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A34399 Titus Britannicus an essay of history royal, in the life & reign of His late Sacred Majesty, Charles II, of ever blessed and immortal memory / by Aurelian Cook, Gent. Cook, Aurelian. 1685 (1685) Wing C5996; ESTC R20851 199,445 586

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according to those Directions Greenvile had brought from him But the King not thinking that place convenient for the Treaty removed with great speed and privacy to Breda a Town belonging to his Sister the Princess of Orange being complemented at his departure from Flanders by the Spanish Governour and honourably conveyed on his way way as far as Antwerp from whence his Publick Dispatches into England were dated Greenvile upon his return besides the Generals Commission to be Captain General of all the Forces then raised or to be raised brought him the King's Seals and Signet by which he was empowered to make a Secretary of State which Honour he conferred upon Morrice who was after the King's return Knighted and confirmed therein in consideration of the Service he had done in introducing Greenvile to the General 's presence And besides those Publick Letters which he was to reserve to be communicated in due time he brought a Private one directed to the General himself written with the King 's own Hand to which he returned an Answer by Mr. Bernard Greenvile in regard his Brother could not then be spared the Parliament being just ready to fit when he was to present to both the Houses the King's Letters and Declaration which Answer was very welcom to the King for that it brought him an assurance under the General 's own Hand of his Resolution to adhere to him against all opposition whatsoever About this time Lambert made his escape from the Tower and endeavoured to make Parties and draw Forces together to oppose his Loyal and Generous Designs which he being informed of acquainted the Council of State therewith and managed the business with so great Prudence that timely ●care was taken to suppress him and that Attempt which in it self threatned the contrary was made by his Wisdom to advance the King's Interest and hasten his happy Restauration For Coll. Ingoldsby being sent against him and his Forces which ●e had got together forsaking him upon the Collonels approach he betook himself to flight but being upon plowed Land his Horse failed him and notwithstanding he had by his valour in many former Battels obtained the name of Stout he presently yielded himself without drawing his Sword or making any other Defence than only crying out twice Pray my Lord let me escape for what good will my Life or perpetual Imprisonment do you The time being now come for the meeting of a new Parliament both Houses repaired to St. Margarets Church where Dr. Reynolds preached before them and after Sermon they repaired to their Houses The Lords making choice of the Earl of Manchester for their Speaker And the Commons of Sir Harbottle Grimstone And having settled their Committees and thereby prepared for their entrance upon business adjourned for some few days in the interim whereof Greenvile con●●lted with the General at what time and in what manner he should deliver his Messages from the King to the several parties to whom they were directed That which was superscribed to the General himself to be communicated by him to the Army and Council of State he thought fit to have delivered to him at the Door of the Council Chamber In order whereunto Greenvile repaired thither when the Council were sitting and told Coll. Birch who was one of the Members that he desired to speak with the General who upon Birch's Intimation came to the Door and in the view of his Guards who attended there received the Letters from Greenvile without shewing any other respect either to his Person or his Business than only demanding of him if he would stay for an Answer and telling him otherwise his Guards should secure him And having commanded them to look to him went in to the Council and communicated to them the Letters whereupon Birch being examined whether he knew any thing of the matter protesting he was altogether ignorant both of the Gentleman and his Business Greenvile was sent for i● and examined by the President from whence those Letters came whose they were and how he came by them for they had not yet proceeded to open and read them he answered that ●he King His Master gave them to him with his own Hand at Breda Having ●hereby informed themselves whence ●he Letters came they deferred the open●ng of them until the Parliament sate ●gain and would have committed Green●ile had not the General told them that 〈◊〉 knew him very well and would an●wer for his appearance before the Par●●ament which were no sooner sate 〈◊〉 he delivered his Letters with inclo●●d Declarations to both Houses where●● the King expressed abundance of ●mpassion and tenderness to the Na●●on which had been so long harassed 〈◊〉 a bloody and unnatural War and pro●ised a free and general Pardon to all 〈◊〉 should in forty days after the pub●●ation thereof lay hold upon that Grace ●less such whom the Parliament should ●ink fit to be excepted from the benefit ●●ereof And that he would preserve 〈◊〉 to the uttermost of his power 〈◊〉 from all manner of Injuries in their ●●es and Estates and grant Liberty for ●●der Consciences for such as dissented 〈◊〉 the Established Religion provided ●●ey did not disturb the Peace of the Nation That as to Sales and Purchases 〈◊〉 would refer himself in all matters to th● Determinations of Parliament and co●sent to any Act or Acts for the satisfyin● the Arrears of the Army and Navy which should thenceforward be receive● into his Service upon as good Pay an● Conditions as they then enjoyed Th● like Letters and Declarations being 〈◊〉 sent by the King and delivered to Gen●●ral Mon●ague to be by him communi●●ted to the Fleet and to the Lord May● and Common Council of London The King's Letters and Declarati●● were received by the Parliament 〈◊〉 such an extraordinary Joy and Ven●●tion that I want words wherewith 〈◊〉 express it for as if some strange 〈◊〉 had suddenly seized upon their min● every man at the Speaker's naming 〈◊〉 King rose up and uncovering him●●●● desired they might be immediately 〈◊〉 which was no sooner done but in an●●tasie of joy they suddenly drew the ●●●tain and exposed the beautiful and ●●rious Scene to the open view of ●●●longing Spectators wherein every 〈◊〉 might plainly behold the happy Issu● all those various Transactions which 〈◊〉 till then been Riddles too mysterious for vulgar understandings to unfold or once imagine to what they tended or where they would terminate By the House of Lords resolving that they did own and declare that according to the Ancient and Fundamental Laws of England the Government was and ought to be by Kings and that a Committee of eight Lords should forthwith joyn with a Committee of the Commons to consider of an Answer to the King's Letter and Declaration And by the House of Commons resolving likewise to appoint a Committee to prepare an Answer to the King's Letter and therein express their great and joyful sense of his gracious offers and to return him their humble
about for some time upon pretence of entring into a League of Friendship with them but meeting of a sudden as he was ranging with his Horse who are accounted the swiftest in the World with some of our Forces who were forraging for Provisions and Horse-meat he surprized and defeated them their manner of Fighting being to take and leave as they find advantage which they do with very active and quick Force and Resolution but the English were not long before they requi●ed him and revenged the injury upon some of his adventurous Stragglers after which he freely entred into and finished a Treaty of Peace with them And the King not long after made it a free Port and indowed it with all the Priviledges of a Merchant City being very conveniently Scituated for Commerce and Trade especially in regard of the Security thereof The great discourse and expectation at this time was what the Presbyterians would do after the Act of Uniformity was past which provided that by St. Bartholomews day their Ministers should renounce the Covenant read Divine Service and Common-Prayer in Church Vestments as the Surplise which was the main thing they pretended to ●cruple or else forsake their Liv●●gs Many endeavours there had been ●●ed before to prevail with the Par●●ament for some Tolleration but ●ot being able to carry it there they afterward applyed themselves to the King and His Council but upon 〈◊〉 full Debate of their Petition and ●s full a hearing of what they had ●o say the business was laid aside ●n regard there was none present who could answer and dispute their pretences for the Superseding the express meaning of that Act. But the Bishop of London by his Prudence and foresight had provided Pious and able Ministers to succeed them in their Cures and for the better security of the publick Peace for times to come the Commissioners for regulating Corporations besides the displacing such Officers as were ●ill affected ordered the Walls of such Townes and Cities as had been the reception of and maintained the late Rebellion to be demolished as examples and security to succeeding Ages viz. Glocester Coventry Northampton Taunton and Leicester which was done accordingly And the Town of Dunkirk which was taken from the