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A29975 The history and life and reigne of Richard the Third composed in five bookes by Geo. Buck. Buck, George, Sir, d. 1623. 1647 (1647) Wing B5307; ESTC R23817 143,692 159

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that divers continued of his Sir-name in that Countrey along time after him which makes it probable he had a naturall Son at least bearing his owne name of Heward that next to him was the Originall Ancestor of this house of Howards And let it not be thought any disparagement for a Noble Family to be raysed from a naturall Issue for many Princely Families have beene derived and propagated from naturall Sonnes as was Eneas Romulus the Founders of the Roman Families so was Theseus and Themistocles as Plutarch writeth others say as much of Hercules c. The King of Spaine descended from Henry de Trastamara base sonne of Alphonsus the Justicer King of Castile And who doth not honour the Princely Race of William the Conquerour Bastard son to the Duke of Normandy where was a more Heroicall man then Robert Earle of Glocester base sonne of King Henry the first The Earles of Warren descended from Hamelin a base sonne of Geoffry Plantagenet Earle of Aniow The Noble Herberts are also said to come from a base sonne of Henry the first And the Duke and Earles of Somerset which followed the Red Rose were the Off-spring of the Beauforts naturall sonnes of Iohn de Gaunt For a further conjecture why these Howards must be descended from Hewardus or Herewardus for so some Writers call him but Iugulfus who best knew him constantly calls him Hewardus both names may signifie in the Saxon or old Dutch a chiefe Captaine of an Army whom the Romans call'd Imperator And that the Titles and names of great Offices have given Sir-manes to many Noble Families wee have examples in plentie Particularly the Visconti of Millan the Chamberlaines of Normandy the Stewards of Scotland the Butlers of Ireland and divers others who had their Sir-names from the Offices of their Ancestours and Fathers and the same presumption or argument may be for taking the Sir-name of Howard and the Origine of their Family from Hewardus the Howards from the time of Heward dwelling in these Countries of Holland and Marshland and were Lords of some Lands belonging to him untill by their matches with the Daughters and Heires of Fitton Tendring Mowbray Tillney c. they became possessed in Norfolke suffolke and Berkeshire and were Lords sometime of Sunning-hill neare Windsor and bore the Sir-name ever since or with small interruption the old Sir-name written Heward or Hereward in Charters and Records and Howard in Stories But descend wee through the succession of those times to William Haward Chiefe Justice in the Raigne of Edward the first Grand-father to Sir Iohn Howard Admirall of the North Fleet in the Navall Warres of Edward the third his Sonne Sir Robert Howard married the Daughter of the Lord Scales and Sir Iohn Howard who lived in the time of Henry the fourth and dyed Anno 16. Henry the sixt had two Wives Margaret Daughter and Heire of Sir Iohn Plais Knight by whom hee had Eliza an onely Daughter married to Iohn de Vere Earle of Oxford who brought him a goodly part of the Howards Lands Her Heires were married to Latimer and Winckfield very fruitfull Families His second Wife was the Daughter and heire of Sir William Tendering of Stoke-Nayland in Suffolke by whom he had Sir Robert Howard his eldest Sonne who married Margaret Mowbray Daughter of a Cadet of the house of Lancaster who became Co-heire with her Sister the Lady Berkely Wife to Thomas Mowbray Duke of Norfolke dead in Venice and left his Sonne Henry Haward heire to Haward and Mowbray and Iohn Howard the sonne of Iohn Howard was created Earle of Norfolke by King Richard the third in the right of his Mother Mowbray he married the Daughter of the Lord Moulines and by her had Thomas Howard the first Howard Earle of Surrey this is he who survived the danger of Bosworth Field and became afterwards Duke of Norfolke from whom all the Howards now living are descended whose Family hath beene so fruitfull to furnish this Kingdome with foure Dukes many Earles Viscounts and Barons three high Treasurers six high or great Marshalls tenne high Admiralls with some honourable Custos of the Privie Seale and sundry Chamberlaines of the Kings house and one lately lived who had borne the Offices of high Constable Lord Lieutenant Lord high Steward Marshall and Admirall of England Lord Chiefe Justice in Oyer of the better part of this Kingdome and Chamberlaine of the Royall house a man honourable in his deportments and fortunate in his undertakings as at the great Marine Battells against all the Navall powers of Spaine the Pope and Princes of Italy Anno Domini 1588. and in the siege of Gadys Anno Domini 1596. And this is the Grand-child of that Thomas Lord Howard who for his better distinction and perpetuall honour is stiled Triumphator Scotorum I have strayed into this digression as a gratefull tender of an acknowledgement I owe to that Illustrious Family for their Noble Patronage and Favour to my Ancestors especially to that unfortunate Bucke and his Children who withered with the White Rose bearing an Ancient and Hereditary love to the House of Yorke and stood in good Credit and Favour with the King his Master no● let this remembrance of him and his obscured Family seeme ostentation or vaine-glory whilst I say no more then what other Historios dictate which give him an able Character Master Camden Clarentius in his Immortall Brittannia deriveth this Sir Iohn Bucke from Sir Walter de Bucke of Brabant and Flanders who had that Sir-name of great Antiquity from the Castle de Bucke in Lis●e a City and Frontire Towne in Flanders where the Ancient Earles were accustomed much to reside the ruines of this Castle remained in the late time of Lodwicke Guicciardine who saith he saw the Carcasse thereof And this Walter Bucke was a Cadet of the House of Flanders employed and sent by the Prince then Duke of Brabant and Earle of Flanders to King Iohn with Auxiliary Troopes Roger Wondover saith Walter Bucke Gerardde Scottigni and Godescalius venerunt in Angliam cum tribus legionibus Flandrensium Bra●antianoru● militum c. and he did the King excellent service here as many of our Historians report for which the King bountifully rewarded him with Lands in Yorkeshire and Northampton shire And in Yorkeshire where he made his Seat he found an Ancient Family of the Sirname of Bucke of Bucton in the Wapentake of Bucrosse where that Family had anciently been for the name is a Saxon or Dutch word and signifieth a Beech Tree or Beech Wood here Walter contracted alliance and Married Ralph de Bucke his Eldest Sonne to the Daughter and Heire of G●celinus de Bucke Grandchild to Radolphus de Bucke who was a part Founder and Bene●actour to the Abbey of Bredlington as is mentioned in the Charter of Henry the first made for the foundation of that Monastery and from this Walter descended Iohn Bucke Knight who married a
then Tyranny according to the style of Sir Thomas Moore When King Henry the Seventh as soon as he had got the Crown sent this young Prince to the Tower afterwards cut off his head yet that was no Tyranny after Sir Thomas Moore But our King Iames of ever happie memory hath thought it an act of so much detestation that particularly he protested against it and shewed another temper of Justice and Power in his Royal Clemencie to certain Noble persons in one of his Kingdoms who being Regal Titulars and pretending title to the Crown there as descended from some King of that Countrey his gracious and pious inclination was so far from seeking their ruine or so much as the restraining them that he suffered their liberty with possession of what they had Then they call the punishment of Iane Shore a Tyrannie A common and notorious Adulteresse as the Duke of Buckingham who knew her very well censured her which she deserved so justly that it was rather favourable then severe or tyrannous Next the death of William Collingborn is made one of his Tyrannies who as some trivial Romancers say was hanged for making a Satyrical Rhyme when the truth is he had committed Treason and was arraigned and condemned of High Treason as may be yet seen in the Record and then it was Justice and not Tyrannie Another proof against their grosse Paralogisms take from this observation made by Demosthenes Tyrannus res est inimica Civibus legibus contraria But King Richard was ever indulgent to his people careful to have the Laws duely observed his making so many good ones being an evident argument of his love to Law and Justice It is further observed that Tyrants contemn good counsel are opinionated of their own wisedoms and obstinate to determine all matters by themselves These Plaintiffs being called by the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is self-Councellors who say they are natura plerumque occulti insidiosi Arte Astu ea Tagere dissimulare conantur quae agunt non communicantes quicquid de suis Conciliis aut rebus cum aliis nec ab aliis Concilium petentes neque admittentes sed tantum sua Concilia sequuntur Also Erasmus hath this Axiome Nullo Concilio quicquam magnae rei aggredi tyrannicum est But King Richard nor did nor would do any thing of importance without consultation with the wisest and noblest And if in any matters he had delivered his judgement yet his manner as his detractors confesse was to say in the end and conclusion My Lords this is my minde if any of you know what may else be better I shall be ready to change it for I am not wedded to my own will Thus Sir Thomas Moor. Eastly Largition and excessive expences are thought vices proper to Tyrants the rather because the Romane Tyrants for their extreme excesses were called Monstra prodigia lues Imperii pes●es reipublicae c. As Caligula Nero Vitellius Domitian Commodus Heliogabolus Caracalla c. King Kichard was ever held to be frugal with the preservation of his honour nor can they tax him with Palliardise Luxury Epicurism nor Gluttony vices following many Tyrants but moderate and temperate in all his actions and appetites which is confessed and therefore needeth no further proof Indeed it had been advantage and safety to him in the event if he had been a Tyrant a while for then he might have preserved his life and kingdom and given a timely check to the practice of Bishop Morton the Marquesse Dorset Earl of Devon and his brother the Bishop the Lord Talbot the Lord Stanley and his brother Sir William Stanley with the Countesse of Richmond his wife and the rest But his remisnesse and patience bred his ruine not his tyranny that had been his protection And now the black curtain of malice and detraction is drawn let us see this King in his proper Royalty and vertues casting up the general and particular notions of A good King and happie Government then peruse what was wanting in him First then There is necessarily required proper to Empire Wisedom Justice Fortitude Beauty Magnificence Temperance and Piety That he had Wisedom and Prudence need no other witnesse then his wise and provident managing both of his own private affairs and Government of the Publike Also in the Military actions in which he was tried both as a Subject and a King his adversaries can allow him to be a wise prudent politick and heroical Prince his Wisedom appearing with his Justice very clearly in the good Laws he made acknowledged and honourably predicated by our Reverend and most learned Professors of the Laws For his further knowledge and love of Justice there can be no fairer argument then his desire and custome to sit in Courts of Justice hearing and distributing Justice indifferently to all men And when he made his Progresse into York-shire being informed there of some extortioners and foul offenders who were apprehended not tried he caused the Law to take the just current giving strict charge and commandment to all Officers of Justice for just administration to all men without partiality or private respects The Fortitude and Magnanimity of this Prince though of lowe stature were so great and famous as they need no Trumpet or Praecony being bred from his youth in Martial actions and the Battels of Barnet Exham Doncaster the second of S t Albans and of Tewksbury will give him the reputation of a Souldier and Captain Being made General of the Kings Armies into Scotland he prevailed happily in his Expedition and particularly recovered that famous and strong Hold of Berwick which King Henry the Sixth had so weakly let go And in this you shall hear the Elogie of one that was loth to speak much in his favour yet occasion forced him to speak his knowledge though coldly and sparingly King Richard was no ill Captain in the War he had sundry Victories and sometimes Overthrows but never by his own default for want of hardinesse or politick order Whereunto he addeth concerning his Bounty Free was he called of dispence and liberal somewhat above his power To which I will adde one Elogie more above all for Credit and Authority recorded in an Act of Parliament and addressed to him in the name of the whole high Court of Parliament in these words We consider your great Wit Prudence Iustice and Courage and we know by experience the memorable and laudable acts done by you in several Battels for the salvation and defence of this Realm Here followeth another general and memorable testimony of him and of more regard and honour because it is averred by one that knew him from his youth the Duke of Buckingham who after Richard was made King and this Duke became ill affected acknowledged to Bishop Morton in private speeches between them That he thought King Richard from his first knowledge even
