry of Windsor shall long time Reign and lose all but Gods will be done Which saying has given occasion to some to magnifie his Memory above all the Kings that were before him not to say all that came after him in that he was in some sense both King Priest and Prophet HONI · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE A Prince of excellent Parts in their kind though not of kindly Parts for a Prince being such as were neither sit for the Warlike Age he was born in nor agreeable to the Glory he was born to but such rather as better became a Priest then a Prince So that the Title which was sometimes given to his Father with relation to his Piety might better have been applyed to the Son with reference to his that he was the Prince of Priests Herein only was the difference betwixt them That the Religion of the one made him bold as a Lion that of the other made him as meek as a Lamb. A temper neither happy for the times nor himself for had he had less Phlegme and more Cholar less of the Dove-like Innocence and more of the Serpentine subtilty 't is probable he had not only been happier whilst he liv'd but more respected after he was dead whereas now notwithstanding all his Indulgence to the Church and Church-men there was none of them so grateful as to give him after he was murther'd Christian Burial but left him to be interr'd without Priest or Prayer without Torch or Taper Mass or Mourner indeed so without any regard to his Person and Pre-eminence that if his Obsequies were any whit better then that which holy Writ calls the Burial of an Ass yet were they such that his very Competitor Edward the Fourth who denied him the Rights of Majesty living thought him too much wronged being dead that to him some kind of satisfaction he was himself at the charge of building him a Monument The beginning of his Reign which every Body expected to have been the worst and like to prove the most unsuccessful part in respect of his Minority being but Nine Months old when he was crown'd happen'd to be the best and most prosperous there being a plentiful stock of brave men left to spend upon who behaved themselves so uprightly and carefully that it appear'd the Trust repos'd in them by the Father had made a strong Impression of Love and Loyalty to the Son The Duke of Bedford had the Regency of France the Duke of Gloucester the Government of England the Duke of Exeter and the Cardinal Beauford had the Charge of his
next Parliament declared Protector only and so moderate as to permit his two great Supporters the Earl of Salisbury then Lord Chancellor and the Earl of Warwick Captain of Callice to share with him for a while in the power who making up a kind of Triumvirate for the time being placed and displaced whom they pleased Upon which the King foreseeing the evil Consequences was moved with a condescention beneath his Majesty to offer an Accommodation which not taking effect both sides prepared to begin the War afresh which ended not with themselves The principal Persons for Quality Power and Interest that stuck to the King were the young Duke of Somerset the Dukes of Exeter and Buckingham the Earls of Oxford Northumberland Shrewsbury Pembroke Ormond and Wiltshire the Lords Clifford Gray Egremount Dacres Beaumont Scales Awdley Wells c. who having muster'd all the Forces they could make incamped near Northampton Thither came the Earl of March Son and Heir to the Duke of York his Father being then in Ireland to give them Battel assisted by the Duke of Norfolk the Earls of Warwick Salisbury Huntington Devon Essex Kent Lincoln c. all men of great Name and Power with whom were the Lords Faulconbridge Scroop Stamford Stanley c. and so fierce was the Encounter betwixt them that in less then two hours above ten thousand men lost their Lives amongst whom the principal on the Kings side were the Duke of Buckingham the Earl of Shrewsbury the Lords Egremount and Beaumont the unfortunate King being made Prisoner the second time who by the Earl of Warwick was conveighed to the Tower Upon which the Queen taking with her the Prince and the young Duke of Somerset fled The rumour of which Victory brought the Duke of York over who laying aside all disguises in the next Parliament call'd for that purpose p●aced himself on the Throne and with great Assurance laid open his claim to the Crown as Son and Heir to the Lady Anne Daughter and Heir to Roger Mortimer Earl of March Son and Heir of Philippa sole Daughter and Heir of Lyonel Duke of Clarence third Son of Edward the Third and elder Brother to John of Gaunt Father of Henry the Fourth who was Grandfather to him that as he said now untruly stiled himself King by the Name of Henry the Sixth This though it was no feign'd Title but known to all the Lords yet such was their prudence that they left the King de facto to enjoy his Royalty during his Life and declar'd t'other only Heir apparent with this Caution for the Peace of the Kingdom That if King Henry 's Friends should attempt the disanulling of that that then the Duke should have the present Possession But this nothing daunted the Queen who having raised eighteen thousand men in Scotland resolv'd to urge Fortune once more and accordingly they met the Yorkists at Wakefield where to mock her with a present Victory Fortune gave her the Duke of York's Life who vainly had stil'd himself Protector of the Kingdom being not able it seems to protect himself but pity it was he could not save his innocent Son the Earl of Rutland a hopeful Youth of not above Twelve years old who being brought into the Army only to see fashions was inhumanly murther'd by the Lord Clifford kneeling upon his knees and begging for his life that angry Lord making him a Sacrifice as he said to appease the injured Ghost of his Father murther'd by t'others Father which Cruelty was fully and suddenly repaid by the Earl of March who in the Battel at Mortimer's Cross slew three thousand eight hundred of the Lancastrian Forces and having put the Earl of Ormond to slight cut off the head of Owen Tuthor who had married King Henry's Mother which it seems did not so weaken or dishearten them but that they recover'd themselves and took their full revenge at the Battel of Barnet-heath where the Queen was again Victorious But such was the activity of the Earl of March that before she could recover London he came up to her and passing by entred the City in Triumph before her whereby he had so far the Start in point of Opinion that he was forthwith elected King by the Name of Edward the Fourth leaving King Henry so much more miserable in that he lost not his Life with his Majesty But herein consisted his happiness That he was the only Prince perhaps of the World that never distinguish'd betwixt Adversity and Prosperity being so intent upon his Devotion as to think nothing Adversity that did not interrupt that Nature having rather fitted him for a Priest then a King and perhaps rather for a Sacrifice then a Priest that he might not otherwise dye then as a Martyr that had lived all his time so like a Confessor HONI · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE The sudden end of these his Competitors gave K. Edward as sudden an end to all his Troubles though not to his Wars For having setled peace at home he was provok'd to take Revenge upon his Enemies abroad falling first upon the King of France after upon the King of Scots but they thinking themselves as unable to grapple with him as two Foxes with the Lion bought their Peace and avoided the ill Consequences of his Fury till Death the common Foe of Mankind made him turn another way forcing him to end the Race of his Fortune as he began it like the Great Augustus Caesar who at the same Age succeeded his slaughter'd Predecessor and by a like Fate was disappointed of his intended Successor HON · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE This was as much as Humane Policy could do but in vain doth he strive to preserve what Heaven had decreed to overthrow Having by his Will declar'd his ambitious Brother Gloucester Protector of both the Children he was resolv'd to let this act the part of King and no King no longer then till his Tyranny could support it self by its own Authority who having to do with the Mother a weak Woman for to her from whom they received their Lives was these helpless Princes to owe their Deaths he had that respect to her Frailty as to keep time with her slow pac'd fears in deferring his intended Paracide till she that was their Nurse thought it fit time to bring them to bed Unhappy Youths to whom the Tenderness of their Mother must prove no less fatal than the Cruelty of their Uncle Had she in the first place Insisted upon the keeping them herself as what fitter Guardian then their own Mother or had she not in the last place Rashly consented to the taking off that Guard which her Husband had so providently placed about them or had at least suffer'd the King to have continued for a while longer at that distance he was when his Father dyed where by his Education and Acquaintance he might have as well secured the Peoples Faith as he was secur'd by
to him and rais'd the Expectations of his future Successes to that height that the Emperour Maximilian who had before submitted though Lord of no less then eight Kingdoms to serve him in the condition of a private Souldier for the wages of One hundred Crowns a day now as some report profer'd to surrender his Empire and Dutchy of Milan to him and the King of France resolving to purchase his Friendship at any rate condition'd to pay yearly to him and his Successors Kings of England for ever Forty six thousand Crowns de Soleile and twenty four Sols Turnois with One thousand five hundred Crowns more as a Tribute out of the Salt of Brovage as may appear by the Agreement Anno 1527. the confirmation of which Treaty cost his Son Charles after the death of his Father who did not long survive the Composition a Million of Crowns more Now if his Enemies had such dread of him what esteem must we imagine the Pope had who owed his Deliverance to him Silver and Gold he had none to tender but such as he had Glorious and Grateful Titles he was very prodigal of For besides that of Liberator Urbis Orbis the Stile of his Ancestor Constantine the Great and therefore though only fit for Henry the Great it being occasional and temporary the Conclave had under consideration such as might be perpetuated to all Ages Some mov'd to have him call'd Defensor Romanae Ecclesiae others propos'd Protector Sedis Apostolicae others again lik'd better to have him stil'd Rex Apostolicus as some Rex Orthodoxus but at last all agreed in that of Defensor Fidei After this he was made Head of the Holy League out of belief That there could no Authority Superior to his be interpos'd either for the Conservation of good men in Peace or repressing those that are ill by War for so are the words of the Fourteenth Article of the League This shews that he was so much greater then any of the Kings were before him by how much they only gave Laws at home but he throughout all Christendom disposing War and Peace as made most to the advantage of his own People who were thereupon so well satisfied with the Conduct of his Government that his Will seems to have been the Supream Law For as he needed to have said no more to his Parliaments then as one of the Roman Emperors cited by Suetonius was used to say to the Senate Scitis quid velim quibus Opus habeo So they could say no more to him nor indeed any Parliament to any King then was declar'd by their giving up themselves and their Liberties wholly to him in that Act of highest Trust and Confidence that ever Subjects pass'd when they consented that he should in case he had no Issue of his own dispose the Imperial Diadem of this Realm as his Highness pleas'd by Will or Patent Thus great was this King whiles he continued to be himself keeping the Rains of Government in his own hands but after he suffer'd himself to be govern'd by others who took advantage of his to serve their own Lusts like one drawn from his Center his motions were so irregular and the intreagues of State so perplext that we cannot wonder at those Disorders which followed to the great interruption of his Peoples peace and prosperity but much more of his own whilst that which private men esteem their greatest happiness fell out to be his greatest curse the enjoyment of a most vertuous discreet and loving Wise who being a Lady of that quick-sight that she look'd thorough all his great Ministers Ambitions and occasionally detected their Designs was undone by the same way she hoped to preserve her self and him For the jealous Cardinal Wolsey his great Minister doubting that she might interpose her self betwixt the King and him as the Moon betwixt the Sun and the Earth and thereby