Spaniards by Cromwell and had ever since been kept at a vast charge was now also by the Advice of His Council in regard it had never been Annext by Act of Parliament to the Crown of England returned to the French King upon the valuable Consideration of Five Hundred Thousand Pounds And there having been great talk and long suspicion of a Plot secretly carryed on against the Government insomuch that the most part of that Summer the Trained-Bands had watcht every night the design now appeared being carryed on by Ludlow Danvers Lockyer Strange and others for the overthrowing of the Government in order whereunto they were to have seized the Tower Deal-Castle and other places of Strength and were ●o have had the word given them ●he night they were to have fallen ●n which was the last of October by George Phillips a Serjeant in the Col●onels Company of the White Regiment But being discovered by ●ne of their number they were ●any of them taken and by sufficient Witnesses Convicted of the Conspiracy four whereof viz. Phil●ips Tongue Gibbs and Stubbs were Executed according to Sentence and ●he rest pardoned by the King who ●lwayes loved to mix Mercy with his Executions The Emperour of Russia about this ●ime sent hither a very Splendid Embassy by three of his Chief Princes one whereof came some time before the other and had Audience of the King in Private at Hamp●on-Court they were received in greater State than any Ambassadors ●ad been that Arrived before them ●he whole Military Force of the City being in Arms and several of the Companies in their Liveries ●nd the Aldermen with their Gold Chaines riding before them They had about thirty Servants that rode on Horseback with Hawks on their fists as Presents And being Conducted on the New-Years-Day following to their Audience at White-Hall they delivered their Presents which were very rich consisting of Furs Beavers Ermins and the like together with Persian Carpets three Persian Horses Arg●marick and other Commodities of that Country as Damasks Silks and Embroderies and a whole Ship load of Hemp there were likewise of the same nature sent from the Empress to the Queen and from the Prince of Russia all which were received with that affection and kindness which the King discovered upon all occasions toward that great and Potent Monarch The King having ordered the Earl of Rothes to succeed Middleton as Chief Commissioner in Scotland went in the Vacation time on Progress Westward from London to Bath and from thence through Glocester-Shire to Oxford being presented at Reading and Newbury with Purses of Gold and receiving where-ever he came very high and Splendid Entertainments At Oxford He was met half a Mile from the City by the Doctors and Schollars in their Formalities and upon His entring the Subburbs by the Militia of that City through which he passed to his Lodgings During his stay there he visited the Schollars and was Nobly Enrertained But not long after His return notwithstanding all those Provisions for peace he was informed of a Plot discovered in the North to involve his Subjects in a War again which was to have begun first in Ireland and so to have been brought into England and several of the Conspirators being taken he sent down a Commission to York in the midst of Winter to try them Fifteen whereof were found Guilty the Chief of them was Captain Oates and shortly after divers more were arraigned the chief whereof were Cotton Denham and Atkins some of them were executed at York some at Leeds and some at other places nor wanted they some in London to abett and favour their designes by Libels and such like Methods for which a Printer was Apprehended Tryed and Execued and others pilloryed and Fined The Dutch having notwithstanding all their great pretences of Love and Friendship to the King been guilty of many Injuries and depredations to the English Nation the King and Parliament in the following Spring took into their Consideration the many Complaints that were made against them and both Houses Petitioned the King to take a speedy and effectual course for the redressing thereof promising to assist him therein with their Lives and Fortunes But he alwayes preferring Peace before War when it may be had upon Honourable Conditions resolv'd to see what he could do with them by fair means before he let things come to extremity and therefore by his Agent there demanded satisfaction for the injuries done by them But that subtle people not willing to return a speedy answer resolved to send their own Embassadour into England which as it was a way of answering more Magnificent so it occasioned the greater delay of time which was the thing they chiefly aim'd at that so they might
according to his accustomed Wisdom foreseeing it would otherwise be impossible to have it uniform and decide the Controversies which would arise about dividing the Ground belonging to each House and oblige the Repairers to build with Brick or Stone provided an Act of Parliament for the setling all things in relation thereunto and the erecting a Court of Judicature to judge and determin all Differences that might arise between Party and Party prohibiting in the mean time the hasty building any publick Edifices and proclaiming a general Fast through England and Wales ordering the distresses of those who were ruined thereby to be then recommended to the Charity of all well-disposed persons and the Money so gathered to be afterward distributed by the hands of the Lord Mayor The Act was pass'd in the approaching Parliament wherein besides the provision for the building the Houses of Brick or Stone it was enacted That the most eminent Streets should be of a considerable breadth and those toward the Water-sides wide enough to render Passages convenient that a fair Wharf should be left all along the River's-side and no Houses built thereon but at a convenient distance appointed therein none whereof were to be inhabited by Dyers Brewers or Sugar-Bakers And that an exact Survey should be made of the Ruins for the satisfaction of particular Interests and a Model framed of the whole Building the better to understand if it were convenient for them to appoint any alterations therein And to shew his Pious Care for the Rebuilding of the Churches for the Service of God as well as Houses for his Subjects to dwell in he recommended that Work to the Charity and magnanimous Bounty of publick spirited Persons and for an encouragement to others promised to Rebuild the Custom-house and Enlarge it for the Benefit of Merchants at his own Charge which he afterward performed engaging to part with all his Right and Benefit arising from his own Lands within the City for the Publick Good and to remit the Duties arising from Hearth-Money to those who should Erect any New Buildings according to his Declaration for Seven Years And to demonstrate his Resolution to perform whatsoever he had promised in his Declaration commanded one Knight to be committed to Prison for presuming to Print certain Propositions for the Rebuilding the City with considerable Advantages to the Crown which were repugnant to his gracious Offers in that Declaration So that London being ashamed to lye longer smothered under Ashes when all those Provisions were made for its Resurrection was by Sir Jonas Moore according to the appointed Model first roused in Fleet-street and from that beginning grew so hastily towards a perfection that within the compass of a few years it outvyed all its ancient Glory and Splendour and appeared far more beautiful in its rise than its fall had rendred it abject and desolate But the burning of London was not the only unhappy Accident that fell out in that Year of Wonders for the Fire which had laid the City in Ashes threatned the Court with the like dissolation for having by the misfortune of a Candle falling into the straw violently seized upon the Horse-Guard in the Tilt-Yard over against White-Hall it burned down the North-West part of that Building but being so close under the King 's own eye it was by timely help in a little time mastered And at a place called Welbourn in Lincoln-shire after a prodigious Thunder with Hail-stones of a more than ordinary bigness there followed such a Storm and Tempest that its violence threw down most of the Houses to the ground tore up Trees by the Roots and dispersing several Ricks of Corn and Hay passed to the next Village called Willington where it threw down firm Houses and going forward to Nanby it fell so violently upon the Church that it dash'd the Spire in pieces and so tore and rent the Body of the Church that it almost levelled it with the ground And that Scotland might likewise bear a share in that Year's Calamities a Seditious Zeal having inspired some Malecontents with revenge against Sir James Turner for executing too vigorously as they pretended the Laws against them they committed an insolent Ryot upon his person taking him out of his Bed and carrying him naked into the Market-place where they were hardly restrained from cutting him in pieces which Tumult was first raised by a small and an inconsiderable Rabble but in a short time increased to a Body of One thousand six hundred Men who marching toward Edenburgh were encountred and defeated near Glencarn many of them being slain and more taken the Ring-leaders whereof were executed and most of the rest pardoned But in the midst of all these unhappy Distractions he did not neglect the making all necessary