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A20374 [An apologie of the Earle of Essex] Essex, Robert Devereux, Earl of, 1566-1601.; Rich, Penelope, Lady, 1562?-1607. Lady Rich to Her Maiestie in the behalfe of the Earle of Essex. 1600 (1600) STC 6787.7; ESTC S341 26,155 38

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concluded this shewes that he meaneth to treate But remember howe heretofore the Spanish kings Lieuetenant and other ministers haue pretended commission when they had none yea haue drawne vs to treatie before they had there power from Spaine to conclude Remember also howe that king hath sent a commission from Spaine to bee openly shewed that treatie might be entertained when it is notorious to the world he neuer meant to conclude any peace witnesse of all this the Duke of Parma his want of commission when by his letters he drew my Lord of Darbie Cobham and other commissioners to the treatie of Berborch And afterwardes that comming of a commission when their great Nauie did presently appeare vpon our coastes for the conquest of England But doe they offer to treate and meane no peace What is then their meaning If you will haue me to interprete I will tell you Their first maine attempt against England was in 88. from that time to this present is full tenne yeares the iust time of the siege of Troy An● now they see open force cannot preuaile they in shewe retire and giue ouer armes but they haue prepared a Sinons horse which cannot enter if we ●ast not downe our walles But because we are thought more credulous then the Tro●an were the bare letter of a base beggerly traiterous fugitiue assuring vs that good faith is meant is the vttermost stratagem they vse to deceiue vs with but though some beleeue it yet I say Time● Dan●●s dona serentes If they appeale from my expositiō let their actions expound themselues will they charge vs at Berborch with fayling to agree to peace or wil they haue vs to allow that the Duke of Medina came with that huge fleete and armie onely to be witnesse to the contract O● if they had rather their owne wo●ds should expound their meaning then their actions Here Emanuell Lewes the Portugal that brought Lopu● and Stephano Ferrara assurance of the 50000. Crownes to be paid so soone as their diuelish conspiracy against the life of our precious soueraigne should t●ke effect heare him I say who at his arraignement in Guild hall London cōfessed at the bar that in their Cipher and Targon when they wrote of peace they intended the murther and death of her Maiestie Or if the peace must not be condemned to be insidious but vnder two witnesses here also Anthonie Rowles nowe prisoner in the tower of London who comming hither out of Spain● with a pretence of making a nouerture of peace and for better colour bringing letters to her Maiestie to your self and me from Teswell the Iesuite to that end confessed vpon his examination taken by maister Secretarie and my selfe that his true etrand giuen him by some of the king of Spaines chiefest ministers was to discouer the state of our preparations to assure the Papistes of England that they might shortly expect their deliuerance to win some counsellors about her Maiestie or noblemen in this kingdome to fauour their case and to offer me from the Spanish king what euer portion or summe of money I would desire so as I would be wonne to take their part Nowe iudge worthy maister Bacon out of the clearenesse of your owne iudgement how I should vnderstand their offer and speach of peace and thinke ●ut of the worthine● of your owne heart what peace my heart could take with them that haue attempted to conquer my countrey practized to murder my Soueraigne and sought out me a● a fitte man to be tempted to betray both my Queene and countrey But if God had not put me backe and arrested by contrary winds this last sommer I should haue taught that proud king what effect his offers had wrought in me And that the longer the will of God and my Soueraigne doe restraine me with the greater interest I hope to pay him in the ende But our peacemakers may alleadge that times are chaunged and with the times the humours of princes and affaires do commonly chaunge So although heretofore their were no trust to be giuen to the enemies word or faire shewes yet now his humour or the consideration of his owne affaires may dispose him to make peace For my part erel can beleeue that he is of a peace able humour I must know how his ambitious and reuengfull humours are satisfied and quenched Satisfied they cannot be for he hath receiued ouerthrowe in encounters ill successe in all attemptes and losse and scorne in all the warre h● hath had with our Maiestie Quenched they are not like to be for if apprehension of death would haue quenched them he would not the last yeare when he came newly out of that traunce which was thought would had been his dead sound had asked the first worde that he spake whether the Adelaniado were gone for England Or if remorse of conscience would haue quenched them he would not in his deuotions being at masse haue vowed to be reuenged on England though he sould all the candlestickes vpon the altar before him Of the first of these speaches my selfe and some of my fellow commissioners haue seene very credible aduertisement out of Spaine And the second was deliuered both to you and to me by the mouth of a principall Iesulte newly come out of Spaine But we may well conclude that his humour is not like to be chaunged for he will neuer thinke he hath sufficient parte of the earth till his mouth ●e full of earth And some of his ghostly