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

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was it long that the Protector bore up after his Brothers Fall the great care he took to build his * From his Tittle call'd Somerset-house House being no less fatal to him then the little care he had to support his Family whiles the Stones of those Churches Chappels and other Religious Houses that he demolish'd for it made the cry out of the Walls so loud that himself was not able to indure the noise the People ecchoing to the defamation and charging him with the guilt of Sacriledge so furiously that he was forced to quit the place and retire with the King to Windsor leaving his Enemies in possession of the strength of the City as well as the affections of the Citizens who by the reputation of their power rather then the power of their repute prevail'd with the King as easily to give him up to publick Justice as he was before prevail'd with to give up his Brother it being no small temptation to the young King to forsake him when he forsook himself so far as to submit to the acknowledgement of that Guilt he was not conscious of The Lawyers charged him with removing Westminster-hall to Somerset-house The Souldiers with detaining their Pay and betraying their Garrisons The States-men with ingrossing all Power and indeavouring to alter the Fundamental Laws and the ancient Religion But he himself charg'd himself with all these Crimes when he humbled himself so far as to ask the Kings pardon publickly which his Adversaries were content he should have having first strip'd him of his Protectorship Treasurership Marshalship and Two thousand pound a year Land of Inheritance But that which made his Fate yet harder was that after having acquitted himself from all Treason against his Prince he should come at last to be condemn'd as a Traytor against his Fellow-Subject whilst the Innocent King labouring to preserve him became the principal Instrument of his Destruction who by reconciling him to his great Adversaries made the Enmity so much the more incompatible who at the same time he gave the Duke his Liberty gave the Earl of Warwick and his Friends the Complement of some new Titles which adding to their Greatness he reasonably judg'd might take from their Envy The Earl himself he created Duke of Northumberland and Lord High Admiral of England and to oblige him yet more married up his eldest Son the Lord Dudley to his own Cosin the second Daughter of the Duke of Somerset whom he gave to him for the more honour with his own hand and made Sir Robert Dudley his fourth and his beloved Son the same that was after made by Queen Elizabeth Earl of Leicester one of the Gentlemen of his Bedchamber And to gratifie the whole Faction he made the Marquiss of Dorset Duke of Suffolk the Lord St. John Earl of Wilts and afterwards Marquiss of Winchester Sir John Russel who was Northamberland's Confident he created Earl of Bedford Sir William Paget another of his Tools he made Lord Paget This the good natur'd King did out of sincere Affection to his Uncle in hopes to reconcile him so thoroughly to Northumberland so that there might be no more room left for Envy or Suspect betwixt them But as there is an invisible Erinnis that attends all Great men to do the drudgery of their Ambition in serving their Revenge and observing the Dictates of their power and pride so it was demonstrable by the most unfortunate issue of this so well intended purpose that by the same way the King hoped to please both he pleas'd neither Somerset thinking he had done too much Northumberland thinking that he had done too little who having drunk so deep a Draught of Honour grew hot and dry and like one fall'n into a State-Dropsie swell'd so fast that Somerset perceiving the Feaver that was upon him resolv'd to let him blood with his own hand And coming one day to his Chamber under the colour of a Visit privately arm'd and well attended with Seconds that waited him in an outward Chamber found him naked in his Bed and supposing he had him wholly in his power began to expostulate his wrongs with him before he would give him the fatal stroke whereby t'other perceiving his intent and being arm'd with a Weapon that Somerset had not a ready fence for an Eloquent Tongue he acquitted himself so well and string'd upon him with so many indearing protestations as kept the point of his Revenge down till it was too late to make any Thrust at him Whereby Northumberland got an advantage he never hop'd for to frame a second Accusation against him so much more effectual then the former by how much he brought him under the forfeiture of Felony as being guilty of imagining to kill a Privy Counsellor for which he was the more worthily condemn'd to lose his Head in that he so unworthily lost his Resolution at the very instant of time when he was to vindicate his too much abus'd Patience thereby betraying those of his Friends that came to second him into the scandal of a Crime which had it succeeded would have pass'd for a magnanimous piece of Justice in cutting off one whom however he was content to spare Providence it seems was not reserving him to die a more ignoble death and by a worse hand The sorrow for his ignominious fall as it much affected the Consumptive King his Nephew who was now left as a Lamb in the keeping of the Wolf the Duke of Northumberland having got as high in Power as Title by ruining the Family of the Seymours so his end which was not long after put an end to the Reformation and made way for the Dudley's to aspire with incredible