Preparations for carrying on and maintaining his War with Holland France and Denmark the latter whereof was now entered into a League offensive and defensive with the States of the Vnited Provinces upon pretence of the Assault made upon the Dutch in his Port of Berghen although he had the freedom of that Port frankly offered him by the King of Denmark himself at a time when he thought nothing of it and that in order to the doing those very Acts of Hostility wherewith he was then unjustly reproach'd by that King as he declared in his Declaration of War against Denmark published about that time And for a good Omen of his future success he not long after his Declaration of War received News that the Vice-Admiral of Denmark was taken by some of his Frigots upon the Coast of Scotland However the King of Sweden having become a Mediator for Peace between him and the States-General and prevailed with him to condescend thereunto and appoint Breda for the place of Treaty the Dutch notwithstanding busied themselves in making Preparations for continuing the War resolving to treat of Peace in a posture and condition to fight if it succeeded not and he not being ignorant of their intentions to make him spend that Summer in needless Expences for War and only keep himself upon his own guard But we having therefore but a small Fleet abroad the Dutch upon intimation thereof got out to Sea betimes and finding no Enemy to resist them made an attempt on Burnt Island but being beaten off with loss they next attempted the Fort of Sheerness which being then a place of small force was after a short but stout resistance abandoned by Sir Edward Spragg and so the Mouth of that narrow River was left open to them And being encouraged by this success they landed about three thousand men near Felton-Cliff and with two thousand of them adventured to make two Assaults upon Languard-Fort but were beaten off and forced to retire in such haste that they left their Scaling-Ladders behind them and had about one hundred and fifty slain upon the place the other thousand which were left behind the Cliff to secure their retreat being encountered by the Trained-bands
observing the Orders sent him At which Proceedings of the States the King being ●ustly enraged resolved to trifle with them no longer but make them feel the effects of his Indignation And knowing that whilst he had Wars abroad it was necessary to have Peace and Union at home he put forth a Declaration of Indulgence to all Dissenting Persons promising notwithstanding that Indulgence to maintain the Doctrine and Discipline of the Church of England as it was then established Sir Robert Holmes Cruising with five of the King's Frigots near the Isle of Wight about the middle of March met with the Dutch Smyrna and Streight Fleet Convoyed by six of their men of War and standing with them gave them a Gun to strike and lower their Flag which they refusing he poured a Broad-side upon them whereupon their Convoy coming up the Fight began about two in the afternoon and continued until night and the next morning was again renewed five of their richest Merchant-men being taken their Reer-Admiral sunk and the rest made their escape for want of more assistance The first blow being thus given the King denounced open War against them by Publishing his Declaration wherein he gave the World an account of the Grounds and Reasons of his Quarrel with them which together with the French Kings preparations and proceedings towards them in laying great Impositions upon their Manufacture which they foresaw tended to a rupture with them they fortifiing themselves with all imaginable speed and diligence endeavoured to procure Allies abroad and made the Prince of Orange their Captain-General at Land and Admiral at Sea And looking upon Maestricht as the first place that would in all probability be attacked by the French King they repaired the Fortifications thereof and re-inforced that City with Men and Provisions The King resolving to prosecute the War with all imaginable resolution and vigour provided for the security of his own Subjects by allowing them sufficient Convoys and giving them liberty to make use of what Foreign Mariners they could procure And his Fleet being now ready to put to Sea he went to Rye to see them joyn with a Squadron of French Ships which that King according to agreement was to furnish him with under the Command of the Count d' Estree Vice-Admiral of France And so soon as he was returned the two Fleets being now joyned stood over for the Coast of Holland Commanded by His present Majesty then Duke of York whose very name was terrible to the Dutch And on the twenty eighth of May meeting with the Enemies Fleet about five Leagues off the Wheelings there ensued a very fierce and bloody Engagement both sides being emulous for Honour and desirous of Victory fighting with extraordinary eagerness But the night coming on and the Dutch finding themselves unable to bear up against the Valour of the English stood towards their own Coasts and were pursued by the Duke who resolved to have renewed the Engagement the next morning had not a Fog prevented and favoured their securing themselves in their Shallows The loss on the Dutch side was very great both as to Men and Ships but on the part of the English there was little Dammage beside the loss of the Earl of Sandwich and the Royal James This loss at Sea was attended with many more on Land the French King having taken several of their Frontier Towns which possessed them with such a Consternation that many of the wealthy Inhabitants forsook their Habitations resolving not to hazard their Persons and Estates in a Countrey falling into the hands of a Victorious Foreigner And the States not thinking themselves secure enough at the Hague removed to Amsterdam and to impede the French King's approach cause● the Sluces to be opened and the Country be put under Water to the incredible Prejudice and Dammage of the miserable Inhabitants Which Distraction of theirs the King of England wisely improved to the strengthening himself and the weakening of them by putting forth a seasonable Declaration wherein he promised That if any of their Subjects out of affection to him or his Government or to avoid the oppression they met with at home would take refuge in his Kingdom they should be protected in their Persons and Estates and have an Act pass for their Naturalization and that such Ships as they brought with them should be accounted as English Built and enjoy the same Priviledges and Immunities as to Trade Navigation and Customs as those of his own Subjects Yet commiserating the deplorable condition into which the States were reduced and supposing their misfortunes had rendred them more humble he sent the Duke of Buckingham and the Earl of Arlington to try if they would at length offer any reasonable terms of Peace who were received by the Common People with great joy and satisfaction crying out God bless the King of England and God bless the Prince of Orange but the Devil take the States But their Pride being not sufficiently abated the Embassadors returned without bringing them to any Conclusion which together with the French King's taking Nimeguen and the English Fleets appearing upon their Coasts so enraged the People that they brake out into tumultuous Insurrections and there was scarce a Town in Holland where they were not masterless And therefore the States that they might appease them commanded their Fleet to go out and beat the English from their Harbours which De Ruyter attempted with all the force that Courage and Resolution could inspire him with but finding himself overmatched was forced to retire with considerable loss The Fleets having both repaired the Dammages of this Fight hastened to try their fortune in a second Engagement which being as unsuccessful to the Dutch as the former De Ruyter stole away in the night But having increased his Fleet was not long before he got to Sea again and meeting about the middle of August with the English Fleet endeavoured to get the Wind of them which then blew North-East resolving if possible to redeem his lost reputation but night coming on both Fleets came to an Anchor The next day the Fight began with the morning wherein the Dutch sustained a very great loss and the greatest part of their Fleet had in all probability been destroy'd and the contest about the Dominion of the Narrow-Seas ended had not the Cowardly French who were then Masters of the Wind behaved themselves as though they had been sent thither only to be spectators of the Bravery and Valour of the English Whereupon the States-General finding they could no longer withstand the successful Arms of that fortunate King sued for Peace by their Embassador and had it granted as well out of Pity to them as Jealousie of the French King's too growing greatness whose Progress they were now at leisure to oppose The King having now consented to admit the Hollanders to terms of Peace became a Mediator for the like accommodation between the Crown of France and Spain endeavouring by his