wose Genealogie I have seen derived from the antique Kings of Britain and from divers other British Princes And this Henry Teudor or the Seventh to confirm all the Titles of this Kingdom unto his claim by the strongest and greatest authority procured them decreed to him and to his issue so established in himself and his posterity for ever by Act of Parliament in this manner and words TO the Pleasure of Almighty God and for the Wealth and Prosperity and Surety of this Realm of England to the singular Comfort of all the Subjects of the same and for avoyding all Ambiguities and Questions Be it Ordained Established and Enacted by the Authority of this present Parliament That the Inheritance of the Crown of the Realm of England and also of France with all the Pre-eminencies and Dignities Royal to the same appertaining and all Liegances to the King belonging beyond the Seas with the appurtenances thereunto in any wise due or appertaining To be rest remain and abide in the most Royal person of our Soveraign Lord King Henry the Seventh and in the Heirs of his body lawfully comming perpetually with the Grace of God and so to endure and in no other Which is also another Title to our King Heir to Henry the Seventh And this Act was renewed and firmly established for our Soveraign Lord King Iames Anno regni primo Yet King Henry the Seventh obtained of the Pope another Title Iure Belli All which Titles and Rights which ever were appertaining to this Kingdom and to the Empire of Britain are coalesced and met in our Soveraign King for he hath not onely the claims of the ancient Kings of Britain of the Saxons and Anglo-Saxons Kings and of the Norman Race but also the Titles and Rights of the Royal Families of York of Lancaster and of Wales c. And no● as the least in reference with these he hath in possession also those singular and particular Monuments of Empire and Raign by some called Fata Regni and Instrumenta Monumenta Regno Imperio destinata One being the Ring of the accounted holy King Edward the son of King Etheldred which was consecrated and extraordinarily blessed by Saint Iohn Baptist in Palestine and sent back by the King as old Writers tell which hath been religiously kept in the Abbey of Westminster and is as Tradition goes the Ring which the Archbishop of Canterbury at the Inauguration and Consecration of the Kings puts upon their finger called in our Stories The Wedding Ring of England The other Monument of the British Empire is the Marble-stone whereupon Iacob laid his head when he had those caelestial and mystical Visions mentioned in holy Writ which stone was brought out of Palestine into Ireland and from thence carried into Scotland by King Keneth after translated to the City of Scone and used for the Chaire wherin the Kings sate at their Coronation brought out of Scotland by Edward the First into England as the best Historians of Scotland and England relate Cathedram Marmoream Regibus Scotorum fatalem in qua insidentes Scotorum Reges Coronare consueverant Rex Edwardus primus e Scona Londinum transtulit in Westmonasterio ubi hodie visitur deposuit It is set or born in a Chaire of Wood and for a perpetual honour upon a Table hanging in the Chappel at Westminster this is writ Si quid habet ueri vel Chronica cana sidesve Clauditu hac Cathedra Nobilis ille lapis Ad caput eximius Jacob quondam Patriarcha Quem posuit cernens numina mirifica Quem tulit a Scotis Edwardus primus c. George Buchanus saith The people are seriously perswaded that in this stone which he calleth Lapidem Marmoreum rudem the state of the kingdom is contained and that fatum Regni is thus understood viz. What King of Scotland soever is Lord of that Stone Soveraignly possessed thereof shall be King and raign in the Countrey where he findeth that stone thus told in a prophetical Distich Ni fallat fatum Scotus quocunque locatum Inveniet lapidem regnare tenetur ibidem Which Prophecie was accomplished in King Iames when he came first into England for his Titles were not onely funiculus triplex qui difficile rumpitur but also funiculus multiplex qui nunquam rumpitur And may those Titles for ever be establisht in his Loins according to that of the heavenly Messenger Regnum perpetuum cujus non est finis Amen Thus I have led you thorow the various Relations and Tragical Interchanges of this Princes Life to his last act and place where after Revenge and Rage had satiated their barbarous cruelties upon his dead body they gave his Royal earth a bed of earth honourably appointed by the Order of King Henry the Seventh in the chief Church of Leicester called Saint Maries belonging to the Order and Society of the Gray Friers the King in short time after causing a fair Tomb of mingled colour'd Marble adorned with his Statue to be erected thereupon to which some grateful pen had also destined an Epitaph the Copie whereof never fixtto his stone I have seen in a recorded Manuscript-Book chained to a Table in a Chamber in the Guild-hall of London which the faults and corruptions being amended is thus represented together with the Title thereunto prefixed as I found it Octob. 9. 1646. Imprimatur Na Brent TO give you him in his equal Draught and Composition He was of a mean or lowe compact but without disproportiō uneveness either in lineaments or parts as his severall Pictures present him His aspect had most of the Souldier in it so his natural inclination Complexions not uncertainely expounding our Dispositions but what wants of the Cour●-Planet effeminate Censurers think must needs be harsh and crabbed and Envie will pick quarrels with an hair rather then want Subject The Judgement and Courage of his Sword-actions rendred him of a full Honour and Experience which Fortune gratified with many Victories never any Overthrows through his own default for lack of Valour or Policie At Court and in his general deportment of an affable respect and tractable cleernesse In his dispence of a magnificent liberal hand somewhat above his power as Sir Tho. Moor sets down And surely the many Churches with other good works he founded more then any one former King did in so short a time must commend him charitable and religious as the excellent Laws he made do his wisedom and strain of Government which all men confesse of the best So having even from those his bitterest times the esteem of a valiant wise noble charitable and religious Prince why should ours deprave him so much upon trust deny works their character and place EPITAPHIVM Regis Richardi tertii Sepulti ad Leicestriam jussu sumptibus S ti Regis Henrici Septimi HIc ego quem vario Tellus sub Marmore claudit Tertius a justa
THE HISTORY of the Life and Reigne of RICHARD The Third Composed in five Bookes By GEO BUCK Esquire Honorandus est qui injuriam non fecit sed qui alios eam facere non patitur duplici Honore dignus est Plato de legibus Lib. 5. Qui non repellit a proximo injuriam si potest tam est in vitio quam ille qui infert D. Ambros. offic Lib. 3. LONDON Printed by W. Wilson and are to be sold by VV. L. H. M. and D. P. 1647. The true Portraiture of Richard Plantagenest of England and of France King Lord of Ireland the third King Richard TO THE FAVOVRABLE ACCEPTANCE Of the Right Honourable PHILIP Earle of Pembrooke and Mountgomery c. Sir HAving collected these papers out of their dust I was bold to hope there might be somthing in them of a better fate if mine obscure pen darken not that too Please your Lordshipp to let your name make them another witnesse of your noblenesse it may redeeme and improve them to a clearer opinion and acknowlegedment of these times in which I am to meet every Critick at his owne weapon who will challenge the Book at the very Title The Malicious and Malevolent with their blotted Coments the Captious Incredulous with their jealous praecisian●sines whose inclinations shewes them of envious perplexed natures to looke at other mens actions and memory by the wrong end of the perspective and me thinks I fancy them to our shaddowes which at noone creepe behind like Dwarfes atevening stalke by like Gyants they will haunte the noblest merits and endeavors to their Sun-set then they monster it but to the Common-rout they are another kind of Genius or ignis fatuus leades them into darke strange wanderings there they stick for to perswade the opinionated vulgar out of their ignorant selves is of as high a beliefe to me as to transpeciate a Beast into a man I therefore shall crave favour to protest these papers beyond their Censure and humour But to those they are wished I hope their weak accesses may be the more pardonable since they are the kindlings and scintillations of a modest Ambition to truth and gratitude which gives me the encouragement to assure your Lordship that if mine Authors be sincere and faithfull my penis free and innocent having learned that a story as it ought must be a just perspicuous Narration of things memorable spoken and don The Historiographer veritable free from all Prosopolepsyes or partiall respects and surely his pen should tast with a great deal of Conscience for there is nothing leaves so an infected a sting or scandall as History it rankles to all posterity wounds our good names to all memory places by an Authentick kind of preiudice I am with his opinion in his excellent Religio Medici who holds it an offence to Charity and as bloody a thought one way as Nero's in another My Lord under these humble addresses this sues to your honoured hand Presented by the unfained wishes of your Honours avowed and humble Servant GEO BUCK The ARGUMENT and CONTENTS of the First Booke The Linage Family Birth Education and Tirociny of King Richard the third THe Royall house of Plantagenest and the beginning of that name What Sobriquets were The antiquity of Sirnames Richard is created Duke of Gloucester his marriage and his issue His martiall imployments His Iourney into Scotland and recovery of Barwick The death of King Edward the 4 th The Duke of Gloucester made Lord Protector and soone after King of England by importunate suite of his Barons and of the People as the next true and lawfull heire Henry Teudor Earle of Richmond practiseth against the King He is conveyed into France The Noble Linage of Sir William Herbert his Imployment He is made Earle of Pembrooke King Edward the 4 th first and after King Richard sollicite the Duke of Brittaine and treat with him for the delivery of the young Earle of Richmond his Prisoner The successe of that businesse The quality and title of the Beauforts or Sommersets The Linage and Family of the Earle of Richmond The solemne Coronations of King Richard and of the Queene his wife his first at Westminster the second at Yorke Nobles Knights and Officers made by him Prince Edward his Son invested in the Principallity of Wales and the Oath of Allegeance made to him King Richard demandeth the Tribute of France His Progresse to Yorke His carefull charge given to the Iudges and Magistrates He holdeth a Parliament wherein the marriage of the King his Brother with the Lady Gray is declared and adjudged unlawfull their children to be illegitimate and not capable of the Crowne The Earle of Richmond and divers others attainted of Treason Many good Laws made The K. declared and approved by Parliament to be the only true and lawfull heire of the Crowne The King and Queene dowager are reconciled He hath secret advertisemēts of