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A59136 The history of England giving a true and impartial account of the most considerable transactions in church and state, in peace and war, during the reigns of all the kings and queens, from the coming of Julius Cæsar into Britain : with an account of all plots, conspiracies, insurrections, and rebellions ... : likewise, a relation of the wonderful prodigies ... to the year 1696 ... : together with a particular description of the rarities in the several counties of England and Wales, with exact maps of each county / by John Seller ... Seller, John, fl. 1658-1698. 1696 (1696) Wing S2474; ESTC R15220 415,520 758

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they had Prophesied Victory should ever attend the Danes wherever it was Displayed in the Field And soon after the Battel was over Hubba was Buryed and a mighty Hill of Stones cast on him as a Monument which gave Name to the place of his Burial which is called Hubblestow or Stone to this day The King pursuing this advantage and for the Encouragement of his Souldiers having shared the Spoiles taken from the Danes amongst them followed the Retreating Enemy and within a while gave them two other great Defeats one at Ethan-Dun the other at Rhoaf-ceaster now Rochester raising the Siege they had layed before it After this they Recruited and brought another Raven Standard to the Field in hopes of better success But near Alesford in Kent they received another great Overthrow so that the Waters in the Ditches Ponds and Rivers adjacent were coloured with Blood and from thence he chaced them into Essex through the Thames in passing which River pursu'd by the Enemy and their own fears many for haste missing the Fords were smothered in the Deeps This however sufficed not the King whose main Aime was to drive them out of the Kingdom and so give Peace and Rest to his tired and distressed Subjects wherefore he Marched to a place then called Beaufleet where Hastinges a Dane who newly arrived with Eighty Ships had fortified and received his flying Country-men and here likewise Fortune was on his side he giving them the Rout and lastly they were quite discomfited at Boultington by Severn and at the Isle of Mesig or Mersey in Essex at the River Ligea or Ley which goeth to Ware and carryed up their Ships but Alfred Trenching and Drying it they could not bring them back whereupon they fled into Northumberland and then to Denmark THE COUNTYE PALATINE OF CHESTER Remarks on the County Palatine of Chester c. THis County is an Antient Palatinate and one of the Pleasantest Counties in that part of England famous for producing Kine of whose Milk is made the best Cheese in the Nation from which the County seemes to take its Name Its Pastures are exceeding Rich and Corn-Land produces extraordinary Crops it abounds with Fish Fowl Sheep and some Goats It is Bounded with Lancashire Yorkshire Shropshire Staffordshire Darbyshire Flintshire Denbighshire and the Ocean It Contains Eighty Six Parishes One City Seven Hundreds Thirteen Market Towns and Nine Rivers and gives denomination to a Bishop of its Diocess It sends Members to Parliament Four viz. The City of Chester two and two Knights of the Shire The City of Chester is famous in many respects as for its Minster Castle and Stone Bridge and has particular to it a Chief Justice for the Entertainment it gave King Edgar who was Rowed in a Barge on the River Dee by Eight Kings whilst himself held the Helm as their Supreame Sovraign It was made a Principality upon Hugh Lupus a Noble Norman being Invested in it by William the Conqueror To be holden as Freely by his Sword as the King himself holds England by his Crown which was the Tenure of all Counts Palatines more like Princes than Subjects as a modern Author has it It s stately Minster was Builded by Leofrick an Earl to the Honour of St. Werburga and in it was Buryed the Body of Henry the Fourth Emperour of Germany and it gave a Title to the Eldest Sons of our Kings who by Birthright are Earls of Chester Calvely is a very Pleasant Town giving Birth to Hugh Calvely a great General against the French in the Reign of Edward the Third Sr. Robert Knowles and divers others of Note Eccleston is Memorable for the Birth of Thomas thence called Eccleston Banbury is a plesant seated Town as also Wrenbury The large Rivers Dee and Mersey Flow very spaciously on its Western part Chester being advantageously situate on the former and Fordestham on a branch of the latter on the East side it has many pleasant Hills with very fertil Valleys Northwich is likewise pleasantly situate on a stream of Mersy over which is a curious Bridge as there is at Dutton Coxton c. The Seats of the Nobility are Clifton alias Rock Savage and Fordsham belonging to the Earl of Rivers Gawsworth and Alford belonging to the Earle of Maclesfield Dutton belonging to the Lord Gerard Barron of Gerards Bonley Dunham Massey the Seat of the Late Lord Delamer Earl of Warrington Besides many stately Houses of the Gentry The Reign of Edward the Elder Seventh Sole Monarch of England c. EDward Sirnamed the Elder Eldest Son to Alfred or Elfride began his Reign Anno Dom. 901. But not long had he been in the Throne ere his Brother Adelwold envying his advancement to the Regal Dignity conspired to supplant him and in order to it raised a Rebellion But finding he was too weak to maintain his Pretensions he fled with part of his Forces to the Danes who were by this time returned and had gotten some strong holds in the North and they for to colour their design made him King in Title tho' not in Effect and with them joyned the Welsh Northumbers and those Scots that bordered on the River Tweed Against these joynt Forces the King Marched and at St. Edmund's Ditch he gave them Battel but lost the day tho' the Danes gained a bloody Victory for in the Fight two of their Kings were slain viz. Chrochrichus and Ethelwald However to put a stop to their further advancing he built the Castle of Hartford and many other strong places and then having recruited his broken Troops with the whole power of the Western and Southern Counties that remained entirly under his obedience he again advanced his Standard and gave the Danes and their Confederates Battel at Wodens-field near Wolverhampton in Staffordshire where the chance of War turning on his side brought him a great Victory There his Rebellious Brother Adelwold with two Kings or chief Leaders of the Danes viz. Covilfus and Healden were slain This Battel was Fought Anno 910. Upon this Edward settled his Northern Territories as far as Northumberland and upon the Death of Eldred who had Marryed Elfleada his Sister he Establi●● her in those Counties that were formerly in the possession of the Mercian Kings before spoken of and Anno Dom. 915 he gave the Danes and their Confederates another great Overthrow killing Turktilus a reputed King with two Earls Virutes and Scurfa the Dukes of Bedford Buckingham c. also Duke Edrick whom the Danes had made King of the East Angles being Vanquished was Slain by his Subjects And then appointing his Sister a true English Heroin who having endured the sharp pangs of Child-Birth had forsook her Husbands Bed saying The Pleasure was not worth the Pain she suffered resolving never more to run the like hazzard as it were in some degree his Partner in the Kingdom she soon made it known that her delight was more in the rough Fields of Battel than in the downey Bed of Love for
Sentence caused his Head to be stricken off at the Standard in Cheapside and then with great violence broke down the Tower Gates killing all they found in it and secured that and the City to the use of the Queen and of the Prince her Son The King being Informed of these Proceedings his Heart failed him so that desisting from his intent of raising Forces he Posted to Bristol and Fortified it committing the Defence thereof to the Earl of Arundale and the Spencer's Father and Son entered with him into the Castle which they determined as a last Refuge to defend with all their Strength but within a few days after the City was Besieged Assaulted and Taken by the Queen and Barons who took and Committed the Earl and divers others of Note to safe custody the King and his two Favourites dispairing of Safety there got out to Sea in a small Fisher Boat intending for Ireland but so Providence ordered it that it was thrice when put out driven by the shifting of the Wind near the Castle so that the last time the Lord Beamont Manning out a Vessel seized it and found there the King and the Elder Spencer the other having got on Shore and shifted away for a time These the Queen presented before the Castle which the Garison no sooner perceived but they Surrendered and here the Lord Arundel was Beheaded and the King sent Prisoner to Kenelworth Castle and by the way they contrived to Shave him to Disguise him least being known he should be Rescued when the Impudent Fellow of a Shaver set him on a Molehill and told him That Cold Water must now serve his turn pointing to the Ditch at which Indignity the King burst out in Tears saying There should be Warm Water whether he would or no. The Queen having thus far proceeded determined the Death of her Capital Enemy dooming him to be Quartered Alive which was done and his Head and Quarters set up in divers places she gave a considerable Reward to the Person who brought her the Head Young Spencer soon after was taken with the Lords Baldock and Reading carried to Hereford and Hanged on a Gallows 50 Foot high And thus fell these Favourites who put too much trust in their own Strength and Pollicy little expecting such suddain turns of Fortune to alter their conditions by throwing them from the Pinacle of Honour into the Gulf of Misery and Disgrace which ought to be a Warning to all who undeservedly aspire cautiously to behave themselves Upon this a Parliament was called to settle the disordered Affaires of the Kingdom who Resolved to transfer the Crown from Edward to his Son whereupon three Bishops three Earls two Barons two Abbots and two Justices were appointed to demand in the Name of the Parliament a surrender of it which if