Ambition and not without hope of setling the Succession of the Crown in themselves For the Duke finding that the King languish'd under a Hectical Distemper and having better assurance then perhaps any one else could from his Son that alwayes attended in his Bedchamber that it was impossible for him to hold out long for Reasons best known to him he cast about how to introduce the far fetch'd Title of his other Son who had married the Lady Jane Gray eldest Daughter to the Duke of Suffolk by the Lady Frances one of the Daughters and Heirs of Charles Brandon by his Wife Mary Queen of France the second Daughter of Henry the Seventh And however this seem'd to be a very remote pretention yet making way to other great Families to come in by the same Line in case her Issue fail'd as to the Earl of Cumberland who had married the other Daughter of Charles Brandon and to the Earl of Darby that had married a Daughter of that Daughter and to the Earl of Pembroke that had married the Lady Jane's second Sister it was back'd with so many well-wishers that it was become not only terrible to the Kingdom but to the King himself However there were two Objections lay in the way the one the preference that ought to be
such a silent Resolution as look'd like a belief of conquering them without a stroke for he fought only one Battle with the Danes and no more wherein he press'd upon them with that inconsideration as shew'd that the apprehensions of future danger had made him altogether contemn the present the slaughter on their side being so great that he thinking it not worth the trouble to bury their Carcasses in several Graves caus'd them to be gather'd into congested heaps and by those dismal Monuments of their unhappy Courage left to Posterity so many Land-marks of a second Conquest That which made this Victory of his appear more serene like the Air after a Thunder storm was the sudden Calm which followed after it all those fierce Infidels being so wholly dispers'd and defeated that having nothing more to do relating to War he bethought himself of performing some notable Act of Peace And accordingly made a Pilgrimage to Rome where it appears how welcom he was by the magnificent Reception he had of Pope Leo the Fourth who not only entertain'd him a whole year upon his own Charge but anointed his darling Son Elfrid who accompanied him thither to the expectation of his Kingdom after him wherein whether his Holiness intended an Obligation to the Father in honouring the Son that was thought most like him and certainly most belov'd of him or whether it were that being his God-son he could not bestow upon him any cheaper Blessing then an Airy Title which yet seem'd to be a Prophetical Designation to the Crown or what other Cause mov'd him to prop up the old with setting up a young King is not known But in the Consequence it prov'd a fatal Complement to them both For Ethelbald the elder Brother apprehending that he was rejected being a Prince of a furious and vindictive Spirit attempted to do himself right by such an unnatural Wrong as never any Son offer'd to a Father before taking his exception from the most unreasonable and one would have thought the most frivolous Ground that could be imaginable For the Father having given the Complement of Majesty to his young Queen the fair Daughter of the Emperour Charles the Bald whom he had married in his return through France contrary as his Son urg'd to a Law made by the West-Sexe who after Bithrick was poyson'd by his Queen ordain'd that no English Queen ever after should be allow'd the Title place or Priviledge of Majesty he took that Occasion from the respect shew'd to his Mother in Law to justifie himself so far in his disrespect to his Father that without more ado he seiz'd the Crown and kept out both Father and Brother the People who are apt to adore the rising Sun declaring their readiness to stand by him as he by the Laws The shame and horror of wh●ch unexpected Repulse broke the heart of the good old King who dying seem'd to bemoan more the loss of his Subjects duty then that of his own Honour But that blessing which Providence deny'd to himself it gave to his four Sons each of which was King after him and all of them this Ethelbald only excepted so eminently virtuous that however we cannot rank Ethelwolph amongst the Fortunate we may yet number him amongst the happy Princes of this Isle ETHELBALD date of accession 857 AS we may presume that the Impudence and Impiety of this graceless Usurper did sufficiently amaze the present so it remain'd as a Riddle to those of future Times who were left to seek how it could come to pass that so bad a Son could so easily supplant so good a Father And which was yet more the Father of his Country as well as his own For however it is evident that he took the first advantage of his weakness by the rigour of that petulant Law before mention'd which was no less unreasonable for the matter of it then himself appear'd to be by the Execution making the People believe that his Father who had broken a Fundamental Law intended also to violate their Fundamental Priviledges whereof no Nation in the World is more jealous then the English Yet had not this single Ingratitude of his been double edg'd it could never have pierc'd to the heart of so wise a Prince but the hatred to the Father being bottom'd upon a love to the Mother whose Beauty Pride and Lust had prepared the first temptation for his Youth and Power The good old King could not resist that double Injury there being so good an Understanding betwixt the two Serpents