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A96700 England's vvorthies. Select lives of the most eminent persons from Constantine the Great, to the death of Oliver Cromwel late Protector. / By William Winstanley, Gent. Winstanley, William, 1628?-1698. 1660 (1660) Wing W3058; Thomason E1736_1; ESTC R204115 429,255 671

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of Manchester and the Lord Fairfax and with joynt Forces besieged York to raise the Siege Prince Rupert came with a great Army out of the South the three Generals left their Siege to fight the Prince under him also New Castle having drawn his Forces out of York served who on a great Plain called Marston Moor gave Battle to the three Generals The Victory at first enclined to the Royalists but by the valour of Cromwel who fought under Manchester their whole Army was utterly defeated Prince Rupert his Ordnance his Carriages and Baggage being all taken This was the greatest Battel of the whole Civil War and might have proved a great Remora to the Kings proceedings had he not soon after worsted Essex in Cornwall who having lost all his Artillery returned to London The Parliament soon after new modelled their Army Sir Thom as Fairfax was chosen General in the room of Essex and now the Idol of a Treaty was set up at Vxbridge in which to shew the clearness of his Majesties intentions I have included some of his most material proceedings conducible to an Agreement betwixt him and the Parliament His Majesties particular Prayer for a Blessing on the Treaty O most merciful Father Lord God of Peace and Truth we a people sorely afflicted by the scourge of an unnatural War do earnestly beseech thee to command a Blessing from Heaven on this Treaty brought about by thy Providence the onely visible remedy left for the establishment of a happy Peace soften the most obdurate hearts with a true Christian desire of saving those mens bloud for whom Christ himself hath shed his O Lord let not the guilt of our sins cause this Treaty to break off but let the truth of thy Spirit so clearly shine in our mindes that all private ends laid aside we may every one of us heartily and sincerely pursue the Publick good and that the people may be no longer so blindely miserable as not see at least in this their day the things that belong to their peace Grant this gracious God for his sake who is our peace it self even Jesus our Lord Amen His Majesties Message to the Houses of Parliament which drew on the following Treaty at Uxbridge December 13. 1644. His Majesty hath seriously considered your Propositions and findes it very dffiicult in respect they import so great an alteration in Government both in Church and State to return a particular and positive Answer before a full debate wherein those Propositions and all the necessary explanations and reasons for assenting dissenting or qualifying and all inconveniences and mischiefs which may ensue and cannot otherwise be so well foreseen may be discussed and weighed his Majesty therefore proposeth and desireth as the best expedient for peace that you will appoint such number of persons as you shall think fit to treat with the like number of persons to be appointed by his Majesty upon the said Propositions and such other things as shall be proposed by his Majesty for the preservation and defence of the Protestant Religion with due regard to the ease of tender Consciences as his Majesty hath often offered the Rights of the Crown the Liberty and Propriety of the Subjects and the Priviledges of Parliament And upon the whole matter to conclude a happy and blessed Peace Sent by the Duke of Richmond and the Earl of Southampton December 13. 1644 His Majesties Commission to certain Lords and Gentlemen to treat at Vxbridge with the Commissioners of the Lords and Commons assembled at Westminster c. Charles Rex Whereas after several Messages sent by us to the Lords and Commons of Parliament at Westminster expressing our desires of Peace certain Propositions were sent by them to us at Oxon in November last by the Earl of Denbigh and others and upon our Answers Messages and Propositions to them and their Returns to us it is now agreeed That there shall be a Treaty for a well-grounded Peace to begin at Uxbridge on Thursday the thirtieth day of this instant January as by the said Propositions Answers Messages and Returns in writing may more fully appear We do therefore hereby appoint assign and codnstitute James Duke of Richmond and Lennox William Marquess of Hertford Thomas Earl of Southampton Henry Earl of Kingston Francis Earl of Chichester Francis Lord Seymor Arthur Lord Capel Christopher Lord Hatton John Lord Culpeper Sir Edward Nicholas Knight one of cur principal Secretaries of State Sir Edward Hide Knight Chancellour and Vnder-Treasurer of our Exchequer