fathers the Iesuites will as well perswade that the inuasion of other princes kingdomes is a worke of pietie as they doe teach desperate conspirators that to murder princes is the way to heauen And if he should die to morrow his sonnes bloud is hotter and his humour of ambition is like to be greater he hath bin breede in domo Regnatri●i and his minde shewes to be already swollen veteri atque insita Austriacae samiliae superbia So as in their peaceable humours there being no hope let vs see what is the present state of their affaites Princes and states when they do enter into consideration of their owne affaires may dispose themselues to peace for vtilitie conueniencie or necessitie For vtilitie if they can get aduautage For conueniencie if peace be sittest to conserue them in the state they are For necessitie when they haue no longer meanes to make warre That it is like the king of Spaine will make peace with vs because he shall get aduantage our peacemakers will not agree and if they doe it is their owne fault if we fall into the pitte which they shew vs so plainely That he should not be inclined to peace with England for conueniencie if neither aduantage intice him nor necessiue inforce him I reason thus All states doe stand as much by reputation a● by strength especially where there dominions are deuided farre and where a fewe of one nation giue the law to great multitudes of many Now let the Indies the
prouinces So that I conclude it were both folly and impietie for them to make any such peace or for vs to drawe them to it yea more folly in vs then euer was committed in any state For what will not the enemie be able to doe vpon vs when besides the forces he now hath he shall haue a countrey in his handes able to find him 60000. or 80000. souldiers 500. shippes of warre besides insinite numbers of transporting vessels and commodious Portes that are but a dayes sayling from the very heart of England But the low countries shall be giuen to the Infant shee marryed to the Archduke Albert and so that state deuided from the crowne of Spaine in a farte safer hand For the disuniting of them I answere the Infant is if the Prince of Spaine haue no children to be heire to her brother and her brother in like case to her and then are the states vnited the onely likelihood of their remayning seuered is if they both haue children and yet since none of that house doe marry farther of then cosen Germaines I see n●t why we shuld not suspect their coniunction by such a match But allowe them ●euered is not Albert sonne in lawe to the late king and brother in lawe to the present● is he not to be backed by the force of Spaine and maintained by the purse of Spaine● will hee not serue the Spanish kings turne aswell to ioyne in warre against England as the Duke of Sauoy that marryed the other sister did in war against Fraunce Nay hath he not a suspected streng●● of his owne by being brother to the present Emperor and in no vnlikely hope to bee Emperour himselfe hereafter 〈◊〉 Nay is not the Infant the person whose title to the cro●● of England Parsons so laboured to prooue Is not the lowe countries the rise by which hee must leape into England Is not such a peace as this in hande the meanes to assure her of all the Iowe Countries Is not the armie which is nowe vnder her newe husbande the force on which the enemie for his enterprize of England must set his rest yes yes this cohaerence is manifest and their designe clearely discouered And it is too plaine what is to be expected of our peace if we include the lowe countries Now let vs consider how good it may be if we abandon them I haue euer thought that such a peace might bee good for vs if they that perswade vnto it c●● prooue three thinges First that they of the lowe Countries will haue both will and strength to maintaine th● warre though we make peace and forsake them Secondly so we leaue them wee may haue good conditions 〈◊〉 our selues And thirdly that as our affaires nowe stand a neutralitie can be possible kept by vs while the vnited prouinces and the enemie are in warre In the will of 〈◊〉 Iowe Countries to continue warre and to refuse all conditions that the enemie shall offer I vnderstande the resolution and counsell of the gouernours of the state 〈◊〉 the conformitie of the people to such a resolution In t●● strength I meane aswell the strength of the gouernours to force the people if they bee aduerse as the strength and sufficiencie of their meanes to endure so great and so sharpe a warre as will fall vppon them Of the chiefe gouernours resoluing there may be these doubtes that they shall be tempted by the enemies offers who if he can wil purchase the seuerally that he may reduce them vniuersally And that they shall be terrified with the danger of counsell for it soundes both harshly aforehand and is ●●e to fal out vnsuccessinely at the first the enemie being so much maister of the fields as some place will be caried I know they doe pretend to be resolute one way and protest against giuing eare to treatie but that may be eyther to moue vs by example or to make vs to leaue pressing of them to a treatie or to seeme to hold out to the last that we may seeme rather to haue vndone them then they to vndoe themselues But if they vpon mature deliberation should chuse the continuance of the warres as the lesse of the two euils yet that they people will be like affected it is not probable for when a people that hath been long ●yted with the miserie of the war shall heare the pleasing name of peace when they that had two mightie Princes ioyned with them in a straight