Innovations and practises against him Createth a vice-Constable of England His sundry treaties with Forraigne Princes Doctor Morton corrupteth the Duke of Buckingham who becometh discontent demanding the Earledome of Hereford with the great Constableship of England He taketh Armes is defeated and put to death by marshall Law THE FIRST BOOKE OF THE HISTORY OF RICHARD THE THIRD OF ENGLAND AND OF FRANCE KING AND LORD OF IRELAND RIchard Plantagenet Duke of Glocester and King of England and of France and Lord of Ireland the third of that name was the younger sonne of Sir Richard Plantagenet the fourth Duke of Yorke of that Royall Family and King of England designate by King Henry the sixth and by the most noble Senate and universall Synod of this Kingdome the High Court of Parliament The Mother of this Richard Duke of Glocester was the Lady Cecily Daughter of Sir Ralph de Neville Earle of Westmerland by his wife Ioane de Beaufort the naturall Daughter of Iohn Plantagenet alias de Gaunt Duke of Guiene and Lancaster King of Castile and Leon third Sonne of King Edward the third for in that order this Duke is best accounted because William of Hatfield the second Sonne of King Edward the third dyed in his infancy and this Duke of Yorke and King designate was propagated from two younger sonnes of the same King Edward the third whereby he had both Paternall and Maternall Title to the Crowne of England and France But his better and nearer Title was the Maternall Title or that which came to him by his Mother the Lady Anne de Mortimer the Daughter and heire of Phillippa Plantagenet who was the sole Daughter and heire of Lyonell Plantagenet Duke of Clarence and second Sonne of King Edward the third according to the account and order aforesaid And this Lady Phillip was the Wife of Sir Edmond de Mortimer the great and famous Earle of March and that Duke Richard King designate by his Father Richard Plantagenet Duke of York sirnamed also de Conningsb●rrough issued directly and in a
to apply Sir Thomas Moore something above his ability which he exprest most in his hospitality And surely if men are taken to the life best from their actions we shall find him in the circle of a Character not so commaculate and mixt as passionate and purblinde pens have dasht it whilst we squint not at those vertues in him which make up other Princes absolute His wisedome and courage had not then their nicknames and calumny as now but drew the eyes and acknowledgment of the whole Kingdome towards him and his brother had a sound experience of his fidelity and constancy in divers hazardous congresses and battels through which he had faithfully followed his fortune and return'd all his undertakings successefull as at Barnet where he entred so farre and boldly into the Enemies Army that two of his Esquires Thomas Parr and Iohn Milwater being nearest to him were slaine yet by his owne valour he quit himselfe and put most part of the Enemies to flight the rest to the sword With the like valour he behaved himselfe at the battell of Exon Doncaster St Albans Blore-heath Northampton Mortimers Crosse and Tewkesbury And it was then confest a very considerable service to the State his taking of the famous Pyrate Thomas Nevill alias Faulkonbridge Earle of Kent with whom complyed Sir Richard de Nevill Earle of Warwicke a neare kinsman to the Earle of Kent his naturall Father which ●●●d him up in the better esteeme and whetted him to any Attempt ●or this haughty Earle who had drawne him from the House of Yorke to which he had done valiant service not long before to the party of Henry 6. and his Lancastrian faction and fearing what forces and aid King Edward might have from beyond Sea provides a warlike Fleet for the narrow Seas of which this Faulconbridge was appointed Admirall with Commission to take or sinke all Ships he met either of the Kings friends or Subjects who did not under act it but made many depredations on the Coasts and put many to the Sword becoming an Enemy the more considerable King Edward finding as the case stood then with him his Attemps by Sea would be of too weake a proofe to surprise him which the Duke of Gloucester contrived by an advertisement he had of his private stealth into severall of the parts sometimes where he had recourse to some abetters of that Faction and comming too shore at Southampton by a ready Ambush seized and apprehended him from whence he was conveyed to London so to Middleham Castle and after he had told some Tales put to death And whilst he continued in the Northern parts he governed those Countries with great Wisdome and Justice preserving the Concord and Amity betweene the Scots and English though the breaches were not to be made up with any strength and continuance the borders living out of mutuall spoyles and common Rapines ever prompt for any cause that might beget braules and se●ds And in the last yeare of the Reigne of the King his brother the Quarrels grew so outragious and hostile that nothing could compose them but the Sword and open War arising from an unjust detaining the Tribute King Iames was yearly bound to pay as Polidore thus writeth King Edward tooke it very ill at the hands of Iames fourth King of Scotland that he refused to pay the Tribute whereunto he was bound by Convenant And therefore resolved by Armes to compell him to it But King Edward being distracted with a jealous care and watching of France neglected that businesse of Scotland and in the meane time Alexander Duke of Albany Brother to King Iames pretending earnest businesse in France makes England in his way and instigates King Edward to put on Armes against his Brother promising to returne shortly out of France and raise a power in Scotland for his aide Hereupon the King resolved it and sent the Duke of Glocester with a good Armie into Scotland who marched master of the field neare to Barwicke having a little before sent thither Thomas Stanley to besiege it and soone after tooke it himselfe But the Duke of Albany failed him and had underhand strooke up a peace with his Brother of Scotland yet Richard of Gloucester accomplished the expedition very honourably and happily Thus Polidore But to enlarge what he reporteth desertively and abridgeth King Edward notwithstanding that negligence noted by him levied strong forces the King of Scotland being as vigilant in that businesse and made the Duke of Glocester his Generall under whom went Sir Henry Peircy Earle of Northumberland the Lord Stanley after Earle of Derby the Lord Lovell the Lord Gray of Grestocke the Lord Scroope of Bolton the Lord Fitzhugh Sir William Parre of Rose a noble and valiant Gentleman Father of the Lord Parr of Rose Kendall and Fitzhugh and Grandfather to Sir William Parr Earle of Essex and Marquesse of Northampton Sir Edward Woodville Lord Rivers Brother to the Queene Elizabeth with many other of Eminency and Noble quality The Duke marched first with his Armie to the borders and frontieres of Scotland giving the overthrow to such as resisted then made up to the strong Towne of Barwicke which at that instant the King of Scotland possessed by the surrender of Henry 6 and had the like successe with those Troopes of the Enemies he met and found about the Towne After a short siege the besieged upon Summons and Parlee finding themselves too weake to make good the opposition were easily perswaded to be at quiet and safely rendring the Towne and Castle vpon very slender conditions as is recorded in the Chronicle of Croyland Having plac't a Governour and Garrison in the Towne he continued his march towards Edenborough with a purpose to besiege and sacke it but was met in the halfe way by Embassadours from thence who after a favourable audience and accesse craved in the name of their King and Nation implore a League or at least a Truce betweene the Kingdomes offering so faire conditions for it that the Generall after a deliberate consultation granted to suspend or intermit all hostile proceedings with a faire entertainement to their persons and a publike Edict throughout the Army that no English should offer any violence or offence to any Scot or their goods and by this provident truce that ruddy storme which seemed terrible to impend was diverted and made a calme preface to the famous League afterward concluded by him when he was K. and Iames the 4 th of Scotland But whilst these imployments staid him there newes arrived of King Edwards death and was muttered very doubtfully by some who had confidence and ground to suppose it hastened by treachery The Nobles at London and in the South parts speedily call the Duke home by their private letters and free approbation to assume the Protection of the Kingdome and two Princes committed unto him by the King Rex Edwardus 4. filios suos Richardo Duci Glocestriae
in tutelam moriens tradidit as Polidore testifieth The Army and affaires of those parts disposed he came to Yorke where he made a few daies stay to pay some religious Offices and Ceremonies to the manes and exequies of the deceased King so hastned to London having in his Traine besides his owne ordinary Retinue sixe hundred voluntary Gentlemen of the North parts brave Horsemen and gallantly mounted upon the way he dispatched certaine seguall messengers to the young King who was then at Ludlow Castle in Wales to provide for his honourable Conduct of London where he arrived not long after the Lord Protector and was magnificently received and lodged at the Bishops Pallace his Brother the Duke of Yorke was then with the Queene Mother in the Pallace at Westminster who out of a pretended motherly care rather indeed her pollicy would not let him stirre from her to see the King who had desired his company but instantly takes Sanctuary with him in the Abbey The Lord Protector sollicites her by some Noblemen to send or bring him to the King which she peremptorily stood against untill Cardinall Bourser Archbishop of Canterbury was made the Messenger who so gravely and effectually perswaded with her that she delivered him the Duke After some dayes respite in London-House the King according to ancient custome was to remove Court to the Tower of London the Castle Royall and chiefe House of safety in the Kingdome untill the more weighty affaires of the State and such troubles if any hapned as often interceeds the alterations of Raignes were well dispatched and composed some threatning evils of that kind being discovered and extinguished before the Protector came to London And untill all things proper to his Coronation were in preparation and readinesse the Lord Protector still being neere unto him with all duty and care and did him homage as Honourable Phillippe de Comines Le Du● de Glocester avoit fait homage á son N●ph●n Comme á so● Roy souverain Seigneur but this Testimony being a voucht by one who loved not the Protector may leave more credit who sayes when the young King approacht towards London the Lord Protector his Unckle rode barehead before him and in passing along said with a loud voice to the People Behold your Prince and Soveraigne to which the Prior of Croyland who lived in those dayes reporteth Richardus Protector nihil reverentiae quod capite nudato genu Flecto aliove quolibet corporis habitur insubdito exigit regine potisuo facere distulit aut recusavit And why should these services and his constancy be judged lesse real to the Son then to the Father his care providence looking pregnantly through all turnes that concern'd him and his State and therefore timely remov'd such of Danger as were vehemently suspected for their Ambition and insolent assuming Power and Authoritie not proper to them and so stood ill-affected to their Prince and turbulent Maligners of the Government And thus his strict justice to some begat the envie of others as it fell out in the time of King Edward betweene those of the blood Royall with whom the ancient Barons sided and the Reginists who being stubborne haughty and incomputable of the others nearnesse to the King stir'd up Competitions and turbulencies among the Nobles and became so insolent and publique in their pride and Out-rages towards the people that they forc't their murmurs at length to bring forth mutiny against them But finding the Kings inclination gentle on that side they so temper'd it as they durst extend their malice to the Prince of the blood and chiefe Nobilitie many times by slanders and false suggestions privately incensing the King against them who suffered their insinuations too farre whilst his credulitie stood abus'd and his favour often alienated from those whose innocence