that they engendred whilst they were hissing at one another And which is yet more strange the Incestuous Parricide after he had possess'd the Bed as well as the Throne so blind is Passion out-did his Father as much in that very point of respect to her for which he undid him as he out-did a●l other men in point of Inhumanity allowing her not only the stile of Queen but designing to make her by the formal pomp of a solemn Coronation alike Partner with him in his Royalty as she was in his Luxury had not Death and the Danes happily parted them After which she was forc'd to return home and by the way fell it seems into the hands of Baldwyn the Forrester of Arden by whom being taken Prisoner he entred at the Breach he found already made and took the Pleasure of her Beauty as lawful Prize ETHELBERT date of accession 858 SO monstrously rebellious was Ethelbald against his Father that Providence vouchsafed him not the honour of being a Father himself So that dying Childless his second Brother Ethelbert became his Heir and Successor a Prince fitted by the Government of part for the Soveraignty of the whole who having happily rul'd the Kentish South and East-Saxons for five years together was admitted by common Consent as well as by particular Right to the honour of being Fourth absolute Monarch of England However his Government was much disturb'd before he could settle upon the Lees of his Power by the increasing rage of the Danes who landing at Southampton sack'd all the Country to the Walls of Winchester and having afterwards buried that Loyal old Town in its own Ashes came on as far as Berkshire with intent to visit London it self but being stopt by the united Forces of that Country they were compell'd to repay the price of their Cruelties to those they had before harassed falling under the Fury of Osrick Earl of Southampton whose People provok'd with the sense of their Sufferings forc'd in upon them and slew Osbeeck and Crans their Chief Leaders exposing the rest to all the miseries that usually befall a routed Enemy in a strange Country and so great was the slaughter of them that the very Fame of it incourag'd the Kentish men to turn head upon another Party that had bridled and was about to saddle them Some have doubted the Courage of this King for that they find him not personally ingag'd all this while not considering
as often as any advantage was offer'd to him during the Barons War playing fast and loose sometimes as an Enemy otherwhile as a Friend as it made for his turn and having it alwayes in his Power by being in Conjunction with Scotland without which he had been inconsiderable to disturb the Peace of England at his pleasure never neglected any occasion where he might gain Repute to himself or booty for his People Upon him therefore he fastened the first Domestick War he had entring his Country like Jove in a storm with Lightning and Thunder the Terrour whereof was so resistless that that poor Prince was forc'd to accept whatsoever terms he would put upon him to obtain a temporary Peace without any other hope or comfort then what he deriv'd from the mental reservation he had of breaking it again as soon as he return'd whereunto he was not long after tempted by the delusion of a mistaken Prophesie of that false Prophet Merlin who having foretold that he should be crown'd with the Diadem of Brute fatally heightened his Ambition to the utter destruction both of himself and Country with whom his innocent Brother the last of that Race partaking in life and death concluded the Glory of the ancient British Empire which by a kind of Miracle had held out so many hundred years without the help of Shipping Allyance or Confederation with any Forreign Princes by the side of so many potent Kings their next Neighbours who from the time of the first entrance of the English suffer'd them not to enjoy any quiet though they vouchsafed them sometimes Peace Wales being thus totally reduced by the irrecoverable fall of Llewellen and David the last of their Princes that were ever able to make resistance and those ignorant People made thereby happier then they wish'd themselves to be by being partakers of the same Law and Liberty with those that conquer'd them he setled that Title on his eldest Son and so passed over into France to spend as many years abroad in Peace as he had done before in War in which time he renew'd his League with that Crown accommodated the Differences betwixt the Crowns of Scicily and Arragon and shew'd himself so excellent an Arbitrator that when the right of the Crown of Scotland upon his return home came to be disputed with Six some say Ten Competitors after the death of Alexander the Third the Umpirage was given to him who ordered the matter so wisely that he kept off the final Decision of the main Question as many years as there were Rivals put in for it deferring Judgment till all but two only were disputed out of their Pretensions These were Baliol and Bruce the first descended from the elder Daughter of the right Heir the last from the Son of the younger who having as 't was thought the weaker Title but the most Friends King Edward privately offered him the Crown upon Condition of doing Homage and Fealty to him for it the greatness of his Mind which bespoke him to be a King before he was one suffer'd him not to accept the terms whereupon King Edward makes the same Proposition to Baliol who better content it seems with the outside of Majesty accepted the Condition But see the Curse of ill-got Glory shewing himself satisfied with so little he was thought unworthy