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A77102 Florus Anglicus: or An exact history of England, from the raign of William the Conqueror to the death of the late King. / By Lambert Wood gent.; Florus Anglicus. English Bos, Lambert van den, 1610-1698. 1656 (1656) Wing B3777A; Thomason E1677_1; ESTC R208435 117,721 287

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from Heaven For hiring a Cellar under the Parliament-House be laid in a vast deal of Gun-pouder which he purposed to set fire to and so to blow up at once all the Parliament-House together with the King the Prince and all the Nobility but the matter was discovered by the importunate care of the Conspirators who gave warning of the danger to the Lord Mounteagle Sonne to the Lord Morlay a Member of the Parliament and one that they loved very well In this Vault there were found terrible Instruments of this damned wickedness that a man would wonder at which were presently taken away Then the Conspirators were executed Catesbey with his companions John and Christopher Wright and Thomas Pierce flying to his Arms was killed with a shot others were taken and executed Amongst whom was Everard Digbey who was unwillingly drawn into this Conspiracy for otherwise he was a man of excellent parts And thus that hainous wickedness that had troubled the devils themselves was purged away In Northampton and Warwickshire new tumults arose first by Fines then by John Reignold that led them but this faction was soon allayed and the Authors were punished In the mean time Frederick Count Elector Palatine came to London to marry Elizabeth King James his Daughter The Marriage was solemnized with wonderfull pomp but all these joyes were over-shadowed with clouds of sorrow for on the sixth day of November 1612 Prince Henry departed this life Various reports were spread abroad by the vulgar as if indirect means had been used but his Physicians gave it under their hands that he died of a violent malignant Feaver Charles the Kings second Son succeeds him in the Principality of Wales About this time that Gallant and Noble Spirit Sr Walter Rawlrigh after fourteen yeares imprisonment made addresses to the King to get leave to visit the New-found-World in America to which he gave him liberty and a Commission under the great Seal to set forth Ships and Men for that Service his Reputation and Merit caused many Gentlemen of quality to venture their Estates and Persons on the Design Many considerable adventures were performed though with great difficulty but more especially that of the taking and burning St Thomes Information being sent to Gendimer who was Embassadour here in England never rested assaulting the King with importunity for reparation Rawleigh no sooner comes a shore at Plimouth but he had secret information and did endeavour to get from thence in a Bark for Rotchell but being apprehended by Sr Lewis Stukly he is brought to London and committed to the Tower Gondimer that looked upon him as a man that had not only high abilities but animosity to do his Master mischief being one of those scourges that Queen Elizabeth had made use of to afflict the Spaniards Having now gotten him in the Trap he laid his B●its about the King In October he was brought to the Kings Bench-barre at Westminster before the Lord Chief-Justice where the Records of his arraignment at Winchester were opened and he demanded why the judgement should not be put in execution Ralwrigh replied that Judgement was void by the King● Commission for his late expedition The Lord Chief-Justice replied the opinion of the Court was to the contrary He required time to prepare for death but it was answered the appointed time was the next morning Accordingly on the morrow he lost his Head on a Scafford in the Palace-yard The Earl of Buckingham as great in Title as favour was now grown a Marquess and lying in the Kings bosom every man paid tribute to his smile Worcester and Nottingham are taken off for him to be Master of the Horse and Admirall of England Queen Anne about that time fell sick and died She was a Queen to be had in everlasting memory for her Noble Vertues The King also fell sick but by Gods affistance he recovered The Palsegrave in the mean time who had married Elizabeth by the prompting forward of some of the German Princes was chosen King of Bohemia The Emperour was wonderfully enraged at this Election and proclaimed Warre against him driving him first out of Bohemia and afterwards out of all Germany who in Holland the common refuge for all wretched people found a bountifull and safe entertainment But James that he might help his Sonne in Law made a motion for a Marriage of his Son Charles and the Spaniards Daughter Charles is sent into Spain through France by Land where he saw upon his journey Mary Daughter to Henry the fourth He was received in Spain in outward appearance magnificently but a dissention arising between the Duke of Buckingham and Count Olivares the principall Don of the Spanish Court the Treaty for the Marriage was drawn out at langth but Charles being impatient of delays was called home again by his Father and arrived safe in England and afterwards he married Mary whom he had affectionately beheld in France What remains to be spoken of King James is either scarce worth recording or not so consonant to the truth He died at last of a disease of the Spleen though there were false reports spread abroad that he was poysoned when he had reigned twenty two years and was fifty nine years of age in the year 1625. He was a true Platonick Prince a Husband worthy of his Wife an honest Father to his Children a good King to his Subjects because he was a Prince he was the Most Learned and he was the Best Prince by reason of his Learning When this King reigned the English Plantations were setled in the Indies as in Virginy which Country Sr Walter Rawleigh first discovered and in the Barmudoes whither an infinite multitude of