Sir Richard Lane Chief Baron of our said Exchequer Sir Thomas Gardiner Sir Orlando Bridgeman Master John Asburnham and Master Jeffery Palmer together with Dr. Richard Steward upon the Propositions concerning Religion to be our Commissioners touching the Premises and do hereby give unto them or to any ten or more of them full power and authority to meet and on our part to treat with Algernon Earl of Northumberland Philip Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery William Earl of Salisbury Basil Earl of Denbigh Thomas Lord Viscount Wentworth Denzil Hollis William Pierpoint Esquires Sir Henry Vane the younger Knight Oliver St. John Bulstrade Whitlock John Crew and Edmond Prideaux Esquires for the Lords and Commons assembled in the Parliament of England at Westminster and John Earl of London Lord Chancellour of Scotland Archibald Marquess of Arguile John Lord Maytland John Lord Balmerino Sir Archibald Johnson Sir Charles Asking George Douglas Sir John Smith Sir Hough Kennedy and Master Robert Carly for the Estates of the Parliament of Scotland together with Master Alexander Henderson upon the Propositions concerning Religion or with any ten or more of them upon and touching the matters contained in the said Propositions Answers and Messages or any other according to the manner and agreement therein specified or otherwise as they or any ten or more of them shall think fit and to take all the Premises into their serious considerations and to compose conclude and end all Differences arising thereupon or otherwise as they or any ten or more of them in their wisdoms shall think fit and upon the whole matter to conclude a safe and well-grounded Peace if they can and whatsoever they or any then or more of them shall do in the Premises we do by these presents ratifie and confirm the same Given at our Court at Oxon the 28. day of January one thousand six hundred forty and four in the 20. year of our Reign His Majesties Instructions to the Commissioners at Uxbridge Concerning the Militia and Ireland First concerning Religion In this the Government of the Church as is set forth Sect. 3. Numb 14. Next concerning the Militia After Conscience this is certainly the fittest Subject for a Kings quarrel for without it the Kingly Power is but a shadow and therefore upon no means to be quitted but maintained according to the known Laws of the Land yet to attain to this so much wished peace of all good men it is in a manner necessary
shun the danger paid him eleven hundred and seventy pounds at the very instant yet did he deliver her the counterfeit coppy onely meaning to make use of the true one to get another some of the Earls adversaries This imposter being found out he was censured to perpetual imprisonment condemned in three thousand pounds two of which were to go to the Countess and his ears nailed to the pillory with this writing over his head A notorious Cheater I shall conclude all with some few observations on this unfortunate Earl as to his first rise my Lord of Leicester introduced him who had married his mother a tye of affinity Sure it is that he no sooner appeared in the Court but he took with the Queen and Courtiers and I believe they all could not choose through the sacrifice of the Father but look on the living Son whose image by the remembrance of former passages was afresh like the bleeding of men murthered represented to the Court The Cicero of our modern times parallels him and Buckingham where the difference was is too transparent certain it is to use Sir Robert Nauntons own words that there was in this young Lord together with a most goodly person a kinde of urbanity or innate courtesie which both won the Queen and took too much on the people which amongst other disparities Buckingham never did attain to the latter What hath been imputed to his fall is that he drew too fast from the Queens indulgence like a childe sucking of an over uberous Nurse which caused him to express himself in such peremptory language when he heard that my Lord Mountjoy received a favour from the Queen for his running so well a tilt when as though he would have limited her respects he said Now I believe every fool must have a favour which made the Queen swear by Gods death it was fit that one or other should take him down and teach him better maners All Authours agree that he was a man of a rash spirit thirsty after the uncertain fame of popularity which helpt him on to his Catastrophe One writeth this Latine Epitaph on him Epitaphium de eodem Comite Ecce sub hoc tumulo situs est celeberrimus Heros Qui cecidit patrii spesque decusque soli Fama ingens annis juvenis fortissimus armis Nobilitate potens religione pius Terra Britannia parens testis Hibernia lethi Tristia fata gemunt fortia facta canunt Facta togae bellive magis praestantia mirer Optima