deprive him of those warm influences of Grace from whence his power took life he design'd to blast her as it were by Lightning from Heaven or rather by a Spark from Hell casting a Scruple into the Kings Conscience which quickly set it on fire upon the apprehension of being guilty of the incestuous Sin of knowing his Brothers Wife This was so craftily managed that it was not known for a while out of what Quiver the Arrow came but a Treaty being had about a Marriage of the King of France with the Lady Mary the Kings Daughter by her it was so order'd that the Bishop of Tarbe the principal Commissioner on that side should make some doubt of the Legitimacy of the Princess thereby to bring on the Question of Incest This though it was urged with somewhat more then usual vehemency yet his Authority not being such as to move the King much at that time The Cardinal secretly ingaged the Bishop of Lincoln his Majesties Confessor to press him farther upon it knowing well as he acknowledged afterward that whatever was once put into the Kings head would hardly ever be got out again nothing doubting withal but that it was in his power at any time to conjure the Devil down again as soon as he had done his Service and after be had tumbled the Queen down or at least brought her into a necessity of making use of his Friendship wherein he had two great ends First to flatter his great Patron the French King with the hopes in case of a Divorce of marrying his fair Sister the Dutchess of Alanson to the King whose Al●yance was then of great Importance to that Crown Secondly to perform a very real Service to his distressed Chief the Pope who be●ng now more persecuted by the Emperour then before by the King of France and at that p●esent in Duress might possibly be releas'd by the very menace of such a Divorce as this the Emperor both as Uncle to the Queen and as Competitor with the French King for the Universal Monarchy being moved by Affection and Interest to prevent so violent a breach in his Allyance But as a Mine when it is sprung doth oftentimes other kind of Execution then they who fire it intended it should so happen'd it in this Case For instead of making a small breach upon the Kings Peace that might amount to no more but the causing a temporary abstinence from the Queens Bed de praesenti only to which 't was hop'd she her self might give occasion by a voluntary Retirement into some Cloyster where she might remain civilly dead till his Excellency the Cardinal made up the breach again it begat such a rupture in his Thoughts that he could have no rest and as one sick at heart thought himself not safe in the hands of any one Physician neither indeed of all those that he had at home till he had the Opinions of those in all the Universities abroad which made the business so publick that Luther who had a little before set up for himself finding there might be a good
Conclusion from so bad a Beginning by making way for some Protestant Lady of that Country that might advance the Reformation begun by him there he vext the Question a long while and finding that the Pope over-aw'd by the Emperour durst not consent to a Divorce he to scandalize him the more set forth by many learned Arguments the unlawfulness of the Marriage and so nettled King Henry that the Pope doubting the effects of his Impatience propos'd by way of Expedient though but faintly to Gregory Cassalis the English Resident then at Rome that he would permit him ut aliam duceret Uxorem which in plain English was That if the King pleased he would allow him to have two Wives at once Now whether it were that the King doubted his power and thought he could not make good what he promised for that he could not make that Marriage out which he had already to be either lawful or unlawful so as to relieve him or dismiss it Or whether he had as is more probable a clear Sentiment of the Popes slight Opinion of him in making so unusual not to say unlawful a Proposal to him is not certain but certain it is he never forgave the Affront till by vertue of his own proper power he had divorced himself from his Authority which the Cardinal labouring to uphold by his Legatine power out of hope of being himself Pope nor only lost himself in the attempt but drew all he Clergy who took part with him into a Premunire Of whose Error his wise Servant Cromwel took the advantage making his Masters fall the occasion of his own rising by whom the thoroughly humbled Convocation we●e perswaded to petition the King for their pardon under the Title and Stile of Ecclesiae Cleri Anglicani Protector supremum Caput which rais'd a greater dispute upon the Supremacy not long after then was before upon the point of Divorce For the Bishop of Rochester who by reason of his great learning and sanctity of Life was a leading man refusing to subscribe the aforesaid Petition unless some words might be added by way of explanation of the Kings Supremacy Cromwel took the Defence thereof upon himself and by advice with Bishop Cranmer there were many Arguments brought to justifie the same both from the Authority of Kingship in general de Communi Jure by vertue of that Divine Law that has given the stile of a Royal Priesthood to all anointed Kings and to which by a parallel Case the Pope himself did not long after give more then a seeming allowance For Clement the Seventh at the interview of Marselles when he was urged by some that desired Reformation and prest for the liberty of receiving the Sacrament in both kinds by an Argument taken from the custome of the Kings of France who alwayes received both Elements he answered That it was a peculiar priviledge by which Kings were differenced from other men as being anointed with the Unction of Priesthood as likewise from the particular Prerogative of the Kings of this Isle de proprio Jure or by the Common Law of this Land which was of ancienter date then any Prescription made by the Pope having been ratified by the Sanction of several Acts of Parliament that had declar'd all Spiritual Jurisdiction to be inherent in the Crown This Doctrine of his wanted not its Use for the King had this immediate benefit of the Dispute to be restored to the Annates and First-fruits of the Bishopricks and now the Bond of his Holiness 's Authority being thus loosed one priviledge dropt out after another till at length they not only divested him of the profit but of the honour of his Fatherhood forbidding any to call him any more * Anciently written Pa. Pa. i. e. Pater Patriarcharum Papa or Pater for that there could be but one Lord and Father but only Bishop of Rome These Annates as they were some of the principal Flowers of the Triple Crown and could not well be pluck'd off without defacing the Sacred Tyara so the whole Conclave took such an alarm at the loss of them that apprehending no less then a total defection to follow they most peremptorily cited the King himself to appear at Rome under pain of Excommunication This was thought to be so unreasonable an Indignity offered to his Majesty in respect it was neither convenient for him to abandon his Kingdom by going so far in Person nor any way decent to trust the Secrets of his Conscience to a pragmatical Proctor that the Parliament who were conven'd to consider of the matter thought it but necessary to put a stop to all Appeals to be made out of the Realm under the penalty of Premunire and pray'd his Majesty without more ado to appoint a Court of Delegates here at home to determine the Cause Upon which the Marriage being not long after declared void Cromwell hastned on the Match with the Lady Anne Bulloigne but the Court of Rome judging the first Marriage good and the last void anathematiz'd all that were assistant in the Divorce and to shew how much they were incens'd by the precipitation of their Sentence they concluded it in one only which by the usual Form could not be finish'd in less then three Consistories This began that Fiery tryal which followed not long after wherein we may say his Holiness himself prov'd to be the very first Martyr dying immediately after the pronunciation of that great Curse as one blasted by the Lightning of his own Thunder whereby the Church Universal being without a Head The Reformists here took that opportunity to provide for their own by declaring the King Supream Head in Earth of the Church of England for the support of which Dignity they vested in the Crown the First-fruits of all Benefices as they had before of all Bishopricks Dignities and Offices whatever spiritual Setting forth in what manner Bishops Suffragans should be nominated and appointed and what their Priviledges and Authorities should be In defence of which their proceedings the King himself wrote an excellent Book or at least it pass'd for his De Potestate Christianorum Regum in suis Ecclesiis contra Pontificis Tyrannidem c. But there were many however and those of no small note who continued so obstinate in their Popish Principles that they could neither be moved by his Pen nor his Penalties to submit chusing rather to part with their Blood then their Blessing And whether they were real or mistaken Martyrs or not rather Sufferers then Martyrs I will not take upon me to say it being as hard for others to judge them as for themselves to judge the thing they died for Truth and Treason being in those dayes Qualities so like one another that they were scarcely to be discern'd as appears by the nice Cases of those two I think the most eminent persons of all that were so unhappy as to suffer for setting up the Papal above the Regal Authority the
thought the fittest Person to be tampered with for regaining the Point or at least to keep all quiet there whilst the King assisted by the Emperour with whom he had newly entred into a strict League sought more considerable Glory in the Invasion of France whither he resolved to go again in Person where notwithstanding that King out of dread of his power had summon'd all his Feises and brought together his Arrereban as they call them to oppose him he took the Town of Bulloigne and had undoubtedly inlarged his Conquests to the very Walls of Paris had not the Emperour privately patch'd up a Peace without him Upon notice whereof he thought fit to return home to reinforce the War in Scotland where though he did not much yet 't was more perhaps then was expected at that time For notwithstanding their conjunction with the French who entred upon one side whiles they prest in on the other both setting upon him like two Mastiffs upon a Lion yet he only rowsing himself shook them off again and pursuing them home to their own doors did them so much more mischief then they were able to do to him that they call'd for quarter choosing rather to treat then fight upon which there ensued a Peace the Conditions whereof whoe're examines will find that he knew how to yield as well as how to conquer giving them the reputation of having back their good Town of Bulloigne but they were to pay him for it Eight hundred thousand Crowns and the possession was to be his till the last payment were made And now having as it were tired himself with Victory it was time to retire into the consideration of taking his eternal rest having seen many of his brave men go before him as the valiant Lord Poynings the Hardy Duke of Suffolk his constant Favorite the Noble Lord Ferrers of Chartley the brave Lord Grey c. And it being now the Eight and thirtieth year of his Reign and the Six and fiftieth of his Age labouring under an unusual heaviness of Body and perhaps a greater of Mind having made Peace with all Enemies but the Scots and Pope having dis-joynted the Frame of Religion and drove away most of those that should put it in frame again having by the Severity of his Justice taken off two Queens two Cardinals for Pool stood condemn'd though not apprehended three Dukes Marquisses Earls and Earls Sons twelve Barons and Knights eighteen which could not but irritate much the Temporal Nobility and of Bishops Abbots Priors Monks Priests which as much incenst the Clergy no less then Seventy seven having offended his Roman Catholick Subjects by disowning the See of Rome and his Protestant Subjects by rejecting the Reformation he was brought at last to that unhappy period to leave the Crown to a Child whose condition was like to prove as uncertain under the Government of a Protector as the Kingdom under his which in case of want of Issue of his Body was to descend to his two Sisters successively of whose Legitimacy Religion and Title there were as many scruples before they parted from the Soveraignty as ever their Father conceiv'd in point of State Conscience or Honour before he parted from their Mothers So from the Catastrophe of his whole Story we may bring this remark That as no man could measure his Happiness by his