inhabitants presently resorted building publick and private houses and made a Commonwealth The same was done by others in New-England to the great comfort of such as were distressed and fled thither CHARLES the first King of Great-Brittany France and Ireland Anno 1625. CHARLES the first succeeded his Father being twenty five yeares of age The first design he had was to marry Henrietta Mary Daughter to Henry the fourth King of France as he purposed before who landed in England the 22 day of April and was received magnificently Then a Navy was prepared against the Spaniard for all friendship was grown stale between these two Kings by reason of the breach of the Marriage and the business of the Palatinate he joyned with the Ships of Holland and sent away toward Spain and first assaulting Cades and not prevailing they set up sail to Sea and spoyling all the Spanish Vessels they met they return for England Now a Covenant was made between the English and the United Provinces and they resolved with joynt Forces to tire out the Spaxiard but Charles whose Exchequer was empted by reason of his great Expence of his Spanish Voyage and setting forth of his Navy was forced to call a Parliament but Buckingham the Kings chief Minister of State and most dear unto him had
that this was subject to that and ever after the Archbishop of York was called Primate of England and the Archbishop of Canterbury Primate of all England Also he made the Churches of Scotland to be under the Primate of York as the Churches of England were under Canterbury Though he seemed to curb the insolency of the Clergy he had them yet in great esteem For Aldred Archbishop of York being angry because he could not obtain what he asked and offering to go away in a fury the King not enduring the hatred of that Prelate fell down at his knees and humbly asked forgiveness of him The Bishop being admonished to raise up the King answered No but said He shall feel what it is to offend St Peter By the largeness of his Benefits he shewed forth the love he bare unto Church men building innumerable Churches for the service of God with Monasteries and other sacred Houses About the end of his life and Kingdom he placed his two Sons Robert and Henry almost in equal power over Normandy There arose on a day a quarrel between Henry and Lewis the Dolphin of France playing at Tables which was the cause of a great contention between the French and the Normans The Dolphin drawing Robert on his side enters Normandy with an Army William forthwith having his Navy ready sails into Normandy and with no difficulty reducing his Son Robert to his former obedience he marched to Roan that he might finde the French men work when he was weary with toyling being very fat he made an halt a while The French derided William because he was sick and by reason of his fat belly speaking scoffingly That he was with childe and ready to be delivered When this jeer was told to William he answered If please God that I ever recover of this child-birth I will burn a thousand lights to God in token of my thankfulness Nor was it long before he entred the Territories of France and wasted all with fire and sword Yet shortly after falling into a relapse of the same weakness he died at Roan His followers not only forsook him being dead but spoiled him of what he had And his Body unfortunately being thrice forsaken at last was let down into his own Monument but not entire WILLIAM the second King of England Anno 1088. WIlliam whose sirname was Rufus the third Son succeeded the Conquerour The beginning of his Reign was unquiet and troublesom his Brother Robert being offended with him for taking the succession from him the Nobility being divided and conspiring his destruction But he freed himself of all this danger partly by force partly by rewards and partly by Armes so that he pacified them all But the greater Tempest was threatned from Scotland now ready to arise for Malcom King of the Scots though he ought homage to the English conjecturing amongst so many troubles that he had now a fit opportunity to be prosperous in his business with great force entred Northumberland and with fire and sword he consumed all he met with and loaded with spoils he returned into his Countrey But William having provided an Army invaded Scotland and subduing Malcom brought him at last to his obedience and made him give Hostages for security Robert the Kings Brother once more proclaims Warre against him because he paid him not the money they were agreed upon and the King of France taking his part he took some Towns by force from his Brother which of right belonged to him But William bribed the French King and so depriving his Brother of all help easily compelled him to crave pardon for his Retractayners But that all things might take their turns Malcom taking occasion of raising Arms from the contempt of the English provoked William by a new injury spoyling his Countrey But when being loaden with the spoil he thought to return home by chance being intercepted by Ambush he lost both his life and the Prize he had got But yet this put not an end to the Troubles for the Welsh setting upon the King already incumbred depopulated his Territories in the way whom at last William overcame in a successfull Battel In the mean while Robert Mowbray by whose valour Malcom was subdued supposing himself to be despised or not so much honoured as he deserved procuring some other Noble men to joyn with him riseth up against his Sovereign but the King suddenly falling upon the small number of the Conspirators easily put an end to this tumultuous Warre taking Mowbray prisoner Yet least the Welsh should rise again afresh however their stubborness was beaten down and should occasion greater danger William now endeavours wholly to Conquer them invading their Kingdom and building of Bulwarks but when this Warre proved to be tedious the business being recommended to Hugh Earl of Shropshire and to the