he refused they would perhaps take other measures and give it from his Family to one more worthy This he took so grievously that after many complainings of his hard Usage and a confession of his Failures in Government he fell in a Swoon which moved the Lords to pitty him but being brought to himself after some time bemoaning his hard Fate seeing there was no other Remedy he Signed and Sealed the Instrument tendered him by which he passed over his Crown and Right and Title to all his Dominions to Prince Edward his Son whereupon Sr. William Trussel one of the Judges or Justices in the name of the whole Realm renounced Homage to the King in these words viz. I William Trussel in the name of all Men of the Land of England and of all the Parliament Procurator do resign to thee Edward the Homage that was made to thee some times and from this time forward I defie thee and deprive thee of all Royal Power and Authority I shall never be tendant to thee as for King after this time SOMERSET SHIRE In this Kings Reign Anno Dom. 1311 The Order of the Knights Templers that Fought so long in the Holy Land was Abolished in all Nations Anno 1318 happened such a grievous Famine That the Poorer sort Eat Dogs Cats Rats and other Unclean things The Prisoners in Goals Murthered divers fresh commers and Eat them and yet many Thousands Dyed for want of this Nauseous Food This was succeeded by a Pestilence and Rot of Cattle Breaking in of the Sea Huge Land-Floods Fiery Armies Fighting in the Air and a Terrible Blazing Star Remarks on Somersetshire c. SOmersetshire abounds in Corn Cattle Wooll Woollen-Cloath Serges and many other valuable Commodities On the North-West it opens to the Irish Sea and for the rest it is Bounded by Devonshire Dorsetshire Wiltshire and Gloucestershire it containes 42 Hundreds 2 Bishopricks viz. Bristol Bath and Wells which are accounted Cities 385 Parishes 35 Market Towns 9 Rivers 45 Bridges 2 Forrests and 18 Parks It sends Members to Parliament 18 viz. Bath 2 Bridgwater 2 Bristol 2 Ilchester 2 Milborn Port 2 Minhead 2 Taunton 2 Wells 2 and 2 Knights of the Shire Bath in this Shire is very Antient famed for its Mineral Waters Curing Diseases in many People said to be First found out by Bladud an Antient British King Bath and Wells joyntly together make one Bishoprick tho' Wells is principally esteemed for its curious Cathedral held to be Built by Inas King of the West Saxons At Pen the Britains were Overthrown by Kenwald King of the West Saxons and afterward the Danes by Edmund Ironside Bridgwater is noted for a great defeat given the Danes Anon Dom. 845 And for the Battel of Sedgmore near it beeween the late King James's Forces and the Duke of Monmouth Anno 1685 wherein the latter was totally Routed Glassenbury the Avalonia of the Romans is famed for the Burying Place of Joseph of Arimathea the first Preacher of the Gospel in this Island and here it is thought King Arthur was brought and Buried Cadburn is remarkable for a greak Defeat King Arthur there gave the English-Saxons Banesdown Mons Bandonicus was doubtless some Encampment of the Romans as appears by the Coins found there and on the Top there remains the Ruins of some Noble Castle said to be one of the Palaces of King Arthur tho' some Writers have placed this Town in Cornwal Ilchester is of good repute Taunton for its Memorable Siege in the Civil Wars and Bristol for the great Trade it drives and the many Sieges it has endured On Mendip Hills and several Places on the Shoar of the River Froom is store of Pit-Coal In the Quarrey at Kingh●● are found Spiral Stones in the form of Snails at Ochyhale near Wells is a deep Cave in which are many Rivulets and hollow Recesses The Monument of Stones near Stanton Drew near Pensford is very remarkable being great Tracts of some vast Foundations St. Vincent's Rock is famous for the Stones found there nearly resembling Diamonds being equal to those of India in lustre but not hardness The Seats of the Nobility are Clevedon Court belonging to the
King to deliver him up to Execution which Insolent Behaviour Sr. William Wallworth Lord Mayor not able to endure Stabbed him with his Dagger so that he fell down Dead and then hasting to raise the City Militia the Rebells after some time were so amazed that they scattered and every one fled for his safety and it was not many days before most of the Ringleaders were by their Companions a thing that seldom fails in such tumultuous Rebellions delivered into the hands of Justice the better to obtain their own Pardons which in the height of their Pride they had scornfully thrown up and the King at this last Conference before their Faces had Cancelled them so that about 1500 or more of the principal Agents were Convicted and Executed in divers Places which put an end to these Popular Disorders and for this Exploit of the Lord Mayor the Dagger was added to the City Arms. Things thus Quieted and the Peoples Fears over The King sued for the Lady Ann Daughter to Charles the Fourth and Sister to Winceslaus the Emperour of Germany in Marriage which was Accorded and the Lady who was exceeding Virtuous and Beautiful was received with great Joy by the King and People and Anno Dom. 1385 he Summoned a Parliament at Westminster in which he Created his Unkle Edmund of Langley Duke of York and Thomas of Woodstock Duke of Glocester his Cousin Henry Eldest Son to the Earl of Lancaster Earl of Derby Edward Son to Edmund of Langley Earl of Rutland Sir John Holland Earl of Huntington and Thomas Lord Mowbray Earl of Notingham Declaring Roger Mortimer Earl of March Son to Edmund Mortimer and Philippa his Wife Daughter and Heires to Lionel Duke of Clarence Third Son to Edward the Third Heir apparent to the Crown but he was Slain by the Rebells in Ireland before the Kings Death And now the King fell into the dislike of his People by hearkening to evil Counsellours especially one Michael De La Pool whom he had made Chancellour and created Duke of Suffolk and Robert Vere whome he created Marquess of Dublin and Duke of Ireland and would have made him King of that Country if the Nobility would have consented to it so that he respected not the sage Advice and Counsel of the grave and most experienced Lords of this the Parliament took great notice and upon the Chancellours insisting on the Kings behalf for a Tax of four Fifteens affirming no less could support his Estate or maintain such Wars as he was likely to undertake the Lords and Commons not only opposed the motion but accused the Duke and others for lewdly Counselling the King and by their Purloyning to enrich themselves wasting his Treasure That by their bad Advice they had kept the King from coming amongst them which according to a received Law and Custom if he refused to do in Forty Days they might Legally break up and depart to their own homes without his leave and of this and other particulars they sent word to the King desiring him within three days he would come amongst them and give Life to those Laws they should make or they were resolved to separate But in Answer to this he required that a select Assembly of Fifty of their Members should attend him This was refused and the Duke of Gloucester and Thomas Arundel Arch Bishop of Canterbury were only deputed who plainly told the King of the Grievances of his People and that by his Absence from Parliament he obscured the light of Justice and hindered the Negotiation of the Commonweal And if he further declined it they must break up and depart to their homes They also craved with humble submssion as they were commanded to be informed by whom his Majesties Treasure belonging to the Commonweal was prodigally consumed and how it came to pass that his large Revenues could not suffice to maintain his Estate and charge seeing he had no Wars This Message and their Demands so angered the King That he Swore had he fore-known the sawcy bouldness of his Subjects whom as he supposed intended to rise in Arms against him he would more willingly have submitted himself to the King of France and have relyed on him for Protection than thus to be baffled and made servil to those whom his Soveraignty ought to command But the two Lords in all humble Duty shewed him that his People stood well affected towards him and that the French had been and were inveterate Enemies to the King of England With this and such-like submissive Discourse he was some what pacified and promised to come to his Parliament in three days and failed not to do it where by Proof and Accusation of the Lords Michael De La Pool Chancellour of England and Duke of Suffolk was Convicted of Purloyning the Kings Treasure and purchasing Estates with it to his own behoof and giving evil Counsel to the great damage of the Kings Subjects and other things so that his Lands were Sequestered to the King's use his Person Fined 20000 Marks committed close Prisoner and deprived of his Chancellourship and other Offices The Arch Bishop being made Chancellour in his stead and in the same Parliament thirteen Persons were Elected Sworn and Authorized with ●he consent of the King published in Writing under ●is Seal to Examine all or any of his Officers touching ●heir Demeanours in their several Offices and Trusts 〈◊〉 censure and condemn any that should be found ●uilty of henious Crimes and the King took an Oath ●ot to revoke or suppress this Commission without the ●onsent of Parliament and it further passed into a ●aw That if any Person should attempt directly or ●●directly to perswade or encourage the King to in●●ge his Oath and Promise touching all or any of these matters for the first Offence to lose his Lands and Goods and for the second to be proceeded against as a Traitor to the King and Kingdom And then a Subsidy of one half Fifteen was granted if the Commissioners upon view of the Kings Estate thought it needful and so an end was put to this Sessions of Parliament This was no sooner done but the King at the perswasion of his Counsellours Released his Favourite De La Poole and went with him the Duke of Ireland Tresillian his chief Justice other Judges and Ministers of State to Notingham where they Pronounced the Duke of Gloucester Arch Bishop of Canterbury and the Thirteen Commissioners to be Guilty of High Treason because against his will and consent they had compelled the King to Ratifie the Commission by his Oath and under his Great Seal so going to Coventry the Judges by an Instrument in Writing under their Hands and Seals declared and confirmed their Opinions to be agreeable and consonant to the Laws of the Land touching these matters Whilst Affairs had but an ill Aspect at home th● French King to Embroyl the Kingdom more if po●sible sent his Admiral with a Thousand Noblemen an● Gentlemen into Scotland with Arms and