could understand no cause for it The Engines of those intrusions and supplantations were the Grayes the Woodvills and their kinsmen who held a strong beliefe to have better'd their power with the young King their kinsman and then they might have acted their Rodomontades and injuries in a higher straine remov'd the Prince of the blood and set up what limits they pleased to their Faction and Power during the minoritie of the King and after too whilst the Queene Mother could usurpe or hold any superintendency upon the Soveraigntie or her Sonne These things and the mischiefes that seem'd to superimpend the State equally poiz'd and consulted by the Lord Protector and others of the principall Nobilitie it was resolv'd to give a timely remedy or period unto them all which Sir Thomas Moore acknowledgeth and confesseth the Nobles of the Kingdome had reason to suspect and feare the Queenes Kindred would put their power more forward when their Kinsman came to be King then in his Fathers time although then their insolencies were intollerable And this Author further acknowledgeth there had bin a long grudge heart-burning betweene the King and Queenes Kindred in the time of King Edward which the King although he were partiall for the Queenes Faction was earnest to reconcile but could not And after he was dead the Lord Gray Marquesse Dorset the Lord Rich. Gray and the Lord Rivers made full accompt to sway the young King and having learn'd it was best fishing in a troubled streame threw all occasions of dissention amongst the great men of this Kingdome that so whilst the other Nobles were busie in their owne quarrells they might take an opportunitie to assault and supplant where they hated And for provision towards the Designe the Marquesse had secretly gain'd a great quantity of the Kings treasure out of the Tower and the Woodevills made good preparations of Armes of which some were met with by the way as they were conveighed close packed in C●rts It was therefore high time for the Protector and ancient Nobilitie to looke circumspectly about them and fasten on all occasions that might prevent such growing Treacheries which could be no way but by taking off their heads Which being resolved the Marquesse of Dorset the Lord Richard Gray their Uncle Sir Anthony Woodeville Lord Rivers and some other of that kindred and Faction were apprehended and at Pomfret executed onely the Marquesse by some private notice given him fled and tooke Sanctuary At the same time the Lord Hastings who much favoured the Queene and her partie especially the Marquesse therefore the more to be suspected dangerous was Arrested for High Treason and in the Tower upon the Greene had his head chop 't off an Act of more strange and severe appearance then the other having the esteeme of a good Subject and generally supposed much affectionate to the Protector and the Duke of Buckingham And Sir Thomas Moore reporteth that the Protector was most unwilling to have lost him but that he saw him joyning with their Enemies and so his life had ill requited them and their purpose this was a Dilemma But
the King might beleeve he was forward to come as near his desires as in honour could be he engaged himselfe to keep so carefull and vigilant a watch upon them that they should have no more power to endanger him then if they were in strict Prison This being returned though not agreable to the Kings hope and wishes yet bearing such a Caution of Honour and Wisdome he remained satisfied and so it paused for the space of eight yeares as I conjecture for the King made this demand in the twelfth yeare of his Raigne 1472 all which time he was very intent to preserve the League with good Summes of Mony and costly Presents In the twentieth of his Raigne 1480 he received intelligence that the Earle of Richmond had stird up fresh Embers and new friends in the French Court to blow them and that the French King had dealt by solicitation of the Earle of Pembrook and others privately to get the Earl of Richmond and offered great Sums to the Duke of Brittaine This gave new disturbance and the King must now by the best meanes he could renue his former s●te to the Duke of Brittaine for which employment he intrusts Doctor Stillington Bishop of Bath his Secretary a man of a Wise Learned and Eloquent endeavour of good acquaintance and credit with the Duke of Brittaine who gave him an honourable and respective entertainement The Bishop after he had prepared him by the earnest of a very rich present tenders the Summe of his Employment not forgetting what he was now to Act and what to promise on the Kings part And for a more glorious insinuation tells him how the King had elected him into the noble Society of St. Georges Order as the most honourable intimation he could give of his love to qualifie all exceptious too and jealousies assures him the King had no intent to the Earle of Richmond but what was answerable to his owne worth and quality of the Kings Kinsman having declared a propensity and purpose to bestow one of his daughters upon him The Duke well mollified and perswades delivered the Earle by a strong Guard to the Bishop at St. Maloes Port a change of much passion and amazement to him whose sufferings tooke hold upon the affable disposition of the Noble Peir de Landois Treasurer to the Duke who had the Earle in Charge and Conduct to St. Malo He urges the cause from him of his so altered and present condition with Protestation of all the aide he could The Earle thus fairely and happily provoked and perceiving the sparkles of his sorrow had hapt into a tender bosome freely exposed himselfe and with such an overcomming Countenance of teares and sighes framed his own Story and prest Landois that it so wrought upon his temper he perswaded the Earle to put on clearer hopes assures him there should some meanes be found to shift the Tempest thereupon writes a sad Relation to the Duke to move his compassion and favour and knowing the Baron Chandais a great man in credit with him well affected to the Earle by a long and reciprocall affection he repaired to his house neare Saint Malo and prevailed with him to use his power with the Duke for returning the Earle who posted to Vanes where the Court was then and tooke the Duke at such an advantage by suggesting his credulity abused and cunningly drawne into this contract by the King that there was a Post dispatcht to stay the Earle In that interim Landois had not been Idle to find a way to let the Earle escape into the Abbey Church of St. Malo where he claimed the benefit of the holy Asyle which was easily contrived by corrupting his Keepers But the Duke to stand cleare of the Kings suspition sent over Maurice Brumell to satisfie him that the Earle according to promise was sent to Saint Malo there delivered to his servants deputed whose negligence let him escape and that he had demanded him of the Covent who denyed to render him without security caution that he should be continued a prisonerin Vanes with as much courtesie as formerly Now being it was falne into those strict and peremptory termes and within the contumacie of such lawlesse persons where he could not use power he yet faithfully protested no suite from the French King or any other should draw him from his former promise All which he religiously performed whilst King Edward lived the space of twelve yeares after Phillip de Comines in which circle of time it may with admiration be observed through what changes and interchanges of hazards dangers and difficulties he was preserved Soone after King Edwards decease King Richard renewed and continued the Treaty by Sir Thomas Hutton of Yorkshire receiving the same satisfaction in Answer but was failed in the performance and so dishonourably that it then appeared the Duke had kept in with Edward more for feare then for love or honour the name of Edward and the Earle of March being indeed accounted terrible where his victorious sword was drawne which breach of the Dukes was not left unpunished at least as that age then guessed by a divine revenge for having married Margaret Daughter and Co-heire of Francis de Mountford Duke of Brittaine she dying without issue he married Margaret Daughter of Gaston de Foix King of Navarr by whom he had one only daughter Anne married to the French King Charles 8. Thus Duke Francis dyed without issue male the Dutchy being swallowed up and drowned in the Lillies or Crapands of France and with his Family of Brittaine irrecoverably lost and absorpted Thus much for the jealousie and feares of those two Kings now to the progresse of ou● Story where the Barons and Commons with one generall dislike and an universall negative voice refused the sonnes of King Edward not for any ill will or malice but for their disabilities and incapacities the opinions of those times too held them not legitimate and the Queene Elizabeth Gray or Woodvill no lawfull Wife nor yet a Woman worthy to be the Kings Wife by reason of her extreame unequall quality For these and other causes the Barons and Prelates unanimously cast their Election upon the Protector as the most worthiest and nearest by the experience of his owne deservings and the strength of his Alliance importuning the Duke of Buckingham to become their Speaker who accompanied with many of the chiefe Lords and other grave and learned persons having Audience granted in the great Chamber at Baynards Castle then Yorke-house thus addrest him to the Lord Protector SIR May it please your Grace to be informed that after much grave Consultation amongst the Noble Barons and other worthy persons of this Realme it stands concluded and resolved that the sons of King Edward shall not raigne for who is not sensible how miserable a fortune and dangerous estate that Kingdome must be in where a childe is King according to the Wise man Vaetibi
terra cujus Rex est Puer But here Sir there is exception of further consequence against them That they were not borne in lawfull Marriage the King having than another Wife living Dame Elizabeth Butler Besides the great dishonour and reproach he received by disparaging his Royall bloud with a woman so far unmeet for his bed These Considerations have resolutely turned all their eyes and Election towards your Grace as only worthy of it by your singular vertues and that interest in the Crownes of England and of France with the Rights and Titles by the high Authority of Parliament entailed to the Royall bloud and issue of Richard Duke of Yorke whose lawfull begotten Sonne and heire you are which by a just course of inheritance and the Common Lawes of this Land is divolv'd and come to you And unwilling that any inferiour Bloud should have the Dominion of this Land are fully determined to make your Grace King to which with all willingnesse and alacrity the Lords and people of the Northerne parts concurre And the Maior Aldermen and Commons of this City of London have all allowed and gladly embraced this generall Choice of your Grace and are come hither to beseech you to accept their just Election of which they have chosen me their unworthy Advocate and Speaker I must therefore againe crave leave in the behalfe of all to desire your Grace will be pleased in your noble and gracious zeale to the good of this Realme to cast your eyes upon the growing distresses and decay of our Estate and to set your happy hand to the redresse thereof for which we can conceive no abler remedy then by your undertaking the Crowne and Government which we doubt not shall accrew to the laud of God the profit of this Land and your Graces happinesse This speech of the Duke is recorded by Doctor Morton Sir Thomas Moore and other Chronicles and Historians to which the Protector gave this reply MY most noble Lords and my most loving friends and deare Country-men Albeit I must confesse your request most respective and favourable and the points and necessities alledged and urged true and certaine yet for the entire love and reverend respect I owe to my Brother deceased and to his Children my Princely Couzens you must give me leave more to regard mine honour and fame in other Realmes for where the truth and certaine proceedings herein are not knowne it may be thought an ambition in me to seeke what you voluntarily proffer which would charge so deep a reproach and staine upon my honour and sincerity that I would not beare for the worlds Diademe Besides you must not thinke me ignorant for I have well observed it there is more difficulty in the Government of a Kingdome then pleasure especially to that Prince who would use his Authority and