Earl of Chester the King left them They cruelly handled the Wolsh cutting off their nostrils and their ears untill such time as the Earl of Shropshire being slain Hugh Count of Chester killing the King of Wales obtain'd a full Victory over them Whilst Lanfranc Archbishop of Canterbury lived he was ruled as with a bridle but after he was dead being as it were freed from all bands the state of the Church being oppressed he began to rage with immoderate Tributes and hard Laws Now was the first time that all Ecclesiasticall preferments were set to sale and any thing was lawfull for money Yet the Tyranny of this King was not wholly void of doing good for he gave freely to a poor Monk a Benefice for which two others contended violently beating the bargain with great summes of money However all these vices were made good by his great Magnanimity for hearing of the siege of the Town of Mantium breaking through a Wall that he might the sooner enter none following him but such as were couragious like himself and despising the danger of the turbulent Sea he came unexpected and freed the place putting the enemy to flight and taking their Captain prisoner who was Helias Earl of Flescia That Earl when he saw himself captivated imputed this his misfortune to the unlooked for arrivall of the King threatning great matters against the King if he were once at liberty whereupon he was set free to do what he could Also he shewed a wonderfull example of notable courage at a Fort call'd St Michaels Mount for he was suddenly set upon by three Cavaliers and although he was already unhorsed he defended himself valiantly with his Saddle for a Target and his drawn Sword untill such time as he was rescued by his followers When as those that accompanied him found fault with his too great care for his Saddle Yes saith he I would rather have lost my life than have left that to the scorn of the Enemy He was faithfull in his promise betwixt both in continence he neither despised nor yet adored Religion but he was extream covetous This was the first King of England that would
French King a Maid of eight years old being betrothed to King Richard For Anna his former Wife was deceased The Duke of Glocester by an importune word blaming the Kings negligence fell into his displeasure and fearing some ill issue of it with his Brothers forsook the Court and entring into a Conspiracy with some friends he attempted to change the state of the Kingdom But the King under-feeling it with his Brother the Earl of Huntington took a progress to the Castle of the Duke of Glocester his Fathers Brother when he came there at night he found the Duke rising out of his Bed and presently going to meet him he was taken by the Earl Marshall and carried Prisoner to Callis and there was hanged miserably Also the Earl of Arundel the chief Conspiratour and some principall Noblemen are east into Prison And he afterwards in a Parliament being questioned for his life had his head cut off the rest being condemned either to be banished or to perpetual Imprisonment And thus Richard by the bloud of the Nobility thought to make good his Kingdom The Dukes of Norfolk and Hereford without any other witness appeaching one the other of Treason are admitted to fight a Duell but when they were both ready to fight they were commanded to forbear and so to spare blood they were both sent away to divers places into Banishment Norfolk went first for Germany then to Venice where he died of meer sorrow and grief But Hereford who had sail'd into France and there being instigated by the Counsel of the Archbishop of Canterbury who was banished for the same Conspiracy returned privately home under a pretence of his Patrimony to be redeemed which the King had brought into the Exchequer after his Fathers death against all Right and Equity but indeed that joyning with the Nobility he might order the Kings Insolence He was scarce landed but the Nobility came from all parts to him and he waxed very strong And having now a sufficient Army he took some Cities and beheaded the Kings chiefest Counsellours Richard in the interim was in Ireland and did his best to subdue the Irish When a Messenger came to him of the Commotions in England he was troubled at it yet made no haste according as the danger required At length the Earl of Salisbury was sent into England before him that he might levy what Forces he could the King promising in six dayes to be with him As soon as the Earl set foot in England he raised with ease a mighty Army of Welsh but the King not appearing a rumour was given that he was dead so part of his Forces went one way some another but a few stood to their Colours The King at last so soon as contrary windes would let him came to them But when he found so much of the Countrey to be fallen to Hereford and the Duke of Lancaster also by the death of his Father he quite fainted in his minde and bad all those men that came to help him to go whither they pleased yet they continuing their fidelity he with the Earl of Exeter and some others fled to the Castle of Conve where he found the Earl of Salisbury Here the Duke of Worcester who was Governour of the Kings House breaking his white Staff a sign of his Office and so renouncing his fidelity fell off from the King to the Lords Conspiratours Then the Earl of Northumberland is sent to the King who from that Castle conveyed him to another place saying also that he came to treat with the King for Conditions of Peace which the King did not refuse But in the way the Earl of Rutland coming upon him he is forced to go to Flint-Castle whether shortly after Henry the Duke of Lancaster came who was guilty and friendly received by the King and then he related the cause of his coming which was that he might receive his Rights and Goods The King granted and ratified all so they went to drink together and afterwards mounting on Horsback they ride towards London in a continued voyage in so great haste that