Warlik● Stores who joyning the Scots Army Marched int● England but upon notice of King Richard's approac● with a formidable Army they crossed the Mountain into Wales leaving Scotland open to the English who Burnt Edenburg St. Johnstons Sterling and Dundee an● having harassed the Country almost from Sea to Se● they returned Laden with much Booty This gre●● Loss so perplexed the Scots who had got little Plunde● among the Barren Mountains that on their retur● they made the French Admiral and most that Atte●●●● him of note Prisoners till the French King who 〈◊〉 precipitated them into this War should make 〈◊〉 satisfaction as designing his own Interest and ●●vantage by it and not theirs and tho' he was very ●●gry at it yet the Scots kept them Prisoners till the ●●ey demanded was sent for their Ransoms This ●red up the French King to raise a mighty Army with ●●solution to Conquer England and to Transport it 〈◊〉 prepared 1200 Ships but when they had a long ●e in their unruly March Plundered the French and ●nings and by reason the Duke of Berry the Kings ●kle who was to command them approving not 〈◊〉 Enterprize delay'd to come to them their wants ●e so great that to supply them they Sold their ●rses Armour Weapons and lastly their Cloaths 〈◊〉 then fell so horribly to Plundering the Country 〈◊〉 the French King not able to endure the cries and ●plaints of the oppressed People and dispairing to 〈◊〉 any thing in England with such a half-starved dis●erly Rout Disbanded them after he had been at ●000 l. Charge The English Nobles now began grievously to com●n of the Kings breaking his Oath and Promises in ●rkening to the evil Counsels and Advice of Robert 〈◊〉 Vere Michael De La Poole Alexander Arch Bishop 〈◊〉 York Nicholas Bamber and Robert Trisillian his Chief ●ice together with those flattering Judges who to ●se the King had Subscribed to the Nullity of the ●mmission and had Censured all such as procured it ●e Traitors to the King c. Intreating him to ●ish them the Kingdom but he would in no wise ●rken to any Proposals of parting with those Favo● who for their better safety counselled him to give 〈◊〉 Callice and his other Towns in France to the French ●g and rely on him for Aid to curb those proud Subjects who sought to Enslave him their Soveraign but this he looked on as dangerous and would not agree to it But the Nobles finding no Redress flying to Arms he practiced with the Lord Mayor of London to raise him an Army in and about the City which he laboured to do but the Graver Citizens who were well affected to the Nobles not only refused to further it but hindered it all they could declaring it was a means to hasten the desolation of that great City humbly beseeching the King not to require any such thing at their hands but rather seek an Accommodation of Differences This extreamly vexed him but finding he misse● of his purpose he dissembled his displeasure and laid aside that Project yet forgot them not But some time after this desiring a Loan of 1000 l. and it being refused him he seized into his hands their Charter and Liberties dissolved their proper Magistracy turning out John Hind their Mayor Henry Warner and John Shadworth Sherifs appointing Sir Edward Dallingredge Warden of the City However finding he could not raise such an Army as he intended by reason most of his inferiour Subjects were well affected to the Lords because they sought not to injure the King but to remove his evil Counsellours who were great Oppressors and Disquieters of the Kingdom he promised to call ● Parliament wherein matters might be Debated with out heat or animosity and that there his five Favors should be Answerable to all Objections and if Convicted stand to such publick Censure or Punishment as the Parliament could justly inflict on them This Concession much pleased the Lords so that they disbanded their Forces and returned the King their humble thanks But it was not long before they were sensible a Snare was laid for them for the Duke of Ireland was privately Levying 5000 Men pretendedly for his Guard and Defence but it was secretly intimated they were to lie in wait in Parties and Surprize the Lords as they were coming to Parliament so that they suddainly recalled their disbanded Forces and shut him up on the Banks of the Thames which he was forced to Swim on Horse-back for the preservation of his Life and posting to the Sea Coast took Shipping for France where some Years after he was Slain in Chasing a wild Boar but so great was then the Kings Love towards him That he caused his Dead Body to be Embalmed brought over and Magnificently Bury'd After the flight of the Duke the Lords Executed some of the chief Ringleaders and suffered the rest to depart to their Houses and so passed with their Army to London where they were Joyfully received by the Citizens The King who kept his Court at the Tower well perceived how much they had gained the Hearts of the greater Part of the People and therefore for his own safety he desired a Conference with them in which it was Agreed a Parliament should be speedily called to Redress Grievances and accordingly a Parliament was Assembled in which the evil Counsellours and corrupt Judges were Sommoned to appear and Answer to the Articles Exhibited against them but upon their default they were Attainted of High Treason against the King and Common-weal and for this John Earl of Salisbury and Sir Nicholas Bambre lost their Heads the Lord Chief Justice Trisilian was Hanged at Tyburn and the rest of these Judges had suffered in like manner had not the Queens incessant supplications prevailed to change their Dooms into Banishment and in this Parliament the state of Affairs was settled to the high contentment of the People And tho' the next Year the Scots began to bustle yet at the Mediation of the French King a Truce was made between the three Kingdoms and King Richard by this means in Peace and Tranquility assisted the Duke of Lancaster to raise an Army when Leaguing with the King of Portugal he Warred on the Spaniard for the Kingdom of Castile which he claimed in Right of his Wife and so prevailed That the Spaniard was compelled to sue for a Peace which was granted on that Kings Marrying Constance the Dukes Eldest Daughter Loading him Eight Waggons with Gold and allowing him and his Dutchess during their Lives 10000 Mark a Year And after having Married Ann his Younger Daughter to the King of Portugal he returned into England Laden with Riches and Honour And now all Appeals to Rome and the Popes Authority in this Kingdom was Abrogated by Parliament and soon after the Vertuous Lady Queen Ann Dyed whose Death so exceedingly grieved the King that for some Weeks he would not be comforted causing the stately House at Sheen in which she Dyed to be utterly Razed
Casholton Kingston upon Thames Wandsworth and other places but the River Thames which is a great part in this County is the most Remarkable and the little River Mole that runs a great way under Ground and rises again It sends Members to Parliament 14 viz. The Borough of Southwark 2 Rygate 2 Blechenley 2 Gatton 2 Guilford 2 Haslemore 2 and 2 Knights of the Shire SURREY By J. Seller The Seats of Pleasure are Richmond belonging to the Royal Family Albury and Waybridge to the Duke of Norfolk Nonsuch to the Duke of Southampton Rowhampton to the Duke of Devon Byflet to the Duke of St. Albans Flanchford to the Earl of Plymouth Rygate Place to the Lord Mordant Towting Graveny to the Lord North and Grey and the Bishop of Winchesters Place in Southwark called Winchester-House The Reign of HENRY the Fifth commonly called Henry of Monmouth THis Henry the greater part of his Fathers Reign was much lead away by evil Company and was not free from committing in his Frolicks Robberies on the Highway especially on his own Receivers and one of his Gang being taken and about to be Sentenced in the Court of Kings Bench he rushed in and laboured to pull off his Irons in order to set him at Liberty but the Lord Chief Justice commanded him to desist whereupon in a rage he went up to the Bench and Struck him on the Face for which after he had given him some mild Reproofs as that the Bench he sat on was the Kings and that himself in that place represented his Person and what Injury was done to him was done to the King and if he shewed such evil Examples none would Obey him when he came to Reign he sent him to the Kings Bench Prison till the Kings pleasure should be known in the matter The King no sooner heard of it but he commended the Judge for his Courage and Impartiality wishing all his Ministers were like him and though the Prince was Enlarged yet for this he was put from his Presidentship in the Council and his Younger Brother Thomas Duke of Clarence placed therein to his great Grief These and other Irregular Passages of his past Years when he was Crowned by Arundel Arch Bishop of Canterbury at Westminster he wisely considered and to repair what had been amiss strictly forbid the Leud Companions of his Youth to enter his Court or any where come near his Person till he had some cause to believe they had reformed and mended their Manners yet ordered some of them who had run out their Estates in pursuing his wild Extravagancies small Pensions to Subsist on till they could better provide for themselves Electing none for his Councel nor into Places of Justice or publick Government but such as were of known Integrity Wise Sober and not to be Biased through fear or favour greatly labouring to Reform the Abuses of the Clergy and for the better security of the Marches he caused the Castles and Towns