Greatness so neither can they take any scantling of his Greatness by any thing that the World calls Happiness it being very true which the Marquiss of Dorset told him very plainly and not unpleasantly at a time when he was ill dispos'd to hear a Jest and not well prepared to be serious to wit That no man could be truly merry that had above one Wife in his Bed one Friend in his Bosom and one Faith in his Heart HONI · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE Now whether his Lady that had been the Wife of a King before did while she was alive put him upon any hopes of being so now for ambitious Men like seal'd Doves mount the higher for being blinded is not certain but certain it is that as soon as she died which was not long after he resum'd the confidence to approach so near the Throne as to Court the Lady Elizabeth the second time now grown a little riper for consent then when he first mov'd the Question to her Neither was it carried so secretly but that his Brother had an insight into the whole practice and at last discover'd the whole Plot but conceal'd his knowledge of it either out of pity or prudence as loath to ruin him with the hazard of losing himself or as doubting perhaps that the Sword of Justice was not long enough to reach him at least not sharp enough to cut thorough the knot of the whole Conspiracy But as Fate never fails undoing the man she has determin'd to destroy and when she falls upon him makes the first stroke at his head so happen'd it in this unhappy Lords case who being unexpectedly undermin'd was blown up by a Train that seems to have taken fire as it were by Lightning from Heaven his Treason being first detected out of the Pulpit and the Protector his Brother so prest by an eloquent Sermon of Bishop Latimer to Impeach him that he being not able to clear him was in some sence obliged to clear himself by a Speech which prov'd as ominous as it was obvious saying at the same time he caus'd him to be apprehended That he would do and suffer Justice And so he did when he sign'd the Warrant for his Execution after the Parliament found him Guilty with his own Hand A singular piece of Self-denial and such as is rarely found in Story there being very few that so much prefer the publick before their own private Interest as not to spare their own flesh and blood However looking so like Revenge it was by most men judg'd unnatural and taking no less from the honour of his Justice then t'other intended to have taken from the Prerogative of his Honour so shuck the frame of his Authority that it broke in pieces presently after and both Factions of Papists and Protestants falling off from him he was expos'd to the cunning of Warwick and the scorn of the Marquiss of Dorset his most unreconcileable Enemies The Papists quit him as believing the Obligation ceas'd by which when he ceas'd by whom they were held in having been true to him no otherwise but for his Brothers sake only The Protestants fail'd him because they doubted he might fail them for how could they think he would give them any Assistance that had given to his own Brother so little Thus when two great Trees grow up together out of one and the same Stock we see that the cutting down of the one commonly indangers the blowing down of the other which remaining single and expos'd to every storm cannot stand unless it have a firm ground as well as a spreading Root Neither
was it long that the Protector bore up after his Brothers Fall the great care he took to build his * From his Tittle call'd Somerset-house House being no less fatal to him then the little care he had to support his Family whiles the Stones of those Churches Chappels and other Religious Houses that he demolish'd for it made the cry out of the Walls so loud that himself was not able to indure the noise the People ecchoing to the defamation and charging him with the guilt of Sacriledge so furiously that he was forced to quit the place and retire with the King to Windsor leaving his Enemies in possession of the strength of the City as well as the affections of the Citizens who by the reputation of their power rather then the power of their repute prevail'd with the King as easily to give him up to publick Justice as he was before prevail'd with to give up his Brother it being no small temptation to the young King to forsake him when he forsook himself so far as to submit to the acknowledgement of that Guilt he was not conscious of The Lawyers charged him with removing Westminster-hall to Somerset-house The Souldiers with detaining their Pay and betraying their Garrisons The States-men with ingrossing all Power and indeavouring to alter the Fundamental Laws and the ancient Religion But he himself charg'd himself with all these Crimes when he humbled himself so far as to ask the Kings pardon publickly which his Adversaries were content he should have having first strip'd him of his Protectorship Treasurership Marshalship and Two thousand pound a year Land of Inheritance But that which made his Fate yet harder was that after having acquitted himself from all Treason against his Prince he should come at last to be condemn'd as a Traytor against his Fellow-Subject whilst the Innocent King labouring to preserve him became the principal Instrument of his Destruction who by reconciling him to his great Adversaries made the Enmity so much the more incompatible who at the same time he gave the Duke his Liberty gave the Earl of Warwick and his Friends the Complement of some new Titles which adding to their Greatness he reasonably judg'd might take from their Envy The Earl himself he created Duke of Northumberland and Lord High Admiral of England and to oblige him yet more married up his eldest Son the Lord Dudley to his own Cosin the second Daughter of the Duke of Somerset whom he gave to him for the more honour with his own hand and made Sir Robert Dudley his fourth and his beloved Son the same that was after made by Queen Elizabeth Earl of Leicester one of the Gentlemen of his Bedchamber And to gratifie the whole Faction he made the Marquiss of Dorset Duke of Suffolk the Lord St. John Earl of Wilts and afterwards Marquiss of Winchester Sir John Russel who was Northamberland's Confident he created Earl of Bedford Sir William Paget another of his Tools he made Lord Paget This the good natur'd King did out of sincere Affection to his Uncle in hopes to reconcile him so thoroughly to Northumberland so that there might be no more room left for Envy or Suspect betwixt them But as there is an invisible Erinnis that attends all Great men to do the drudgery of their Ambition in serving their Revenge and observing the Dictates of their power and pride so it was demonstrable by the most unfortunate issue of this so well intended purpose that by the same way the King hoped to please both he pleas'd neither Somerset thinking he had done too much Northumberland thinking that he had done too little who having drunk so deep a Draught of Honour grew hot and dry and like one fall'n into a State-Dropsie swell'd so fast that Somerset perceiving the Feaver that was upon him resolv'd to let him blood with his own hand And coming one day to his Chamber under the colour of a Visit privately arm'd and well attended with Seconds that waited him in an outward Chamber found him naked in his Bed and supposing he had him wholly in his power began to expostulate his wrongs with him before he would give him the fatal stroke whereby t'other perceiving his intent and being arm'd with a Weapon that Somerset had not a ready fence for an Eloquent Tongue he acquitted himself so well and string'd upon him with so many indearing protestations as kept the point of his Revenge down till it was too late to make any Thrust at him Whereby Northumberland got an advantage he never hop'd for to frame a second Accusation against him so much more effectual then the former by how much he brought him under the forfeiture of Felony as being guilty of imagining to kill a Privy Counsellor for which he was the more worthily condemn'd to lose his Head in that he so unworthily lost his Resolution at the very instant of time when he was to vindicate his too much abus'd Patience thereby betraying those of his Friends that came to second him into the scandal of a Crime which had it succeeded would have pass'd for a magnanimous piece of Justice in cutting off one whom however he was content to spare Providence it seems was not reserving him to die a more ignoble death and by a worse hand The sorrow for his ignominious fall as it much affected the Consumptive King his Nephew who was now left as a Lamb in the keeping of the Wolf the Duke of Northumberland having got as high in Power as Title by ruining the Family of the Seymours so his end which was not long after put an end to the Reformation and made way for the Dudley's to aspire with incredible Ambition and not without hope of setling the Succession of the Crown in themselves For the Duke finding that the King languish'd under a Hectical Distemper and having better assurance then perhaps any one else could from his Son that alwayes attended in his Bedchamber that it was impossible for him to hold out long for Reasons best known to him he cast about how to introduce the far fetch'd Title of his other Son who had married the Lady Jane Gray eldest Daughter to the Duke of Suffolk by the Lady Frances one of the Daughters and Heirs of Charles Brandon by his Wife Mary Queen of France the second Daughter of Henry the Seventh And however this seem'd to be a very remote pretention yet making way to other great Families to come in by the same Line in case her Issue fail'd as to the Earl of Cumberland who had married the other Daughter of Charles Brandon and to the Earl of Darby that had married a Daughter of that Daughter and to the Earl of Pembroke that had married the Lady Jane's second Sister it was back'd with so many well-wishers that it was become not only terrible to the Kingdom but to the King himself However there were two Objections lay in the way the one the preference that ought to be
to the Dutchess Dowager of Suffolk before the Lady Jane her Daughter in case the right of Inheritance was set up The other was that of the two next Heirs Females in case the right of Immediate Succession should take place There was a third also but he thought it not worth the consideration being so far off to wit the Title of the Queen of Scots from the Lady Margaret eldest Daughter of Henry the Seventh which being in the French seem'd to be of less weight then if it had been in the Scots to neither of whom he believ'd the English would ever be brought to submit but all these Difficulties were quickly digested in his ambitious Thoughts The first which was the pretention of the Lady Jane's Mother he hop'd to set aside by introducing her as the next Successor and not as the next Heir by right of Descent and because the Kings Sisters were before her in the Succession so that nothing could be available to set aside their Right but a plain Disseisure he made use of the Interest of the one as a Wedge to drive out the other And finding that the King their Brother by the Equity of a Law made in his Fathers time had the power to nominate who he thought fit to come after him he made it his great business to work upon his weakness and to perswade him to set both aside and admit the Lady Jane taking his first Argument from his Piety and Care of the Church under the present establishment made by himself shewing him what danger 't was like to be in if so obstinate a Papist as his Sister Mary succeeded who having been convict before all the Lords of the Councel had most passionately justified her Popish Principles saying She would never change her Faith much less dissemble it Urging thereupon that Gods Glory ought to be dearer to him then his own Flesh and Blood that this was his last and greatest Act of which he knew not how soon he might be call'd to give an Accompt to the King of Kings and therefore desired him for Gods sake as well as for the Kingdoms and his own sake not to let her take place Then for the Lady Elizabeth whom he could not deny to be a Protestant he said if she should be prefer'd before her elder Sister it might possibly give an occasion to unconceivable Troubles and revive the Disputes about their Legitimacy which had cost too much blood already besides the hazard that would be of the Churches no less then their own Peace and the possibility of bringing the whole Nation under the Yoke of some stranger Prince to whose Tyranny the People would never submit concluding that as the three Daughters of the Duke of Suffolk were nearest in Blood and being married took off all fears of introducing Forreigners so having with their Natural suck'd in the Sincere Milk of the Word they