the King had no leisure given him to change his cloaths Then was the King put into the Tower the Castle for the Nobility and was diligently watched there And a Parliament was called by the Command of Lancaster though it were falsly given out in the Kings Name wherein Richard was accused of divers crimes Namely That he had wasted the goods of the Kingdom That he had borrowed a vast summe of Money and not yet repay'd it That he had made all the Laws Arbitrary as he pleased That he had changed the Members of Parliament when he would That he had Tyrannically taken Power to himself over the Subjects Estates That he had corrupted the Judges That he had caused his Vncle Earl of Glocester to be barbarously murdered at Callis That he had imprisoned the Members of Parliament That beyond Right and Equity he had put the Earl of Arundel to extream Terture That be had depopulated his own Kingdome That be had pawned the Ornaments of the Kingdome and Kings out of the Kingdom and so forward For which faults they thought fit to deprive him of all his Honours and Title of King But he that he might seem to desire what he would have avoided willingly resigned all his Right to the Kingdom and freely gave it to Henry of Lancaster whom he nominated to succeed him which was ratified and confirmed by the Great Seal Then Richard being brought to Pomfret-Castle was discharged of his Crown Henry having thus got the Kingdome and not enduring any Competitour one day lamenting was heard to cry out Is there any man will free me from that hatefull man And presently one Peter Exton a Knight that he might winne the Kings favour with such a wickednesse went with eight more unto Richard whom he set upon to kill him being at Dinner but Richard rising hastily wresting the Ax out of the hands of one of his Executioners killed four of them and at last by this Peter Exton he was knocked down dead himself by an unhappy blow on the Head which the Parricides lamented when it was too late Thus the unhappiest and most well-favoured of the Kings of England ended his life and Kingdom HENRY the fourth King of England and France Anno 1399. HENRY of Lancaster who was nominated to succeed was crowned King but that he might not be thought to usurp that Kingdom which he had by Election he endeavoured to be established in his own Right vaunting that he was the next Heir being directly descended from Henry the third but that was false and counterfeit for Roger Mortimer Earl of Marsh deriving his Pedigree from the eldest Sonne of Henry the third had a better Title To this he added his Right of Force whereby he made good the Succession he could not have done by Inheritance Be it what it will be he maintain'd it by his Sword He gave good example when his
much augmented his own affairs But when all things went not as they should do in France and Sommerset was held to be the cause of all and after him Suffolk Many complaints by consent of the Lower-House of Parliament were alleadged against him whereof he was found guilty and cast into Prison but he is suddenly set at liberty But a new sitting being summoned at the instance of the Lower-House he was banished for five years but whilst he sailed into France he was intercepted by the English and his Head cut off leaving his Body disgracefully on the shore and so the death of the Duke of Glocester was paid for Richard Duke of York in the mean time having won the Irish hearts gave the first step to end the differences between the White Rose and the Red and for a beginning of his own Right to the Crown for he descended from Lyonel Duke of Clarence the third Son to the third Edward Nor was it difficult to change the state of the Kingdom when so many abuses and errours that were so well known to the common people were crept in And King Henry wholly unfit for the Government as the people would say by whose foolish negligence France and Normandy were lost The men of Kent by the perswasion of York gave their Votes to John Mortimer and with a great and well-appointed Army they march toward London Mortimer himself commanding them The Army made a stay between Eltham and Greenwich and then they sent up their Complaints to the King and Parliament concerning the present state of the Kingdom and amongst the rest they petition That the Dukes of York Buckingham and Exceter may be restored to their places and former favour there was no answer given but a crying out to their Arms. But the men of Kent when they were come to the Battel killing both the Staffords who commanded the Army they put the Kings Forces to flight whereupon the greatest part of the Kings men fell off for they came running by companies to Mortimer whose Forces thus increased wonderfully wherefore the King fled to Killingworth Castle in the County of Warwick expecting the issue By his departure Mortimer grew more bold and came to the Suburbs of London and then possessing himself of the Bridge he came into London doing no wrong to any man for his Army was very well disciplined to keep down the violence of the Souldiers whereby he won the affections of many but afterwards the Men of Kent being sharpned with hope of the prey fell upon some of the richer Citizens which was very ill resented by all Mortimer was now Master of London and he cut off the Heads of some of those that were the Ministers of those Errours as John Say Chief-Treasurer of England and his Sonne in Laws and some others But the Londoners detesting his haughtiness arm themselves and craving help from Scales the Lord Lieutenant of the Tower with such Forces as they had collected Matthew Gogthus being their Captain in the night they fall upon Mortimers Army that were in the Suburbs of St Georges on the other side of the Thames But the Kentish men repulse them with such violence that the Londoners were forced to give ground and to leave the Bridge to the Conquerours who hereupon being enraged fell to cast in fire to burn the Houses upon the Bridge