thereabouts to be Repaired and Strongly Garisoned by which means he Awed the Scots and Welsh and kept his People free from their former fears and apprehensions of danger And the better to shew he had no hand in nor was consenting to the Death of King Richard he caused his Body to be brought from Langley to Westminster in much Funeral Pomp and to be Interred by Queen Ann his beloved Wife In the Second Year of his Reign he Assembled a Parliament at Leicester wherein he was Importunately Addressed to supress Religious Houses where they were ill mannaged and in stead of promoting Godly Lives had been made the Nurseries of Gluttony Idleness Pride and all Uncleanness considering they would yield into his Coffers an Annual Rent of 20000 l which might be better Employed for the Support of the Crown and Honour and Safety of the Kingdom in maintaining 15 Earls 1500 Knights and more than 6000 Men at Arms besides a great Number of Almes Houses for the support and relief of the Poor This much startled the Abbots Priors Fryers Monks Nuns c. as fearing to be Vn-Hived and forced to Labour for their Livings which they were little able to do considering they had so long been inured to a habit of Idleness and therefore to turn the Stream another way at their instant Entreaties Henry Chichesly who Succeeded Thomas Arundel in the Archiepiscopal See of Canterbury took an opportunity in a very Learned Oration to make the King sensible of his Right to the Crown of France inciting him to Claim it as his proper Inheritance and in the Clergies behalf for the carrying on the Wars he offered a large Sum of Money whereupon the other business was laid aside and nothing now considerably debated or spoken of but how the King might Recover France The People every where shewing a willingness to Embark in the Undertaking And a Noble Embassy was sent to King Charles the Sixth peremptorily to demand the peaceable delivery of the Kingdom together with the Dutchies of Aquitain Normandy Anjou and whatever had formerly appertained to the Crown of England and if the French King without Effusion of Blood would yield to his demands he would take the Lady Catherine the Kings Daughter to Wife and Endow her with all the Dutchies and Provinces and be tractable in every thing tending to the French King's Honour and Estate but upon the Refusal he would attempt the gaining it by the Sword and bring on that Kingdom all the Miseries that are inseparable attendants on a cruel War The unexpected strangeness of this Message so amazed the French King and his Nobles that they could make no ready Answer but promised to send Ambassadors to King Henry who should endeavour to Adjust this weighty Affair yet the Dauphin of France had no sooner notice of the King's Demands but despising his Youth and holding him unfit to attempt a matter of so high a consequence in a scoffing manner sent him a Tun of Racket-Balls to sport with in his Tennis-Court This so Angered him that He Vowed by Gods assistance ere many Months were over he would toss so many Iron Balls within the Kingdom of France that their strongest Rackets should be too weak to turn them And hereupon he Levied a puissant Army so that the Dauphin seeing him in earnest began to repent of his Rashness and governing Affairs under his Father whose Imbecility rendered him not very capable of it he sent Ambassadors to Inform King Henry That if he would desist from his Purpose and Live in Amity with that Nation and take the Lady Catharine his Sister to Wife he should then receive with her a large Sum of Money with some small Territories and Possessions in that Kingdom To this King Henry Replied That unsess with the Lady he might have the Dutchies of Normandy Anjou Aquitain and all the other Signories to him and to his Crown justly appertaining he would not wave his Title to the Crown of France but attempt by all Hostile means to win it
off in Five Days tho' the Physitians gave out he dyed of a Malignant Fever Whatever his Disease was it carried him off on the 6th of November 1610. in the blossom of his Youth he being 18 Years 8 Months and 17 Days Old He was a Prince of Extraordinary Wisdom and Piety much above his Years Of strength and ability of Body equal to most Men of a Noble and Heroick Disposition and an hater of Flattery and Flatterers He had an high Esteem of Sir Walter Rawleigh and used to say No other King but his Father would keep such a Man as Sir Walter in such a Cage meaning the Tower He kept his Court at St. James's which was much frequented by the most sober of both the Nobility and Gentry Something of the gravity of the Prince's temper may be known by the following story Once when the Prince was hunting the Stagg it chanced that the Stagg being spent crossed the Road where a Butcher and his Dog were travelling and the Butchers Dog killed the Stag which was so great that the Butcher could not carry him off When the Huntsmen and Company came up they fell at odds with the Butcher and endeavoured to incense the Prince against him to whom the Prince soberly Answered What if the Butcher's Dog killed the Stagg what could the Butcher help it They Replyed If his Father had been served so he would have Sworn at that rate That no Man could have endured it Away replyed the Prince All the Pleasure in the World is not worth an Oath In the time of his Sickness a Person whom he lov'd and who had been the Companion of his Diversions coming to see him and asking him how he did the Prince among many other sober Expressions answer'd him thus Ah Tom I in vain wish for that time I lost with thee and others in vain Recreations But England was not worthy of so great a Blessing as the Life of this Excellent Prince For whom notwithstanding the Court was not long in Mourning because of the Nuptials that ensued and the Elector Palatine having been highly Feasted and Entertained departed with his Bride The King having raised one Sir Robert Carr who had been his Page high in his Favour creating him Viscount Rochester so that he Acted as it were all in all and the Earl of Essex's Lady falling in Love with him and complaining of her Husbands inability in performing his Nocturnal Duties the King gave order to the Archbishop that a Divorce might be sued out which accordingly was done and she Married the Viscount But Sir Thomas Overbury who had been his great Favorite inveighing much against this Marriage and labouring to disswade him from it because the Lady lay under much scandal of Lust and Incontinency was by his and her procurement committed to the Tower and there by tampering with Sir Gervis Ellows the Lieutenant of that Garison and one Weslon and others they procured him to be Poisoned and the Earl of Northampton who was privy to it the better to colour the business gave out he dyed of the Pox and that strange noisom Sores were found on his Body but this did not long conceal so wicked a practice for it proved their Ruine Northampton dyed soon after in a Melancholly disordered condition and a little after the Apothecaries Man who was hired to give Sir Thomas Overbury a Glister that had been poisoned falling Sick at Flushing revealed what he knew as to the Poisoning and who was concerned in it This News coming over by the means of Sir Ralph Winwood who had been Ambassador in Holland made a great noise and more and more suspicion appearing the King sent for the Judges to search narrowly into the Truth of it Imprecating a Curse on them and their Posterity if they were negligent in it and the like on himself and Posterity if he favoured any Guilty Person so that the Viscount made Earl of Somerset in consideration of his Marriage with the Lady Catharine Howard Daughter to the Duke of Suffolk and Niece to the Earl of Northampton who had been Divorced from the Earl of Essex when he had got his Pardon signed as being charged before with Imbezling the Crown Jewells c. had it stopped under the Broad Seal and the Lord Chief Justice Cook sending for him he went to the King to complain of the Indignity put upon him looking on it as a great presumption in the Man that had done it But the King much to his dissatisfaction replied Thou must go then for if Cook sends for me I must go too and when he parted with him turning his back he smiling said I shall never see thy Face more and the same Day the Earl and his Countess were made Prisoners and divers others as Weston Mrs. Turner a great confident of the Countesses Sir Jarvis Ellows and one Frankling The Four last being first Tryed were found Guilty received Sentence of Death and were Executed confessing the fact and soon after the Earl and his Countess were Tryed and Condemned but the King Pardoned them or rather Reprieved them giving them only a Lease of their Lives for Term of Years utterly Banishing them the Court and his Favour So that deprived of all Honours places of Trust and Fortunes they led mean and despicable Lives the dying very miserably her Privy Parts Rotting and he of Discontent and Melancholly So punctual is God in his Providence to revenge Innocent Blood on the shedders of it and bring them to shame even in this Life The fall of this Favourite made way to the rise of George Villers Son to Sir George Villers of Lancashire by a second venture who being a comely Person and his Parts improved by Travel the King upon his first arrival at Court cast his Eyes on him made him his Cupbearer at large and in the End created him Duke of Buckingham growing in a little time as high in favour as the former doing all with the King as he pleased and continued so to do till he was Stabbed by one Felton at Portsmouth as will appear in the next Reign Sir Thomas Mason being Arraigned as concerned in the Murther of Overbury had his Tryal set aside and the Lord Chief Justice chequed for venturing to insinuate That in this there might be the Discovery of more than a Private Person intimating tho' not plainly That Overbury's untimely remove had something in it of retaliation as if he had been guilty of the same crime against Prince Henry and glancing some what that the Earl of Northampton had but how truly I determine not assured the Lieutenant of the Tower That the making away of Sir Thomas Overbury would be acceptable to the King he had his wings ever after clipped Soon after this the Lady Arabella Dyed in the Tower which set Mens Tongues and Fears on work that she followed the same fate but nothing publick appeared in it She was Daughter to Charles Stewart Younger Brother to the King's Father and