pace domi Maxima marte foris Mors fera corpus habet Coelo Comes inclyte vivis Vita dicata Deo mors nonna vita data est The Life of Sir ROBERT CECILL Tu pater patriae Princeps Prudentia cujus Extulit immensum roges populosque Britannos THis Earwig of the Court Sir Robert Cecil afterwards Earl of Salisbury was the Son of the Lord Burleigh and the Inheritour of his Wisdom and by degrees Successour of his places and favours though not of his Lands for he had Sir Thomas Cecil his elder Brother afterwards created Earl of Exeter He was first Secretary of State then Master of the Wards and in the last of Queen Elizabeths Reign came to be Lord Treasurer all which were the steps of his Fathers greatnesse and of the Honour he left to his House For his Person he was not much beholding to Nature though somewhat for his Face which was the best part of his outside but for his inside it may be said and without Solecisme that he was his Fathers own Son and a pregnant Proficent in all Discipline of State He was a Courtier from his Cradle which might have made him betimes yet at the age of twenty and upwards he was much short of his after-proof but exposed and by change of climate he soon made shew what he was and would be He lived in those times wherein the Queen had most need and use of men of weight and among able ones this was a chief as having his sufficiency from his instructions that begat him the Tutourship of the times and Court which were then the Accademies of Art and Cunning. This great Master of State and the staff of the Queens declining age who though his little crooked person could not promise any great supportation yet it carried thereon a head and a head-piece of a vaste content and therein it seems Nature was so diligent to compleat one and the best part about him as that to the perfection of his memory and intellectuals she took care also of his senses and to put him in Linceos oculos or to pleasure him the more borrowed of Argus so to give unto him a prospective sight and for the rest of his sensitive Vertues his predecessour Walsingham had left him a receipt to smell out what was done in the Conclave and his good old father was so well seen in the Mathematicks as that he could tell you thorow all Spain every part every ship with the burthens whither bound with preparation what impediments for diversion of enterprizes counsels and resolutions And that we may see as in a little Map how docible this little man was I will present a taste of his abilities The Earl of Devonshire upon the certainty the Spaniard would invade Ireland with a strong Army had written very earnestly to the Queen and the Councel for such supplies to be sent over that might enable him to march up to the Spaniard if he did land and follow on his prosecution against the Rebels Sir Robert Cecill besides the general dispatch of the Councell as he often did wrote this in private for these two began then to love dearly My Lord Out of the abundance of my affection and the care I have of your well doing I must in private put you out of doubt for of fear I know you cannot be otherwise sensible then in the way of honour that the Spaniard will not come unto you this year for I have it from my own what preparations are in all his Parts and what he can do For be confident he beareth up a reputation by seeming to embrace more then he can gripe But the next year be assured he will cast over unto you some Forelorn-hopes which how they may be reinforced beyond his present ability and his first intention I cannot as yet make any certain judgement but I believe out of my intelligence that you may expect there landing in Munster and the more to distract you in several places as at Kinsale Bur-haven Baltimore where you may be sure coming from Sea they will first fortifie and learn the strength of the Rebells before they dare take the field howsoever as I know you will not lesson not your care neither your defences and whatsoever lies within my power to do you and the publick service rest thereof assured And to this I would adde much more but it may as it is suffice to present much as to his abilities in the pen