could not but maintain the Truth of the Reformed Religion as well as the Dignity of the Succession with universal good liking And whereas the eldest of them to wit the Lady Jane before mention'd was his own Sons Wife he could be content they should both be bound by Oath to perform whatever his Majesty should Decree for that he had no such regard to his own as to the general good Which plausible pretences so prevai●'d over the weak King whose Zeal had eaten up his Understanding that he made his Will and accordingly excluded both his own Sisters to let in the other After doing of which weak act having nothing more to do but to dye 't is thought the Duke was so grateful as to contribute much to the delivering him out of his pains as soon as might be and with as much ease for he slept away with that meekness that those that could not find in their hearts to pray for him living perform'd that Charity to him when he was dead However some there were who sower'd with a Religious Leaven took occasion to raise as great a scandal on the untimeliness of his death as others had before upon that of his Birth putting this remark upon it to make it look like a Judgment that it was in the same Moneth and in the very same day of the same Moneth that Sir Tho Moor was put to death by his Father Wherein whilst they maliciously reflected upon the Evil that was past they consider'd not how like another Josiah he was taken from the Evil to come departing with this Justification before Men and Angels That he had done as much as could be reasonably expected from the tenderness of his Years or his Power HONI · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE And now it appear'd how ominous it was for the Innocent Lady Jane to have been brought as she was in state to the Tower But as she offer'd Violence to her own Inclinations out of Obedience to those of her Father and Mother so the assumption of that temporary was in order to the intituling her to a more lasting Glory being taught the vanity of all humane Greatness by the brevity of that of her own which lasted not so long as 't is reported a Dream of one did but a little before for there is a Story of one Foxley a Pot-maker to the Mint in Henry the Eight's time that slept fourteen dayes together and no body could wake him no not with pinching or burning whereas she came to her self in less then ten dayes and then poor Lady found herself where he was too in the Tower ready to be translated as after she was from a Kingdom to a Scaffold and from the Scaffold to a Kingdom again Happy had it been for her if it had prov'd a Dream only suffering not so much for any Crime of her own Ambition as for not resisting that of others having this aggravation of her affliction to see her Husband and the Duke his Father executed before her who both died for the same Fault but not with the same Faith that she did The Duke that had therefore importun'd King Edward to give her this fatal honour to the intent Popery might be utterly abolish'd declaring when he came to suffer that he himself was a Roman Catholick which most think he had not done had not some Promises of Life upon condition of turning deceiv'd him at the very instant time of his Death whereby Queen Mary was quit with him at the last though she could not deal with him in the first place For as he was reputed to have had no Faith whilst he lived so by this abrupt Apostacy he was judg'd to have no Religion when he dyed There is this further Remark upon him That as he suffer'd under the same Fate and upon the very same Block the late Duke of Somerset did so 't was his hap to be laid under the same Stone in the same Grave where they now lye side by side as good Friends that living were unreconcilable Enemies Two headless Dukes betwixt two
unsettledness of the Times or of mens Minds rather whilst some were led by Conscience others by their Temporal Concerns some out of Love to Reformation and others out of fear of Superstition some again out of desire of Change but most out of dread of Forreign Servitude that the Conclusion of this Match gave beginning to a desperate Rebellion which though at first it seem'd despicable enough being headed by no better a man then Sir Thomas Wyat a private Knight of Kent the Duke of Suffolk who was in the Conspiracy being apprehended almost as soon as he appear'd yet before it could be supprest the wise Match-makers found they had met with their Match in that Rebel who was so fortunate as to rout the Queens General and take all their Ordnance and Ammunition Upon which he march'd up with full Assurance of taking the chief City into which though he brought but sive Ensigns 't is probable he might have carried it had not Heaven taken part against him as usually it doth against Rebels first arming them with Impudence and then disarming them with Fear making the Arch-Traytor a terrible Example of unparallel'd Insolence who whiles he was at large continued bold as a Lion but being once apprehended prov'd so base a Coward that brib'd with the hopes of Life he made himself guilty of a greater Treachery then he was to dye for accusing Edward Earl of Devon and the Princess Elizabeth the Queens Sister to have been privy to his Conspiracy which gain'd Credit not so much from the Suspect of any private Affection betwixt them two although he alleadged they were to be married as from the secret disaffection either of them had he to the King that should be as being his Rival she to the Queen that was as being her Disseisor the two Sisters as little agreeing in point of Right of Succession as their two Mothers in point of Right of Marriage but fain he would have acquitted them when he found he could not be acquitted himself by it for having serv'd their turn of him the Statesmen gave the fatal turn to him However the malitious Chancellor Gardner resolving to take the Truth at the wrong end and believe it as he pleas'd secur'd them in several Prisons till he were at leisure to examine the matter being then deeply ingaged in providing Fire and Faggots for those Learned Hereticks Cranmer Ridley and Latimer c. who were to make a Holocaust preparatory to the Queens Nuptials which having been defer'd by this unexpected Rising was now propos'd in Parliament For the greater confirmation the three States of the Kingdom assenting thereto upon the Conditions following First That King Philip should admit no Stranger into any Office but only Natives Secondly That he should Innovate nothing in the Laws and Customes of the Realm Thirdly That he should not carry the Queen out of the Realm without her consent nor any of her Children without consent of the Councel Fourthly That surviving the Queen he should challenge no Right in the Kingdom but suffer it to descend to the next Heir Fifthly That he should carry away none of the Crown Jewels nor remove any Shipping or Ordnance Sixthly and lastly That he should neither directly nor indirectly intangle the Realm of England with the Wars betwixt Spain and France Upon which Terms 't was hop'd by those affected not the Match that Philip would knock off there being neither Youth or Beauty to tempt him But as the House of Austria did ever prefer their Ambition before their Love so designing the universal Monarchy he thought he made a great step to it by being put in possession of England and so near intituled to France And now the most Catholick King being joyn'd with the Faith defending Queen it cannot be imagin'd but that they must begin with Religion In order to the Regulation whereof Cardinal Pool being first restored again in blood and reputation was sent for over who arm'd with his Legatine Power and a natural Force of Eloquence press'd hard upon the Parliament and shewed them the danger they were in by their late Schism being become as he said Exiles from Heaven and in no capacity to have been ever readmitted had he not brought from Rome the Keys that opened the gates of Life and thereupon he advised them to abrogate those Laws which lay as blocks in their way urging them thereto from the Example of their good King and Queen who he said had resigned their Title of Supream Head to shew themselves true Members of the Mystical Body and had made Restitution of those Lands which had been sacrilegiously taken from the Church by their Predecessor Which Speech of his being very Methodically digested and delivered with great gravity startled many of the Lords who reflected upon their Fore-fathers Devotion to the holy See but those of the lower House having it seems lower thoughts and deeming it a rare Felicity to have shaken off that heavy Yoke that had so long gall'd their Fore-fathers necks did not so readily assent to receive his profer'd Fenediction at so dear a rate as to part with their Lands which having been divided by the Queens father amongst them were by several Settlements and Alienations so translated from one Family to another that without great Inconvenience they could not be sever'd from their Temporal Proprieties However they so far complyed as to agree That the first Fruits and Tenths granted by the Clergy to King Henry Anno 1534 should be remitted But after they came to consider the Poverty of the Treasure the reason of the several Pensions that had been granted in Lieu thereof by the said King to divers Religious Persons that were still living they revok'd their Decree again Upon which the Legate not skilful enough to deal with a Multitude as appear'd afterward by his loosing the papal dignity desisted content it seems with the honour of having prevail'd over the more devout Queen the heat of whose Zeal had so softned her heart that it was fit for any Impression Now as he had a better Faculty in Canvassing of the Feminine Sex which Cardinal Carraffa afterward Pope Paul IV upbraided him withal in the open Conclave so he prevail'd with her to give up all that she had in her own possession who to move others to imitate her piety did it with that detestation of the Sacriledg of her Predecessors that when one of her wise Counsellors yet of the same Religion told her it would be a great Diminution to the Revenues of her Crown she answered piously and as she thought prudently that she had another Crown to look after that she valued a thousand times more then that But while she is thus careful for the eternal King Philip her Husband was no less busie to secure his Temporal Crown In order to which he went over to receive the Blessing of the Emperour his Father then in Flanders who upon his Arrival delivered up to him the possession of the Low
Tools that are as dangerous as useful if not skilfully handled Whom therefore she counterpoiz'd with as many of her own Religion to the end that holding the Ballance in her own hand she might turn the Scale as she saw cause Neither was it a thing of small Moment that came first to be weigh'd by her to wit the great Business of Religion The Materials whereof being prepared to her hand by her Brother as the Foundation was laid to his by her Father she resolv'd to proceed in Edification of the Church as Solomon did in building of the Temple with as little noise as might be And accordingly as she conform'd to take her Assumption from the hand of a Popish Bishop who performed all the Ceremonies of her Inauguration More Romano so being crown'd she made choice as I said of such a mix'd Councel as might put her out of all doubt of over-setting the Vessel by loading too much upon any one side and out of all danger of Foundring by steering their Course in too streight a Line cross the Surges of the swelling Tide and because she designed to shew her Moderation as well as her Wisdom she did not put out the Candle-light of Popery all at once but let in the Sun-shine of the Gospel by such degrees that the People might neither be left altogether in the Dark to grope after new Laws nor yet expos'd to be dazled with the two sudden approach of the greater Light refining the Mass with such a temperate heat of Zeal as first took off the Scum only that is the foulest and grossest part of Superstition then proceeded to purge out the thinner Dross of scandalous Matter and in the last place she took away what appear'd superfluous and unnecessary retaining only the sounder part out of which she made up that Form of Service which hath ever since continued to be used in the Church of England Whose ground work she laid upon the Holy Scriptures making up the Superstructure of the Doctrine of the * Nicen. Athanasian and Apostles Creed Three Creeds approv'd and confirm'd by those great Masters of Assemblies in the Four first General Councels worthily esteem'd to be stiled Synodi Firmissimi and explain'd by several of the Orthodox Fathers in the several Ages following to the intent that co●●aining Ecclesiar●m ●●m●ium Fidem they might be a Rule without