and so put a great fright upon the City and made a great slaughter At last their heat began to remit and these men of Kent began to detest the wickednesse Mortimer had done and desired to return home again which when the King understood he sent his Seal for their Pardon and for all his men being gone from him Mortimer was left without a Guard who thinking to escape by flight was taken and slain This Tumult was appeased but a far greater arose shortly after for York depending upon his Right comes to London under pretence of Complaints against his Adversaries and especially against Sommerset who had lost France and was now come home but the truth was to make a Party he obtained the help of Norfolk and the Earls of Sarisbury and Devorshire to assist him and so marching into Wales he quickly raised an Army The King hearing this prepares his Forces also and collecting Forces he made haste thither with the Duke of Sommerset Both the Armies meet at last and the King sending messengers asked York What should be the cause of so great a Tumult Who cast all the fault on the Kings evil Counsellours and chiefly upon Sommerset promising that if he were cast into Prison untill such time as he might be tried that then he would disband all his Army Hereupon Sommerset is cast into Prison under a colour and York gave his Passe-port which being done the King went toward London with York But Sommerset who before was cast into prison being now set at liberty accompanied the King and in his stead York was brought like a Prisoner before the King At last they come to London and there grew a hot dispute between these two Dukes before the Kings Councel the one accusing the other of Treason the matter came at last to this head That York should take a solemn Oath to be true to the King and should go toward his Castle Wigmore for the report was that Edward Earl of Marsh Sonne and Heir to York was now drawing up with an Army And in the mean time a Messenger came from Burdeaux craving help against the French John Talbot Earl of Shrewsbury is sent thither who after he had behaved himself gallantly was slain with a Gun The French by his death recover all they had lost except Burdeaux In the mean while the Duke of York did his best to allure the mindes of the Subjects and then gaining the Nobility to his side who were all offended with Sommerset and joyning the Earls of Sarisbury and Warwick with him he prevailed so farre that Sommerset in the Kings absence was sent to the Tower But Henry when he heard that though he were sick and returning to London he not only sets him at Liberty he makes him Governour of Callis and of all the other places in France which thing so provoked York that he and his Assistants March to London with a great Army The King with Sommerset Buckingham and his Sonne Humphrey the Earl of Northumberland and a sufficient Army goes against them At St Albans the Armies came in sight one of the other York sent Letters in the Morning to the King requiring Sommerset to be delivered up to him that he might be tried the King refusing this he makes the first On-set Sommerset and with him the Earl of Northumberland and Humphrey Earl of Stafford fell in the Battel and five thousand men with them Many were wounded and taken The King himself who had fled into a Countrey-mans house for fear of the weapons was taken by the Conspiratours This Battel fell on May the 23th and the 13th year of his Raign But
Warre especially by Sea and in the West-Indies and Portugal the English did mischief to the Spaniard and received the like The Queen when those Clouds of a Tempest at hand were dispersed caused a publick Thanksgiving to be made unto God who had delivered her and in Triumphant manner she rid through London She was not for all this free from Troubles but by the Queens Wisdome and Masculine Valour they were even strangled in the birth and England was made the receptacle of persecuted and afflicted men who fled by companies out of France and Holland by reason of the Wars there In the mean while Sir Francis Drake was sent toward Hispaniola who made the Spaniard work enough in those parts taking Cape Verde wasting Hispaniela and he skirmished in divers small fights with the Spanish Forces But when there was no occasion for a fight on the continent he returned home with the spoil and honour The next year also the said Sir Francis Drake burnt and took six and thirty Spanish Ships laden with great riches that lay in the Haven at Callis and brought them for England With the same Success almost the Earl of Essex with a vast Fleet of English and Dutch wasted the Coasts of Spain and landing his men wan Gades and plundering the City and burning thirty Ships that rode in the Harbour he came back for England laden with the spoil After that the English Fleet watching the Spanish Navy that came fraught with rich Merchandize that came from the West-Indies was disappointed by their flying into the Isle Tercera France being involv'd in troubles the Queen was pleased to assist the King of France with men and money The King of France having reduced his Subjects to their Obedience endeavours to mediate a Peace betwixt the Spaniards and the Queen the Queen to satisfie the French Kings desires sent an Embassadour into France to consult about it But the States of Holland sent Embassadours to Queen Elizabeth to dehort her from the Peace In the year 1598. Philip King of Spain died in the seventieth year of his age He aimed at great matters but was unfortunate in most of them whereupon it came to passe that the three Keys of the Spanish Empire which his Father so called and willed him above all things to keep diligently to wit 1. Gulet in Africa Flushing in Holland and Cadez in Spain were neglected The first taken in by the Turkes the second by the Confederates of the United Provinces the third much impaired in its strength and impoverished by the English which his Father fore-seeing in his life time admonished