Office as he ought I must therefore desire that this and my unfained Protestations may assure you the Crowne was never my ayme nor suits my desire with yours in this yet I shall thinke my selfe much beholding unto you all in this Election of me and that hearty love I find you beare me and here protest that for your sakes it shall be all one whether I be your King or no for I will serve my Nephew faithfully and carefully with my best counsels and endeavours to defend and preserve him and this Kingdome nor shall there want readinesse in me to attempt the recovery of that hereditary right in France which belongs to the Kings of England though of late negligently and unhappily lost There the Protector became silent and thought it not safe in his discretion or policy to open all the disgusts he had of the Soveraignty for that would have been matter of Exprobation of the Barons and toucht too neare the quicke though he had well observed by sundry experiences of the leading times and moderne too the inconstant ebbing and flowing of their dispositions how variable and apt they were to take up any occasion of change pursuing their Kings if once stirr'd so implacably that many times they never left without death or deposing Examples he had in the Raignes of King Edward his Brother and Henry the sixth not long before that in the time of Richard the second and his Grandfather Edward the second more anciently the extreame troubles and distresse of King Iohn and Henry the third all by the Barons being dreadfull warnings and insolent monuments of their haughtinesse and Levitie and this was Altamente repostum with the wise Prince But the Duke of Buckingham thinking the Protector set too slight a consideration upon so great a Concernment and the affection tender'd by himselfe and the Nobilitie and over hearing something he privately spake to the Lord Maior and Recorder tending to his mislike for an Epilogue or close to his former Oration he thus freely addes SIR I must now by the Priviledge of this Imployment and in the behalfe of those and my Countrey adde so much freedome unto my dutie as to tell your Grace It is immoveably resolved by the Barons and people that the Children of King Edward shall not Reigne over them Your Grace hath heard some causes nor need I intimate how these Estates have entred and proceeded so offensively to other men and so dangerously to themselves as is now too late to recall or retire And therefore they have fixt this Election upon you whom they thinke mostable and carefull for their safetie But if neither the generall good the earnest Petitions of the Nobility and Commonalty can move you wee most humbly desire your Answer and leave to Elect some other that may be worthy of the Imperiall Charge in which wee hope wee shall not incurre your displeasure considering the desperate necessitie of our welfare and Kingdome urges it And this is our last Suit and Petition to your Grace The Protector toucht by this round and braving farewell which made him very sensible For as Sir Thomas Moore disertly confesseth the Protector was so much moved with these words that otherwise of likelyhood he would never have inclined to their Suit And saith That when he saw there was no remedy but he must either at that instant take the Crowne or both he and his heires irrecoverably let it passe to another paradventure one that might prove an Enemy to him and his especially if Richmont stept in betwixt whom and this Prince the hatred was equally extreame Therefore it behoved the Protector to Collect himselfe and fixing his Consideration upon the effect of that necessitie they last urged gave this Reply MY most Noble good Lords and most loving and faithfull friends the better sense of your loves and most eminent inconveniencies insinuated by your Noble Speaker hath made me more serious to apprehend the benefit of your proffer and Election And I must confesse in the meditation thereof I find an alteration in my selfe not without some distraction when I consider all the Realme so bent
by the same Titles This was as bitter as short and doubly ill taken First because it came with a Repulse Next because it seemed to proceed from a suspition and as a tax of his Loyaltie and begets another pretence of exception in the Dukes bosome which he called a breach of promise in the King for not joyning the Prince his Sonne in Marriage with the Lady Anne Stafford his Daughter but all those Colours were but to give complexion to the face of his defection the true cause was well devined and found out by the King his Ambition and aime to be Soveraigne rays'd by an overweening of that Royall Blood he supposed to be in his descent from the said Thomas de Woodstock c. Sonne of a King and yet he was not resolutely determined to make his Claime to the Crowne this way nor to attempt the Kingdome by Armes untill those embers which as it were lay but luke-warme in his thoughts were quickned and revived by the animation of Doctor Morton Bishop of Ely then a Privie Counsellour though he stood in some umbrage and disgrace in the Court with the King for his practises against him and was at this time in the custody of the Duke of Buckingham as a Prisoner more expressely for that being a Privie Counsellour he had given secret advertisement to the Earle of Richmond of what passed in the secret Councells of the King To this advantage he applyes that which he had wittily drawne from the Dukes discontent and passionate discourses at times passed By which perceiving the glance of his Ambition and that deriv'd from the great opinion of his Royall Blood he pregnantly tickles and feeds that humour untill he had soothed him past his owne strength or retyrement for his secret drift was to apt and prepare the Duke to a Rebellion at any hand though not to set his owne Title on foot yet layes open the advantage of the present times to it proposing flat usurpation and tyranny against the King Regnant and the strong likelyhood of his Deposing This lifts the Duke something higher in his owne opinion But comming to a pause and perceiving Richmond was the man they had aimed at for this great blow who had conditioned by Oath to marry the Lady Elizabeth for the Countesse of Richmond had by the meanes of Doctor Lewis conciliated the friendship of the Queene Mother to that Alliance and to draw as many of the House of Yorke into the Action as were at her Devotion that many Potent Lords and some Forraigne Princes had promised their ayds he began to retreat and conceive he had taken the wrong path to his journyes end for his Title and Claime must be nothing if those of Yorke and Lancaster were united And that the Earle who stood betweene him and his Aimes was not onely resolute to attempt but strongly ayded for it himselfe not able upon such an instant to raise a power able to encounter much lesse give check unto his violent Ambition therefore concludes all against himselfe and that it would fall out farte better to side with the times a consideration which doubtlesse would highly stirre a spirit where so much greatnesse of opinion and ambition was And the Doctor discerning this disgust and that he was startl'd in his hope and resolusion to recover him an intire man not let him stand by an idle spectator in so meritorious an action he opens a private way of honour and satisfaction suggesting him the first and greatest man the Kingdome was to know next the King And finding his particular distasts to King Richard of quickest sense and argument to him he freshly urges and as it were refricates each particle to the greatnesse of his spirit and discontent the Duke replyes not much at that time but busie in his thoughts leaves him and presently fashions a visite to the Countesse of Richmond a Lady of a politick and contriving bosome to know the credit of his intelligence which she insinuates with arguments so full of circumstance and honour besides her Sons indearment to him their hearnesse of blood affirming the Dukes Mother a Somerset the reciprocall affinitie betweene her Father and his and then the bravery and Religion in the Cause that the Duke now forsakes himselfe and fully gives up his resolution and promise to her thus prepar'd he finds out the Lord Stanley the Marquesse of Dorset Edward Courtney Earle of Devonshire and his Brother the Bishop of Exeter Sir Iohn Bowrchier Sir Iohn Wells Robert Willowby Edward Woodvill Thomas Arundel who had severally raised forces and intended their Rendezvous neere Glocester so to march for Dorsetshire there to receive the Earle and the Duke with his Welchmen But the King was early in his preparation to prevent them before they could unite or the Earle of Richmond arrive there else they had fastened a most dangerous Blow upon him And at this full stop in these progresses me thinkes wee may observe how uncertainely in our strongest valuations we are our owne and that our greatest Confidences and humane Policies are but heavie weights hung at trembling Wyers while our expectations are apt to be flattered and out-goe themselves but are overtaken in their Successe and Fates as was this great Mans for their Forces neither met by Sea nor Land the English being scatter'd by a suddaine and huge inundation that so dangerously over-flowed all passages they could not joyne nor passe the River Severne while the suddainnesse and strangenesse of it stroke the Souldiers with such alteration that most part of them forsooke the Duke and left him to himselfe The Earle of Richmond was as unfortunately met at Sea by a great tempest upon the coasts of England The King took the advantage this accident offered and pursued the Duke not only with a galloping Army but with Edicts Proscriptions that promised a thousand pounds in mony whereunto some Writers adde so much Lands as was worth one hundred pounds per annum to any that should bring in the Duke who was betrayed and brought to the King then at Salisbury by Humphry Banister an eternall brand having lived by this mans service and now thought treacherously to subsist by his Ruine The Duke being examined freely confessed all and for it lost his head in the field according to Marshall Law used by Armies in November An. Dom. 1484. An. 2 Rich. 3. And here if wee view him in the figure of his Ambition or Fate wee shall find Doctor Morton his Caput Argoll or the malignant Planet of his fortune who as Sir Thomas Moore confesseth and affirmeth by his Politick Drifts and Pride advanced himselfe and brought the Duke to this ruine The rest fled some into Sanctuaries others into Brittaine to the Earle of Richmond and some into Flanders all their Plots being now how to be safe And thus farre King Richard in the Voyage of his Affaires had a promising Gale wee will therefore here cast