all Exception But whiles she proceeded with this great tendernes● in hopes to have pleas'd both Parties she displeas'd either The first being no less griev'd by her Reforming so much then the last by her Reforming no more One would have thought that her Clemency would have silenced the Papish for that she might have purg'd with Fire and Faggot as her Sister did And that her Honesty would have subdued the Protestants who they found he● to continue to be Semper Eadem notwithstanding the warm Temp●●tions wherewith the Pope plyed her for a long time offering 1. To take away the Sin of her Father notwithstanding the many injuries don● to the Church and confirming all his Alienations 2. To take away the reproach of her Mother by making Null the Sentence of Divorce notwithstanding she never reconciled to the Church 3. To honour the Memory of her Brother so far as to allow the use of the Common-Prayer Book in English recording to his establishment And lastly to indulge this to the hono●● of her own Memory that her Realm should for her sake only which never was offer'd before have the Priviledge to receive the Sacrament in both kinds A well compounded Bait and such as if it had been large enough to have cover'd the Hook might probably have taken any other Woman but as her Conscience forbid her to close with the one so Reason of State permitted not that she should come nearer the other then she did For there was newly started up a Generation of Inlightned men who took upon them to reform her Reformation and make it more Suitable they would not say Conformable to Christs Scepter and Kingdom by rooting out those Representatives of Antichrist the Bishops who they thought to differ no otherwise from the Popish Prelates then Rooks do from Ravens desiring instead of the Hierarchy to set up a Gospel Ministry so they phras'd it that was certain Evangelicks after the example of those Congregational Pastors of Geneva who despising all Order Habit or Title were underpropt or assisted by two Lay-Elders chosen out of the gravest though not the wisest of the People whose Office as one observes like that of the Ears is only to bear themselves upright and hear what the Praetor says without any other Ecclesiastical priviledge pretence or power This projection was under-hand carried on by some squint-eyed Lawyers who having one eye upon the Jurisdiction of the Bishop t'other upon her Prerogative took all occasions to detect the nakedness of her Government and to bespatter it with scurrilous Libels Amongst which there could be nothing more bold and Seditious then those two notorious Books the one intituled The Admonition to the Parliament the other The Defence of that Admonition Not to mention those lewd Pamphlets call'd by the Names of Martyn Marr Prelate Christs Scepter and Kingdome Englands Gulph c. by the Oath Ex Officio was rendred Antichristian and the Oath of Supremacy not lawful but in a qualified sense This giving her sufficient warning to secure the State by fortifying the Church she caused the Arch-bishop Whitguift to cast three Cannons which were so plac'd that Innovation could no way make its approaches to let in any of their Factious Teachers For no man was to be admitted to the Cure of Souls that did not first recognize the Queens Supremacy Secondly submit to the use of the Book of Common-Prayer and Ordination of Bishops and Thirdly to the Articles pass'd at the last Synod at London 1562. and Lastly Declare that they believ'd either of them consonant and agreeable to the word of God However it was no small Interruption that these brain-sick men gave to her intended Reformation and the Mischiefs that attended it were so much more insupportable by how much they proceeded from a Religious Madness that reign'd at that time over all Christendome most of the Neighbour Nations even as far as Italy it self not excepting the very Dominions of the Pope labouring under the same Distemper which was a kind of Spiritual Feaver that caus'd such an Inflammation in their Consciences as could be cured no other wayes but by Blood-letting the very worst of Remedies whereof the King of France made the first experience and no where so much by whose Example the King of Spain afterwards did the like and other Princes imitating them it is since become a common practise This troubled her the more in respect of the advantages taken by the adverse Party the Papists who being more strictly united by these Divisions amongst the Protestants and deluded by the belief of certain groundless Predictions that her Reign
derive themselves from a Monster by the Fathers side and from a Gipsy on the Mothers side But the name of Scot bearing the same signification with Gayothel we may more reasonably conclude it was first given them by the Saxons either for the reason aforesaid as the word (m) Scot illud dictum quod ex diversis rebus in unum Acervum aggregatum est Camb. ex M. Westm Scot like the word Alman with them signifi'd a Body aggregated out of many Particulars into one or else by contraction of the word Attacot for the High landers making their way into the Borders of the Low-lands inhabited by the Picts who were the ancient Britains beat out by the Romans the Picts thereupon remov'd into the West and left the East part of the Country intire to them who sithence which was near about Aurelian's time or a little after made themselves known to the Romans by the Name before mentioned of Attacots The Picts and they made War upon each other for a long time mov'd by want as other Nations by wantonness for the great Commodity they fought for was Bread the want whereof brought them to accord a Cessation of Arms every Season during Seed-time but the Corn being in ground they fought on till Harvest following after which every Victor was known by his Garland of several sorts of Grain as the Roman Conquerors by theirs of several sorts of Boughs But when the Roman Empire began to decline both of them united in one hope of recovering that part of the Isle which is since call'd England And after the Romans totally quit it they press'd so hard upon Vortigern the then Titular King that he was forc'd the Romans having deny'd him further assistance to call in the Saxons to his aid who finding them then call'd by the Name of Attacots after their usual manner of abbreviation they term'd them Scots The first of all their Kings at least the first worthy that Title that broke over the great Clausura or Mound then call'd the * By the Romans nam'd the Picts-Wall Wiath was one Fergus Sirnam'd the Fierce a Prince descended from the ancient Kings of Ireland for I take the first Fergus and his One hundred thirty seven Successors to be at too great a distance to have their height truly taken who not induring that his Territories should be bounded when his Ambition could not that broke in like a Land-flood and over-run all the adjacent Countries making his Name so terrible that the Romans themselves imputing that to his Fortune which any other Nation would have ascrib'd to his Fortitude made an honourable retreat and left the poor Britains to defend themselves who doubtless had been over-run by him had not the Picts emulous of his Glory interrupted his Successes by whose vicinity both he and his Successors were so much streightned that they could not much inlarge their Territories till the Reign of Keneth the First a wise Prince who reducing that Kingdom under him not so much by Puissance as Policy made that the middle which was before but the bounds of his Dominions deserving therefore to be esteem'd tanquam alter Conditor About Sixty years after him another of the same Name tenth in descent from him rais'd the Throne a step higher having got as great a Conquest over the People as the other did over the Picts by turning the Optimacy into a direct Monarchy for he made the Succession Hereditary that till then was but Elective The fittest and ablest saith Buchanan being till that time prefer'd before the nearest or noblest since which time the eldest Son of the King of Scots hath been alwayes stil'd the Prince of Scots This King however gain'd not so much upon the Nobility in point of Majesty but that they gain'd much more upon his Successors in point of Power so that their Superiority was scarce so distinguishable for a long time from a bare Precedency but that they might rather be call'd Regnantes than Reges so long as the Thanage lasted who being a kind of Palatines exercis'd an absolute Power over their particu●ar Tenants and Vassals cum Jure Furci Thus they continued as it were under their good behaviour absolute Princes but bounded with many Restrictions till the time of James the Fourth whose Predecessors having clear'd their Title from all Incumbrances by Competitors leaving him sole Heir of the Peoples Affections as well as of his Predecessors Glory he married the Lady Margaret eldest Daughter and at length Heir to our Henry the Seventh by which Match their Thistle being ingrafted into our Rose mended both its colour and smell And their Kings that had been a kind of Homagers to ours from the beginning almost of their Monarchy became as it were manumitted by the expectation of their Title Paramount and by the possibility of being Lords of the Imperial Crown of this Realm The primier Seizen of which happiness after the death of Queen Elizabeth without Issue was in James the Sixth who Sirnam'd himself the Peaceable to let the World know he came not in by Conquest but Consent having this honour above all that were before him and probably beyond what any shall have that come after him his way was made before him not by any humane power but by Divine Providence long since reveal'd by a written Prophesie ingraved though not understood in that fatal Stone which is plac'd within the Regal Chair where the Kings of Scots anciently and ours since have been crown'd brought by them out of Ireland in the first place and by our King Edward the First translated hither afterwards whose words now they are fulfill'd seem plain enough Ni fallat fatum Scoti quocunque locatum Invenient Lapidem regnare tenentur ibidem This by the Ancients was call'd Saxum Jacobi as for that as Tradition had deliver'd it they believ'd this to be the Stone on which the Patriarch Jacob rested his Head But we of later times have found it to be Saxum Jacobi with relation to him who was to take up his rest here who being by a Decree from Heaven declared Head of this Nation may not improperly be call'd our Patriarch Jacob the first King of that People that ever was crown'd in this Kingdom by whom the Scots may be said to Reign here according to another Prophesie as ancient as the former recorded by Higden in his Polichronicon and evidently fulfilled at his coming in when he transplanted so many of his Country-men into our fat Soil that they grew up like Weeds to that degree of rankness as in the Age fol●owing to choke the best Flowers in our Garden and taking advantage of us when we were drunk with Prosperity brought us like drunken men to quarrel one with another for what since we came to our selves we cannot find or are at least asham'd to tell having by the corrupted Principles we first received from them ingaged our selves in so groundless a War that after Ages will not believe