Guyan Gascoyne and other Provinces the former being mostly Victorious recovering many places and driving the Enemy for the most part out of his Territories there But whilst the King was intent to go over and finish what had been so well begun and carried on the French King as much as in him lay to cross his proceedings had made a Faction in Scotland against the new King who compelled him to renounce his Allegiance to King Edward and send Defiance to him nor was this all but with an Army hastily gathered he entered and wasted the Northern parts of England Slaying Burning and Plundering without Pity or Remorse Whereupon King Edward recounting his manifold Favours and the great love he had to the Revolted King of Scots this base Ingratitude so stirred his Anger That he resolved a bloody chastisement should be the punishment of his unthankfullness Whereupon recalling some of his Forces and raising more he Marched to the succour of his Subjects and such was his good Fortune that in a little time he met with and fought the Scotch Army slaying 25000 of them winning the strong Castles of Berwick and Dunbar and soon after the City of Edenburough with many other places of note which made King John too late see his Errors and to what distress his rashness had driven him However thinking to find Favour by an humble submission or at least prevent the further Ruin and Desolation of his Country he came and cast himself at King Edwards Feet wholle submitting with himself the Crown and Kingdom of Scotland to be at his dispose in expectation to have been Restored but King Edward resenting very heinously his ungrateful proceedings sent him under a strong Guard to the Tower of London yet ordered him allowance of Liberty Diet and Attendance as became his state when Marching from Sea to Sea without any farther resistance he settled the Affaires of Scotland committing the Government of the Kingdom to John Warren Earl of Surry as his Lieutenant Constituting Hugh Cressingham Lord Treasurer and William Barnsley his Chief Justice confining some of the Rebellious Scots within the Marches of England that they might be disabled from giving any Disturbance in his Absence and so returned in Triumph with great Honours and high applause of his Subjects The King being now at leasure to remember the Injuries the French had done him and resolving to Revenge them Leagued with Guy Earl of Flanders and Transported an Army thither and Fought with Robert Earl of Arthois whome he Routed taking many Towns and Fortresses on the Frontiers which made the French King play over the game again of stirring up the Scots to Rebellion hoping by that means to constrain him to return but on the contrary he appointed Henry Piercy Earl of Northumberland his General for that War who mannaged it with that Prudence that after some Marching Training them into the open Field he gave them Battel with incredible Slaughter so that many Miles of Ground were in a manner covered with their dead Bodies by which great Overthrow they found themselves constrained to return to their former Obedience so that the French King perceiving his Project took not on that side seemed very desirous to try his Strength with King Edward in the Field but his Courage failing he reposing more confidence in his Policy than Valour he proceeded to tamper about proposals of Love and Amity that might settle a lasting Peace and King Edward being now a Widower he earnestly solicited him to take his Sister to Wife to make the Alliance stronger which by the cunning subtilty of some Courtiers Bribed by the French King was brought about and Peace ensued after a tedious War that had caused much Bloodshead So the King with his Queen returned home and soon after he made Prince Edward his Son who had been Born at Carnarvan in Wales the better to ingratiate himself with those People Prince of Wales and Earl of Chester and to gain the Hearts of the Londoners he restored them those Liberties his Father had deprived them of and without which they had continued the space of Twelve Years during which time a Governour was set over them by the King and their Magistrates chosen by his order But whilst things were well ordering at home the Scots again fell into Rebellion Whereupon the King sent to demand their Ring-leaders who had drawn them into this danger which principally was one Wallis a Gentleman of an inveterate Spirit against the English Nation with a promise of Pardon to all the rest upon their laying down their Arms or else threatned to waste the Country with Fire and Sword from Sea to Sea and spare none of that Nation he should find in his way But driven on by their hard Fate they were Deaf to these Proposals making yet greater preparations to weather as they thought the Storm they could not but expect and so upon the Kings entering the Marches of Scotland they bid him Battel where before the Armies joyned he made them the same Offers which they seemed to reject with scorn so the Bloody Blast being sounded by the order of the Incensed King who resolved now to Scourge them in earnest the English fell on with such fury and violence that they broke like a Tempest into the Scots Battel carrying all before them so that a miserable slaughter ensued and the King pressing too furiously upon those that Fled in the eagerness of the Pursuit fell from his Horse and broke two of his Ribs yet he lightly remounting and not regarding his Hurt drove them out of the Field with the slaughter of 32000 of them he not now as at other times restraining the Swords of his Soldiers but gave scope and encouragement to their thirst of Revenge and in this Battel fell the flower of the Scots Nobility and Gentry but on our side very few were slain some Historians make mention but of 28 of all Degrees tho' that seemes too Partial But in comparison of the Scots they were certainly very inconsiderable The Prisoners that were taken were not many by reason few were spared in the Fight or in the pursuit that were overtaken so that the small remainder of the Nobles came and Humbled themselves before the King charging the fault on such as they said had justly received their Deserts by being slain in the Battel and this Submission upon their taking a new Oath of Fealty and Homage was accepted and returning home upon the earnest request of Pope Boniface the Eighth he Released John the Deposed King of Scots out of the Tower who went to Normandy to live quietly there on Lands alotted him called Bayliolls Lordship or Lands where falling Blind and being much in Years he Dyed leaving his Estate to his Son Edward However his Death put not an end to the Scots Troubles for they had not long enjoyed Peace but forgetting their Oaths or at least despising all conditions with the English they again Revolted and again felt the same Scourge
disabled and very few Men kill'd But this bad beginning did not so much Dishearten the Dutch but in a little time Van Trump was again at Sea with 120 Men of War But for all his haste Blake was out before him with 70 Men of War and Sailed Northward to interrupt the Dutch Fishing-Trade and to look after five Dutch East-India Ships about that time expected Home and in the mean time Sir George Ascough arriving in the Downs with the Barbadoes Fleet brought ten Dutch Merchants Ships and four Dutch Men of War along with him whom he had taken in his way Of which Trump having Notice endeavoured to get between Sir George and the River but by the changing of the Wind was Disappointed Whereupon be returned to Holland to convey their East-Land Ships to the Sound and in his way receiv'd advice that Blake had dispersed their Herring-Fishing and taken 12 Men of War that Guarded them upon which Trump sent part of his Ships to Guard the Merchant-men and with the rest Sailed to find out Blake who was about the Isles of Orkne● But a terrible Storm arising Trump's Fleet was so scattered that he came home but with 42 Sail tho' most of the rest came in afterwards But Blake came safe to Yarmouth with all his Fleet and six of Trump's Frigats that he had met with and 900 Prisoners In the Month of August following Sir George Ayscough and De Ruyter Engaged each other Sir George had several of his Captains wounded and some Ships damaged but not one Ship lost What Loss the Dutch had was not known In October following was another Engagement on the side of the North-Foreland between the Dutch Admiral De W●● and Admiral Blake wherein great Courage was shown on both sides the Rear-Admiral of the Dutch was Boarded and Taken and two more of their Ships were Sunk and one Blo●n up So that the Dutch made what haste they could to get off and were pursu'd by the English Fleet within 12 Leagues of the Maeze After which the English having preserv'd all their Ships tho' some were much Damag'd return'd into the Downs in Triumph The Hogen-Mogeans finding that if they went on at this Rate they were like to be reduc'd to poor distressed States again resolve to re-inforce their Fleet considerably the King of Denmark whom they had Solicited to take their Part promising to assist them with 20 Ships of War provided they restore Van Trump to his place of Admiral again Which they readily agreed to and prevail'd with Trump again to accept it With this Reinforcement Van Trump being restor'd to his office of Admiral got together a Fleet of 80 Men of War and 10 Fire-ships with which he Sail'd to the back-side of the Goodwin and Blake was in the Downs with few more than 40 Men of War who hearing that Van Trump was coming to Fight him resolved not to refuse the Engagement and therefore Hoised up his Sails to find out Trump and sent out seven Ships to discover his Fleet which were met by nine of the Dutch sent out upon the same Errand These meeting first began the Fight and the two Admirals hearing the Cannon quickly advanc'd at the head of their Squadrons the Fight being