of any being so abhor'd of his People for it that upon the first occasion they had to quarrel with his Justice as who should say they would wound him with his own Weapon they appeal'd to King Edward who thereupon summon'd him to appear in England and was so rigid to him upon his appearance he would permit none else to plead his Cause but compell'd him in open Parliament to answer for himself as well as he could This being an Indignity so much beneath the sufferance of any private Person much more a King sunk so deep into his Breast that meditating nothing after but Revenge as soon as he return'd home securing himself first by a League and Allyance with the King of France to whose Brothers Daughter he married his Son he renounced his Allegiance and defied King Edward's Power no less then he did his Justice This begat a War betwixt the two Nations that continued much longer then themselves being held up by alternate Successes near three hundred years a longer dated difference perhaps then is to be found in any other Story of the World that Rancor which the Sword bred increasing continually by the desire of Revenge till the one side was almost wholly wasted t'other wholly wearied Baliol the same time King Edward required him to do Homage for Scotland here prevailed with the French King to require the like from him for his Territories there this began the Quarrel that the Division by which King Edward which may seem strange parting his Greatness made it appear much greater whilst himself advanc'd against Baliol and sent his Brother the Earl of Lancaster to answer the King of France Baliol finding himself overmatch'd as well as over-reach'd renew'd his Homage in hopes to preserve his Honour But King Edward resolving to bind him with stronger Fetters then Oaths sent him Prisoner into England whereby those of that Country wanting not only a Head but a Heart to make any further resistance he turn'd his Fury upon the King of France hastning over what Forces he could to continue that War till himself could follow after But Fortune being preingaged on the other side disposed that whole Affair to so many mistakes that nothing answered Expectation and which was worse the Fame of his Male-Adventures spirited a private person worthy a greater * Wallis Name then he had to rise in Scotland who rallying together as many as durst by scorning Misery adventure upon it defied all the Forces of England so fortunately that he was once very near the redeeming his despairing Country-men and had he had less Vertue might possibly have had more success For scorning to take the Crown when he had won it a Modesty not less fatal to the whole Nation then himself by leaving room for Ambition he made way for King Edward to Re-enter the second time who by one single Battel but fought with redoubled Courage made himself once more Lord of that miserable Kingdom all the principal Opposers Wallis only excepted crowding in upon Summons to swear Fealty the third time to him This had been an easie Pennance had they not together with their Faith resigned up their Laws and Liberties and that so servilely that King Edward himself judging them unworthy to be continued any longer a Nation was perswaded to take from them all the Records and Monuments whereby their Ancestors had recommended any of Glory to their Imitation Amongst other of the Regalia's then lost was that famous Marble Stone now lodg'd in Westminster-Abby wherein their Kings were crown'd in which as the Vulgar were perswaded the Fate of their Country lay for that there was an ancient Prophesie
France set forth his own Eloquence and the Kings Title so well deducing his Descent in a direct Line from the Lady Isabel Daughter to Philip the Fourth and Wife to his Grandfather Edward the Second and refuting all the old beaten Arguments brought from the Salique Law to oppose it as being neither consistent with Divinity Reason or Example he at once pleas'd and convinced all his Hearers but most especially the King himself who seem'd to be inspired with a Prophetick confidence of that success which after he had but scorning to steal any Advantage or wrong the Justice of his Title somuch as to seem to doubt 't would be denied before he would make any kind of preparation for the Conquest he sent Ambassadors to Charles the Sixth to demand a peaceable surrender of the Crown to him offering to accept his Daughter with the Kingdom and to expect no other pawn for his Possession till after his death This Message as it was the highest that ever was sent to any free Prince so he intrusted it to those of highest Credit and Trust about him these were his Uncle the Duke of Exeter a man of great esteem as well as of great Name the Arch-bishop of Dublin a very politick Prelate the Lord Gray a man at Arms the Lord High Admiral and the Bishop of Norwich the first as much renown'd for his Courage as the last for his Contrivances to whom for the greater state there was appointed a Guard of five hundred Horse to attend them The Report of this great Embassy as it arriv'd before them so it made such a Report throughout all this side of the World that all the Neighbour Princes like lissening Deer when they hear the noyse of Huntsmen in the Woods began to take the Alarm and consider which side to sly to it being so that England and France never made any long War upon one another but they ingaged all Christendom with them However the Court of France pretending themselves ignorant of the Occasion of their coming dissembled their disdain and treated them with that magnificence as if they had design'd