so unreasonable a Story or not be able to write it so plainly as that it may be intelligible How a King was made a Subject to his Vassals and how they were made Slaves to one another How every man who had any honesty was afraid and every one who had any honour asham'd to own it How they that had any Reason were forc'd to deny or disguise it lest their Wisdom should bring them under Suspect and that Suspect under Condemnation whiles Loyalty was the only proper Subject for a Tragedy and Religion for a Farse God with us being set up against Dieu mon Droit For all which we have no excuse to give to Posterity but must disclaim with the Poet and say to each Reader Desit in hac tibi parte Fides nec credite Factum Ovid. Metam Vel si credatis facti quoque Credite poenam But we have this to attenuate our dishonour if the condemning them can any whit excuse us that the Scots were not disunited from us in point of Shame more then in point of Guilt who having the impudence to make their King their Prisoner sold him back to their Brethren of the Covenant here at a dearer rate then the Jews paid for Christ or then possibly those here would have given for him had they not thought it the price of their own Freedom rather then his But as the buyers found themselves not long after miserably disappointed by the Regicides who took the Quarrey from them so those that sold him to them liv'd to see themselves sold at a lower rate then he was and bought by those who bought him of them The Genius of the whole Nation of Scotland feeling a just reverberation of Divine Vengeance in being rendred afterward no Kingdom I might say no People if we consider the Akephalisis that follow'd but a miserable subjected Province to the Republicans of England without any hope of Redemption but what they must expect from the free grace of his Son against whom they had thus sinned And however they have since recover'd something of their ancient Glory by the Merits of some great Persons amongst them eminent for their Loyalty but more particularly by the merits of the brave Montross whose incomparable Example alone is enough to buoy up the dishonour of their lost Nation as being more lasting yet 't is to be fear'd they as well as we yet suffer so much in their reputation abroad that the very Pagan Princes of the other part of the World how remote soever have been alarm'd at the report of so unpresidented an Impiety and accompting themselves therefore more secure in the F●ith of their Bruitish Subjects then our King can be in ours rejoyce at the happiness of having no Commerce with us exalting himself in the words of the Poet Ovid. Metam Si tamen admissum sinit hoc Natura videri Gratulor huic terrae quod abest Regionibus illis Quae tantum fecêre nefas THE ORDER AND SUCCESSION OF THEIR KINGS I. date of accession 1603 JAMES the Sixth of Scotland and first of England being after the death of Queen Elizabeth the last of the direct Line the next Heir as only Son of Mary Queen of Scots sole Daughter and Heir of James the Fifth Son and Heir of James the Fourth by Margaret eldest Daughter of Henry the Seventh of England was on S. James 's day 1603. Crown'd King of Great Britain and Prince Henry his eldest Son dying before him the Crown descended to his second Son II. date of accession 1627 CHARLES the First a Prince who deserving the best of any other was the worst used by his People that ever any King was but Heaven has been pleas'd to recompence him for the indignities he suffer'd here on earth by compelling all those who would not allow him the honour of a KING whiles he was alive to reverence him as a PROPHET being dead themselves being made the instruments in the accomplishment of his dying Prediction That God would at last restore his Son III. date of accession 1648 CHARLES the Second our present Soveraign who bless'd be Divine Providence for it after twelve years rejection by those Sons of Zerviah that were too hard for him was brought back triumphant and placed upon the Throne by an invisible hand which having now recorded hu right as it were with the Beams of the Sun unworthy are they of that light who do not willingly submit to him being as he is the undoubted Heir to his Fathers Vertues as well as to his Kingdoms HONI · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE DIEV ET MON DROIT Now if it be one of the most desirable points of happiness because the most durable to have such Subjects as wish no other Soveraign but himself as himself desired no other Subjects but those he had so we may believe he had a large share of Joy with the People and possibly more transcendent then most men conceiv'd in respect of the Reflections he could not but make upon his past Troubles which in some sort may be said to have taken their beginning even before he took his there being such a Sympathy in Nature that he could not but have some Convulsion fits in his Mothers Womb at the time when that unhappy Prince received his death to whom he was indebted for his life especially since the same men by the same Principle they were mov'd to deprive him of a Father were obliged to deprive him of his Soveraignty as after they attempted to do when they disputed his Right of Succession Thus far he suffer'd being yet unborn Now being born he seem'd to be in no less danger in his Cradle then that great Legislator of the Jews was at the same Age in his Bull-rush Ark being toss'd and tumbled by the agitation of several swelling Factions as t'other by the motion of the troubled Waters whilst they that made away his Father began with no less Audacity to fall upon his Mother and as they strangled the King first and then blew up the House afterward so now they restrain'd the Queen under so streight a Confinement that she could scarce breath and blew up her Power which we may call her Castle by a train of Popularity to which Buchanan gave Fire by that Invective he wrote against the Monarchy of that Kingdom intituled De Jure Regni apud Scotos wherein as much as in him lay he subjected Kingship to be trampled underfoot by the Beasts of the People affirming that they had the Right to create or depose their Princes as they pleas'd And accordingly they compell'd his Mother to resign into their hands the Crown she had receiv'd in her Cradle to be given to him that was now lying in his Thus far he suffer'd being yet uncrown'd Five dayes after his Mothers Resignation he was Crown'd and Anointed and being but thirteen Moneths old was acknowledg'd King by the Name of James the Sixth But at very same
time they agniz'd his Right they admitted a Protestation for saving the Right of another James to wit the Duke of Chasteau Herauld who it seems had some Pretensions in Right of his Great-Grandmother the Daughter and Heir of James the Second So that this was as yet but to make him a King in Name and shew whilst he must continue under the Pupilage of Ambitious Regents that design'd rather to give Laws to him then advise him how to give Laws to others 'T is true whilst he was under the care of those two Patriots of known Honour and Loyalty his Grandfather Matthew Earl of Lenox and the old Earl of Marre the one his Governour by the right of Nature t'other by that of Custom he had some Satisfaction though no Security for how could they be able to protect him that were not able to defend themselves the first of them being murther'd the last heart-broke by the insupportable Troubles he met with in his short breath'd Regency But how melancholy a life he lead under his next Regent the Earl of Morton who under pretence of keeping all Papists and Factious Persons from him suffer'd him to see almost no body appears by that strict Order of his by which every Earl was forbid to approach his Presence with any more then two attending him every Baron with any above one and all of lesser Quality were not to come but single Upon this 't is true the offended Nobility to affront Morton declar'd him Major and made some shew of leaving him to his own dispose but in respect he was but twelve years old they thought fit to appoint him eleven Lords more to be assistant in Councel to him three and three by turns which in effect was to put twelve Regents over him instead of one which was design'd by some that intended their own advancement more then his Thus he suffer'd during the Nonage of his years How he suffer'd further during the Nonage of his Power will appear in the Sequel For Morton notwithstanding the Prescript Form of Government drew to himself being one of the twelve the Administration of all Affairs and keeping the Power still within his own hands as the King within his own Power admitted none to see or speak with him but whom he thought fit whereby he was now brought to loose his Liberty wholly because t'other had loss his Authority in part only This Tyranny held till the Lords headed by the Earl of Athole freed him by force of Arms After which believing himself clearly manumitted out of his Pupillage to shew himself accountable to none but himself he began to single out such Friends for his Confidents as by nearness of Blood or the nobleness of their Natures he judg'd most worthy to be trusted Two there were above the rest on whom he seem'd to cast a disproportionate Grace these were Esme Lord Aubigny Grandson of the Lord John Stuart his Grandfathers younger Brother whom he created first Earl and after Duke of Lenox and Charles Earl of Arran who being a Hamilton was his near Kinsman too but both of them being suspected to be of the French Faction it gave fresh occasion of offence to the chief of the Factions there and no less umbrage to the jealous Queen here who knew the former of the two to be much honoured by the Guises This new conceiv'd Envy heightned the old Rancor of the mutinous Nobility and made them have recourse to the same Remedy for prevention of the same Mischief as before whereunto there being a fair opportunity given by the absence of these Lords the one being in a Journey t'other at Edenburgh the Earl of Gowry with whom confederated the young Earl of Marre and the Earl of Lindsey finding the King alone at St. Johnstons invited him over to his Castle of Reuthen As soon as they had him there they made him Prisoner and accusing the two Lords as Enemies to the Protestant Religion having first put all his trusty Servants from him they forc'd him by an Instrument under his Hand and Seal to banish the Lord Aubigny and to imprison the Lord Arran and which was yet more insupportable compell'd him to approve all that they did by Letters to Queen Elizabeth But it was not long ere the death of the Duke of Lenox in France who 't is said however dyed a Protestant made the Conspirators so secure in the possession of him that he found the means to make his escape from them And recovering himself now the second time as one that once more became Lord of himself he recall'd his trusty Councellor the Lord Arran by whose advice he was guided in all his Concerns This so provoked Gowry beyond all patience that in defiance of all Reason as well as of all Right he made a second attempt upon him But as those who are fore-warn'd are fore-arm'd so the King having an eye upon him defeated his purpose and made him what he should himself have been made by him a Prisoner at Mercy whilst his Complices escap'd into England to seek Protection from Q. Elizabeth Who hoping to have prevented Gowry's Sentence dispatch'd away her Secretary Walsingham to the King to admonish him to take heed how he was led away by evil Counsellors and to shew him how difficult a thing it was to distinguish betwixt good and bad Counsel at his Age being then but eighteen years old to which the King return'd a sudden not to say a sharp Answer That he was an absolute Prince and would not that others should appoint him Counsellors whom he liked not Wherewith the testy Queen was so offended that she set her Terriers upon Incouraging the factious Ministry whereof there was good store there and those fit Tools for her purpose to say those things which became not her to own who clamoring upon his Government and raising many slanders upon Himself and Councel tending to the making them Popishly affected were thereupon cited to Answer for their Seditious Practises But they refused to appear avowing that the Pulpit was exempt from all Regal Authority and that no Ecclesiastical Persons were accomptible for what they preach'd to any but to God and their Consistory In the mean time the Queen follow'd the blow and furnishing the proscrib'd Lords with Money secretly dismiss'd them home Who as soon as they return'd upon the Credit of declaring for the Confirmation of the Truth of the Gospel for freeing the King from evil Counsellors and maintaining Amity with the Protestant Interest of England rais'd Eight thousand men in an Instant with whom they marched up directly to Court and so far surpriz'd the King that he was forced to render himself to them and to ingage to give up to their Mercy all their Adversaries and who they were was left to their own liberty to declare Next he was compell'd to put into their hands the four Keys of the Kingdom Dumbritton Edinburgh Tantallon and Sterling Castles After which Glames one of the principal Rebels was