Rights which none but such Monsters as themselves would unjustly detain from so great and so good a Prince Wherefore being deeply sensible of their danger they prepare for War but whether it should be Offensive or Defensive was yet a question among them But at last considering that if there must be a War it had ever been a Maxim among the greatest Politicians that it was most prudent to make the Enemies Country the Seat of it They resolved upon an Offensive War hoping that Scotland would quickly be weary of maintaining two Armies since it had so much ado to keep one And that since they were informed their Levies went on flowly they thought that their Forces which were already on Foot might easily go and surprize them before they lookt for them or were half ready to entertain them In order whereunto Cromwel being called out of Ireland was in great state made Captain General of all their Forces raised or to be raised in England Scotland and Ireland The Lord Fairfax who had in him some sparks of Loyalty waving at once that Employment and his own Commission not as some imagine to avoid the hazard of that Expedition for he was one that never turned his back upon danger but because he was unwilling any longer to be subservient to those base and vile Designs which he now began to abhor Whilst these preparations were making in England the King removed from the Hague to Diep in Normandy and from thence to Scheveling from whence after a dangerous Storm and narrow escape of some English Vessels which lay in wait for him he arrived safe at the Spey in the North of Scotland which the Parliament being informed of they sent some Lords to receive and attend him from thence to Edinburgh where he is received by the Parliament and Committee of Estates and Kirk with infinite expressions of Fidelity and Affection the common people like so many Echoes to their Superiors and the whole City sounding nothing but Vive le Roy. But Cromwel being advanced with his Army into Scotland and having been successful in some smaller Encounters and given them a total overthrow at Dunbar they found themselves in a sad and perplexed condition having not only the Enemy raging in the bowels of that Kingdom but being extreamly divided also amongst themselves wherefore they now thought it high time to unite among themselves In order whereunto a general meeting was appointed at St. Johnstons which should consist of King Lords and Commons and the Assembly of the Ministers in which Assembly several Lords formerly in favour with the Kirk were admitted to Commands in the Army and a Liberty to sit in Parliament as Hamilton Lauderdale and others And Major General Massey formerly Governour of Glocester for the Parliament but afterward reconciled to the King was admitted to a Command in the Army And as the perfection of all the Kings Coronation was there resolved upon so that now their wounds began to heal and their breaches to be made up again and it was generally hoped that these Clouds of Division being blown over a serene Sky would immediately follow and the Sun of Prosperity shine on their future proceedings The Parliament of Scotland in pursuance of those resolutions at St. Johnstons having dissolved themselves in order to the Kings Coronation it was performed on the first of January at Schone in as Solemn and Splendid manner as the exigency of the time could bear his Majesty with a great Train of his Nobles and others went first to the Kirk where a Sermon was Preacht by a Scotch Minister whose name was Duglass upon those words then they brought out the Kings Son and put upon him the Crown and gave him the Testimony and made him King and Jehojadah and his Son Anointed him saying God save the King 2 Chron. 23 11. Joined to these words and Jehojadah made a Covenant between all the People and between the King that they should be the Lords People v. 16. Which Sermon being ended he was conducted from his Chair of State which was placed in the Kirk to that erected for his Coronation by the Lord High Constable and the Earl Marshal where being placed he was Proclaimed King by Herald King at Arms and then clad with a Robe of State by the Lord Chamberlain and the Lord Steward After which sitting he consented to the National Covenant the Solemn League Covenant Directory and the Catechisms and promised upon his Royal word to perform them so far as he understood them to be agreeable to the Word of God in his own Family in his Kingdom of Scotland and in all his other Dominions as soon as it should please God to restore him thereunto Which being done the Coronation Oath was next read which was Enacted in the first Parliament of King James and is as follows That His Majesty shall maintain that Religion Discipline and Worship that is most agreeable to the Word of God to the best Patrons of Reformation and is against all Heresy Schism Idolatry Superstition and Prophaneness that he should govern the Kingdom by Law and Equity and that he should maintain the just Rights of the Crown and Priviledges of the People After the reading of which Oath he declared with an audible Voice that he did promise in the name of the great God who Lives for ever that he would to the uttermost of his Power endeavour to do the things contained in that Oath Which done Herald King at Arms went to the four corners of the Stage and demanded of the People four times whether they were willing that Charles the Second Son and Heir of Charles the First should be King over them to which the People answered Long live King Charles God Save the King Then the Marquess of Argile Presented him with the Royal Scepter the Earl of Eglington put on the Spurs the Lord High Constable set the Crown upon his Head and the Earl Marshal having unsheathed the Sword put it into his hand to defend the Faith withal which having held a while he delivered it to the Earl of Glencarn to be carried before him Then the Nobility Gentry and Commons of the Kingdom did as in the presence of the Great God that Lives for ever swear Allegiance Fealty and Obedience to him as to their Liege and Soveraign Lord and the whole Ceremony was concluded by an Exhortation of the Minister to his Majesty to the Nobility to the Clergy and to the Commons the sum and substance whereof was in reference to the Covenant which they then lookt upon as the Center from which every Line both of Soveraignty and the Subjects Duty was to be drawn in their respective Circumstances And for a power to perform what he then exhorted them to the assistance of God is invoked by prayer who being Alpha and Omega they made him the first with whom they began and the last with whom they finished So soon as the Crown was set upon his Head he made a
in the other being attended on by Confusion represented in a deformed shape having on a Garment of severall ill-matcht Colours put on the wrong way on her Head Ruines of Castles and torn Crowns and in her Hand broken and shattered Scepters On the South Pedestal was a Representation of Britains Monarchy supported by Loyalty with Women Monarchy arayed in a large Purple Robe adorned with Diadems and Scepters and over that a loose Mantle edged with blew and silver Fringe resembling Water the Mapp of Great Britain being drawn on it Upon her head was the City of London in her right hand Edenburgh in her left Dublin Loyalty was all in white with three Scepters in her right hand and three Crowns in her left The first Painting on the South side was a prospect of His Landing at Dover Ships at Sea great Guns going off one kneeling and kissing the Kings hand attended by many Souldiers both Horse and Foot and great numbers of People gazing above and beneath this Motto In Solido Rursus Fortuna Locavit alludeing to that of Virgil thus Rendred Fortune Reviving tho she tumbled down Sporting Restores again unto the Crown Above the Arch on the North and South-Sides stood the Statues of James and Charles the first and between them somewhat higher and just over the Arch that of the Restored King with this Inscription D. N. Carolo D. G. Britanniarum Imp. Opt. Max. ubique venerando Semper AUG Bretissimo ac piissimo Bono Reip. Nato De avita Britannia Et Omnium Hominum Genere Meritissimo P. P. Extinctori Tyrannidis Restitutori Libertatis Fundatori Quietis ob Felicem Reditum Ex Voto L. M. P. S. P. Q. L. The Second which was a Naval Representation was erected in Cornhill near the Royal-Exchange on the East side whereof two Stages were erected on each side of the Street one in that on the South side a person representing the River of Thames and on that on the North side which was made like the upper deck of a Ship were three Seamen whereof one was habited like a Boat-Swayn and upon the Shield or Table on the front of the Arch a Latine Inscription the first painting on the North side over the City Arms represented Neptune with his Trident advanced with this Inscription Neptuno Reduci On the South side opposite to Neptune was Mars represented with his Spear Inverted having his Sheild charged with a Gorgon and by his knees this Motto Marti Pacifero Over the Arch the Marriage of Thame and Isis The painting in the North side over Neptune represented the Exchange with this Motto Generalis Lapsi Sarcire Ruinas The uppermost great Table in the fore ground represented Charles the first with the Prince his Son who was the then Restored King in his hand viewing the Soveraign of the Sea the Prince Leaning ●n a Canon with this Inscription O Nimium dilecte Deo cui militat aequor Et conjurati veniunt ad Classica ventt For Thee O Jove's delight the Seas engage And muster'd Winds drawn up in battel Rage The third which represented an Artificial building of two Stories the one after the Corinthian way of Architecture the other after the Composit with a Latin Inscription upon a Shield was Erected near Wood-street