to make Peace with the English and the United Provinces Anno 1599. died that Reverend and famous Divine Mr Richard Hooker a man moderate temperate meek and virtuous even to the best imitation and left behinde him a living monument of his real worth his Book entituled Ecclesiastical Polity Then Peace was confirmed between the Spaniard and the French but the English and the United Provinces refused to be comprehended in it because they held it disadvantagious to their business but making a Covenant with joynt Forces they invade Spain The Spaniard stirs up the Earl of Tyrone who made a great rebellion in Ireland Essex was sent thither to subdue the Rebels and to make them conformable but he scurvily neglected an opportunity of conquering the Enemy and beyond his Commassion treats with the Rebels concerning Peace He was therefore called home and commanded to answer for his fault by his submission he found the Queens favour Afterward prompted on either by shame or his ambition of the Kingdom he raised an Army and entred London and when he purposed to have forced the Queen his Forces ran away from him and he was taken prisoner accused of High-Treason and lost his Head for it Charles Blunt was sent in his place who in divers fights wonderfully subdued the Forces of the Rebels though the Spaniard had sent many supplies to relieve them In a set Battle he overthrew Tyrone and the Auxiliary Spaniards and then made Conditions driving them out of Ireland Tyrone afterwards when he tried all wayes submitted and humbly intreated the Queens Pardon In the mean time Richard Levison and William Monson with eight great Ships and some small ones went and spoiled the Spanish Coasts and meeting the Spaniards Fleet coming from America with abundance of wealth he set upon them but was too weak for them for he was disappointed After that he mastered a very great rich Ship riding at Anchor in Portugal and burning some lesser Ships he returned for England with her At that time the Seminaries of the Church of Rome and chiefly the Jesuites were banished out of England because they caused croubles and could not live quietly At last the Queen being feeble with age and hot disease she died in the year 1602. and she departed a very good Christian having named King James of Scotland Sonne to Mary Stuart to be her Successour when she had raigned fourty four years and four Moneths A Queen that was most endowed with all the Benefits of Nature a comely Person for her Body but more comely in her Soul she was an excellent Scholar to be commended for her Goodnesse and Justice She was a Mother to her Subjects and a Subject to the Laws JAMES King of Great-Brittany France and Ireland Anno 1602. THe loss that England sustained by the death of Elizabeth was abundantly recompensed by her Successour King James and the union of the two Kingdoms England and Scotland He was inferiour to her neither for Religion nor any thing else and by new rejoycings he extinguished that grief the Subjects had conceived He was a King the more happy because he obtain'd a Kingdom by lawfull succession that was no wayes embroyled with Warres and Tumults but setled in exceeding great Peace But as in the calmest weather ofttimes clouds rise suddenly and it fals to thundering and lightning so the affairs of Brittany though most peaceably were endangered by the malice and conspiracy of some The Ring-leaders were Henry Cobham and George his Brother Thomas Gray of Wiltshire Walter Raleigh and others Their purpose was to kill the King but newly crowned to change Religion to raise Tumults to let in Forrainers A terrible design But this flame vanished into smoke the principall being either put to death or condemned to perpetual imprisonment or having their pardons granted to them But least Peace should be disturbed by new Warres he made Peace with the King of Spain who was a sworn Enemy to the English Nation it was solemnly confirmed on both sides Though Peace were settled abroad yet there was occasion for new Troubles at home For when the King had called a Parliament a very horrible Conspiracy was detected the chief Authour of it was one Catesby a Roman Catholick He having hamper'd some other men in the same business endeavoured at one stroke to root out all the English Nation as it were by Lightning
and Yorkshire were revolted from him at the Report of what was past and for fear of them his counsel was troubled But the Parliament which the King in his straights was not ignorant of thought fit to proceed and did prescribe Conditions to the King namely That the English should be governed the same way as the Scotch were and to that they might call a Parliament as often as they pleased and assign Offices to whom they thought fit That the Bishops should be ejected out of the Parliament whom they found more addicted to the Kings side and many such like Propositions In the mean time the Houses take into their Power the Towns of greatest concernment amongst which Hull was one The King had sent the Earl of New-castle thither before to demand it for himself but the Townsmen who had first received order from the Parliament being doubtfull what to do were between hope and fear but then being confirmed with a farther order from the Parliament they excluded the King Wherefore being defrauded of his hope he resolves upon more milde counsels and sent Letters to the two Houses desiring them not to proceed so harshly to leave off their violence protesting his Innocence and sincere intention before God and man But the Parliament little moved by these words take care in the mean time for the business of Ireland giving Licence to Martin Tromp the Admiral of Holland to search all Dunkirk ships even in they very English Havens Also Digby and Lunsford that were addicted to the King are accused of High Treason the one was taken the other escaped into Holland Then they send Messengers to the King and gave him thanks for his Letters desiring his