very furious and lasting from two in the Morning till six in the Evening on the 29th of November Tho' this Battel was fought with much Fury on both sides yet the Dutch carried the Day by their Numbers In this Fight the English had two Ships taken one Burnt and three Sunk the Dutch who had no great cause to boast had a Flag-ship blown up and all the Mariners and Soldiers therein Lost but two and several of their Ships very much Damaged It is said That upon this Defeat Van Trump in a Triumphant manner Sailed through the Channel with a Broom on his Main-Top-Mast as if he had swept the Channel of all English Ships But it was not long before they were even with him again for the Parliament having added General Monk and General Dean to Admiral Blake in February following with 60 Men of War fell upon the Dutch who were 76 Men of War and had the Charge of 300 Merchants Ships to convey home-wards and a furious Fight for three days Successively ensued in which the Dutch lost eleven Men of War and 30 Merchants Ships and no less than 1500 Men kill'd But of the English many Ships were ●●atter'd there was but one Sunk the Sampson but the Captain and most of the Men Sav'd The number of the English slain in the Fight were very near as many as those of the Enemy About this time the Duke of Glouoester was sent by the Parliament who had kept him in the Isle of Wight ever since his Father was Beheaded to Dunkirk whence he was Conducted to the Princess of Orange his Sister at Breda and after he had ben there a little time he went to Paris to his Brother and his Mother On the 20th of April following General Cromwel with M. G. Lambert and M. G. Harrison and some few more of the Officers of the Army went to Westminster and entred the Parliament-House while they were sitting and after a short Speech made by Cromwel declaring the Necessity there was for Dissolving them he declared them to be Dissolved and required them to Depart but the Speaker was unwilling to leave the Chair till Harrison took him out by the Arm and Cromwel commanded the Mace to be taken away and not to be carried before him any more and caused the Doors of the Parliament-House to be Locked and a good Guard to be placed there to prevent the Assembling of any of the Members And then in the room of this Rump-Parliament thus Dissolved a Council of State was Constituted consisting of the chief Officers of the Army and such of the Members of the late Parliament as they had a Kindness for and in this Council of State the Supreme Authority of the Nation was said to Consist and Obedience thereunto required as fully as to the Parliament when Sitting and Judges Sheriffs Justices c. and all other Civil Officers to act in their respective Offices as before till a new Representative should be chosen The Dutch thought this Change might be to their Advantage but they found themselves mistaken for the new Governours omitted nothing that might advance their Maritime Preparations and fitted out the Fleet with great application and with such Success that tho' one of the English Generals Dean was slain in the Fight yet the Dutch were again Defeated six of their best Ships being Burnt and two bl●wn up and eleven Ships and two Hoys taken and 1350 Prisoners whereof Six were Captains of very good Note and of the Ships that were taken one was a Vice-admiral and two were Rear-admirals The English had not one Ship lost or disabled and except General Dean but one Captain slain And now a new Parliament was Summoned chosen by Cromwel out of the Several Counties of
That if the King would enter into an actual War with the French King they would stand by him with their Lives and Fortunes So that finding the French King still went on with his Conquests King Charles delayed not to send several Regiments to the Aid of th● Confederates in Flanders and laid a Prohibition on Fr●●ch Goods Hereat the French King being somewhat Startled hoping to break the Measures of England made Proposals of Peace to the Dutch and they Understanding that the Parliament had taken up a Resolution to give no more Money till Satisfaction was first had and their Fears and Jealousies removed and not thinking for this Cause fit to rely on England since the Misunderstandings rendred it no longer it self did clap up a Peace in a very short time and the rest of the Confederates followed their Example However before the Peace could be Ratified the French took several Towns and at last Besieged Mons this made the King Command the Duke of Monmouth and Earl of Ossory to joyn the English Forces under their Command with the Prince of Orange who so bravely Behaved themselves that they forced the Duke of Luxemburg's Camp and raised the Siege with the Slaughter of some Thousands of French and had done greater things if all Hostilities had not thereupon been stopped Things being thus settled Abroad greater Disturbances threatned at Home for about this time a wicked design was discovered to take away the King's Life and involve the whole Nation in Blood and Ruin which was carried on for a considerable time by the Papists The first Discoverer was Titus Oats but his Evidence was little Credited till such time as Sir Edmundbury Godfrey who had taken Oats's Depositions was found Murthered at Primrose-Hill with a Sword run through his Body tho' by a visible Mark about his Neck it appeared he had been Strangled So that this giving a sufficient Ground of Belief Oats's Evidence being also further Corroborated by Letters found in the Custody of Edw. Coleman Secretary to the Duke of York the Parliament proceeded strictly to Enquire into the matter so that the Commons often sat from Morning till Night to Consult how to Prevent the Danger and make a thorow Discovery and having Voted and entred into their Journal That it was their Opinions that there had been and was an Execrable and Hellish Design carried on by the Papists for Assassinating the King Subverting of the Government and Destroying the Protestant Religion A Proclamation was ●ssued out for Banishing Papists and reputed Papists ten Miles from the City of London and Westminster and all Roman-Catholicks were turned out of the Guards and the Parliament Addressed the King That the Duke of York might be removed from his Presence and Counsels But the last was not Granted And now divers Persons being taken up and Imprisoned on the account of this Plot one Staly a Goldsmith's Son in Convent-Garden was first Executed for saying He would kill the King then Edw. Coleman the Duke of York's Secretary then Ireland Pickering Grove Whitebread ●enwick Gawen Langhurn and others as Concerned in the Plot and Green Berry and Hill being accused by Prance and Bedlow for the Murther of Sir Edmund-bury Godfrey were Tryed at the King 's Bench-bar Condemned and Executed And then the Commons called the Lord Treasurer to an Account who had been accused by Mr. Mountague sometimes the King's Embassador at the French Court for holding a private Correspondence with France but he relying on the King's Pardon the Business ●nded in a long Imprisonment in the Tower after much stir had been made about it And the King in Hopes the better to please the Commons and satisfie the Nation in General new modell'd his Council making it to consist of 30 Persons Fifteen of them to be Certain and the rest to be Elective at pleasure ten out of the Nobility and five Commoners besides a Lord-President a Secretary of Scotland and such of the Princes of the Blood-Royal as should be at Court with which the next Day he acquainted the Parliament and of this Council the Earl of Shaftsbury was made President But notwirh●●anding this Alteration in the Council it had not the desired effect which the King intended for the Parliament were still solicitous in searching to the bottom of the Popish Plot and the more effectually to do it voted That the Duke of York's being a Papist and the hopes of his coming as such to the Crown have given the greatest countenance and encouragement to the designs of the Papists c. And therefore ordered a Bill of Exclusion of the Duke of York from the Sucession of the Crown to be brought in But the King and the Dukes party were for offering Expedients for securing the Protestant Religion tho' the Duke should come a Papist to the Crown But this would not content the Commons And there arising some heats between the Lords and Commons about the Bishops Voting in Capital Cases the King thinking he could expect but little from them Prorogued them to a more convenient season but in a little time after dissolved them and called another which he hoped to find more to his purpose But during the interval of the Parliament Sir George Wakeman was tryed for the Popish Plot and acquitted before the Lord Chief Justice Scroges whose carriage was so different in this Tryal from what it had been in those before that he was shrewdly suspected to have some very feeling Reasons for it For after this Tryal Scrogs was more violent against Oats and the Whigs than he had been before against the Papists And now there was set on foot a new Popish Plot to sham the old one and put a Plot upon the Presbyterians which was called The Meal-Tub Plot the Papers relating to it being found under Madam Celiers Meal-tub the design whereof was To leave Papers and Libels of dangerous things against the Government in the Houses of the most Eminent persons active in the Discovery of the Popish Plot by them called Presbyterians and then to inform the Government that such persons where these papers were left were dangerous persons to the King and Goverment upon which their Houses being search'd and these papers found there it should have been sufficient evidence to condemn them The Tryal how this would do was first made upon Colonel Mansfel a worthy Gentelman who was Prosecuted for it but the examination of it being left to Sir William Jones the Attorney-General his Report was That Mansfel was innocent and Dangerfield at that time the Papists Tool and who had left the Papers in Mansfels Lodgings was guilty Upon which Dangerfield was committed to Prison where he mad ae thorow discovery of this cursed intreague and Sir Wil. Jones was turn'd out of his place for his honest Report And indeed from this time forward the Duke of York and his Creatures ruled all things under the King so that now the whole Design of the Government seem'd to be to sham