defensiue and offensiue league shall see themselues abandoned first by Fraunce and then by England when one the one side for the maintenance of the warres they shall haue newe and great contributions demaunded of them and one the other side they shall be offered all plausible conditions of peace nay when they shall see England by making peace get the trade of Spaine from them and they alone by standing out shall be barred of that Nauigation which hath made them so mightie in shipping and so encreased in wealth and riches what then the multitude is like to chuse is it not easie to iudge And if the people be not conformable of themselues how by the authoritie of the gouernours of the state which are called the generall states they may be forced I doe not see First because it is not an absolutē and necessary but a limited and voluntarie obedience which they yeelde Secondly because the state hath not as the state of Rome had and the state of Venice hath one place that as the head doth commaund and direct all the partes of the body but is compounded of equal parts Zealand is as absolute as Holland Friseland as eyther of them yea not onely the least prouince but the least town holdes it selfe to haue a kinde of Soueraigntie and will haue as free a voyce as the greatest Thirdly because of the former manner of proceedinges which hath not byn to send commaundementes to binde but deputies to perswade not to resolue and conclude in the greatest causes in any one counsell or assembly but to sound and feele the disposition of euery prouince and so to winne them to like of that they haue deuised of And l●stly because that euen amongst themselues they are for the time generall states there is not like to be vnanimitie in opinion and then though they that dissent being sewe will not beare the enuie to stande in counsell against the greater parte yet it is easie for them when they come home to worke in the particular prouinces and townes such a distrust of that which shall be generally propounded to all as the resolution will sticke and the whole businesse bee ouerthrowne it being vnsafe for them to denie libertie of voyce to any such libertie being the true cause of their taking armes and standing out against the common enemie But admit both by the gouernours of state and people it were resolued that the low Countries alone should remaine in war how are their meanes or is their strength like to
maintayne warre Of all forraine helpe they are vtterly destitute Fraunce makes no diuersion England can yeeld no succours and in all Christendome their is no other prince or state likely or able to back them Their owne meanes and abilitie grow either by the fruit of the earth or by traffique and merchandise for the fruites of the earth that meanes is like to be but small for the enemy being maister of the fields and able to deuide his forces into diuerse places will euery day eyther winne from them part of that they hould or at the least so infecte those partes that are already in the States obedience as except it bee in Holland or Zealand which the enimie cannot yet come vnto the husbandrie will bee ill followed and yealde little profitte And as for their meanes by traffique it is vnlikely that merchauntes that may remoue their dwellinge to peaceable places nere hande where they may haue safe and free trade will remayne in the Low Countreies which onely is in warre of all these partes of Christendome and if they keepe their dwelling yet will the Spaniarde without doubt banish them the trade into Spaine when both Fraunce and England and the Easterlinges shall supply him and will seeke both to banish and impeach them of other trade as much as hee can pretending that they are now the onely perturbe●s of the peace of Christendome So as I conclude when I thinke with myselfe what the gouernours of the state of the vnited prouinces are like to resolue what the people in generall will be like to desire howe hardly the multitude will be forced against their liking or the meanes of the Low Countries make them subsist to themselues I see nothing but danger that the enemie will shortly and suddély be master of all the country which how it importeth vs to preuent it hath bin before made plain I will now cōsider what conditions we are like to haue for our selues so we wil forsake our confederats restitutiō of places we can not demand as Fraunce did for the enemie holds none of ours Reparation of damage we can as little seeke for for from him we haue sustained no losse And trade into the Indies our zealous peacemakers wil not stand for least the enemie offended wil grant no peace Traf●ique into Spaine and Portugall we shall haue and that is the onely condition that carries any shewe of aduantage to vs. But if we consider howe greedie our merchantes will be of such a trade at first and how easie it will be for a faith breaking enemie to confiscate all our countrimens goodes and to embarge and vse English shipping against England wee would not bragge to much of this aduantage But on the other side he will require alteration in our gouernment or in the execution of our lawes for matters of religion deliuering vp the townes her Maiestie hath in the Loue Countries and reparation of all the damages susteyned in the wars The first is a condition only for a conquerour to impose and vnfitte for a braue state that in all the wars heretofore hath had the better once to heare mentioned The second should neuer be asked of a Queene so iust as shee will not yeald vp the keyes of a countrey deliuered by her best confederates into the handes of her greatest