Anchor a while and claspe up this first Booke with the Relation of his better Fortunes Explicit Lib. I. THE SECOND BOOKE OF THE HISTORY OF KING RICHARD THE THIRD The Argument of the Second Booke THe Earle of Richmond practiseth with Forreigne Princes and with the English Nobles for assistance and Forces to make his first and second invasions of England He came first to Poole with ill successe secondly to Milford cum bonis avibus What Bastards are and whereof they are capable who be of the House of Lancaster how Lancaster and Beaufort or Sommerset differ Bastards of Kings must not take the Sirnames of the King or Kingdome The honourable priviledge of the name of Plantagenet Prince Edward and Queene Anne John de la Poole proclaimed Heire of the Kingdom by Richard the Third Bastards of John Duke of Lancaster made legitimate and capable of Offices Honour and of Heritage by Richard 2 and the Parliament What the Legitimation of the Pope is Armes and Names of Princes Bastards The Nobility of King Henry 7 th He affied not much in the Titles of Yorke and Lancaster The Pope giveth to him the Title de jure belli de domo Lancastriae The greatnesse of the Title of Yorke of Counsell and Connsellours The Prerogative of the King in Iudgements and Controversies The Earle of Richmond landeth at Milford Haven His entertainment there and in Wales His aptnesse for divers wives he marcheth to Bosworth King Richard and he sight Richard is overcome and slaine also the Duke of Norfolke by the Earle of Oxford ut Creditur The Earle of Richmond is straight Crowned King in the field The fatall Errour of King Richard Kings loved Combate The Titles of King Henry 7 th Kings go not now to war● Cruelties committed upon the body of King Richard He was attainted of Treason though against the Laws of Nature and of Royall Majesty with many of his followers and servants The Earle of Surrey how released out of prison his Geneology from Hewardus walter de Buck and his Progeny The Second Booke WE left King Richard the Third in the growth of a flourishing and promising Estate and his fate now in the rise of a peacefull and prosperous Raigne of a calme and hopefull presage But Fortune that lends her smiles as Exactors do mony to undoe the Debtor soone cald for the Principall and Interest from this Prince to whom she was meerly Novercall and he might well call her with the expert Heros in Euripides fortuna diurna i. e. fortune of a daies life for in her best mood she is most slippery in her favours and redious in her mischiefes as was aptly considered by a grave man Fortuna adversas res cupido animo inducit secundas parco she is a mother but a little while a stepdame a long time and for ever to some here then we are aggressing into the turbulent and luctuall times which were towards the end and period of his Life and Raigne the formall and finall causes happening from the invasions attempted by the Earle of Richmond I will begin the Second Booke there and may say invasions because he twice invaded the Kingdome though by errour or ignorance of our Vulgar Historians they are confounded and made one which corruptly maimes the Story and conceales and pretermits some very remarkeable agitations particularly the true cause of the Duke of Buckinghams ill successe and defeate is misunderstood or not at all known To come to it therefore more certainly we must take notice of the first preparation by the Earle of Richmond who was resolved to advance his claime that way and unbosomes himselfe to the Duke of Brittaine his possibility and advantage by friends if he could raise but sufficient strength to set him safely in England The Duke gives him all good wishes to his undertaking but opposes against all Arguments of drawing him in first his Amity and League with England which in honour and justice he was not to violate Then his wants by the long Civill and cruell Warres with his Barons that had so exhausted his Coffers as durst he dispense with the former cause yet that might render him excused being unable to furnish him at least in so short a time as his expedition required beyond which answer for the present the Earle thought not fit to presse him But having a prompt and strong affiance in his good fortune makes up to some of the Dukes most honourable and powerfull Friends to lay siege that way to him by private advantages for by his ingenious demeanour he had won the inclinations of many great ones being Master of a pleasant acute wit which was well supplied in him by the straine of all Courtly Acts to those he had the helpe of the French Tongue which he spoke excellently well and to give all the more plausible accesse and influence hee was as Philip de Comines who knew him testifies a very compleat and well featur'd Gentleman which makes the rule certaine and well animating Gratior est pulchro veniens e corpore virtus The beauties of the mind more gratious are When as the bodies features are more faire In the number of those eminent persons he had gained during his faire imprisonment more fortunately he had applyed himself unto the Lady Margaret Dutchesse of Brittaine Daughter of Gaston de Foix a great man in the Westerne parts of France whose Ancestors were well affected to the English and Madam de Bevier the Dutches so farre countenanced him in his designe that she became an earnest suitor unto the Duke her husband and prevailed both for his liberty and aide for caution and pledge herein he was only to kneele at the High Altar before the blessed Sacrament in the Cathedrall Church of Saint Vannes there to make his religious Vow justly and truely to observe what restitution he privately had promised to the Duke and Dutches which protestation made he had three Ships well rigged and furnished with Men Armes and Victuals as my Author relates Au Conte de Richmond furent aux despens du duo trois grosses Navires de Brittannia charges de gens de Armes c. qui se misent in mer. But by the favour of this Brittish Writer the Earle staid many daies at Saint Malo to receive and send intelligence and made it the beginning of October 1484 before he came to Saint Poole in Dorset where he lay some time at Anchor to send his Boates a shore as Explorers or Spies for discovery of the Coasts where the Kings Armie or his friends lay who returned without any particular satisfaction but that there was many Armed men about the Country The Earle who in all things was circumspect and cautiously rimerous resolved immediately to loose from thence but the night following a terrible tempest constrained them with all hast to weigh Anchor and make into the Maine the Storme and darkenesse of the night severing and dispersing their
Ships some to the Coasts of Brittaine but the Earle himselfe to the Coasts of Normandy And this was the successe of his first invasion which though it bore an inauspicate face it proved of a friendly event For had he landed about Poole or but stayed till the Kings Ships had come in that lay waiting not far off he had been a lost man every way the King being not only active to meet their contrivements but had some advantage upon them by the close intelligence of a friend and knew that the Forces of the Duke of Buckingham with the Earle of Devon and others were to meet neare Gloucester and march in their full and united strength towards the sea-Coasts of Dorset there to receive the Earle But the King encountred with the Duke of Buckinghams Army beate him and cut off his head before any of the rest could come at him daily putting the ordinary bands of these West Countries in a ready posture for guard of their Coasts and that if the Earle of Richmond or any of his French Forces came a shore they were to be entertained courteously by them pretending themselves of the Duke of Buckinghams Army who had routed the Kings Party and were sent thither to receive and conduct the Earle with his men to London This was the projected end But it is of remarkeable note to look into the various paths of this Earles fortune and how they brought him to his journies end when they appeared most doubtfull and threatning not only gave him advantage by the good successe of his Enterprises but made the most adverse accidents serve as prosperous unto them for was it not happy the storme at Poole drove him from the Coasts of England and no lesse fortunate that the Duke of Buckingham was defeated whereas had the Duke atcheived that day the Earle of Richmond not being there who was to be present in person and Generall of the field we may with reason conjecture his Emulation and Policy would have accumulated the honour and fortune of the Conquest to his owne pretended Title such Spirits like the Sea where they intrude or win making their advantage their right and not easily surrender so much is the engagements of Ambition too strong for all ties of faith and right The example is observable in the Earle of Richmond himselfe who although he knew the Children of the Duke of Clarence and others had better right to the Crowne yet once possest would not resigne no not to his owne Sonne whilst he could hold it nor did he want his Presidents as all men know who know any thing And to take all Relations in our way that may be levell with our Story betwixt this and his second Invasion some other passages offer themselves as an interim and not impertinent to supply the Readers observation Amongst other the Death of the Kings deare and only Sonne at least Legitimate who dyed in the Castle of Middleham in Yorkeshire in the Month of Aprill Anno Dom. 1484 which newes gave such a passionate Charge upon the Nature and Affections of the King and Queene being then in the Castle of Nottingham that as mine Author saith Subitis doloribus insanire videbantur Yet the King being a man of an equall moderation to his courage puts it into the Scale of his other worldly encounters and as it was said of Iulius Caesar that he soone passed the death of his only daughter Iulia most pretious in his affection Et tam facile dolorem hunc quam omnia vicit So King Richard tempered his griefe and businesse so together that the one made him not unsensible nor the other negligent but as the Prior of Croyland telleth did all things gravely and discreetly as before Rex Richardus nihilominus tamen suam partem defensione vacaverit although the Queene could not hold so proportioned a temper over her griefe the tendernesse of her Sexe letting it breake upon her in a more passionate manner and with such an Impression that it became her sickenesse past recovery languishing in weaknesse and extremity of sorrow untill she seemed rather to overtake death than death her which was not long after the Princes and added not a little to the Kings sufferings and sorrowes though traducing Spirits have charged him with shortning her life by poyson or some other practice which are prestigious and blacke Comments falsly plac't in the Margent of his Story and may mere nearely touch the credit of the Authors than his if we judiciously take a view of him and his Actions and looke upon the indulgent and active care for his Country which he gave a constant and sincere expression of instantly after his Sonnes death when by the deliberation and consent of the Barons he was industrious to thinke of a Successour and to nominate such an one whose bloud and worth might make him equally Heire to the Crown and the peoples affection with the highest approbation of the Kingdome and none more neare to either then Sir Iohn de la Poole Earle of Lincolne Sonne and Heire of Iohn de la Poole Duke of Suffolke and of the Lady Elizabeth Plantagenet Duchesse of Suffolke the Sister and Heire of this King Richard who was declared and proclaimed Heire apparant to the Kingdome This was a Contrecarre to the Faction of Richmond and indeed what greater affront could thwart them if those of the House of Lancaster or Beaufort were next Heire to the Crowne as the pretenders affirmed for the Earle of Richmond who would likewise have him to be Caput gentis Lancastriae Princeps familiae though they could scarcely prove him not without question I am sure Membrum illius familiae untill he came to be King for it was a question in those times and much disputed whether the Beauforts or Sommersets were of the House of Lancaster or no most true it is the Children of the House of Lancaster being lawfully borne and after Henry Plantagenet Duke of Lancaster had Conquered and deposed Richard the Second were to be held Princes of the Bloud Royall and capable of the Crowne in their naturall and due Order But those of Beaufort or Sommerset were as the Vulgar hath it filij populi or as the Imperiall Juris-consults say liberi vulgo quesiti who by the old Greeks were termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. sine Patre the Doctors of the Spirituall Law drawing the Originem of such children ab illicito damnato coitu of the polluted adulterous bed and so those Beauforts three males and one female begotten by Iohn of Gaunt as he believed according to the Lawes were to be reputed the children of Sir Otho Swinford begotten upon Katherine his Wife in his life time who was daughter of Sir Payen Rovet a French-man dwelling in Beauforts and was Guyen Herald to the Duke of Lancaster His Dutchesse Dona Constantia a most noble and vertuous Lady daughter of Don Pedro King of Castile was living also