the Popish-Plot and set up another in it's room against all the honest Gentlemen in the Nation For the Parliament having oppos'd the Duke's Succession his Design was to destroy all those Gentlemen that were active against Popery and to bring Popery in Per fas ne fas And this appear'd plainly not only in Scotland where the Duke reign'd as High-Commissioner and by whose Means the Earl of Argyle was Try'd Condemn'd and design'd to be Executed had he not Providentially made his Escape but in England also as appear'd by Dangerfield's Evidence first and afterwards by Fitz-Harris his Plot For after several Prorogations of the Parliament before they sat viz. from the 17th of October 1679. to the 21th of October 1680 they then sat but found things had been carried on so high against the Interest of the Nation by a sort of Men that were called Tories and that joyn'd with the Popish Party to stifle the Popish-Plot and in advancing Arbitrary Power declaring their Abhorrence of Petitioning the King for the sitting of the Parliament that they resolved to make Examples of some of them Voting against Sir George Jefferies Sir Francis Withens and some others who were preferr'd by the Court for being against the Interest of the People In this Parliament after a full Hearing by the House of Lords the Lord Stafford one of the Popish Lords in the Tower was found Guilty of High-Treason Condemn'd and Executed But the Parliament being high for the Bill of Exclusion it having Passed the House of Commons the King first P●orogued and soon after Dissolved them But presently issues out Writs for calling another at Oxford the 21th of March following which was 1681. In the mean time one Fitz-Harris an Irishman speaks to Everard his Countrey-man and one of the Discoverers of the Popish-plot to write him a villanous Libel against the King and the Duke this Libel was to be Printed and put into the Pockets of the most Active Men in the Kingdom against Popery both Lords and Commons who were thereupon to be taken up and Try'd for High-Treason Everard writes this Libel and brings Fitz-Harris to his Chamber to hear it Read but first Discovers the matter to Sir William Waller and plants him in his Closet where he might hear the Libel Read unknown to Fitz-Harris after having heard the Libel Everard asks Fitz-Harris how he lik'd it who told him very well Upon this Sir William Waller goes to the King and discovers the whole matter to him the King seem'd to be very well pleas'd and orders Fitz-Harris to be taken up and Committed to Prison which was accordingly done Tho' Sir William was afterwards told when he went from the King that the King was highly displeas'd with him for this piece of Service and said he had broke all his Measures Fitz-Harris being taken and Committed Prisoner to Newgate he was Examined by Sir Robert Clayton and Sheriff Cornish and seem'd willing to discover the whole Design the next Day But the next Day he was remov'd to the Tower and there kept a Close Prisoner And now the Parliament met at Oxford where one of the first things they Debated was the Business of Fitz-Harris who was Impeached by the Commons but the Lords refused to joyn in the Impeachment which the Commons look'd upon as a Denyal of Justice and finding the Design was to stifle Fitz-Harris's Evidence in whose Plot some Persons of the highest Rank were Concern'd they Voted against the Tryal of Fitz-Harris by any inferiour Court whatsoever This being the Posture of Affairs the King on the 28th of March Dissolves the Parliament and immediately took Coach and went to Windsor leaving both Houses in Amaze and the City of Oxford in great Confusion as was the whole Nation soon after upon the News of it This Dissolution was follow'd by a Declaration as his Father had done before him This being done the Business was to bring in a new Plot to destroy the Protestants but Fitz-Harris must first be taken out of the way being Try'd before Pemberton who was made Lord Chief Justice as was supposed for that Purpose and soon after Executed at Tyburn with Oliver Plunket the Titular Primate of Armagh for the Popish-Plot About this time the City of London having chosen of their Sheriffs Men of Integrity to wit Henry Cornish and Slingsby Bethel Esquires which was a means of having Good and Upright Juries the Enemies of the Government could not so well carry on their Designs which made them uneasie and resolve to have better for their purpose next Year but were therein again Disappointed for the Citizens chose Thomas Pilkington and Samuel Shute Esquires two very honest Gentlemen and this was the Reason that when they design'd to introduce their Protestant Plot by the Tryal of Stephen Colledge a Joyner by Trade but an active Man in the Discovery of the Popish-plot and therefore most commonly known by Name of the Protestant Joyner they were disappointed by the Grand-Jury's bringing in the Bill against him Ignoramus it being only sworn to by some Witnesses of the Popish Plot in Ireland who being Discountenanced were reduc'd to extream Poverty and now were by the Tories hir'd to Swear for Bread But the Popish Faction resolv'd to go on with their Show and therefore Colledge was Committed Prisoner to the Tower and soon after a Bill prefer''d against him at Oxford where they had a Jury to their Mind who found it Billa vera whereupon he was had down to Oxford and Tryed for a Design to Seiz the King there at the sitting of the Parliament and tho' he made an excellent Defence notwithstanding all the Foul play that was offered him yet he was brought in Guilty and soon after Executed declaring his Innocency and that he was the first but should not be the last that suffer'd for his Zeal against Popery in which he was a true Prophet The Earl of Shaftsbury was next Indicted of High-Treason but the Evidence against him being only some of those Baffled Witnesses and other Profligate Persons whom the Grand-Jury could not believe and therefore brought in the Bill Ignoramus This was a great Mortification to the Popish Party who desir'd nothing more than to take off this Noble Lord and therefore finding the great Obstacle to their Designs were Juries it was resolved by the Faction to take away the City Charter and thereby their Power of chusing Sheriffs And accordingly a Quo Warranto was brought against the Charter of London which was Prosecuted with that Earnestness that notwithstanding the Learned Pleading of the City Council in the behalf of the Charter Judgment was given against it and their Liberties and Franchises seized into the King's Hand And the Mayor and Sheriffs were appointed by the King and acted by Commission from him during his Pleasure About this time the Duke of York going by Sea into Scotland to fetch back his Dutchess whom he had left there in the Gloucester Frigat she was unhappily cast
Writing had it been prov'd his was only an Answer to Sir Robert Filmer's Treatise of Absolute Monarchy which had been the Design not only of this but of the two preceding Reigns yet this Evidence such as it was was sufficient with such Juries as then were pack'd for their Purpose to find the Collonel Guilty notwithstanding the Learned Defence he made for himself So that he was Condemned and Beheaded dying with a Greatness of Mind worthy of himself The Duke of Monmouth who was also one of the Lord Howard's Council of Six had for some time absconded but now upon his Submission to his Father and his Unkle was admitted to Court but being urg'd to make a fuller Discovery and Confession of the Plot which he affirm'd he knew nothing of he fell again into his Unkle's Displeasure and consequently into his Father's and so was Banished from the Royal Presence Several others who were said to be concerned in this Plot fled beyond Seas and were Out-lawed for not appearing here in Court among whom was one Holloway a Bristol-Merchant who was taken at Nevis in the West-Indies and brought over hither He was wrought upon by some of the Duke's Creatures to make a Confession and he should have his Pardon and when he had own'd enough to Hang himself he was offered the Benefit of a Tryal which he refused and flung himself upon the King's Mercy and so was Executed And not long after Sir Thomas Armstrong Master of Horse to the Duke of Monmouth who upon the Proclamation put out for apprehending him had fled into Holland was taken out of Leyden by Surprize and brought to London and Committed to Newgate and it being Term-time was soon after carried to Westminster where that infamous Wretch Sir George Jefferies being at that time Lord Chief Justice order'd him to be Executed the Friday following he being already Out-lawed But Sir Thomas boldly Demanded the benefit of the Law which was on his side for by a Statute of the 6th of Edw. 6. it was Enacted That if any Person Out-law'd for Treason being beyond the Sea shall within one Year after such Out-lawry render himself to the chief Justice of England he should Reverse his Out-lawry and take a Tryal which Sir Thomas then desir'd it being his Case But the Cheif Justice over-rul'd it and would not admit of his Plea nor let him have Counsel to Argue it But gave a Rule of Court for his Execution the Friday following the Impudent Chief Justice charging Richardson in a Jeering manner to see that Sir Thomas had the full benefit of the Law then And accordingly he was drawn up on a Sledge to Tyburn and there Executed Denying his Knowledge of any Plot whatsoever against the King But Sir Thomas's Death was Voted Murther by the Parliament since this happy Revolution The pretence of this Plot gave them a specious Ground to Persecute the Dissenters the Goals throughout England being at this time filled with them and Multitudes Cited to and Excommunicated by the Spiritual Courts for Nonconformity Executing upon them all the Vengeance that was possible Some being punish'd as Rioters some for Treasonable Words and some upon Actions of Scandalum Magnatum and Fined Exorbitantly beyond all Law or Reason of which