enemies nor of a prince so wise as shee will not adde strength to him whose strength alreadie shee holdeth so much suspected nor inable him to inuade whose ambition and malice thirsteth after inuasion and conquest The third condition is vnpossiblè to be graunted for the losse the king of Spaine hath receiued in these wars amounteth to a greater summe then the treasure of al the kings in Christendome If It be asked how I knowe that these conditions will be demaunded I answere I learne Albertus mind of Albertus himselfe and the Spaniards conditions out of the instruction giuen to the Spanish commissioners If it be sayd though in the intercepted letters and instructions such conditions were to bee asked but neuer meant they should be insisted vpon I answere that in the instruction to the Spanish commissioners it is expresly set downe in the first and third condition the lega●e shall be pressed to vrge the French king to stand with them in obtayning them and for the second if the English commissioners doe cut of all hope of deliuering the townes that then the treatie shall instantly breake of which is as much as if he should say except England will giue vs the keyes of the Low Countries whereby we may reduce them and let vs haue the Port of Flushing in which our Galleys may winter and from which we may set out our fleete for the conquest of England whensoeuer we will breake wee will haue no peace with England at this time But if it be graunted that the Low Countries wil maintaine the wars alone and that Spaine will grant vs good conditions so we wil abandon the states how wil it appear that it is possible for vs betwixt these two to hold a neutralitie If we do not the vnited prouinces some fauour vnderhand at least by letting them be serued by such of our nation as will voluntarily offer themselues vnto them their state cannot be maintained nor they kept our friendes whom we suffer to perish On the other side if we doe them in this kinde or any other any fauour which shall keepe them from perishing we giue the Spaniard and the Archduke a newe quarrell and so make them of new become our enemies Besides her Maiestie hath bestowed in the action in the Low Countries at the least 4 millions of crownes and shee hath in pawne for the debt which the states owē her the townes of Flushing and the Brill to reimburse that which is due and to maintaine the warres the states are vnable to deliuer the townes without reimbursement were vtterly to loose all the treasure spent and the authoritie and bridle which her Maiestie hath vpon that people which is one of the greatest securities of her state to keepe them especially Flushing and to remaine in new treatie in my vnderstanding seems altogether vnpossible for when the enemie shall see that neither by treatie nor offer of his large conditions the states will be wonne he will assayle them by force yea he will take that way which will bee shortest and easiest for the reduction of the whole which will be to bring his Galleys into the riuers and to transport men into the Ilandes for so by peircing into zeland he shall make his way into Holland and if hee haue once good sooting in these 2. prouinces he is straight master of the whole state If Flushing which is the onely bulwarke against the Ilandes and the Castle of Ramnekins which commaundeth the riuer of Stoad shall notimpeach nor offend the enemie he will carrie all the rost of the Iland of ●aterezen and so consequently all Zeland if after he is become her Maiesties friend
liued a yeere till the opinion of the worlde obraided mee with more retirednesse then was fit for my yeares or the present time And to haue gone to trauell when my country sent out so great an armie had bin as much as to haue turned ouer bookes onely to gaze at the babies and pictures whilst others were studying the sence For to iustifie my going into Portugal I must plead these circumstances First of the person with whom I went A poor distressed exiled king whom I had herd of tentimes repeate the storie of his owne oppressions Secondly of the enemies against whom I went An insolent cruell and vsurping nation that disturb●d the common peace aspired to the conquest of my countrey and was a generall enemie to the libertie of Christendome Thirdly of the cause in which I went to deliuer the oppressed out of the handes of the oppressors and by giuing the Spaniard his handfull at home to free both mine owne countrey and our confederats from the feare and daunger of his attempts And lastly of the time in which I went A time when mine eyes full of disdaine had so lately seene their falsly called inuincible Armado saile by our shores when all the braue heartes of this kingdome boyled till they sawe that insolent enemie taught both to knowe himselfe and to value vs. And when my heart was perswaded by both these circumstances I engaged my meanes kinsfolkes friendes and followers else neither the aduenture had beene made vp nor the iourney perfourmed It being no allowed action of her Maiesties but a mere aduenture of priuate men And when I was so farre in I confesse I was not of their humour that loue to wager vpon other mens hances or sit at home like merchants whilst their hopes and goodes are ventured abroad For my going without charge or leaue I must auowe the one as out of counsell and excuse the other as by necessity I chose to goe without charge that I might bee free to execute the lesse I commanded not that I might not be obnoxious to the successe and because I had ouerthrowne the vioage If I had stood vpon the commission And I could take no second place