to Complement them out of their business but after the Message was delivered with that faithful boldness that became so great an Affair they were all in that confusion that it was hard to judge whether they were more ashamed incensed or afraid giving such a return as seem'd neither compatible with the honour wisdom or courage of so renown'd a People as they are For first as they did neither deny nor allow the Kings Title but said they would make Answer by Ambassadours of their own So in the next place they were so hasty in their Counsels and the dispatch of their Ambassadors hither that they arriv'd in England almost as soon as those sent hence And lastly at the same time they desired Peace and offer'd to buy it with the tender of some Towns they gave the King an Affront which was a greater Provocation then the denyal of ten such Kingdoms for the Daulphin who in respect of the King his Fathers sickness I might rather say weakness managed the State affecting the honour to give the first Box or perhaps desiring to make any other Quarrel the ground of the approaching War which he foresaw was not to be prevented rather then that of the Title which had been already so fatally bandi'd scornfully sent the King a Present of Tenis-balls which being of no value nor reckoning worthy so great a Princes acceptance or his recommendation could have no other meaning or interpretation but as one should say he knew better how to use them then Bullets The King whose Wit was as keen as t'others Sword return'd him this Answer That in requital of his fine Present of Tenis-balls he would send him such Balls as he should not dare to hold up his Racket against them Neither was he worse then his word however his preparations seem'd very disproportionable for so great a Work For the Army he landed was no more but six thousand Horse and twenty four thousand Foot a Train so inconsiderable and by the Daulphin judg'd to be so despicable that he thought not fit to come down himself in Person to take any view of them for fear he should fright them out of the Country too soon but sent some rude Peasants to attend their Motion who incouraged by some of the Troops of the nearest Garrisons as little understanding the danger they were ingaged in as they did the language of the Enemy they were ingaged with fell in upon the Rear of his Camp but as Village Curs which fiercely set upon all Strangers having the least Rebuke with a Stone or a Cudgel retreat home whining with their Tails betwixt their Legs so they having a Repulse given them ran away and made such Out-cries as dishearten'd the Souldiers that were to second them so much that after that he marched without any Resistance as far as Callice Neither indeed saw he any Enemy till he came to give Battel to the united Forces of France at that famous Field of Agencourt where notwithstanding he was out-numbred by the French above five for one he fought them with that Resolution as made himself Master of more Prisoners then he had men in his Camp to keep them an Occasion Fortune gave him to shew at once her Cruelty and his Mercy who whilst he might have kill'd did not but when he should not was forc'd to be cruel beyond almost all Example for as he gave Quarter in the beginning of the Battel to all that ask'd it his Clemency and Gentleness being such that as he was then pleas'd to declare he consider'd them as his Subjects not as his Captives So being over-charged with their Prisoners Numbers upon a sudden and unexpected accident however of no great Consequence if it had been rightfully understood he was forc'd to write the dismal Fate of France in cold Blood and in order to the saving life destroy it For as he was seeing his wounded men drest having gotten an intire Victory as he thought and as afterward it proved a sudden out-cry alarm'd his Camp occasion'd by a new Assault of some French Troops who being the first had quit the Field were the first return'd into it again in hopes by fighting with Boyes to regain the honour they lost in refusing to fight with men these under the Leading of the Captain of Agencourt set upon the Pages Sutlers and Laundresses following the pursuit with that wonted noyse as if they would have the English think the whole Army was rally'd again and chasing them Upon this the King caus'd all the scatter'd Arms and Arrows to be recollected and his stakes to be new pitch'd and put himself into a posture of Defence neither were the English only deceived by the Shreiks and Cries of those miserable People that fell into these mens hands but all those of the French likewise that were within hearing insomuch that the Earls of Marle and
to the Dutchess Dowager of Suffolk before the Lady Jane her Daughter in case the right of Inheritance was set up The other was that of the two next Heirs Females in case the right of Immediate Succession should take place There was a third also but he thought it not worth the consideration being so far off to wit the Title of the Queen of Scots from the Lady Margaret eldest Daughter of Henry the Seventh which being in the French seem'd to be of less weight then if it had been in the Scots to neither of whom he believ'd the English would ever be brought to submit but all these Difficulties were quickly digested in his ambitious Thoughts The first which was the pretention of the Lady Jane's Mother he hop'd to set aside by introducing her as the next Successor and not as the next Heir by right of Descent and because the Kings Sisters were before her in the Succession so that nothing could be available to set aside