Life of LANCELOT ANDREWS Bishop of Winchester IT is poetized of the Thracian Orpheus that his Oratotary was so powerful that with it he drew the senseless stones after him towards the building of Thebes which some moralize that his eloquence was such as attracted the senseless and stony multitude from Barbarism to frame themselves to a civil and well ordered life What was storied of Orpheus may fitly be applied to this learned Bishop who with his heavenly Oratory drew many stony senseless hearts out of the Captivity of Satan unto the glorious freedom of the Gospel of Jesus Christ For his person we can add nothing to him to name him is enough to all that knew him and to read him will be enough to them that knew him not his piety being such as was esteemed comparable to that which was found in the primitive Church This right reverend father in God Bishop of Winchester Prelate of the Garter was born in the City of London descended from the ancient Family of the Andrews in Suffolk his Father a Merchant of good repute and according to the Religion of those ancient times very devout being one of the Society and Masters of the Holy Trinity commonly called Trinity-House He in his tender years shewed great aptness to learning which he so improved under his two School-masters Mr. Ward Master of the Coopers Free School in Radcliffe and Mr. Mulchaster Master of the Merchant-Taylors Free School in London that he promised a golden Harvest from so hopeful a seed-time So that from his youth he declared an extraordinary worth that he was made up of learning and vertue in both of them so eminent that it was hard to judge which had the precedency and greater interest though it was truly asserted from his contemporaries that there was not any kinde of Learning that he was a stranger to but in his profession admirable which was as well if not better known abroad then admired at home Having under these two gained an excellent knowledge in the Greek and Hebrew Languages he was sent to Pembroke-Hall in Cambridge where he was by Doctor Wats Archdeacon of Middlesex a Benefactor to that house placed in one of the Greek Schollarships soon after he was made Bachellour of Arts and a Fellowship being void he and Thomas Dove afterwards Bishop of Peterburgh for the obtaining thereof were put to a trial of some Schollastical exercises upon performance whereof they chose him into the fellowship yet so well did they approve of his opponent that they made him some allowance for his present maintenance under the title of a Tanquam Socius Thus this great miracle of worth that arrived to such a fulness of material learning had yet room enough left him in the temper of his brain for almost all Languages to seat themselves so that his learning had all the helps that Language could afford and his language learning enough for the best of them to express so that it might be said of him as it was of Claudius Drusus that he was a man of great parts as mortal nature could receive or industry make perfect In process of time his endowments made him so eminent that he was invited unto Jesus Colledge in Oxford by Mr. Hugh Price who built the same whose decerning spirit presaging of his future abilities nominated him in his foundation to be one of his first Fellows there and having taken the degree of Master of Art he applied himself wholly to the study of Divinity Soon after was he chosen Catechist in the Colledge which he performed so well that not onely the University became his common auditors but many out of the Countrey resorted thither greatly admiring at his profound learning Henry Earl of Huntington hearing of his worth sent for him to accompany him into the North whereof he was President where by his painful preaching he converted many Recusants to the Protestant Religion And now his abilities being still better known to the world Sir Francis Walsingham Secretary of State to Queen Elizaheth took special notice of him and by his means he was preferred to be Vicar of Saint Giles without Cripple-Gate London then Prebend and Residentiary of St. Pauls and afterwards Prebend of the Collegiate Church of Southwell soon after upon the death of Doctor Fulk he was elected into the Mastership of Pembroke-hall in Cambridge Afterwards he was made Chaplain in ordinary to Queen Elizabeth who took such delight in his preaching that she resolved upon his higher preferment but having made him first Prebend and not long after Dean of Westminster death prevented her of her intentions But what was wanting in her was performed by her learned successour King James who admiring him for his transcendent abilities soon after his coming to this Crown made him Bishop of Chichester and Lord Almoner and withal added the parsonage of Cheyham in Surrey to his Commendam He now as he excelled most of his Brethren in dignity he thought it not enough unless he did more then imitate them in sanctity of life and knowing no better rule for his direction herein then what Saint Paul had prescribed to Timothy he resolved to make those precepts his rules of practice In these addresses of his to Heaven first he led his life as in respect to men blameless his vertues admired by all but imitated of few his life being like a candle set on a candlestick which gave light to the whole House drawing many souls to God as well by his holy conversation as pious preaching It is a true saying A mans pious carriage makes his speech perswasive Secondly his charity was most transcendent to pass over many