hauing before the same time and in the same army had place aboue the generall But though I had no chardge yet I made my brother generall of the horse and my faithfull friend Syr Roger William s colonell generall of the infantry 7. or 8 of my fast friendes colonels and 20. at the least of my domestickes captaines so as I might haue authoritie and party enough when I would For my want of leaue I must plead necessitie her Maiestie hauing resolued to sende none of my qualitie and many at home shewing enuie inough to those poore gent that were named which made me foresee with what successe I should haue sued for leaue For my conducting her Maiesties forces to the French King in 92. I must alledge that the sending of the succours was resolued on before my name was in question And if I had not offered myselfe to the iourney some other noble man that neuer had place in the warres might as the phrase is in the common law haue beene promoted p●● Salium and so I that neuer had her Maiesties commission to commaunde in chiefe should haue seene my puis●●● leape ouer my head Also I felt that my fortune had bred mee enuie and that enuie procured mee strong and dangerous opposition and this opposition would not be ouer-caryed but by her Maiesties great fauour and that the greatnesse of her Maiesties fauour must growe out of the greatnesse of her seruantes merite and I sawe no way of merite lie so open to me as by my seruice in the warres the times themselues and my owne beginning fitting vnto it and at that time none of my countrey of my rancke disposing himselfe that way If besides all this it be con●idered that I went to a king who for his admirable valour and often fighting with his owne handes was not onely the most famous king but also the most redoubted Captaine of all Christendome That the inte●ded seruice was to free the maritine partes of Normandy from the handes of the league or power of the Spaniard that therby the common enemie should finde lesse succour or fauour in these Seas If these thinges be well considered I doubt not but my French iourney will be thought sufficiently iustified But perhaps in these actions wherein either I had no charge at all or was commaunded by others or offered myselfe to the seruice when the imploiment was before resolued on I hauing no parte or interest in that counsell my Apologie will be the better allowed of then in my two last Sea iourneyes wherein I am charged to bee the authour of the counsell aswell as the executor of the seruice wherefore first for the first For the counsell of going into Spaine I protest I had no more parte in that then my L. Treasurer my L. Admirall and master Secretary who were all priuie from the beginning and did assent and aduice to the iourney as much as I did her Maiestie did first moue for the defensiue vppon intelligence that the king of Spaine did both purpose and prepare to assaile her finding that she did strengthen the low countries and fortisie against him molested him in his Indies choaked him by Sea So that his counsell resolued that to be the shortest and easiest way to all his ends to begin with England And when her Maiestie was armed and able to take the starte it was thought both a wise and safe counsell not to lease so great and so faire an opportunitie For the proiect of going to Cadz I haue euer confessed it was my Lord Admirals my colleagues If any man will single me out to chardge me alone with any thing it must needs be that whè all the charg of preparation was past the armie leauied marching to the Randeuous and the low countrey fleete that was to ioine with vs in the way that then I was as constant in the iourney as I had bin all the while before when I might haue sold the honour of my Soueraigne the securitie of my countrey the contentment of our confederates the hopes and almost whole fortunes of hundreds of my friendes that I had drawne into that iourney for some priuate gaine vnto myselfe If any man will vse so base a speach as that wee offended the kinge of Spaine so deepely in that iourney as that he is nowe implacable and further from peace I answere vana sine viribus ira wee brought away and burnt his shipping and destroyed his Sea prouision● yea we put him to such chardge and losse as he shorte●● after played banckrupte with all his creditours Let mee euer see his strength decrease though his malice increase ●ather then beleeue in his faith and good nature when his strength is great If any man will on the other side obiect that though ●e had good
he be vsed as an enemie by that places she holdes the peace is broaken but though it were proued neuer so fully that the peace which we might haue if we may haue any at all is full of dangers incōueniences yet som are so zelous of it that they will say it is the misery of our state that we neither haue a good peace nor a good warre and of the two euils it is better to haue a practised peace then an insupportable warre But iniurious are these to the men of warre that fight for them and defend them in thinking our Armes which haue euer done honour to our countrey stricken terrour to the heartes of our enemies lesse able to defend our countrey then their treaties which haue neuer beene free from scorne and disaduantage Iniurious are they to the countrey which bredde them which being one of the brauest strongest and happiest states of Christ endome is iudged by these men as weak as their owne weake hearts Iniurious they are to her Maiestie who hath ruled them who being so great so glorious so victorious a Queene shall be iudged vnable to maintaine warre when she cannot