last Sir Thomas Pilkington and Dr. Oats were Severe instances each being Fined 100000 l. to the Duke But a little before this time the Vertuous Lady Anne youngest Daughter to the Duke was Married to Prince George the King of Denmark's Brother the Match being generally liked by the People he being a Protestant Prince And the Hamborough Company in Gratitude for Favours receiv'd from the King in Relation to their Charter erected his Statue of grey Marble in the midst of the Royal-Exchange in the Habit of a Roman Caesar This was the State of the Nation when upon Monday the second of February 1684 5 the King was taken with an Apoplectick Fit which if it carried him not out of the World then 't is certain it did the Friday following Dying in the 54th Year of his Age having Reigned 36 Years and some few Days He was a Prince that very much indulg'd himself in taking his Pleasure and was very unlike his Father in this That he was a great Lover of Women and kept variety of them as the Dutchess of Cleaveland Nell Gwynn and the Dutchess of Portsmouth the last of which was made use of by his Brother to make the King do whatever he had a mind to have done for so much was the King taken with her French Charms that he could deny her nothing And therefore advancing of Favourites was done by her Mediation and even Parliaments themselves Prorogu'd or Dissolv'd if she had a Mind to have it so He was not a Prince Bloody or Cruel in his own Nature yet by the Ascendant his Brother had over him many worthy Persons lost their Lives in his Reign He was a Prince of very good Natural Parts had they not been Vitiated by giving himself up so much to the satisfaction of his Lusts His making War with the Dutch and joyning with France against them weaken'd the Protestant Interest and has made the French so Formidable to Europe And having carry'd on his Brother's Designs in Masquerade as long as he thought Convenient he dyed of a sudden but whether Naturally or by some Foul Play I will not determine tho' the latter was much Suspected However the Nation had a real Kindness for him and the News of his Death fill'd all Eyes with Tears and all Hearts with Sadness except those of the Papists and some Tories that were worse than they But this proceeded chiefly from the Fears and dismal Apprehensions the People had of the ensuing Reign In the Eleventh Year of this Kings Reign a Prodigious Whale came up to Greenwich and run it self on shore there soon after which Oliver Cromwel then Protector died In his 17th Year 3 Blazing Stars appeared of different shapes and colours which were look'd on to be the Denuntiators of ensuing Judgements In his 18th Year was a great Plague in London of which died far more than ever did in any Plague before and in the next Year the greatest part of the City of London was Consumed by Fire In the 33d Year of his Reign on the 18th of May 1680 a great storm of Hail fell in London and the parts adjacent the Hail-stones being of an extraordinary bigness some of them nine inches about and generally as big as Pullets Eggs with the figures of Stars and other curious works upon them being also very hard Several Rooks in the Temple-garden being kill'd by them and many Sky-lights in London broken to pieces by their violent failing upon them Soon after which a Prodigious Blazing-Star appeared in the West for several Weeks together In the 37th Year of his Reign there was a great Frost that continued from the beginning of December to the end of February in which time the Thames was frozen
in St. Bartholomew's-Lane on the Back-side of the Royal-Exchange where any one may see the Truth of this Entry I am assured Mr Hinton was in Court at Oats 's Tryal to have testified this but was terrified from it for fear of being Vndone But how true soever Oats's Testimony was he was found guilty of Perjury upon both Points before Jefferies his Colleagues and had Sentence to be Whipt from Aldgate to Newgate on the Wednesday and on the Friday from Newgate to Tyburn which was so severely Executed that he received at his two Whippings 13000 Stripes besides which he was to stand in the Pillory five times in the Year and to be a Prisoner during Life And soon after Mr. Dangerfield was Sentenc'd to undergo the like Punishment which yet had a more Fatal Issue for discovering the Meal-Tub-Plot of which I have spoken in King Charles his Reign For Dangerfield returning back from his last Whipping was run into the Eye by one Francis which touching his Brain he dy'd of the Wound in a few Hours For which Francis was afterwards Hang'd Soon after the King 's coming to the Crown care was taken to provide a Parliament fit for the King's purpose to which way had been made the latter end of his Brother's Reign by Quo Warranto's against Corporations and by the surrender of Charters and they met the latter end of May Where the King made the same Speech to them for Substance which he did at first to his Privy Council adding That he expected they should settle his Revenue during his Life which he must not suffer to be Precarious And the Parliament answer'd his Ends settling the Excise and Customs upon him during his Life which indeed he took before without their giving him and gave him other Moneys beside During the sitting of the Parliament on the 11th of June the Duke of Monmouth arrived at Lime in Dorset-shire with three Ships whereof one was a Man of War of 32 Guns and about 80 Men and having Landed and taken possession of the Town without any Opposition he Published a Declaration wherein he Declared he came over to restore the Kingdom to it 's Antient Rights and Priviledges which were all invaded by the Duke of York and his Adherents the Instruments of his Tyranny charging him with the Murder of the Earl of Essex and of the late King c. And inviting the Nobility Gentry and Commons to come in to him and to assist him for the recovery of their lost Liberties and bringing the Duke of York to speedy Justice Tho' at the Duke's Landing his Complement wanted of an Hundred yet upon Notice of his being Landed he quickly encreas'd so that in a few Days he was several Thousands strong so that leaving Lime he went to Taunton encreasing still as he went King James in the mean time having his Parliament by him first puts out a Proclamation for apprehending of Monmouth and offers 5000 l. as a Reward for any that should take him and the Parliament to shew their Loyalty ma●e an Act attainting him of High-Treason And besides this the King sent several of his Forces down against him under the Command of the Lord Feversham The Duke of Albermarle in Devonshire had rais'd the Militia of the County for the King and brought his Forces within a quarter of a Mile of the Duke who prepar'd to Fight him But the Duke of Albermarle perceiving that his Forces were inclin'd rather to Fight for Monmouth than against him withdrew with s me Precipitation without doing any thing being fearful of being pursu'd by Monmouth which if Monmouth had done he had certainly put him to the Rout and taken all his Arms which was the only thing that Monmouth wanted The King's Forces were now come into the West and at Phillip's-Norton met with the Duke of Monmouth between whom and the King's Forces there was a brisk Rencounter wherein the King's Forces retreated with Loss Monmouth's Men firing fiercely upon them Soon after the Duke marched to Cansham-bridge intending to go for Bristol but hearing the Duke of Beaufort was with a Body of Men to oppose him in his way he turn'd about and went to Bridge-water whither the King's Forces followed him and lay at a place called Sedge-moor there in the dead time of the Night on Sunday the 5th of July the Duke with a Guide Marches against the King's Forces with 3000 Foot and 1000 Horse and falling upon them a very fierce Fight ensued the Duke's Foot fighting incomparable well but his Horse hardly ever came up and his Foot having spent all their Ammunition and being put in Disorder by the King's Horse in the end were put to the Rout the Duke of Monmouth himself with the Lord Gray and some others making their Escape and riding towards the Borders of Hampshire where on the 8th of July the Duke was taken as also the Lord Gray and a Noble Brandenburger that came over with him They were all brought to London with a strong Guard on the 13th and the D. after having been Examined at Whitehall was Committed to the Tower and being already attainted by Parliament a Warrant was signed by the King for his Execution and on the 15th of July he was Beheaded on Tower-hill many pittying of him but none being able to help him But this was one Specimen more of K. James's Love to so good and kind a Brother as K. Charles the II. had been to him cutting off the Head of his beloved Son After the Duke's Defeat at Sedgmoor many of his Followers were taken and put in Prison and then the Chief Justice Jefferies was sent down to keep the Assizes there where he acted so many barbarous things that 't is a shame to Name them and Posterity will scarce believe them For in the Counties of Dorset and Sommerset above three Hundred Persons were Executed and their Heads and Quarters were set upon Poles and placed both in all the chief Towns and in the Roads and High-ways for many Miles together both to the Terror and Annoyance of Travellers as they past along And thus it is that King James performs his Word to his Privy-Council at his first coming to the Crown of his endeavouring to follow the Example of his dear Brother in all things especially in that of his great Tenderness and Clemency to his People But it is not all the Blood shed in the West that will Suffice there are still other Victims to be offer'd up for upon Tuesday the 13th of October 1685. Alderman Cornish was taken off of the Exchange where he was following his Business without any apprehension of Danger towards him thinking his own Innocency a sufficient Defence and committed close Prisoner to Newgate and on the Saturday night following had Notice to prepare for his Tryal on Monday at which time he was Tryed for High-Treason in promising to assist the Duke of Monmonth the Lord Russel Sir Thomas Armstrong c. against King Charles the Second