vast sums he bestowed upon poor Parishes Prisons and Prisoners his private Alms in his last six years besides those publique amounted to the sum of 1300. pounds and upwards Notwithstanding by what hath been said he might seem in his life time to be his own Almoner yet extended he his works of compassion most abundantly at his death leaving four thousand pounds to purchase two hundred pounds land per annum for ever to be distributed by fifty pounds quarterly thus to aged poor men fifty pounds to poor widdows the wives of one husband fifty pounds to the binding of poor Orphans Apprentices fifty pounds and to the relief of poor prisoners fifty pounds Also he gave two hundred pounds to poor Maid-servants of honest report who had served one Master or Mistress seven years to be distributed presently after his decease Many other acts of Charity did this good Bishop do a fair coppy for new succeeding rich Cleargy-men who are all for the mountain word of Faith but have nothing to do with good Works to write after He had alwayes a special care of promoting sufficient and able men to Livings a great mans letter will do but little good with him if he saw not piety as well as personage in the party His enquiry was constantly to know what hopeful young men were in the
contra Philippum secundum Hispanum numerosa classe exercitu Angliam 1588. invadentem Animam Deo Servatori reddidit anno salutis 1588. die 4. Septembris Optimo charissimo marito moestissima uxor Letitia Francisci Knollis Ordinis Sancti Georgii Equitis Aurati Reginae Thesaurii Filia amoris conjugalis fidei ergo posuit The Life of the Lord BURLEIGH Cecilius fidei cultor patriaeque Thesauri Custos spes miseris unica pauperibus THe exit of one Statesman occasions the entrance of another Secretary William Cecill on the death of the old Marquesse of Winchester rise up in his room a person of a most subtle and active spirit though he stood not altogether by the way of constellation and the making up of a part and faction for he was wholly intentive to the service of his Mistresse Queen Elizabeth and his dexterity experience and merit challenged a room in her favour which ecclipsed the others over-seeming greatnesse and made it appear that there were others that steered and stood at the helm besides himself and more stars in the firmament of her Grace then Vrsa major or the Bear with the ragged staff He was born as some say at Bourn in Lincolnshire but as others upon knowledge averre of a younger Brother of the Setsils or Cecils of Hereford-shire a Family of no mean Antiquity derived as some think from the Roman Cicilii Who being exposed and sent to the City as poor Gentlemen use to do their younger sons he came to be a rich man on London-Bridge and purchased Land in Lincolnshire where this man was born He was sent to Cambridge to St. Johns Colledge then to the Innes of Court to Grayes-Inne where he attained to a great knowledge of the Law though in all his life time he never sued nor was sued by any And so he came by degrees to serve the Duke of Somerset in the time of his Protectourship as Secretary and having a pregnancy to great Inclinations he came to rise to a higher conversation with the chiefest Affairs at State and Councels to be Master of the Requests the first that ever bore that Office But on the fall of the Duke he stood some years in umbrage and without employment till the State wanted his abilities and though we finde not that he was taken into any place during Queen Maries Reigh unlesse as some have said towards the last yet the Councel on several occasions have made use of him and at Queen Elizabeths entrance he was admitted Secretary of State the Queen as her Titles were sparing rendring them the more substantial afterwards he was made Master of the Court of Wards then Lord Treasurer A Person of most exquisite abilities and indeed the Queen began then to need and to seek out for men of both garbs Though our Burleigh lived in an age wherein it was present drowning not to swim with the stream yet whatsoever others write of him he opposed that act and unnatural will of King Edward the Sixth wherein the King passing by his Sisters Mary and Elizabeth entailed the Crown on Queen Jane This great Instrument of State was rankt amongst the Togati of state as by these following Letters may be perceived To the Right Honourable my very good Friend Sir Francis Walsingham Resident for the Queens Majesty in France Sir My hard case is such as either by business in health or by dolour in sickness I cannot account my self a free man but a slave to serve or an offendor to suffer torment the will of God be fulfilled in me to his honour for otherwise I finde no comfort in this world of this enough I am forced to write this in my bed with my hand whilest I groan for pain in my knee and foot and