made Captain of his Guard All persons out-law'd for Treason had their Utlaries revers'd all the bad Subjects were declar'd good and some of the best declar'd Traytors A Treaty of Peace was concluded with England upon Conditions that the Queen-Mother should never be releas'd and in order to the bringing on her Tryal as after it fell out which Tryal of the Mother prov'd yet a greater tryal to the King her Son who having before lost his Father and Grandfather by a dismal Fate both privately murther'd was much more abasht to appear so much a King and no King as to be a helpless Spectator now of his Mothers Tragedy made away by such a publick Tryal as seem'd to proclaim his weakness and shame more then her guilt This seem'd to be the very dregs of that bitter Cup whereof he had drank so largely a little before but being as he hop'd the last draught he was to take of Infelicity he bore it with suitable patience as became a Christian and a King But his Destinies decreed that there must yet be one Throw more before the Birth of his Greatness For however his Majesty clear'd up from the time of his Mothers departure like the Sun after a stormy Morning which becomes brighter and brighter as it draws nearer its Meridian yet there happen'd after all this an Eclipse that lasting only half an hour had like to have extinguish'd all his Light and Glory if a Hand from Heaven had not rescued him For the young Gowry who at the time of his Fathers death and long after continued in Italy the Country where they are learn'd in the Art of Revenge having found an opportunity to draw him again into that fatal Castle where he was before Prisoner to his Father under pretence of shewing him some Chymical Rarities got him up into some higher Rooms whiles his Servants were retired to eat it being presently after he had dined himself where by the help of his younger Brother and another appointed to assist them they intended to have assassinated him had not he that was to do the horrid Deed not only relented at the very instant when he drew his Sword upon him but turn'd his point upon his Fellow Regicide and thereby gave him time to step to a Window and call for help which came so timely to him as to rescue him by the death of the two Gowrys This though it was the last of Treasons was not yet the last of dangers he met with For after this mov'd by what Obligations besides that of Love I know not which commonly is not so domineering a Passion over Princes as private men he run as much danger at Sea as he had before at Land exposing himself to the mercy of that unruly Element at the most dangerous Season of the year to fetch over his Queen the Daughter of Frederick II. King of Denmark who having attempted several times to come to him was drove back and as 't is said by the power of Sorcery into Norwey which hazard being afterward recompenced by the satisfaction he had in the Vertue of his Wife and the hopes conceiv'd of the Children he had by her two Sons and a Daughter as he had no further cause to Fear so he had nothing further to wish but that lucky hit that came by the death of the late Queen Elizabeth to have the Glory of bringing this Isle so long divided from all the World to be at Unity within it self And now to the end he might take the Inclinations of the People at the first bound wherein no man was ever more skilfull then he he abrogated the two names of Distinction England and Scotland and reconciled them to each other under the comprehensive Appeliation of Great Britain restoring England to its old Name as he from whom he claim'd had restor'd the Crown to its ancient stock Fain he would have brought them under the unity of the same Laws but finding neither Nation pleas'd with the Proposal either being partial to their own Constitutions as fitted with due and different respects to their different Tempers Interests and Proprieties he quitted that Design as a Labour of too hard digestion But however the Reasons of State varied he was resolv'd to reconcile the Polity of the two Churches as in an Union of Possession so in an Uniformity of Government and Worship Those of his own Country having then no other Form but that impos'd upon them by Boanerges Fox without taking Counsel of Prince or Prelate which was not otherwise to be made good but by the same Violence with which it was at the first introduced against the Will of any of the Nobility but such whose Ancestors were brib'd by the Alienation of the Church Lands But before he could impose any thing upon them understanding there were many here in England that followed that Classical way he resolv'd to have a free Conference with the ablest of their Demagogues to the end that sounding the depth of their Principles he might if possible fathom that of their Piety which no man could better do then himself being an universal Scholar as well read in Men as Books and so transcendently versed in the last that he was not improperly stil'd Rex Platonicus How confident he was of his skill in discussing all points Theological appears by his entring the List with Pope Pius the Fourth and making him give ground Neither was he a little provoked to this Spiritual Warfare by a clamorous Petition pretended from a thousand dissatisfied Ministers who not having yet matter enough of just Complaint made up the Cry by the number of Complainants To whom while he was considering what Answer to give or rather how to make them answer themselves as after he did by taking each of them apart and commanding him to set down in Writing what it was he singly desired which when compared altogether prov'd so contradictory and absurd that like men brought to cudgel one another in the dark they withdrew with broken Pates he was interrupted by the Discovery of a Treason which coming on so early in the Dawn of his Government could not well be discovered what it was nor whereto it tended For whereas most other Conspiracies are hatch'd by men of the same Faction Interest and Judgment this strangely involv'd People of all sorts and conditions without respect to any Repugnancy of Quality or Concern Priests and Laymen Papists and Puritans Noblemen and Ignoble Citizens and Country-men were all piec'd up together in the same Combination but whether ingaged by Faction Ambition Covetousness or Malice was not known or at least by the Kings Wisdom conceal'd However by the well-known Names of the Principal Conspirators the Lord Cobham who was Lord-Warden of the Cinque Ports the Lord Gray of Wilton who had a great Post in the late Queens Government Sir Walter Rawleigh Lord-Warden of the Stanneries Sir John Fortescue Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir Griffith Markham Sir Edward Parham and several
terrible by the ominous Reverberations from Scotland who ecchoed to those Murmurs here with such a dismal Concordance as shew'd to what Instrument they were tuned This drew him into that Kingdom to correct the growing Distemper before it because too virulent wherein he proceeded as wise Physitians do that draw the pains from the Head by Applications to the Feet but as it is hard to discern the true meaning of any mans Intention which being the Soul of every Action is invisible and very easie to abuse it with a malitious Interpretation that is not only against its own but against all Sence and Reason so it happen'd to him who beginning with the Ratification of the Negative Confession subscrib'd by his Father and the whole Kingdom Anno 1580. which was a Renuntiation of the Papal Authority and all the corrupt Principles depending thereon he was charged by those that had before felt the smart of the Commission of Surrendries and were inforc'd to disgorge those Sacrilegious grants they had obtained during his Fathers minority to have a design of bringing in Popery a word that turn'd every mans Blood into Choler and gave the hottest allarm to tender Consciences that ever that cold Clime knew the train of whose Calumnies was so laid that it quickly took fire here in England where the Presbyterian as yet call'd the Puritan Party having as they thought matter enough of Scandal long before from the unhappy Toleration of Sports on the Sabbath-day and the turning of the Communion Table Altar-wise began to chackle as one expresses it like the Geese in the Capitol bespattering the Bishops with that vehemency that much of their unbeseeming Froath fell upon the King himself And for the more intire Concurrence of Civil and Religious Clamors the same evil Spirit that furnish'd them with meet matters of Complaint turning Man-Midwife eased them of many a Spiritual Throw by opening the Womb of their Conspiracy before its full time making way for the new birth of that long expected Parliament from whose heat all the Factions took life and like quickned Snakes began to hiss with such invenom'd rage as shew'd a manifest contempt of all Authority pressing now upon the Kings Conscience as much as they would have the World to think he had press'd upon theirs before not only refusing to admit the use of the Liturgy however compos'd by their own Bishops in any of their Parochial Churches but denying the King himself the priviledge of having it read in his own private Chappel at Edenburgh And least the World should doubt that their Insolence was not come to its wish'd for height they took upon them the marks of Soveraign Power indicting without his Licence or Knowledge four principal Tables or Counsels in the said City one of the Nobility another of the Gentry a third of the Burgesses and a fourth of the Ministry Out of which there was set up a general Table of select Commissioners all alike Enemies to Unity and Uniformity who were to chalk out the Methods for abolishing Superstition and Tyranny by which was meant in their mystical Sense Episcopacy and Monarchy In order to the carrying on of which d●sorderly Proceedings they seiz'd as well the Crown as the Church Lands and notwithstanding their hate of Forms began so well a Form'd Rebellion that the unhappy King was provok'd beyond his natural temper to repell Force by Force But before his Justice could reach them they had so firm'd their Faction by their Solemn League and Covenant which was not like that ancient Bond taken in the Year 590. wherein they were bound to the maintenance of the Kings Person and Authority for in this they swore all to the mutual Defence and Assistance of each other against all Persons opposing them whatever not excepting the King himself that he was glad to close in a Pacification which after produc'd a Cessation that by the Artifice of some of their Friends here working upon his tenderness of shedding Blood concluded with a disbanding of his in order to the letting down their Army but after abusing him in this as well as in all other their Intreagues for they determin'd never to sheath the Sword till they got their ends he was forc'd to reinforce himself by new Leavies which necessitated the calling another Parliament here at home This prov'd so much worse then all that had been before it in that they were grown more learn'd in the Discipline of Daring and being fully instructed by the Complaints of all that were weary of the Government or Governours like the first Reformers of Germany they sum'd up their Centum Gravamina in a general Remonstrance which was carried on with that unparallel'd Contumacy that every one that was licentiously inclin'd pleas'd himself with the Imagination of having the Ball of Soveraignty flung down to be scambled for by the Multitude whose Heads being made giddy by the continual Noise of those Spiritual Trumpeters that fill'd their Ears with the joyful sound of the long look'd for Promises of a new Heaven and a new Earth and the Description of such a Kingdom wherein as they said the Saints and Servants of the most High were to reign by a Special Commission written in the Stars which none could read but these Astronomical Rabbins themselves They began like men Spiritually drunk to defie all Carnal Powers and having before broke the Windows of the Royal Pallace resolv'd in the next place to pluck down the two great Pillars of the Throne These were the Arch-bishop of Canterbury and the Earl of Strafford the one presiding in Spiritual t'other in Temporal Matters both of whom were Impeached of High Treason the one to gratifie their Malice t'other to secure their Fears the last was the first brought to stake whose Crimes savouring rather of Injustice to the Subject then Unfaithfulness to the King proving no otherwise Treasonable but by accumulation of so many lesser Misdemeanours together as might make up by heap what was wanting in the weight of his Guilt The King refus'd to condemn him till he had first consulted the Judges in point of Law and the Bishops in point of Equity by either of whom being left in greater doubt if possible then before having a natural aversion to all State Phlebotomy as well knowing that this Blood-letting though it might stop the Feaver for some little time would so weaken his Power that he should not be able to resist any future Distemper the consideration whereof brought him into a State Convulsion that drew his Judgment several wayes before he could determine what to do Honour and Justice press'd him on the one side the Common Interest as 't was pretended on which hung the weight of the Publick as well as his own private Peace urg'd him on the other side either grating upon the most tender and sensible part his Conscience which like a Needle betwixt two Loadstones that trembling with equal Inclinations to either at the same time seems to turn