Majesty to return to London The King though he were pleased with their gratitude yet refused to come to the Parliament least the people by their Insolence should again put him in danger The Parliament was much displeased with this refusall of the King because the traffique did not proceed well and because they could not press their designs as they would Whereupon the Lower House drew up an Humble Remonstrance Whereby they desired Power to bestow all Places of Government both by Sea and Land upon whom they thought fit and to fortifie Towns with Ammunition and Provision necessary as they pleased And proceeding yet farther They asked that the old Servants of the Queen both English and French and such as were her Priests might be banished and the Bishops and Lords addicted to the Popish Religion might be excluded from the Parliament-House That a Synod of fifty Ministers might be called That the Princes and Lords should be forbidden to go out of the Land or to make any Covenant with forrain Princes or Commonwealths without the Parliaments consent Lastly They desired that the King should take an Oath to hold no counsel with the Queen in Church or State affairs The Lords of the Upper House were not well pleased with these Propositions for that the Kings Authority was palpably infringed by them The Lower House was angry at that and fell to their former Artifice and threatned to raise the people and incite them against the Nobility as Enemies to the Commonwealth and addicted to the Kings side The Lords regarded not their threats untill they saw the Commons uniting themselves by counsel from the Lower House and which is to be admired they found the Commissioners of Scotland to joyn with them against the profit of their own Countrey At last they were terrified with these things and fore-seeing greater dangers they consent though it were against their wils Twenty chosen men therefore are sent to the King with these Conditions which when the King beheld he undertook to ask Counsell thereupon and to deliver his minde in writing But when he was pressed with straights on all sides he yielded to these Conditions namely That the Parliament should store the Cities of the Kingdom with provision upon this ground that the King should first be made acquainted what provision they would make and to bestow the Offices so that of three men chosen the King might choose one As for the Bishops and the rest as being matters of great moment he would advise farther The Kings Consent was received by the Parliament with great applause though they could have desired the terms of his Grant had been larger for by this Authority they increased in power as much as the King decreased They brought the business so farre that the power should be in their hands so long as the Parliament sate which they meant for ever For the King by a dangerous Indulgence had granted them leave before to sit so long as they pleased they being not to be dissolved without their own Consent And that this power granted to them might not prove unfruitfull they presently put out some Governours and put in others Nor are they content with this but being higher by the Kings Grants they petition that the six Members should be cleared from all guilt and to be freed from attainder the King was resolved to yield to all and did grant what they asked The Kings courage was so farre weakned that he lifted up the Power of his Adversaries and pulled down the hopes of his friends who trusting but little to his over great lenity thought it best to avoid the strokes or misfortune now hanging over their heads Part of them forsaking the Parliament went home to their houses Part of them preferring voluntary banishment before continual fear went out of the Land for they had now got the power of all into their hands and did what they pleased no man daring to whisper against it And now that plenty of Parliament-members was so diminished that in the Upper House there were left not above five and twenty in the Lower House scarce fourscore the Kings friends still falling off that at last there were hardly sixteen in the House of Lords In the mean time they raged fiercely against those that were addicted to the Romish Religion and they provide a Fleet with the Kings Treasure to defend the Mediterranean Sea upon all occasions whereby his Power was diminished and his Authority broken The Queen also was so tired out with so many calumnies and aspersions that she resolved to sail into Holland and to accompany her Daughter to her Husband the Prince of Orange to whom she was espoused And the Parliament to leave the King naked of that succour easily yielded to it The King that he might clearly demonstrate that he by his presence had been no cause of any of those evils before his departure had consented to the Petition of the Parliament to exclude the Bishops out of the House which was not the least of his failings And to discover his minde plainly toward the Reformed Religion he caused a severe Statute to be published against the Papists and banished all their Priests out of the Kingdom 'T is marvellous with how great joy the people accepted that Bonfires were made in