therefore I must be short I could no sooner get answer to your Letters brought by Rogers Your Lordships brought yesterday by Harcourt were I think welcome and well interpreted by her Majesty for I sent them with my own sentence aforehand of my good allowance of your discretion in your choice of taking and leaving The Queen of Scots you see is deferred whereof that portion which is written was for my ease indited by Sir Thomas Smith you must make the best of it and seek out reasons to satisfie them there that will mislike the delay Indeed it hath been onely devised to win delay I thank you for your private Letter Even now we have very good newes from the Borders that Dun-Brittain Castle was taken on Munday last in the night by cunning where was taken the Archbishop of St. Andrews and the Lord Flemming the manner how it was taken is not signified but it is of a greater importance then Edenborough Castle considering it was the Receptaculum to all the Scottish Queens Forraign Aid From Westminster out of my Bed this Saturday at five of the Clock the seventh of March 1571. Your assured Friend W. Burleigh To my very loving Friend Mr. Francis Walsingham Esq the Queens Majesties Ambassador in France Sir I have received your Letters both by Mr. Wigmore and Beal as by Harcourt I did late advertise you and having made her Majesty partaker both by hearing them read and by her own reading I am in this sort directed to answer you to the First of the Second that is to that of the 13. of February brought by Beal Her Majesty maketh good account of the person of him I mean the 36 t s 4 tio 30-0 uf I u'c 62 by the Intelligence which he gave you but it breedeth some doubt in her that the certainty can be no otherwise understood in that it is informed you that the practice continueth by late dispatching of an Englishman of high stature and lean of visage wherein is such incertainty as no man can thereby attain either to discover the practice or withstand it by apprehending the party And surely Sir her majesty wisheth you to endeavour your self with such as you shall think good to come to the knowledge of some persons by stay of whom such a matter might be deciphered for my own part I think it likely that these practices are devised but without more appearance I see no evident reason to move me that in time when the Queen of Scots her self and her factors are in hope to be delivered by treaty and with the favour of our Queen there should be any attempt otherwise for her escape Wherein how cunning soever men be in device yet the execution standeth upon many adventures and any mischance happening might breed ruine to the whole enterprise I have been acquainted with many of these like advertisement but surely I never found any substance in them in the event but yet with them and without them I ever finde it good to be circumspect I write not to have you forbear from hearing and reporting of any the like but my experience serveth to move you to procure the givers of such things to discover the matters more certainly
this grief say some occasioned his death though others impute it to the loss of his Bark called the Francis which five Spanish ships intercepted at the Isle of Saint Dominick but when the same heart hath two deadly wounds given it together it is hard to say which of them killeth Drake notwithstanding continued his course to Port-Rico in St. Johns Island and casting anchor within the road a shot from the Castle entred the steerege of his ship took away the stool from under him wounded Sir Nicholas Clifford and Brute Brown to death as they sat at supper whereupon the English enraged fired five Spanish ships of two hundred Tuns a piece in revenge of the Castle The intention of the English was to have marcht with their Land Forces from Port-Rico to Panama being an Istmus which joyneth together Mexicana and Peruana where the Spanish Treasure lay Sir Thomas Baskervile with seven hundred and fifty men undertook the charge but the Spaniard having notice of their intentions had built their Fortresses to impeach their passage in assaulting of which first the English had such welcome that they had no minde to try the second so that fearing their Gold would be dear bought as well as far fetcht they returned again unto their ships Drake afterwards forced Nombre de Dios and many other petty Towns but though herein he did the Spaniard much hurt he did the English little good and now thinking with himself that according to his preparations the expectation of his performances would be greater then before the consideration thereof accompanied if not occasioned the flux which wrought his sudden death January 28. 