their Right but a plain Disseisure he made use of the Interest of the one as a Wedge to drive out the other And finding that the King their Brother by the Equity of a Law made in his Fathers time had the power to nominate who he thought fit to come after him he made it his great business to work upon his weakness and to perswade him to set both aside and admit the Lady Jane taking his first Argument from his Piety and Care of the Church under the present establishment made by himself shewing him what danger 't was like to be in if so obstinate a Papist as his Sister Mary succeeded who having been convict before all the Lords of the Councel had most passionately justified her Popish Principles saying She would never change her Faith much less dissemble it Urging thereupon that Gods Glory ought to be dearer to him then his own Flesh and Blood that this was his last and greatest Act of which he knew not how soon he might be call'd to give an Accompt to the King of Kings and therefore desired him for Gods sake as well as for the Kingdoms and his own sake not to let her take place Then for the Lady Elizabeth whom he could not deny to be a Protestant he said if she should be prefer'd before her elder Sister it might possibly give an occasion to unconceivable Troubles and revive the Disputes about their Legitimacy which had cost too much blood already besides the hazard that would be of the Churches no less then their own Peace and the possibility of bringing the whole Nation under the Yoke of some stranger Prince to whose Tyranny the People would never submit concluding that as the three Daughters of the Duke of Suffolk were nearest in Blood and being married took off all fears of introducing Forreigners so having with their Natural suck'd in the Sincere Milk of the Word they could not but maintain the Truth of the Reformed Religion as well as the Dignity of the Succession with universal good liking And whereas the eldest of them to wit the Lady Jane before mention'd was his own Sons Wife he could be content they should both be bound by Oath to perform whatever his Majesty should Decree for that he had no such regard to his own as to the general good Which plausible pretences so prevai●'d over the weak King whose Zeal had eaten up his Understanding that he made his Will and accordingly excluded both his own Sisters to let in the other After doing of which weak act having nothing more to do but to dye 't is thought the Duke was so grateful as to contribute much to the delivering him out of his pains as soon as might be and with as much ease for he slept away with that meekness that those that could not find in their hearts to pray for him living perform'd that Charity to him when he was dead However some there were who sower'd with a Religious Leaven took occasion to raise as great a scandal on the untimeliness of his death as others had before upon that of his Birth putting this remark upon it to make it look like a Judgment that it was in the same Moneth and in the very same day of the same Moneth that Sir Tho Moor was put to death by his Father Wherein whilst they maliciously reflected upon the Evil that was past they consider'd not how like another Josiah he was taken from the Evil to come departing with this Justification before Men and Angels That he had done as much as could be reasonably expected from the tenderness of his Years or his Power HONI · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE And now it appear'd how ominous it was for the Innocent Lady Jane to have been brought as she was in state to the Tower But as she offer'd Violence to her own Inclinations out of Obedience to those of her Father and Mother so the assumption of that temporary was in order to the intituling her to a more lasting Glory being taught the vanity of all humane Greatness by the brevity of that of her own which lasted not so long as 't is reported a Dream of one did but a little before for there is a Story of one Foxley a Pot-maker to the Mint in Henry the Eight's time that slept fourteen dayes together and no body could wake him no not with pinching or burning whereas she came to her self in less then ten dayes and then poor Lady found herself where he was too in the Tower ready to be translated as after she was from a Kingdom to a Scaffold and from the Scaffold to a Kingdom again Happy had it been for her if it had prov'd a Dream only suffering not so much for any Crime of her own Ambition as for not resisting that of others having this aggravation of her affliction to see her Husband and the Duke his Father executed before her who both died for the same Fault but not with the same Faith that she did The Duke that had therefore importun'd King Edward to give her this fatal honour to the intent Popery might be utterly abolish'd declaring when he came to suffer that he himself was a Roman Catholick which most think he had not done had not some Promises of Life upon condition of turning deceiv'd him at the very instant time of his Death whereby Queen Mary was quit with him at the last though she could not deal with him in the first place For as he was reputed to have had no Faith whilst he lived so by this abrupt Apostacy he was judg'd to have no Religion when he dyed There is this further Remark upon him That as he suffer'd under the same Fate and upon the very same Block the late Duke of Somerset did so 't was his hap to be laid under the same Stone in the same Grave where they now lye side by side as good Friends that living were unreconcilable Enemies Two headless Dukes betwixt two