end not far from the place where the Cross formerly stood In the spanderills of which Arch two Figures in Female habit and a leaning posture represented Peace whose Shield was charged with a Helmet and Bees ●ssuing forth and going into it with this Motto Pax bello Potior And Truth cloathed in a thin habit on her Shield Times bringing Truth out of a Cave with this Motto Tandem Emersit Over the great Painting upon the Arch of the Cupula was Represented a large Geryon with three heads Crowned In his three right hands a Lance a Sword and a Scepter in his ●hree left the Escutcheons of England Scotland and Ireland having before him the Kings Arms with three Imperial Crowns and beneath him in great Letters Concordia Insuperabilis The fourth Triumphant Arch which represented the Garden of Plenty and was of two Stories one after the Dorick Order the other of the Jonick was Erected in Fleet-street near the turning into White-Friers and had upon the great Sheild over the Arch in Large Capitals this Inscription Ubertati AUG extincto belli Civilis incendio clusoq Jani Templo arum celsis construxit S. P. Q. L. Over the Postern on the South side of the entrance was represented Bacchus drawn in a Chariot by Leopards his Mantle a Panthers skin a Crown of Grapes on his head a Thyrsis with Ivy in his left hand and underneath Liber Pater The Painting over this represented a Vineyard with Silenus on his Ass with Satyrs dancing round about him in drunken and antick Postures And on the North side opposite to Bacchus was represented Ceres drawn in a Chariot by winged Dragons and Crowned with Eares of Corne having in her left hand Poppyes and in her right a blazing Torch the Painting over her being the description of Harvest Ceres AUG And the King having created six Earles as many Barons and Sixty Eight Knights of the Bath to assist at that Ceremony and appointed the 23d of April which was St. Georges day for the Consummating thereof the Glory and Splendor of it commenced the day before when he past through the City to White-Hall in a most Magnificent and Tryumphant manner For the Streets being all gravelled and filled with a vast multitude of wondring Spectators as well out of the Country as the City and some Forraigners who acknowledg themselves never to have seen amongst all the great Magnificencies of the World any that came near or equal'd that and even the Vaunting French were forced to confess that their Pomp of the late Marriage with the Infanta of Spain upon their Majesties entrance into Paris was far inferior in its State Gallantry and Riches unto that most Illustrious and dazelling Cavalcade which proceeded after this manner First went the Horse Guard of His Illustrious Brother the Duke of York the Messengers of the Kings Bed-Chamber the Esquires and Knights of the Bath being One Hundred and thirty Six in number The Knight Harbinger the Serjeant Porters the Sewers of the Chamber the Quarter Waiters the Six Clerks of the Chancery the Clerks of the Signet the Clerks of the Privy Seal the Clerks of the Council the Clerks of the Parliament the Clerks of the Crown the Chaplains in Ordinary bearing Dignities ten in number the Kings Advocate and the Remembrancer the Kings Councel at Law the Master of Chancery the King Puisne Serjeants the Kings Attorney and Sollicitors the Kings Eldest Serjeants the Secretaries of the French and Latin Tongues the Gentlemen Ushers dayly Waiters the Sewers Carvers and Cup-bearers in Ordinary the Masters of standing Officers being no Councellors viz. Of the Tents Revels Ceremonies Armory Wardrobe Ordinance the Master of Requests Chamberlain of the Exchecquer Barons of the
by his Predecessors Whereupon rising out of the Chair He was led by His two Supporters to the Communion Table where he made a solemn Oath to observe those things he had before promised and then returning to his Chair again kneeled at the Footstool while the Hymn of the Holy Ghost was Singing Then he arose from his Devotion and disrobed himself of his upper Garment and his under Garment being so contrived that the Places to be Anointed might be opened by undoing certain Loops The Arch Bishop proceeded to that Ceremony after which the Coife was put on his head and the Dalmatica the Super-Tunica of Cloath of Gold and the Tissue Buskins and Sandals of the same And the Spurrs being put on by the Peer that carried them the Arch-Bishop took the Kings Sword and laid it on the Communion Table which after Prayer was restored to him again and girt on him by the Lord Great Chamberlain then the Armil and the Mantle or Open Pall was put on after which the Arch-Bishop taking the Crown into his hands laid it on the Communion Table and having prayed took it up again and set it on the Kings head whereupon all the Peers put on their Coronets and Caps and the Choire Sung an Anthem Then the Arch-Bishop took the Kings Ring and having prayed put it on the fourth finger of the Kings hand after which the King took off his Sword and offered it up which the Lord Great Chamberlain having redeemed drew it out and carried it naked before him Then the Arch-Bishop delivered the Scepter with the Cross into his Right and the Rod with the Dove into his Left hand and the King kneeling blessed him after which the King ascended His Throne Royal attended by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal where after Te Deum Sang all the Peers did their Homage Kissing his le●t Cheek and afterward standing all round about him they every one in their order toucht the Crown upon his head promising their readiness to support it to the utmost of their Power and then proceeding to the Communion the King having received and offered returned to his Throne till Communion was ended after which he went into St. Edwards Chappel and taking his Crown from his head delivered it to the Bishop of London who having laid it upon the Communion Table the King withdrew into a Traverse where the Lord Great Chamberlain disrobed him of St. Edwards Robes delivering them to the Dean of Westminster and arrayed him with those prepared for that day and then being conducted to the Communion Table in St. Edwards Chappel the Crown Imperial provided for him to wear was set up ●n his head After which taking the Scepter and the Rod and his Train being set in order before him he went up to the Throne and so through the Choire and Body of the Church out at the West door to the Pallace at Westminster the Peers according to their Rank going before him with their Coronets on and in the great Hall at the upper end whereof was a Table and Chair of State raised upon an ascent for the King and below Tables for the Nobility the Lord Mayor and Citizens the Officers at Arms c. they were entertained with a Noble and Magnificent dinner after which he returned in his Barge to White-Hall It is very observable that altho● it had rained for about a month before yet it pleased God that not one drop fell upon this Splendid Triumph which appeared in its full Lustre and Grandeur but was no sooner over and the King and his Traine sat down to Dinner but it fell a Thundering Lightning and Raining with the greatest Force Vehemency and Noise that was ever known at that season of the Year the Thunder and Lightning seeming as it were to imitate the Fire and Noise of the Cannon which then plaid from the Tower it being observed that they exactly kept time with that loud Musick so that they were easily distinguishable from each other the Thunder and lightning still intermitting between each firing of the Canons as if they had waited to receive and answer the Reciprocated and ecchoed Boation and Clashes of the Guns which was taken by the most Judicious and discerning part of Mankind for a very auspicious and promising Omen notwithstanding the mad Remnant of the Rebellion would have had it paralled to Sauls Inauguration without reflecting upon the Season or the Different case between the Ancient Kingly Right and Descent in Christendom and that new Title and Government in Jewry which in regard of the peculiar presence of God amongst them before was a kind of casting him off and declaring they would not have him to Reign over them There was not only in London but through the whole Kingdom great rejoycing for the Kings Coronation which was manifested by Feasting and other Publick shews as Trayning the several Bands of the Countryes with the additional Voluntary Gentry in a new and gallant Cavalry And so there was in Scotland and Ireland in each whereof there was likewise the same kind of Tryumphs in resemblance of this Magnificence And having with as much Brevity as possible glided through this Sphere of Glory in which the Ancient honour of the Government and Kingdom was refixt and given the World the full and compleat View of that wonderful Revolution which will undoubtedly be the amazement of all succeeding Ages each Luminary being thereby placed and shining in their proper Orbs and degrees the Soveraign Nobility Clergy Gentry and Commonalty having by that blessed change recovered their former and distinct Lustre and from being the scorn and deris●on were once again become the Envy of the World I shall proceed to shew by what Rules and Methods he managed the Government throughout his whole Raign and therein shall begin First with his Calling a Parliament with whom he desired to meet and consult for the more effectual healing the Breaches uniting the Differences and redintegrating the mutual Affections and Endearments which the unnaturalness and perverse malignity and divisions of the late times had abrupted and hitherto discontinued When he dissolved that Parliament or Convention which was sitting when he came in He promised the calling of a new one and accordingly Issued out His Writs soon after for their sitting down the Eighth of May a little before which several Musters had been made in England of the Militia and a General Train in Hide-Park of all the Forces about London both Horse and Foot Fifteen Regiments whereof he there took a view of The chief Stickling in the Election of Members for this Parliament was between the Episcopal and Presbyterian Parties the Latter whereof notwithstanding their Numbers found themselves greatly mistaken in the suffrages of the Kingdom when under no Awe nor distempered with a Frenzy and a misguided Zeal For altho several Letters were dispatcht by the chief Ministers of that Perswasion to their Correspondents wherein they exhorted them to do their utmost in procuring such persons
