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A37119 The history of the thrice illustrious Princess Henrietta Maria de Bourbon, Queen of England Dauncey, John, fl. 1663. 1660 (1660) Wing D293; ESTC R20 24,263 144

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yet in the mean time will use her utmost power and interest by all ways imaginable to help him She likewise sends another Letter to the French Ambassadour resident to be delivered to the L. Gen. which she directs To her Trusty well-beloved Tho. Lord Fairfax Generall of the Parliaments Forces Therein imploring his aid and assistance to come over to the King her Husband to see him before he should be proceeded against by any Tryall or Charge and to have a Passe for her secure coming and returning This Letter was by the L. Gen. Fairfax sent to the House of Commons but they not so much as deigning to take it into consideration laid it aside And on they proceed in their intended traiterous design against the King her Husband condemning him by their pretended High Court of Justice to be murdered by severing his head from his body before his own Palace-gate of White-hall which accordingly they executed on that black day for ever to be rased out of the Kalender Tuesday the 30 of Jan. to the astonishment of the whole World and grief of all good men But with what unexpressible grief and sorrow to his Royal Consort must be left to imagination no pen being able to express that black cloud of distractions which so sad an accident must necessarily involve her in certainly had she been of the same Religion that those noble Roman Women were who scorned to survive their Husbands her magnanimous spirit had certainly followed their example But since her Religion though it could not restrain her sorrow for her murdered King and Husband restrained her from following him in death she is resolved to spend the rest of her time in Religion and therefore retired her self to the Monastery of Challons where she ceased not daily to lament both his and her own hard Fortune his in coming to so untimely an end by the treachery of his Subjects and her own in surviving him Till at length overcome by the importunities of the King and Qu. Mother of France she came to keep Court though with the most obscurity that could be in Pallace Royal a Pallace built by Cardinal Richelieu at Paris yet never interposing in any matters of Estate except what might be for the Promoting of the interest of her Son King Charles the Second who not only lost his Father but was deprived of his Kingdoms by his Fathers Murderers till it pleased God of late to restore him which sure does in a great measure comfort this disconsolate Princesse though Worlds cannot repair the loss of such a Husband A Prince he was of an incomparable piety and so rare a pattern of Conjugal love that he commanded the Princess Elizabeth the day before his death to tell her mother That his thoughts had never strayed from her and that his love had been the same to the last Nor were her Vertues less resplendant which should I undertake to Characterize I should wrong what King Charles himself hath done I therefore only conclude with this Wish May England ever be happy in such Princes but may never Princes of England be so unhappy in their Governments as the Malice and Rebellion of some men made Them to be FINIS The Queen born Prince Charls his Voyage to Spain His return K. James his Letter to the K. of France Letters sent to the Princess Henrietta Maria King James his Death Prince Charles succeeds Letters of Proxie to the Duke of Chevereux Buckingham and others sent to fetch the Queen K. James his Funerall The Qu. sets forward The Queen puts to sea Arrives at Dover The King and Queen set forward to Londen The Marriage proclaimed Occasion of discontent between the King and Queen The Qu. Servants dismissed Bishop of Menes Madam St. George offer a defence of themselves The Qu. extreamly disturbed at the sending away of her servants The Kings endeavour to pacifie her The French misdemeanours King of France resents the sending away of his Sisters servants Ambassadours sent to demand their restitution But in vain War with France unsuccessefull The Queen brought to bed before her time Prince Charles born The Prince baptized Princess Mary born And Duke of York The Queen raises a Benevolence amongst the Catholiques The Catholiques free supplyes The Collectors of her Majesties Benevolence questioned The Qu. message to the House of Commons The Qu. Mother arrives in England Her death Duke of Glocester born The Marriage of the Princess Mary with the Prince of Orange The Qu. accused of High treason The Queen goes for Holland The Parliaments endeavour to clear themselves The Qu. answer to their excuse The breach betwixt the King and Parliament The Parliament raise Arms The King likewise arms The Queen comes to England The Qu. Letter to the King about her escape at Burlington The Qu. goes to York Advances to Newark Her Majesties Forces Card Richelieu his death His birth extract Character Mazarine succeeds him Lewis 13. dies The Qu. and King meet at Edge hill Ambassadour from France The Qu. at Oxford Sir William Waller routed The Qu. intends to journey to the West Queen proclaimed traitor Sets forward towards the West Delivered of a daughter Queen passes into France Waller and Essex routed Nazeby fight the Kings ruine The King disguised leaves Oxford The Qu. desires to procure Lorrain to assist the King Oxford taken The Scots sell the King The Qu. Letter to the King And to the Lord Fairfax The King beheaded The Qu. goes into a Monastery at Challons