Discouragements Whilst those of the Royal Party impatient to see the King so much less then he should be thought it as necessary as just to attempt the making him something more then ever he had been but straining the Sinew-shrunk Prerogative beyond its wonted height disjoynted the whole Frame of Government and broke those Ligaments of Command and Obedience whereby Prince and People are bound up together Unhappy King to whom the love and hatred of his People was alike fatal who whilst himself was thus unhappily ingaged against himself was sure to be the Loser which side soever was the Gainer and so much the more miserable by how much even Victory it self must at once weary and wast him but great was his Prudence as great his Patience And next the Power of making Tempests cease Walleri Was in this Storm to have so calm a Peace Behold now the great Soveraign of the Seas expos'd as it were upon a small Raft to the raging of the People as a Shipwrackt Pilot to that of the Sea without any hope but what was next despair to recover some desolate Rock or Isle where he might rest himself in the melancholy expectation of being deliver'd as it were by Miracle So he being drove first from London to York from thence having in vain tryed to touch at Hull passed on to Nottingham where he set up his Standard but not his rest from thence he marched to Leicester so towards Wales and having a while refreshed himself at Shrewsbury after divers tossings and deviations fix'd at last at Oxford the famous Seat of the Muses ill Guards to a distressed King and perhaps no great Assistants to those about him who were to live by their Wits Here he continued near three years acting the part of a General rather then a King his Prerogative being so pinion'd and his Power so circumscrib'd that as none of his own People paid him Homage where he could not come to force it so the Neighbour States of the United Netherlands though they disown'd not a Confederation with him made so little shew of having any regard to his Amity as if it were Evidence enough of their being his Friends that they did not declare themselves his Enemies Only the Complemental State of France sent over a glorious * Prince liurcourt Ambassador who under the pretence of Mediating a Peace was really a Spy for continuing the War The only fast Friend he had was his helpless Uncle the King of Denmark who was so over-match'd by the Swede all that time that he could give little or no assistance to him During his abode here he did as much as the necessity of his streightned Condition would permit convening another Parliament there to Counter those at Westminster least it should be thought there was a Charm in the name where there appear'd no less then One hundred and forty Knights and Gentlemen in the lower House and in the upper House Twenty four Lords Nineteen Earls Two Marquesses and Two Dukes besides the Lord Treasurer the Lord Keeper the Duke of York and the Prince of Wales who if they were not equal in number as some think they were were much more considerable in quality then that other Parliament at London But being a Body without Sinews they sate as so many Images of Authority or if with decency we may say it like Legislators in Effigie Those at Westminster having in this the better of them that they had got into their hands that pledge of extraordinary Power the Dominion of the Sea which was a sufficient Caution for that by Land † Cic. ad Artic. lib. 10. Epist 7. Nam qui Mare teneat eum necesse est Rerum potiri This brought in Wealth that brought in Men the Men brought in Towns and Provinces under their Subjection so that we find they had an intire Association of divers whole Counties when the King could assure himself of no more then what he made Title to by his Sword Even Yorkshire it self the first County that he made tryal of entring almost as soon as he was gone out of it into Articles of Neutrality But notwithstanding all the disadvantages he had by want of Men and Money of Means and Credit yet we see he brought the Ballance of the War to that even poise that it rested at last upon the Success of one single Battel to turn the Scale either way for had they been beaten at Naseby where they got the day they had been as undoubtedly ruin'd as he was by loosing it which Battel being the last ended as Edge-hill did that was the first with that sinister Fortune to have the left Wings on each side routed by those of the right But the advantage the * So those who served the Parliament were call'd from the shortness of their hair as it was generally worn generally worn amongst those of the Puritan party Round-heads had in this was that they had not forgot the disadvantage of the former Fight but early quitting their pursuit return'd time enough to relieve their distressed Foot and so by their Wisdom recover'd that fatal advantage which the † The Kings Party were so call'd because those that appear'd first on his side were most of them Gentlemen on Horse-back Cavaliers lost by their Courage who pursuing their half-got Victory too far lost the whole unexpectedly In this Battel as in that the Royal Standard was taken and as the King lost his General then so he lost himself acting the Generals part now his Power crumbling away so fast after the loss of this Day for in less then four Months time twenty of his chief Garrisons surrendred General Goring was routed at Lamport the Lord Digby and Sir Marmaduke Langdale near Sherborn which we know caus'd a more unlucky Rout after at Newark the Lord Wentworth was surpriz'd ar Bovy-tracy the Lord Hopton routed at Torrington the Lord Ashly at Stow upon the Wold that he was never able to repair the Breaches made daily upon him but was forc'd to quit his faultring Friends and cast himself into the hands of his fawning Enemies the Scots who having kept all this while hovering at a distance like Eagles that follow Armies for prey expecting what might be the Issue whilst the English were so busie in cutting one anothers Throats were resolv'd to let him know what value they put upon him and accordingly gave notice to the Parliament of his being with them which begot a hot dispute betwixt them for a while to whom of right the Royal Prisoner belonged till in the end it concluded with redeeming the good King by a good Sum who taught them thus to betray him by first betraying himself the failure of their Faith being grounded upon that of his own who had he kept upon the Wing as one observes whilst his Party was beating in the Covert might possibly have retreiv'd the Quarrey and by retiring into some place of present safety recover'd himself
his Head he resolves once more to venture his own In the mean time those of the Isle of Ely the remainder of Leicester's Party that had held out from the time of his death with incredible courage and patience taking new life and hope from this Revolt make many excursions and spoils to the great charge and vexation of the King and the Publick Neither could the Pope 's Legate prevail with him to come in though upon tearms safe and honourable tendering the Publick Faith of the Kingdom and which was then thought greater that of the Church to them So much were they transported with the Opinion of their Cause or by the falshood of their hopes till this stubbornness of theirs provok'd the King to raise a new Army the Command whereof was given to his Son Edward that prosperous Prince whose Fortune then being not able to resist he had the honour to conclude that War and consequently to put a Period to all his Fathers turmo●ls who being shaken at the Root did not long survive the happiness of that tranquillity the end of whose Troubles were the beginning of his own ingaging upon the conclusion of that in a War so much more dangerous by how much more distant the benefit whereof was to be expected only in the other World this was that Undertaking in the Holy Land which separating him from his Father beyond all hope of ever seeing him again gave some occasion to question the old Kings Understanding others his good Nature But as the great concerns of Religion are as much above Reason as that is beyond Sense so we must impute that to the resolute Zeal of the Son which we cannot allow for Devotion in the Father who had he had any thoughts of going into the other World as his great Age might have prompted him to would rather have taken care for a Grave for himself then for so hopeful a Successor who only by seeking Death escap'd it Now whether the ingratitude of the Clergy or the Ambition of the temporal Lords were a greater tryal of his wisdom or Power I know not but the course he took to reduce either to terms of modesty and submission shows the world he had no want of understanding however he was forc't to put up the front of his Lay-peers in order to the facillitating his Revenge upon the other whom he mortified by a strain of State which none of his Ancestors durst venture upon Whilst he not only put them out of his Protection but all men out of theirs denying them not only his favour but his Justice not only the benefit of his ordinary Courts but the priviledg of sitting in that higher Court of Parliament A severity not to give any worse name to it of so acrimonious a nature that it not only expos'd them to all the injuries and affronts triumphant malice and scorn could put upon them but was made more intollerable and grievous by his docking their Revenues as after he did by several * Stat. 3 Edw. 1. cap. 19.33 Stat. cont formum collation Statute Laws amongst which I cannot but take notice though by the By of the particular contempt express'd in that odd Statute aginst † Stat. de Asportatis Religiosorum c. An. 3 cap. 34. ravishment where it is declared Felony to use force to any Lay-Woman and only a trespass to ravish a Nun. Neither was it thought enough to make what abscission he thought fit without their greatness were rendred incapable of any further growth to which intent he cauteriz'd if I may so say the wounds he had given them by that Statute of ‖ An. 3. C. 32. Mort-main which as it was the most fatal of all others to them so it might have prov'd so to himself had he not at the same time he thus disoblig'd them oblig'd the Laity by another suppos'd to be the wisest Law that ever was made to wit that of Westminster the second entituled De Donis Conditionalibus which tending so much to the preservation of particular Families and adding to their greatness no less then their continuance is by some Historians call'd Gentilitium Municipale and had this good effect that it brought the temporal Nobility firmly to adhere to him against the Pope when amongst many others that intituled themselves to the Soveraignty of Scotland a Kingdom too near to be lost for want of putting a claim his Holiness became his Rival and thought to carry it as part of St. Peter's Patrimony This Victory at home which brought the proud Prelates to purchase his Justice at a dearer rate then probably they might have paid for his mercy had their submission been as early as it was afterwards earnest I take to be much greater then all those he had got abroad by how much fortune had no share in it and fame was the least part of his gains extending to give him not long after as great an advantage over the Lay Nobility whom having first discern'd of their Patronage wholly and of their other priviledges in a very great part he did as it were cudgel them into Submission by the authority of his * vid. lib. Assis fol. 141.57 Trail Baston a commission which however it were directed to the Majors Sheriffs Bayliffs Escheators c. and so seem'd to have been aim'd at those of the lower rank onely which were guilty of those Enormities of Champorty Extortion Bribery and intrusion crimes much in fashion in those days yet by a back blow it knockt down several of the great Men who either countenanc'd or comply'd with the offenders and which was more terrible this writ was kept as a Weapon in the Kings hands to use as he saw occasion And to say truth he was so expert at it and indeed at all other points of skill that brought him in any profit that he was too hard at last for the Lawyers themselves those great masters of defence Canvasing his Judges as well as his Bishops when he found both alike rich both alike corrupt Beyond these he could not descend to the consideration of any Criminal save the Jews only for whom perhaps it had been no great Injustice to have taken their Estates if at least he could have been prevail'd with to have spar'd their Lives but as so great Courage as he had would not be without some mixture of Cruelty so 't is the less wonder to see that Cruelty heightened by Covetousness as that Avarice by Ambition the adding to his Treasure by these Exactions being in order to the adding to his Dominions which were not yet so entire as consistent with his safety much less the Glory he aim'd at Wales being then as a Canton of the same Piece divided by a small seam which yet had a Prince of their own blood descended from the antient Stock of the Unconquer'd Britains who it seems had so little sense of the inequality of Power betwixt them that he had given this King great provocations