to be Elected for Members of that Parliament as were known to favour their Discipline yet that no part of the Government might be left unjustified and unreared the greater part of those chosen for Members of the House of Commons were as well affected to the Restoration and Settlement of the Church as the former had been to the Restoration and Settlement of the Crown The Eighth of May being come when they were to sit according to the Splendid Custome of opening those great Assemblies He rode in State and Tryumph from White-Hall to Westminster being arrayed in his Royal Robes and his Crown on his head and having placed himself on His Throne in the House of Peeres commanded the Commons to attend him there and in a most pleasant and obliging manner declared his great Content in meeting them Telling them that he was very confident that it would prove a happy Parliament and acquainting them with his design of his Marrying the Infanta of Portugal which Match having been proposed to his Privy Council and highly approved of by them he thought none there present would willingly have him live and die a Batchellor In confidence whereof he had newly made and signed a Treaty with that King by his Embassadour Don Francisco de Mello who was then ready to depart with the said Treaty in which the Article of Marriage was inserted The Kings Speech being ended and the Lord Chancellor Hide having given them a further account of the Reasons why they were called and the happy Effects his Master expected from their Sitting The Commons made Choice of Sir Edward Turner the Dukes Attorney General for their Speaker who in his Speech upon his being presented to and accept● of by the King exprest the hopes of that House That as His Majesty had manifested his great Indulgence to their former which was but his Adopted So he had a fuller Blessing for that present which was his Natural Parliament being called by His immediate Writ The Convocation of the English Clergy being all Eminent Learned and Pious Persons met likewise on the Sixteenth of that Month at Westminster and a Parliament began about the same time in Ireland The Parliament at the special instance and desire of the King who was willing to give the highest demonstration of his Care and Resolution for the assuring to his Subjects whatsoever was contained and promised in His Declaration from Breda and the Act of Pardon first began with an Act for the Confirmation of the Act of Oblivion which being done by the Free Parliament not called by the Kings Writ was thought by the Guilty not to be valid and secure enough to them and that they might by a wise provision before hand prevent all Objections and Scruples which might otherwise have been raised upon that account They Ratified and Confirmed all the other Laws made therein and then proceeded to frame such new ones as were necessary for the better setling and maintaining the Publick Peace wherein that for Regulating Corporations as the most necessary had the Precedency wherein Commissioners were Impowered to displace all such as bore Offices and were any way suspected to be ill-willers to the Government and the Kings Authority or should refuse the Oath of Allegiance and Supremacy or the Oath of Abjuration which was indeed at that time the only or at least the chief Test of Loyalty in regard they were therein to renounce the Solemn League and Covenant as unlawful in it self and illegally imposed But during the Houses Debate about that Bill Mr. Prin who had alwayes indulged himself the liberty of Quarrelling with every thing that any way ran counter to his inclinations could not refrain against the Priviledge of the House whereof he was a Member from publishing his Reasons against the said Bill affirming it was contrary to Magna Charta but the Commons having Commanded their Serjeant at Arms to Seize the Printer and Prin owning himself to be the Author he was brought to the Barr and severely rebuked by the Speaker but upon his humble submission and the House's favourable reflection upon his great Endeavours for the Restitution of the King he was remitted the Censure and Punishment which he had incurred by that over-sight And that they might shew their respect and veneration to the Prelacy by relieving it from the Oppressions and justifying of it from the Calumnies and Reproaches of the late times they Repealed the Act of the 1 Caroli 7. which forbid the Bishops medling in Civil affaires and debarred them from their Priviledg of Peerage in the House of Lords to all which Honours they were by this Repeal restored as fully as ever they had been before The free Parliament having before their desolution respitted the punishment of several of the Regicides the Parliament next reassumed the Consideration of that matter and having caused the Lord Manson Sir Henry Mildmay and Mr. Robert Wallop to be brought to the Bar declared their Estates to be confiscated and their Persons and Posterity degraded from all Titles and Armes of Gentility and that they should be carried back again to the Tower and from thence be drawn through the City of London to Tyburn on the 30th of the following January and so back again with halters about their necks upon Sledges and after that to suffer perpetual imprisonment And having now done as much as could be expected from them for the present they were adjourned by the King who declared his great satisfaction in what they had done and that his confidence i● them had not in the least deceived● him About which time the Duke o● York having been chosen Captain to the Artillery Company in London honoured them with his Presence and led them in their Ground And in the August following the Kings Sollicitor Sir Heneage Finch being chosen Reader of the Inner-Temple he was pleased to indulge him a Favour never granted before by any of his Royal Progenitors to any of those famous Societies accepting of an invitation to dine with him in that Hall These endeavours of the Parliament to settle the Nation upon the Foundation of a well-grounded and lasting Peace by excluding from all Offices as well Sacred as Civil and Military those that refused to take the aforesaid Oaths did highly urge the Discontented of the late Anarchy whose anger suggested to them some hopes of undoing all again In order whereunto they laid new designs and Conspiracies and had several meetings to consult about them but their designes proved Abortive by a timely discovery Barbone Moyer Salmon Wildman Haynes Ireton and others were seized and Committed to safe custody The King out of a Noble and generous inclination to shew Respect and Veneration to the Memory of his Friends when it was out of his power to reward their Persons and considering likewise that the Living are usually very much taken with kindnesses exprest to the dead did about this time give order for the Re-interring those two Loyal Commanders Sir
Holland-Coast the alarum whereof brought back Bankert who had been about three Weeks at Sea with some of their Ships and caused them to make de Ruyter after his long expected arrival from the West Admiral of their Fleet. But the Bishop of Munster's Drums who then likewise threatned them with a War sounding in their Ears almost as terribly as the English Cannon made them order a flying Army to the Frontiers tho' with little satisfaction to the fearful Inhabitants who daily fled to the fortified Towns for their security In the mean while the English Fleet in three Squadrons sailed towards Norway and the Earl of Sandwich having notice that fifty Hollanders had sheltred themselves in Berghen sent a Squadron of twenty two Men of War under the Command of Tyddeman to attack and fire them in the Harbour which Enterprise had proved very fatal had not the Wind befriended them and the Dane permitted them to plant their Guns on shore against the resolute English however they received very great dammages and had many of their best Ships in that Harbour dissabled And the Earl himself meeting with a Convoy of theirs who had several Merchants and some East-India men in his Company attacked them with so much resolution that notwithstanding the storminess of the Weather did much favour them yet he took Eight of their Men of War two of their best East-India Ships and twenty Sail of their Merchants and some few days after the Fleet encountering with eighteen Sail of the Enemy took the greatest part of them with above one thousand Prisoners