triumph at London and in other places it may be it was done because the Kings Power was now ended The Queen in the mean time imbarqued at Dover and with true tears took her last farewell fore-seeing that this departure of hers was an omen of a most sad Divorce The Parliament in the interim asked the Kings consent upon some Governours of the Kingdom they had chosen But the King who was now sensible of his errours began to draw back and to delay the business They impatient of all delayes send Commissioners to him to let him understand That the Parliament must flie to their Arms and defend their Authority by force unlesse the King would presently grant their just Petitions as they said And when the King resolved to remove farther from London they entreated him not to do it but rather if he would not he should let his Sonne live at London The King not wondring a little at this Petition answered That he was by these Propositions much amazed but what to answer he knew not He would have them lay their hands on their hearts and would search whether of the two gave the cause now of mischiefs that would arise from a Civil Warre As for his Sonne he would as a Father provide for him and that neither of them would go from London unless they were afraid of the Insolency of some people there And that he desired to procure Peace by all means not caring who took up Arms for he would rest on Gods providence So their Messengers were dismissed But the Parliament supposing they were not now to demur command all the Lieutenants of the Counties by their Edicts to flie to their Arms and to compell all their Subjects that were fit to bear Arms to repair to their Colours And forthwith they unpoured all those Officers the King had made and made new ones by their own Authority The most excellent and the wisest men were of opinion that all that provision of the Parliament would dissolve into smoke The London Counsel also thought themselves wronged by this unusual and unheard of boldness in the Parliament for by this means they were stript of all their Authority They complain of it to the King but what should he do whose hands were already bound and he did not strive to unbinde them Then they put up their humble Petitions to the Parliament to which the principal Citizens of London subscribed their hands But when they waited for an Answer as it was requisite the principal of the Subscribers were punished So all things grew worse and worse The King in the mean time who was not ignorant of the Parliament Attempts called all his Nobility to him that he might put a stop to the Parliament proceedings The Parliament to lull the King asleep with fair words used all devices and when this would not do they over-weigh him with complaints and crimes As that he had hearkned to a change in Religion and given cause for the uprears in Ireland especially they that were most powerfull with him secretly bespotting the Queen They added That the Instruments of the Pope of the Kings of Spain and France were resolved to restore the King to his former Authority and other things that served to justifie their own proceedings and to make the King faulty The King published his Declarations labouring to remove these aspersions from him and to decline the hatred of them yet prevailed nothing for the Parliament by a new Declararation did both support and augmented the former Articles complaining that the greatest injury was done to themselves by the Kings forsaking them The King in the mean time takes his journey for York together with the Prince the Palsgrave the Duke of Richmond and some other of the Nobility being resolved to be deluded no farther but to oppose Force against Force and the Right he could not maintain by yielding to maintain by Arms. The Parliament did not sit still but fortified the chief Towns with Ammunition and Souldiers especially Hull a City of greatest concernment Also the Earl of Warwick was sent with thirty men of Warre to guard the English Coasts and they call Vice-Admiral Pennington back again by speedy Messengers who had transported the Queen into Holland and under pretence of subduing Rebellion they gather a mighty mass of money Charles in the mean time to overthrow their Commands prohibits what they would have by Edicts to the contrary but they disobeying the King did their work by frighting him with threats which was a great grief to moderate men The King when he was come to York was received with the highest affection of his Subjects and before them all he removeth all that envy of Popery that was charged upon him But the Parliament who were not well pleased with the Yorkshire men for this sent Letters to the King inserting fair speeches to pacifie his anger They write a counterfeit Letter in the name of Elizabeth Countess Palatine as written by her wherein they did foully defame the States of Holland for her ill entertainment amongst them To avoid the hatred of this business Joachimus the States Embassadour complained to the Parliament of the falsity of that report because his Masters Honours were much shadowed by it whose splendor and benevolence toward strangers was sufficiently known to all the world and he prevailed so farre that these counterfeit Letters were publickly burnt A Rumour also as false as the former was scattered abroad that a great Fleet was made ready for King Charles in the Denmark Havens and thus each on both sides strive to draw reputation and authority to their party They had long enough banded in words they must now come to blows Ere long they break forth into open Warre The King cals all the Knights of the Garter and all others that by the band of Nobility held from the Crown to come to him to York The Parliament contrarily made it death for any of them to go to the King yet of the Lower House twenty Members revolt to the King making more reckoning of the Kings commands than of the Parliaments In the mean time there followed an humble Petition of the men of Kent to the Parliament wherein they humbly desired That nothing should be done without the Kings consent That the Liturgy might not be altered That the Bishops might be restored That they would not suffer the Fundamentall Laws of the Land to be antiquated without the Kings permission nor Arms to be raised without his command That some good means might be found out to make an agreement c. But the Parliament not only denied to answer them but they severely punish him that brought the Petition and the Earl of Bristol that received it casting both of them into Prison to cut off for the future all way for such requests their fellows not a little raging at it and saying openly that that liberty was unjustly taken away whenas they had listned to other Petitions that were farre more