1595. who as he lived by the Sea died on it and was buried in it A man no doubt of admirable parts and one who had done many worthy services for his Countrey and yet it is questionable whether those rich prizes he brought into England did us more good then Tobacco supposed first brought hither by his followers hath since done us hurt One bestowed this Latine Epitaph upon him EPITAPHIUM Religio quamvis Romana resurgeret olim Effoderet tumulum non puto Drake tuum Non est quod metuas ne te combusserit ulla Posterit as in aqua tutus ab igne jaces The Life of Sir FRANCIS VVALSINGHAM Te Francisce pio patriam cum deseris exul Pectore pro meritis praemia digna capis SIR Francis Walsingham the great manager of the Queens pretended match with the Mounsieur of France had the honour to be Sir Philip Sidney's Father-in-law He was a Gentleman at first of a good House but a better Education and from the University travelled for the rest of his Learning He was doubtless the best Linguist of those times but knew best how to use his own Tongue whereby he came to be employed in the chiefest Affairs of State He was sent Ambassadour into France and stayed there a Leiger long in the heat of the Civil Wars and at the same time that Mounsieur was here a Suiter to the Queen and if I be not mistaken he played the very same part there as since Gundamore did here At his return he was taken principal Secretary and was one of the great Engines of State and of the Times high in Queen Elizabeths favour and a matchful servant over the safety of his Mistress He is noted to have had certain curious and secret wayes of Intelligence above the rest but I must confess I am to seek wherefore he suffered Parry to be so long on the hook before he hoysed him up and I have been a little curious in the search thereof though I have not to do with the Arcana Imperii For to know is sometimes a burthen and I remember that it was Ovids crimen aut error that he saw too much But I hope these are Collaterals of no danger But that Parry intending to kill the Queen made the way of his access by betraying of others and impeaching the Priests of his own Correspondency and thereby had access and conference with the Queen and also oftentimes familiar and private conference with Walsingham will not be the Quaere of the Mystery for the Secretary might have had ends of discovery on a further maturity of Treason but that after the Queen knew Parry's intent why she should then admit him to private discourse and Walsingham to suffer it considering the conditions of all assailings and permit him to go where and whither he listed and onely on the security of a dark sentinel set over him was a piece of reach and hazard beyond my apprehension I must again profess that having read many of his Letters for they were commonly sent to Leicester and Burleigh out of France containing many fine passages and secrets yet if I might have been beholding to his Cyphers whereof they are full they would have told pretty tales of the times He was ranked amongst the Togati chief of those that laid the foundation of the Dutch and French Wars which was another piece of his fineness and of the times I shall conclude with one observation more that he was one of the great Allyes of the Austrian embracements for both himself and Stafford that preceded him might well have been compared to the Feind in the Gospel that sowed his tares in the night so did they their seeds of division in the dark and it is a likely report that the father on him at his return that he said unto the Queen with some sensibility of the Spanish designs in France Madam I beseech you be content not to fear the Spaniard hath a great appetite and an excellent digestion but I have fitted him with a bone for this twenty years that your Majesty shall have no cause to doubt him provided that if the fire chance to slack which I have kindled you will be ruled by me and now and then cast in some English Fewel which will revive the flame That the discerning Reader may the better scent this Fox I have presented to his perusual one of his Letters A Coppy of the Letter sent to Mr. Secretary touching the negotiation had with the King the 28. of August 1570. SIR May it please your Honour to advertise her Majesty that the King accepted in very good part her congratulation as from his good Sister and Neighbour who hath alwayes wished his well-doing for these were his words After congratulation done to the King the Queen Mother having enquired of me of the well-doing of her Majesty asked me how the Queen of Scots did I answered her that at my departure for any thing I knew to the contrary she did very well Then she proceeded to enquire of me touching her present estate I answered according to the tenor of my instructions in what state she stood at my departure wherewith she seemed to rest very well satisfied And then she fell to protestations that for her own part she was so well perswaded of the Queens Majesties merciful