However the French King supposing the Ballance of Affairs not yet even enough and affecting a Sovereignty in the Mediterranean-Sea not only continued his friendship to them but in their behalf declared War likewise against England upon pretence of succouring them according to the Conditions of the Treaty in 1662 which Declaration the King who altho he was as great a lover of Peace as any Prince in the World yet being provoked would not be behind hand with his Enemies soon returned with the like denunciation of War against him protesting that he was resolved to prosecute that War against France with his utmost force by Land and Sea And it was admirable to behold the cheerfulness and alacrity wherewith the Maritine Countreys offered him their Service upon their first receiving his Orders to put themselves into a posture of defence but being unwilling to continue them under the trouble and charge of a needless Duty he dismiss'd them for the present and only ordered them to be ready if there was occasion The Pestilence being now pretty well abated he returned again to London where he was joyfully received and welcomed by the Lord Mayor and Aldermen about which time eight persons formerly Officers or Soldiers in the Rebellion were Indicted at the Old-Bayly for conspiring the Death of the King and the Alteration of the Government having in his absence from the City plotted the surprisal of the Tower killing the General Robinson and Brown and then according to their old levelling humour to have declared for an equal division of Lands The better to effect which Design of theirs the City was to have been fired the Portcullices to have been let down to keep out all assistance and the Horse-guards to have been surprised in their Quarters the Tower having been viewed by them and its surprisal ordered by Boats over the Moat and so to scale the Wall One Alexander was the chief Conspirator having distributed several Sums of Money amongst them and he told them for their encouragement of several great ones that sat continually in London and issued out all necessary Orders which Counsel he said received their Directions from another in Holland who sat with the States The third of September being found by a Scheme erected for that purpose a lucky Day a Planet then ruling whose direful effects portended the downfal of Monarchy was pitch'd upon for the Attempt They were found guilty of High Treason and executed at Tyburn Prince Rupert and the Duke of Albemarle being made joynt Generals at Sea for that Summer's Expedition divided the Fleet the Prince commanding the blew Squadron wherewith he sailed toward France upon intimation that the French were hasting to joyn the Dutch Fleet and the Duke the other two who meeting the Hollanders on Friday about 4 or 5 Leagues from the North Foreland couragiously attacked them notwithstanding he had not above half their number bravely maintaining the Fight two days and part of the third when he had been hardly put to it had not the Prince hearing the Guns tacked about and made towards him Upon his approach de Ruyter sent out 30 stout Ships to intercept him and prevent his joyning the Duke but avoiding them he hastened forward and sent Albemarle word that if he liked the design he would keep the wind of them and engage the 30 Ships de Ruyter had sent against him but the Duke not liking his purpose advised him rather to joyn the Fleet which he did and the approaching night soon after put an end to their farther proceedings And the next morning so soon as it grew light they perceived the Dutch to be fled and gotten almost out of sight St. Georges Chanel having proved too dangerous and stormy for them but making all the sail they could they pursued them and the Prince with his fresh Squadron falling in with them with an undaunted courage and bravery pass'd five several times through the whole Body of their Fleet so that not able longer to endure it with all the sail they could make they began to run and sheltred themselves in their shallows But both Fleets having repaired their dammages got out to Sea again and meeting soon after begun a second Engagement no less bloody than the former both sides fighting with all the Courage and Valour that could be expected from the most inveterate and enraged Enemies de Ruyter resolving to revenge his lost disgrace and recover if possible his lost honour and the Prince to maintain his former by obtaining a second Victory They began to fight about Nine in the Morning pouring Broad-sides upon each other with such fury that the roaring Canon seemed to outvy the Thunder and the Smoak clouded the Sun and rendred the Air more dark and dismal than was black Munday There might have been seen the Heads of some the Arms Leggs and Thighs of others shot off some divided in the middle with Chain-shot breathing out their last in anguish and pain or burning in Fired Ships whilst others exposed to the mercy of the Liquid Element implored pity from their very Enemies whom they intreated to save their Lives although with the loss of their Liberties But in the midst of all those deplorable miseries the survivers fought with as much resolution and fury as ever their Courage and Valour being rather heightned than daunted thereby For which Victories a solemn thanks giving was observed throughout the
considered the Plea and consulted with other Judges about it and were of opinion it was insufficient and was therefore overruled and the Prisoner ordered to plead over Whereupon he pleaded Not guilty and had till the first Thursday in the next Term allowed him for his Tryal In the mean while many Loyal Addresses flowed from all parts of the Nation full of Congratulations and Thanks to the King for his late Declaration And in Trinity-Term Dr. Oliver Plunket was Try'd for High-Treason the Evidence against him being all profest Papists affirmed he was made Primate of Ireland by the Pope at the French Kings Recommendation and that he having thereupon engaged to do that King all the Service he could had actually levied amongst his Popish Clergy great Sums of Money to introduce the French Dominion and extirpate the Protestants out of that Kingdom upon which evidence he was found Guilty and was together with Fitz-harris who received his Tryal the next day executed at Tyburn on the first of the following July protesting his innocency and praying for the King Queen and Duke Presently after the Tryal of Fitz-Harris his Wife and Maid accused the Lord Howard of Escrick of contriving the Treasonable Libel for which he was convicted who was thereupon committed to the Tower And in a Paper delivered at his Execution to Dr. Haukins Minister of the Tower for his Wife he confirmed that accusation denying what he had formerly confest about Danby and the Plot affirming he was drawn into that confession only through hopes of saving his Life thereby But a Bill of Indictment against Howard being delivered on the last day of the Term to the Grand-Jury of Edmunton Hundred sworn to by Fitz-harris's Wife and Maid and by some others that Jury pretending to be unsatisfied with the Evidence would have indorsed it with an Ignoramus had not one of the Clerks of the Crown who attended them withdrawn it from them for which notwithstanding they were told by the Court the Kings Attorney might stop such proceedings as he saw occasion they preferred a Bill of Indictment against the Clerk to the Jury of Oswelston Hundred there attending for that pretended Misdemeanor The Reason why some Persons went so well attended to the Oxford Parliament began now to appear for about this time there was discovery made of a design of seizing the Kings Person whilst he was there and several factious People were thereupon committed to the Tower viz. Rouse Haynes White Colledg and the Earl of Shaftsbury whose Papers were likewise seiz'd At the Sessions which began soon after he and Howard moved to be bailed but the Judges told them it lay not in their power to bail out of the Tower At this Sessions and Indictment of High Treason was preferred to the Grand-Jury of London against one of those lately committed to the Tower whose Name was Colledg But in regard he was a busie factious Fellow and ever loved to meddle most with that he least understood and pass his ignorant censures upon the great Affairs of State He was the more commonly known by the Name of the Protestant Joyner But notwithstanding the Evidence against him was full and clear they returned an Ignoramus upon the Bill whereupon part of the Treasonable Words and Matters for which he was there Indicted being transacted at Oxford whilst the Parliament sate there the Cause was removed to that Assizes where he was before the Lord Chief Justice North tryed upon the same Evidence and condemned and executed In a Parliament held at this time in Scotland the Duke of York presided as the Kings High Commissioner and an Act was past which asserted the Right of Succession to the Imperial Crown of Scotland asserting it to be by inherent right and that the nature of the Monarchy was such that by the fundamental and unalterable Law of the Realm it transmitted and devolved by Lineal Succession according to proximity of Blood and that no difference in Religion no Law nor Act of Parliament could alter or divert the Right of Succession of the Crown to the nearest and lawful Heirs and declaring it High Treason either by Writing Speaking or any other way to endeavour the least