Richard pursued him with so much speed and fiercenesse that he forc't him to his Standard And now high in bloud and anger to see his Valour deluded by such a politicke Bravery with his Sword makes way and with his owne hand slew Sir Charles Brandon Standerd-Bearer thinking to have made the next blow as fatall to the Earle but the confluence of Souldiers interjecting rescued him Sir Iohn Cheney being one of the foremost whom the King stroke from his Horse to the Earth But Charged and invironed with multitudes that like a storme came on him Valiant Richard falls the Sacrifice of that day under their cruell Swords so rabious in their execution as if his body must suffer more because they could not kill his better part mangling and wounding his dead Corps whilst it lies drentcht in gore Et Lupus turpes instant morientibus ursi Et quaecunque minor nobilitate fera est As Currs in their kenells will bite and teare the skin of those beasts which in the fields they durst not barke at Occidit in bello miseranda caede Richardus Crinibus attractus dum ferro saeviat hostis And after all to compleate their barbarisme threw his body behind one upon a Jade and so conveyed it to Leicester A story to be thought incredible at least to charitable and modest eares and highly upbraided by the happier and Christian fame of William the Conquerour who severely punished a Souldier but for hacking the thigh of King Harold after he was dead though an Usurper and his perfidious enemy with all noblenesse causing the body to be delivered to his Mother for an honourable interment which was solemnly celebrated in his own Abbey at Waltham The Battle thus fought and won the Victor was Crowned in the field with that Crown K. Rich. wore which the L. Stanley put upon his head salutes him King by the stile of Hen. 7. K. of England c. And Henry Earle of Richmond Son of Edmund ap Meredith ap Teudor alias of Hadham Earle of Richmond and of Margaret Daughter and Hei●e of Iohn Beaufort Duke of Sommerset attained to the Crowne and had the easier ascent by the oversight and remissnesse of Richard in that Catastrophe of his Raign who gave too much opportunity and scope to the actings of his Enemies when they were under his power and arme And in the Fortune of his judgment at the closing Scene that did not better presuppose his Enemy too prudent and reserved to trust the advantage he had upon so sharpe and single an hazzard But Richard beleeving he had the odds in courage and monomachie of him which probably might make him Master of the Combate and so of the Field the straite being so desperate too resolved rather to trust to the Fate of his owne Valour then the chance of an uncertaine escape a resolution not so rash and overweening as commendable if we looke upon the very aymes and necessity of it neither is it new or improper for Princes to demand the tryall of campe fight or single Combate personaly in their Armies and to the Generals in their absence William the Conquerour challenged King Harold Before that a Combate was fought betweene Edmund Ironside and Canute the Danish King for the whole Kingdome of England our Richard the first and Edward the first in Palestine proffered the like to some of the Pagan Princes so did Edward the third Henry the fifth with the Kings of France In the last Age the valiant Prince Ia●es the fifth of Scotland in Person challenged Thomas Lord Howard Duke of Norfolke Generall for the King of England who accepted it But the King into his Demands would have the Country or Lands then in Controversie to be made Brabium victoris which was without the Generalls power to engage being the Inheritance of the King his Master but proffers better Lands of his owne upon the Combate which was not accepted so that concluded nothing The better end of these Challenges and Combates being at first levelled from Mercy and Piety for by this single adventure the Innocent bloud of Armies was more then stanched preserved Forraigne Stories brings this home to us and highly Characters their Kings and Generalls in the like examples which this Age draws a Curtaine before as not fit for imitation making too desperate a wound in a setled State and Succession the first who rendred that or some more Politike reason for Princes not to adventure themselves was Phi. the 2 K. of Spain as a late writer ascribeth but is mistaken For the more ancient Histories of Syria and Persia mentions some Kings that refrain'd from Warres long before as Herodotus Diodorus Trogus Pompeius tells us But let us take measure from that Times Wisedome Valour Policy c. to this and wee shall find them but tottering foundations of States which cannot uphold themselves or obvert the least Decree of God when he intends to scourge or alter kingdomes for where such vicissitudes are destin'd the Councells and faculties of men must be darkned and there will fall out all concurrences and advantages to further that purpose So in the extirpation and transferring of Families the Potter in Ieremy breaking one Jarre to make another whose fatall commutations should extimulate the pietie of our natures and make us modest censurers of their events For as wee see things but through a Cloud whilst wee measure them by accidents so wee intrude on Gods providence judging mens actions in their successe while wee over-act our owne Of such a composition was the ill-wishers of King Richard who forgot him not in his grave but indeavoured to be equally cruell to his memory And in November following a Parliament was holden in which he was attainted of High Treason a straine very high to make him guiltie of that being a King he could not commit By the same figure may others who were stiled chiefe ayders and assistants of King Richard in the Battaile of Bosworth as Sir Iohn Howard Duke of Norfolke c. though some would have him retired from the Court all King Richards raigne But Sir Thomas Moore affirmes He was constantly with him and neare his Counsells Sir Thomas Howard Earle of Surrey Sonne and heire apparent to the Duke Francis Lovel Viscount Lovel Sir Walter Devereux Lord Ferrers of Chartley Sir Iohn de la S●uch Sir Robert Harrington Richard Charleton Richard Ratcliffe William Berkley William Catesby Thomas Broughton Iohn Buck Humphrey Stafford Robert Midleton Robert Brokenbury Iohn Kendall Secretary to the King Walter Hopton Ieoffry Saint-German Roger Wake Thomas Billington William Sapcoate William Brampton all Knights and some Heralds at Armes with divers other an Act of Parliament being made to disable and fore-judge them of all manner of Honour State Dignitie Also to ●orfeit all Mannors Castles Lordships Hundreds Franchises L●berties Advowsons Priviledges Nominations Presentations Tenements Rents Suits Reversions Portions Annuities Pensions Rights Hereditaments
State and best of a King both groaned and complained but had not the sting and infection of King Richards adversaries who did not onely as the proverbe saith cum larvis luctare contend with his immortall parts but raked his dust to finde and aggravate exceptions in his grave having learnt their piety from the Comicall Parasite obsequium a●nicos verit as odium parit and finding it as well guerdonable as gratefull to publish their Libels and scandalous Pamphlets a piece of policy and service too to the times and an offence to resent any thing good of him they gave their pens more g●ll and freedome having a copy set by Doctor Morton who h●ad taken his revenge that way and written a Booke in latine against King Richard which came afterward to the hands of Mr. Moore sometime his servant so that here the saying of Darius which after became a proverbe hath place Hoc Caleeamentum consuit Histiaeus induit autem Aristagoras Doctor Morton acting the part of Histiaeus made the Booke and Master Moore like Aristagoras set it forth amplifying and glossing it with a purpose to have writ the full story of Richard the third as he intimateth in the title of his Booke but it should seeme he found the worke so melancholy and uncharitable as dul●d his disposition to it for he began it 1513. when he was Under-sheriffe or Clerke to one of the Sheriffes of London and had the intermission of twenty two yeares which time he tooke up in studies more naturall to his inclination as law and poetry for in them lay his greatest fancy to finish it before he died which was in 1535. but did not yet lift himselfe so happily into the opinion of men that his commendations had more fortune then observation and past him under the attributes of learning and religion though in both he came short of what was ascribed to him for if he understood the Latine and Greeke then held great learning yet was he so farre under the desert of an excellent Scholler as the learned censured him a man of slender reading and Germanus Brixius Irruditus i. unlearned for the sanctity of his life Iohn Baleus who tooke not up his knowledge of him an age off as some of his admirers but from the originall thus gives us his draught Hoc nos probe novimus qui eramus eidem Thomae Moro vi●iniores quod pontisicum pharisaeorum crudelitati ex avaritia subservi●ns omni tyrāng truculentior ferociebat imo insaniebat in eos qui aut Papae primatum aut purgatorium aut mortuorum invo●●tiones aut imaginum cultus aut simile quiddam oliabolicarum imposturarum negabant a vivisi●a Dei veritate ita edocti Consentire hic Harpagus noluit ut Rex Christianus in suo Regno primus esset nec quod ei liceret cum Davide Salomone Iosaphato Ezechia Iosia s●cerdotes Levitas reject● Romanensium Nembrodorum tyrannide in proprio ordinare dominio c. Adding the attribute of tenebri● of veritatis evangelicae perversissimus os●r of obstina●us ●alophanta of impudens Christi adversarius and saith of his end that decollatus suit in Turre Londin●nsi sexto die Iulij Anno Dom. 1535. Capite ad magnum Londini pontem ut proditoribus fieri s●let s●ipiti imposito nihilominus a Papistis pronovo Martyre colitur Thus he became a Martyr and a Saint but we shall finde other cause of his condemnation by his owne testimony for when he stood at the Barre arraigned some exceptions having been urg'd against him for seeming to uphold and maintaine the Popes supremacy in England his reply was he could not see quomodo laicus vel secularis homo possit vel debeat esse caput status spiritualis aut ecclesiastici yet insinuated that this opinion was taken hold off but for a pretext to supplant him the greatest cause of the Kings displeasure being for his withstanding the divorce between him and Katharine of Castile his wife and his second marriage with the Lady Anne Bullen Marquesset of Pembrooke And his owne words spoken to the Judges as they were set downe by his deare friend George Courinus in a short discourse upon his death are non me pudet quamobrem a vobis condemnatus sum videlicet ob id quod nunquam voluerim assentiri in negotium novi matrimonij Regis which uttered after sentence of condemnation when no evasion or subter●ugies would availe must proceed surely from his conscience and before this he wrote a letter to Mr. Secretary Cromwell which I have seene wherein he protested he was not against the King either for his second marriage or for the Churches supremacy But wisheth him good successe in those affaires c. which renders him well looked upon not so stout a Champion for the Pope as many of his partiall friends and Romanists supposed neither so sound in his Religion for I have seene amongst the multitude of writings concerning the conference about the alteration of Religion and suppressing of Churches and Religious houses that his connivance and consent was in it nor could he excuse it with all his policy and wisdome neither had the King ever attempted it had not the Pope and his Agents opposed that second marriage an error and insolency Rome hath ever since repented But it prov'd a happy blow of Justice to this Kingdome cutting of him and his authority which else had hazarded the best Queene that ever was the sacred and eternally honoured Elizabeth to whose growing glory and virtue Master Moore became an early and cruell adversary even before she was in rerum natura To know him further let me referre you to the Ecclesiasticall History of Master Iohn Fox in the raigne of Henry the eight who describes him graphically for his historicall fragment it shewes what great paines he tooke to item the faults and sad fortunes of King Richard the third and how industrious he was to be a time observer it being the most plausible theame his poeticall straine could fall on in those times and could not want acceptance nor credit well knowing in what fame he stood and that the weaker Analysts and Chroniclers of meane learning and lesse judgement would boldly take it upon trust from his pen who tanquam ignotum servum pecus have followed him step by step without consideration or just examination of their occurrents and consequents And the reputation of him and Doctor Morton being both Lord Chancellours of England might easily mislead men part blind who have dealt with King Richard as some triviall clawing Pamphleters and Historicall parasites with the magnificent Prelate Thomas Wolsey Cardinall and Archbishop o Yorke A man of very excellent ingredients and without Peere in his time yet his values had the sting of much detraction and the worth of his many glorious good workes interpreted for vices and excesses to such it must be said quod ab ipso