Son who entred into the world on the twentieth of July 1640. and was Christned Henry and after created Duke of Glocester She had before been delivered of her third Daughter on the 17th of March 1636. who was Christned Anna and died before her Father And shortly after the Duke of Glocesters birth in the same year the Ambassadour Leiger of Holland made some overtures of a Marriage between the young Prince William of Nassau Prince of Orange and the Kings eldest Daughter the Lady Mary Which Overtures were willingly assented to by the King and likewise agreed upon by the Parliament who expressed much joy at the Kings inclinations to marry his Daughter to a Protestant Prince though somewhat inferior to her in birth and nobleness So on Sunday the second of May the Marriage was with a great deal of Solemnity performed in the Kings Chappell at White-hall Notwithstanding the Parliaments former suspension of all proceedings against the Kings servants who collected the Benevolence amongst the Catholiques for the Kings necessary supply in his Expedition against the Scots yet a strange report after there was of the Parliaments intentions to draw up Articles of High Treason against her And indeed some resolutions there were of the Parliaments upon a fond conceit that the Queen had so much power with the King as to misadvise him either to perswade her to withdraw her self aside by some fears wherewith they would possess her or else to drive her away perforce which the King finding and thinking the first the surest course thought it better to have her go as it were voluntarily and therefore acquainted the Parliament That he was pressed by the States Ambassadours to send the Princesse Maria into Holland to her late Espoused Husband and that the Queen desiring it he had given her leave to goe with her And so the good Queen was got out of their Clutches the King accompanying her and the Princess to the Sea-side at Dover and she carrying with her all the Jewels belonging to the Crown the Pawn of which afterwards with some additional supplyes from the Prince of Orange assisted the King in his extreamest necessities The King was extreamly troubled at the Queens departure which made him fall into this rare Soliloquie of her in which because he who knew her best gives the best Characters of her that possibly can be given I shall here insert it ALthough I have much cause says the King to be troubled at my Wives departure from me and out of my Dominions yet not her absence so much as the scandal of that necessity which drives her away doth afflict me That she should be compelled by my own Subjects and those pretending to be Protestants to withdraw for her safety This being the first example of any Protestant Subjects that have taken Arms against their King a Protestant For I look upon this now done in England as another act of the same Tragedy which was lately begun in Scotland the Brands of that fire being ill quenched have kindled the like flames here I fear such motions so little to the adorning of the Protestant Profession may occasion a further alienation of minde and divorce of affections in her from that Religion wherein we only differ Which yet God can and I pray he would in time take away and not suffer these practices to be any obstruction to her judgement since it is the motion of those men for the most part who are yet to seek and settle their Religion for Doctrine Government and good manners and so not to be imputed to the true English Protestants who continue firm to their former setled Principles and Laws I am sorry my relation to so deserving a Lady should be any occasion of her danger and affliction whose merits would have served her for a protection amongst the savage Indians whilest their rudenesse and barbarity knows not so perfectly to hate all vertues as some mens subtilty doth among whom I yet think few are so malicious as to hate her for her self the fault is she is my Wife All justice then as well as affection commands me to studie her security who is only in danger for my sake I am content to be tossed weather-beaten and shipwrackt so as she may be in a safe harbour This comfort I shall enjoy by her safety in the middest of my personal dangers That I can perish but half if she be preserved to whose memory and hopefull Posterity I may yet survive the malice of mine enemies although they should be satiated with my blood I must leave her and them to the love and loyalty of my good Subjects and to his protection who is able to punish the faults of Princes and no lesse severely to revenge the Injuries done to them by those who in all duty and Allegiance ought to have made good that safety which the Laws chiefly provide for Princes But common civility is in vain expected from those who dispute their Loyalty Nor can it be safe for any Relation to a King to tarry among them who are shaking hands with their Allegiance under pretence of laying faster hold on their Religion 'T is pity so noble and peacefull a Soul should see much more suffer the rudenesse of those who must make up their want of Justice with inhumanity and impudence Her sympathie with me in affliction will make her Vertues shine with greater lustre as Stars in the darkest nights and assure the envious World That she loves me not my Fortunes Neither of us but can easily forgive since we do not much blame the unkindnesse of the generality and Vulgar for we see God is pleased to trie both our Patience by the most selfpunishing sin the ingratitude of those who having eaten of our Bread and being enriched by our bounty have scornfully lift up themselves against us and those of our own Houshold are become our enemies I pray God lay not their sin to their charge who think to satisfie all Obligations to duty by their Corban of Religion and can lesse endure to see then to sin against their Benefactors as well as their Soveraigns But even that policy of mine enemies is so far venial as it was necessary to their designs by scandalous Articles and all irreverend demeanour to seek to drive her out of my Kingdoms lest by the influence of her example eminent for Love as a Wife and Loyalty as a Subject she should have converted to or retained in their Love and Loyalty all those whom they had a purpose to pervert The lesse I can be blest with her Company the more I will retire to God and mine own Heart whence no malice can banish her Mine Enemies may envy but they can never deprive me of the enjoyment of her Vertues while I enjoy my self Let the world then judge by this noble character given her by him who of all men in the world best knew her how ill she deserved those many scandals and reproaches upon