Alteration therein The French Protestants being greatly opprest and persecuted by that King flockt into England in great multitudes and were received by the King of England with abundance of Kindness and affection ordering that his Officers and Magistrates should give them the same Countenance and Favour with his own Subjects assuring them he would take them into his Royal Protection and grant 'em his Letters of Dennization and promising to procure in the next Parliament an Act for their Naturalization A special Commission of Oyer and Terminer being granted by him for the Tryal of Shaftsbury and others at the Old Bayly the Bill of High Treason preferred against Shaftsbury notwithstanding the Evidence swore very full to the Treason was returned by the Grand-Jury the Foreman whereof was Sir Samuel Barnardiston Ignoramus as a former Jury had done that of Colledg Whereupon the people whose Idol he was gave a great Shout and assaulted those who were Witnesses against him with that violence that the Sheriffs to prevent mischief were forced to guard them as far as the Savoy homeward Bonfires were that Night made by the Rabble almost in every Street at one whereof Capt. Griffith was knockt down and wounded in the Head for endeavouring to put it out And a rout of people marching down Warwick-lane one whereof had his Sword drawn sometimes cryed No York no Popish Successor and then bawl'd out a Monmouth a Shaftsbury a Buckingham till they were stopt by the Watch at Ludgate But tho the factious Rabble were thus overjoyed at the acquittal of their Idol yet the sober and Loyal part of the Nation had other sentiments about it and declared their Indignation in several Loyal Addresses against the most Execrable and Traiterous designed Association which was discovered in Shaftsburys Closet amongst his other papers which threatned not the King alone but Monarchy it self In February 1682 there hapned a strange and Barbarous Murder which for the boldness of the Attempt and the baseness of the manner wherein it was perpetrated is scarcely to be parellel'd in any History For Thomas Thin of Long-Leat Esq a Gentleman of an Estate of about 10000 l. per annum having privately married Elizabeth Daughter and sole Heir of Jocelin Earl of Northumberland and Relict to Henry Earl of Ogle Son and Heir apparent to the Duke of Newcastle And some of her Friends who were not so well satisfied with the Match as her Grand-mother was by whose means it was said to be made up having perswaded her before ever her New Husband had bedded her to withdraw her self secretly into Holland the Town was thereupon alarumed with the approach of a mighty Suit in Law concerning the Validity of the Match the best Civilians being engaged on the one side or the other And Count
own Prerogative and his Peoples Properties by the just Dimension of his Laws so that Justice was impartially administred throughout his whole Reign unless where himself was party and there he would rather lose his own Cause than have his Subjects seem oppressed nor was there ever known so few Executions in so long a Reign And truly when we especially for the first Eighteen Years after the Interregnum consider his great Mercy to Traytors it looks as if he design'd not to spare himself provided he could but people again or at least keep as full as possibly a Nation which had been so monstrously emptied of men by a long unnatural and sanguinary War For he was ever unwilling to inflict the least Severities upon his offending Subjects unless when necessity of State or the nature of the Crime did bind the hand of Mercy and render Severity absolutely necessary rather for the publick than his own Secuirty He always professed to love and seek Peace and prefer it before the Troubles and Hazards of War wherein he was like Solomon rather than David and imitated our Blessed Saviour who stiles himself the Prince of Peace ever bearing it in his Princely mind that when Christ came into the World Peace was sang by the Holy Angels and when he made his Exit Peace was the Legacy he bequeathed Nor can it be imagined That his desire of Peace was the effect of softness or fear for he was both Active and Valiant but he had a Conduct peculiar to himself in bringing about his Purposes His peaceable disposition and accomplishing his designs by the most easie and gentle means and would do that by Peace which others could not perform by War and effect more by shewing his Sword than others could do by using it He knew the way to preserve and obtain Peace was sometimes to pretend an inclination to embrace War and therefore would when provok'd make offers of the latter till he had mended the Conditions of the former By which means he was more absolutely and with far less charge to his Subjects the Arbitrator of Europe than any of his Predecessors had ever been and could at his Pleasure dispence War and Peace where and to whom he pleas'd which makes it the greater Wonder That He who was so great a Lover of Peace should be so successful in War for his Arms were always fortunate nor did he ever after his Restauration know what a miscarriage meant The Two Rebellions in Scotland were ended by Victory as if raised industriously to encrease the Fame of his Arms which after so long an interval of Peace wanted exercising and in his Wars with Holland France Spain and Denmark he was always sued to for peace before he granted it and the French King did ever fear his Threatnings more than other Princes performances In the exercising his Sovereignty he consulted his own Judgment rather than other mens Affections or Interests and always reserv'd the disposal of his Royal Favours to his own Will and Pleasure and to avoid the fate of too many Princes who are ruled by their Favourites and Govern'd by those whom they themselves have raised he never admitted any of his Nobles to so familiar an intimacy with him His care to maintain the Prerogatives of the Crown as to give others occasion to account them his Favourites For altho he had many Noblemen about him whom he greatly loved and upon whose Advice and Counsel he much rely'd as Clarendon Buckingham Lauderdale Danby and others yet none of them could be properly called his Favourites as Gaveston and Spencer were the Favourites of Edward the Second or the Duke of Norfolk of Richard the Second And altho he would frequently acquaint his Parliaments with his Intentions and require their advice and assistance for the executing of them yet he would not endure they should be too positive or peremptory therein accounting that too great an Invasion of his Prerogative and would tell them The Right of making and managing War and Peace was invested in Him and if they thought he would depart from any part of that Right they would find themselves mistaken for having the Reins of Government in his own hands he would have the same care to maintain them there as he would have to preserve his own Person His Prudence and Conduct in managing the great Affairs of his Kingdom was so admirable and successful that it is rather to be wondred at than believed and he made so many good and wholsome Laws every one whereof was grounded upon the most searching Maxims of State for the Welfare and security of His Subjects and the maintaining the prerogatives of the Crown as no Age before him could ever boast of which begot in all men the greater Awe and Veneration of him and yet there is nothing more certain than that his Reputation was as great if not greater abroad than at home His Prudence and Conduct tho perhaps not so well grounded for Forreigners could not see at that distance the passages of Affairs nor discern by what Secret Councils he always attained his own ends and disappointed the Expectation of his Enemies abroad and the Factions at Home and were therefore forced to make their Judgment upon the Issues and Success of them No Prince ever had a Wiser Council than He and yet no Prince ever needed it less for he was Himself a Counsellor to his Council and was able to direct those of whom he asked advice For he was as well skilled in the Art of Kingship as His Royal Grandfather was wont to term it and had as great an insight into and understood as well the best Rules and Methods of Government as any Prince that ever sway'd a Scepter which rendred him more capable of exercising his Kingly Office to the greatest advantage of Himself his Kingdom and the Protestant Religion and enabled Him to govern His Subjects for so long a Tract of Time with so much exactness that by his Wise and Prudent Management he so poized all jarring and different Interests as to preserve the publick Peace and Tranquility of his Kingdom to the very last Minute of His Life notwithstanding the many restless Attempts of unruly and designing Men to disturb it and left things in so good a posture at his Death that his most Illustrious Brother and Royal and Lawful Successor ascended his Imperial Throne with as much Facility and Applause as any of his Predecessors He loved so well to see his Subjects thrive that he coveted not so much to fill his Exchequer as to reign over a Rich and Wealthy People and thought Money as well bestowed when laid up in their Coffers as when it filled his own He was Religious toward God as well as just towards man and took care to promote the Interest of the Church as well as the State At His Restoration he found the Church involved in Trouble but left her possessed of Peace he found her robbed and