haue peace but at the pleasure of her enemie Iniurious and moste vnthankfull to God himselfe are they that hitherto fought for them in that for an vnsase peace with an Idolatrous and irreligious nation they would leaue an honourable and iust warre when they haue done all that they can it the enemie will not conclude peace we must haue warre And shall not reasonable men then aswell be perswaded by necessitie of reason as by necessity of fortune But wherein doe they find such insufficienci● to maintayne the warres our Nauy as also that of the confederats was neuer stronger nor the enemy in shipping halfe so weake our nation generally was neuer so martiall nor neuer had so many able leaders Our confederates in the Low Counteies who being firmely knit vnto vs are of more vse then all the friendes in Christendome that euer we had or can haue they I say were neuer more resolute Fraunce hath left vs we are cased of many chardges and shall make warre in fewer places Ireland is chargeable that charge may wel be borne when it is almost the sole burthen that lieth vpon vs yet if there be any weakenes in our meanes to make warre it is in our treasure But if it be considered howe for this present yeare Spaine hath no abilitie to assayle vs howe the next yeare the yearely subsidies will beginne to be paid how in Fraunce we haue an end of all chardges and are to receiue reinbursement of that is due how in the Low Countries her Maiesties expence may alsocease and shee receiue some helpe towardes her other chardges yea though her Maiesties treasure be drawne deepe into and the poore husbandmen by these late hard yeres hath now scant means to liue yet if our sumptuous buildings surfeiting dyet our prodigalitie in garmentes our infinite plate and costly furniture of houses be considered England cannot bee thought to be poore Can we exceed all nations in Christendome in expencefull vanities and can we not arme our selues against one nation which we haue alwaies beaten for our necessary defence was Rome so braue a state as the very Ladies to supply the common treasure to maintaine the warres spoyled themselues of their iewels and rich ornamentes And is England so base a state that the men in it wil not bestow some of their supersluous expences to keepe themselues from conquest and slauerie did the kinges and religious people of the old Testament to maintaine the warres against the enemies of God sell the ornamentes of the Temple and thinges consecrated to holy vses and shall not we which haue as holy a warre spare those thinges which we haue dedicated to our idle and sensuall pleasures and could our nation in those former g●llant ages when our countrey was farre poorer then it is now leauie armes make warre archieue great conquests in Fraunce make our powerful arms known as farre as the holy land and is this such a degenerate age as we shall not be able to defend England no no there is some seede yet left of the auncient vertue Remember with what spirit and alacrity the Gentlemen of England haue put themselues into our late actions There will euer be found some Valerij that so the state may stand and flourish care not though they leaue not where with all to bury themselues though other bury their money not caring what case they leaue the state We haue thankes be to God a Queene who neuer hath beene wastfull in her priuate expences yet will sell her plate and iewels in the tower ere her people shall be vndefended We are a people that will turne our silken coates into iron iackets and our siluer plate to coates of plate rather then our Soueraigne shall be vnserued but why should eyther prniceor people be put to that extremity If her Maiestie will but bestow 60000 pound a yeare which the Low Countries doe cost her and 20000. pound a yeare which the States doe offer her and 20000 pound more which I doubt not may be drawn by way of reimbursement from the French king this 100000. pound a yeare with halfe as much more bestowed by the States who to engage her Maiestie in mainteinance of the warre will neuer shrinke for their portion this summe I say of a 100000. pound put into the handes of an honest and sufficient treasurer for the wars and to bee issued by warrant of a counsell of warre well chosen will fully and sufficiently maintaine the war with Spaine yea if this be doubted it shall be made plaine that with 250000. such a force shall be maintained that her Maiestie hauing a conuenient number of her ships and furnishing them as she yearly doth the enemie shall bring no fleete into the Seas for England Ireland and the 〈◊〉 Countries but it shall be beaten nor seeke to gather any in Spaine but the partes of it shall be defeated before the whole be assembled yea those seruices shall be done vpon the enimy that the poorest Prince and state in Christendome shall haue little cause to feare his malice But of this question whether we should think the peace good for vs which the peacemakers wil procure I haue stood long innough I come now to the last question of all whether they doe enter into the treatie of it with due circumstances My purpose is not to deale with complementall circumstances or the Pantilios of honour though I iudge them in their proper time and place worthy of good consideration but the materiall circumstances which any prince or state should waigh before they enter into treatie I iudge to be these The time of treating whether it yeald most aduantage for peace or warre The persons of the treators whether or no the enemy with whom we treate may make aduantage by pretence if nothing be concluded The assurance of the