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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A55345 The life of the right honourable and religious Lady Christian[a], late Countess Dowager of Devonshire Pomfret, Thomas, d. 1705. 1685 (1685) Wing P2799; ESTC R3342 19,382 111

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Freedom To which glorious Designs they were not a little invited by her carnest solicitations and very much incouraged by her Prudence and in which Essex had given the surest Demonstration of his loyal Purposes had not Death prevented him in the end of the year Forty six The Presbyterian Faction in general that first fomented and still carried on this unnatural Rebellion beginning the War in the name of God would not put an end to it neither for his sake nor the Kings having other Apprehensions and making other Advantages of the Kings and Churches sufferings For because God was pleased to make them the Crucifiers of his People they supported their Persons and their Pretenses by their successes and reckoning their own Christianity from their Victories would not allow either the King or his Cause to be so much as Christian for they themselves are the men that were Fortunate and Prosperous and therefore had the Baseness as well as ignorance to declare that they were setting up Christs Kingdom though by the breach of all his Commandments being suffered by Heaven to satisfie their lust ambition and revenge upon the Crown and Mitre A Principle that equally serves Presbitery and Mahumetism for we have seen the Grand Segnior to prevail upon a great part of Christendom and to have made both the Kings and Bishops of the Eastern Churches his Slaves and Tributaries and yet he is prosperous hence the Sultans of each Party do agree that every thing is Right that is Fortunate and what mischief both the Turk and the other have wrought to Christian Princes the whole World can tell or what hopes there may be to find Penitents amongst such men who will declare a Prevaling Villain to be Gods General the next Age must expect for we can find but very few in this The Generosity indeed of Essex ought to have its due allowance and commendation and the rather because even after all his successes he saw the Error of his Arms and the Kings Right did then appear to him when he had triumphed over all his Power But he could live no longer than only to see his Faults and it may be his being infected with Loyalty was the Poison that dispatched him Essex being dead the Janizaries of the Rebel Army by the basest Treachery and Violence soon made themselves Masters of the Kings Person and carrying him from place to place whether they pleased brought him to Latimers where our noble Lady happening then to be with her Son the Earl of Devonshire his Majesty had much private Consultation with her concerning the State of his Affairs and at the same time expressed both to her and the Earl the great sense he had of the faithful Services they had done him The latter end of that year increasing the Kings troubles and the consideration of his multiplying her own being much depressed in mind with such a load of publick Calamities she would try if Privacy might give ease to any part of her Sorrows retire therefore she did to her Brothers the Earl of Elgins House at Ampthill a place if any in the world next to her Sons that could compose her distracted thoughts and the only means she could then think on to give any tolerable comfort under those circumstances of the Kings and her own Afflictions And thither she was the rather invited by that unparallelled kindness that ever had been between her self and Brother the extraordinary love she bare to his Lady the Countess of Oxford and the dear Respects she had also for her Nephew the Lord Bruce his Lady and Children Here as she would always acknowledge to her death she both lightned her griefs and her expences and at this time during her three years stay there she became Mistris of those Riches which her Retirement gave her opportunity to gather For when at home her expences in the noblest House-keeping and the most generous Charity kept equal measures with her Incomes and her Goodness so vied her Huswifry that she could scarce tell how to lay up mony so long as she had a friend to entertain or any in distress to relieve For Charity was one of her dear Delights nor would she stay for but find out Opportunities though indeed she lived in such times that afforded dayly Objects for her tenderest Compassions The War had made Loyalty poor and Sequestrations upon the Priests of God had reduced the Clergy to such lamentable wants that they had nothing left to cloath them but their own Righteousness nor any thing to feed on but a good Conscience and their passive Vertues Here our noble Lady saw and pitied and as ever she had been the Defender so now she became the succourer of the Righteous Cause Fed and Cloathed and Comforted all that lived within the Vicinage of her Charity and as one Act of goodness creates Appetites after others so neither could her Desires be satisfied with the next occasions for her Bounty but she sought abroad and diffused it round the Nation and beyond it also to such as were made poor for Gods sake and the Kings And in this she had a peculiar Generosity for though she would give with both hands to the loyal Sufferers yet she would not indure it should be reckoned as an Alms but rather as a just Debt to them out of her Abundance And God was pleased to invite her forward to keep the Fountains of her Nobleness and Charity continually open by the greatest incouragements for as she laid up Riches in Heaven by her mighty Expence in the Acts of mercy so those waters upon which she cast her bread returned with such Fertility and Increase that she became Owner of larger Possessions upon Earth and collected mony and Blessing by her Dispersions to the Poor Removing in the year 50 to that pleasant seat of Rohamptom in Surry she had not lived much above a year in it ere it became her own by Purchase And now began again the usual Resort of her former friends and her own magnificent way of living which she improved not only to raise to her self the Memoirs of a private Greatness but a Name of everlasting Honour for her concerns in the Publick good Hence she took opportunity from such loyal Persons as frequented her House to discourse with and perswade them to the most Active indeavours for the Kings Restauration and her Counsels in this business as they were the most Prudent and steady so neither could any to whom she communicated them scruple in the least their own joyning in such honourable Designs because they saw that she invited and incouraged her nearest Relations into the same generous Hazards For during her abode at Amphthill she had continual Correspondencies with such Persons both in England and Scotland as she found would assist to the resettlement of the King and the Recovery of the Church and State from those thraldoms under which they both groaned To this end many Letters passed between her and Duke Hamilton the