companies of Horse and Dragoons six pieces of Cannon two Mortar-pieces and one hundred and fifty Waggons of Money Provision and Ammunition Mr. Jermin now Earl of St. Albans as Coll. of her Majesties Regiment of guards commanded in Chief over the whole Squadron Sir Alexander Lesley who since indeed ever proved himself a traiterous murderous perfidious and cowardly Scot had the ordering of the Infantry and Sir John Gerrard commanded the Horse Capt. Leg the Artillery and her Majesties self Generalissima with an undaunted and more then Womanlike resolution in the head of her Army But let us look a little into her Majesties native Countrey where that famous or rather infamous Politician Cardinall Richelieu having by his Policies dipped his hands in the blood of so many innocent Peers of France is forced at length himself fato succumbere to yield to that Fate from which no subtilty could reprieve him He was born at Paris of Noble extraction and took his Orders at Rome where Pope Paul the fifth then sitting in the Pontifical Chair looking with earnestness upon his physiognomy told him That he should become the greatest Cheat in the World He was by the Queen Mother first preferred to be Bishop of Larone and then to the Kings Counsel whom she afterwards commended to the Pope who sent him the Cap and after the famous siege and forcing of Rochell by his policy and industry became the prime Minister of State in the Kingdome of France and the King growing up to age insinuated so much into his favour that he postponed filial duty and brotherly affection to his love towards him so his Policy taught him to be ingratefull in the highest degree to those breasts which had first cherished and advanced him His minde was esteemed by most to be of the same colour with his habit wholly sanguine and much of the temper of that Spanish Cardinal who affirmed That Gunpowder in the field gave as sweet a perfume as Incense at the Altar He was observed to be of an irreconcileable nature where he once hated he hated ever pardoning none from whom he either had or judged he might receive an injury The Marshal of Marillacks and many other prime Peers of France are examples of his revenge Yet his Counsels have been by many great Politicians esteemed of high conducement to the affairs of France for by them the Hugonots were suppressed who were looked upon as one of the greatest Weaknesses of France for by them either Forain Princes cherished their Invasions or potent Peers their Rebellions A great scourge he was to the Spaniard but greater to the Duke of Lorrain whom he chased out of his Countrey to seek another habitation He was looked upon as the greatest Incendiary and Fomenter of the Scottish and English Rebellions and Disturbances A man he was of an infinite contriving and sedulous spirit as solid as subtile a thing rare under the Gallick Clime insomuch that many have termed him the wonder and Prodigy of Prudence A mighty Change there was expected to follow in the Government of France upon his death but he had so well instructed his Pupil Mazarine that things went on still in their former frame This Mazarine who succeeded in that grand employment was a Sicilian by birth and are a wily subtile generation of mean Parentage but an highly extended Genius he was first servant to a German Count at Rome who much frequenting Plays at which he was an excellent Artist his servant Mazarincs quick spirit soon learned the Trade and Fortune likewise favouring him in a short time he raised himself to a Stock of a thousand Crowns when leaving his Master he gets into the service of Cardinal Barberino then chief in the Court of Rome by whom being soon observed to be of a nimble wit and tenacious judgement he was first employed in a small Legateship in Italy which place he performing even to admiration and the Court of Rome wanting a person whose cunning policies might circumvent Richelieu's designs in France he is by the Cardinal Barberino's means chosen and sent Legat thither but finding himself outwitted here he thought it better to joyn with Richelieu and become his Pupil to learn more then lose that opinion already had of his judgement And under him he so perfected his experience that it will be a hard question to determine whether his Predecessor before him or he since have managed the affairs of that Kingdom with greater subtilty Not long after the death of his Royal Favourite Lewis the 13th brother to the Queen of England and surnamed the just returning out of Catalonia extreme sad and melancholy bid adieu to the World having yet left behinde him two Heirs Males Children born to the wonder of the world after twenty three years barrenness in his Royal Queen and Consort Infanta once of Spain when he despaired to have seen a Childe of his own Heir to the Crown of France He was a Prince of himself of a very quiet and peaceable temper by which means Richelieu had the greater opportunity to carry on affairs of State as he pleased At his death he declared the Queen Regent or Governess of his young Son the King till he came to age recommending the Cardinal Mazarine whom she had long before received to her for counsel But let us return to the Queen whom we left marching towards the King and whom we may now expect to have met him at Edge-hill The first time which his Majesty had had the happiness for so I dare affirm he accounted it to see her since her forced departure to Holland what joy and congratulations there was at this meeting I leave the Reader to judge In the mean time Monsieur Harcourt came over Ambassador from France to treat of an accommodation between the King and Parliament but his Negotiation was by many rather looked upon as a flourish from the Policy of Cardinal Mazarine to pry into the actions of this great difference he being likely rather to widen that breach which was the Master-piece of Cardinall to make then any way endeavour to close it The Queen being by the King conveyed to Oxford stayed there till the beginning of the next year whilest the Kings affairs went on in a very hopefull posture for the same day that the Queen entred Triumphantly into Oxford was Sir William Waller the City Generall totally routed at Roundaway down and no Army in the field to oppose him had he not unadvisedly set down before the siege of Glocester whilest in the mean time Essex raised another Army and Sir William was recruited by the City the Scots invited in to assist their Brethren of England against the King when had his Majesty directly marched up towards London he had found no force to oppose him and so might have utterly quasht the Rebellion which had been better policy then the in vain attempting that beggerly and disloyal City The Queen