a Prince and his owne Brother upon so horrid a thing or he indure to heare it Sir Thomas Moore holds King Edward would not ingage his Brother in so butcherly an office there being many reasons that he durst not neither doe his adversaries charge him directly by any credible Author of that time or discover by whom this murther was onely the Prior of Croyland maketh it somewhat suspitious Hoc tempore inventum est corpus regis Henrici sexti exanime in turre Londinarium Par●at Deus spatium poenitentiae ei donet qui●unque sacrilegas manus in Christum Domini ausus immittere unde agens tyranni patiens gloriosi martyris titulum mereantur Tyrannus in the proper construction being Rex for whosoever is Rex is Tyrannus according to the ancient signification for amongst the Greeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was used for a King simply good or bad and this some hold makes against King Edward Richard being Duke of Gloucester then yet so doubtfully as may be refelled by good authority for it is the opinion of very grave men Henry the sixth was not murthered but died of naturall sicknesse and extreame infirmity of body Rex Henricus sextus ab annis jam multis ex accidente sibi aegritu●ine qua●dam animi incurreret infirmitatem sic aeger corpore impos mentis permansit diutius this considered with the aggravation of his griefe and sorrow in the losse of his Crown and liberty being then a prisoner the overthrow of all his friends and forces in the Battaile of Teuxbury but above all the death of his Sonne the Prince might master a stronger heart and constitution then his in a shorter time which opinion is received and alleadged by a learned and discreet Gentleman The occasion of the murther of King Henry the sixth hath no other proofe but the malitious affirmation of one man for many other men more truly did suppose that he died of meere griefe and melancholy when he heard the overthrow of his cause and friends with the slaughter of the Prince his Sonne And Iohannes Majerus saith it was reported King Henry the sixth died of griefe and thought Concerning the slaughter of the Prince his onely Sonne it is noted to be casuall and made suddaine by his owne insolence not out of any pretended malice or premeditated treachery and so it cannot be called wilfull murther for the King demanding him why he invaded his Kingdome his reply was he might and ought to doe it in defence and preservation of the right which the King his Father and his heires had in the Crowne and maintained this lofty answer so peremtorily and boldly the King in rage strooke him with his fist as some say armed with a Gantlet and instantly the Noblemen attending as George Duke of Clarence Marquesse Dorset the Lord Hastings and others drew their swords upon the Prince and killed him which they would make the particular fact of Duke Richard But to the contrary I have seene in a faithfull Manuscript Chronicle of those times that the Duke of Gloucester onely of all the great persons stood still and drew not his sword the reasons to credit this are first it might be in his meere sence of honour seeing so many drawn upon him there was no need of his or in his respects to the Princes Wife who as Iohannes Majerus saith was in the roome and neare akinne to the Dutchesse of Yorke his Mother and to whom the Duke was also very affectionate though secretly which he soone after demonstrated in marrying her nay this Duke bore such a sence of noble actions in his bosome that mislikeing the obscure and meane buriall of Henry the sixth this Princes Father he caused his corps to be taken from Chertsey and to be Honourably conveyed to the Royall and stately Chappell of Windsor ordained for Kings And Sir Thomas Moore saith further he was suspected to have the contriving part in the Duke of Clarence his Brothers death yet confesseth it was commonly said Richard opposed himselfe against the unnaturall proceedings of the King both privately and publiquely and the truth is it was the Kings owne immoveable and inexplorable doome who thought it justly and necessarily his due for Clarence stood guilty of many treasons and great ones and by his ingratidude had so forfe●ted himselfe to the Kings displeasure that no friend durst move in his behalfe this the King did afterward acknowledge with some discontent when his wrath had cooled as we may guesse in this expression of his O infaelicem ●ratrem pro cujus salute ne●o homo rogavit yet Polidor Virgil doth not rightly understand here as I conjecture by the sequell but let us interpret that a little and take up another accusation which puts into the way That Richard Duke of Gloucester should scandall the birth of the King his Brother with basterdy and alleadge it for a speciall matter in Doctor Shawes Sermon that he should fame King Edward the fourth a bastard and that the Dutchesse his Mother had wanton familiarity with a certaine Gentleman this he might erroneously scatter in the Pulpit and take it up on the like intelligence by which in the same Sermon he called her to whom King Edward was betrothed before his marriage with the Lady Grey Elizabeth Lucy whose name was for a certaine Ellenor Butler alias Talbot so called by King Richard and written in the Records This drift had been too grosse for King Richard to lay an imputation of whoredome upon his owne Mother a virtuous and honourable Lady being it cast also a shame and basterdy upon himselfe for if she offended in one she might as likely offend in another and in the rest And to quit him of it Sir Thomas Moore Richard Graf●on Mr. Hall say that King Richard was much displeased with the Doctor when he heard the relation which the Duke of Buckingham also affirmed in his speech to the Lord Mayor of London That Doctor Shaw had incurred the great displeasure of the Protectour for speaking so dishonourably of the Dutchesse his Mother That he was able of his owne knowledge to say he had done wrong to the Protectour therein who was ever known to beare a reverend and filiall love unto her and to cut of all farther doubt and question it was proved and is testified upon records that George Duke of Clarence onely raised this slander in an extreame hatred to the King his Brother many jarres falling between them by which the King had a just cause to take notice of his malice Visus est dux Clarentiae magis ac magis a regis praesentia desu●trahere in consilio vix verbum proferre neque libenter bibere aut manducare in domo Regis When Richard even in that calamitous time Henry the sixth had overthrowne King Edward in a battaile recovered the Kingdome and proclaimed Edward an usurper so faithfull was his Brother that
he was proclaimed traitor for him and when Queene Margaret besiedged the City of Gloucester with the Kings power the Citizens stood at defiance with her Army and told her it was the Duke of Gloucester his Towne who was with the King and for the King and for him they would hold it his Loyalty bearing a most constant expression in this motto Loualto melie which I have seen written by his owne hand and subscribed Richard Gloucester The other was as constantly undermining at him after confederate with the Earle of Warwicke his Father Allie who had turn'd faith from the King and went into France solliciting for force against England which they brought in fought with the King and overthrew him and so fiercely pursuing the victory that the King was forc't to fly out of the Land Clarence not so satisfied unlesse he might utterly supplant him studied that slander of basterdy to bring in himselfe an heire to the Crowne which was proved and given in expresse evidence against him at his triall and attainder by Parliament amongst sundry other articles of high Treason Videlicet That the said Duke of Clarence had falsly and untruly published King Edward a bastard and not legitimate to Raigne that himselfe therefore was true Heire of the Kingdome the Royalty and Crowne belonging unto him and to his Heires these be the very words of the Record and enough to tell us who was the Author of that slander and what important cause the King had to quit himselfe of Clarens a bitter proofe of the old Proverbe fratrum inter se irae acerbissimae sunt and all the favour Clarence could at his end obtaine was to choose it as Iohn de Serres reporteth it so that it was not the Duke of Gloucester but the Kings implacable displeasure for his malice and treasons that cut him off who could not thinke himselfe secure whilst he lived Witnesse Polidor Virgil Edvardus Rex post mortem fratris se a cunctis timeri animadvertit ipse jam timebat neminem Next for the murther of the two sonnes of King Edward the fourth Edward the fifth King in hope and Richard of Shrewsbury Duke of Yorke and Norfolke his younger Brother they alleadge it in this manner That King Richard being desirous to rid those two Princes his Nephews out of the world imployed his trusty servant Iohn Greene to Sir Robert Brackenbury Lieutenant Constable of the Tower about the executing of this murther and by reason that plot tooke no effect Sir Robert not liking it The Protectour suborned foure desperate Villaines Iohn Dighton Miles Forrest Iames Tyrrell and William Slater to undertake it who as they further alleadge smothered them in their beds which done they made a deepe hole in the ground at the foote of the staires of their lodging and their buried them hiding the place under an heape of stones not after the antient manner of tumulus testis others vary from this and say confidently the young Princes were imbarqued in a Ship at Tower wharfe and conveyed from thence to Sea so cast into the Blacke deeps others averre they were not drowned but set safe on shore beyond Seas And thus their stories and relations are scatter'd in various formes their accusations differing in very many and materiall points which shakes the credit of their suggestion and makes it both fabulous and uncertaine one giving the lie to the other their malice having too much Tongue for their memories and is worth the noting how opposite and as it were ex Diametro repugnant they are In vulgus fama valuitfilios Edwardi Regis aliquò terrarum parte●migrasse atque ita supestites esse Thus Pollidor with which Dr. Morton and Sir Thomas Moore agree in one place The man say they commonly called Perkin Warbeck was as well with the Princes as with the people English and forraigne held to be the younger Son of Edward the fourth and that the deaths of the young King Edward and of Richard his brother had come so far in question as some are yet in doubt whether they were destroyed or no in the dayes of King Richard By which it appeares they were thought to be living after his death And as the act of their death is thus uncertainly disputed so is the manner of it controverted For Sir Thomas Moore affirmeth as before reported they were smothered in their beds with Pillowes but Pollidor saith peremptorily it was never known of what kinde of death they dyed Another Author and more ancient agreeth with them Vulgatum est Regis Edwardi pueros concessisse in sata sed qu● genere interitus ignoratur one reason of this may be that they who held Perkin Warbeck and Richard Duke of Yorke to be all one give another accompt of his death whereas if it had beene certaine these foure before named for Assasines had murdered them then the place time and manner had beene easily known upon their strict examination they living freely and securely and without question long after this murde● was said to be done Therefore there can be no excuse for this neglect of Examination much lesse for the suffering such to goe unpunished and at liberty which me thinks maketh much for the cleering of King Richard As for the burying of their bodyes in the Tower if that be brought in question certes the affirmative will be much more hard to prove then the negative For true it is there was much diligent search made for their bodies in the Tower all places opened and digged that was supposed but not found Then it was given out a certaine Priest tooke up their bodies and buried them in another secret place nto to be found hereunto but with better decorum for the more credit of this assertion they might have added it was done sub sigillo confessionis which may not be revealed Sir Thomas Moore seeing the absurdities and contrarieties of these opinions as a man puzeled and distracted with the variety and uncertainty thereof concludeth their bodies were bestowed God wot where and that it could never come to light what became of them Hall Hallingshed Grafton and the rest confesse the very truth hereof was never knowne And if there be a stricter inquiry into the mystery we shall discover that they were neither buried in the Tower nor swallowed in the Sea for the testimony and Relation of sundry grave and discre●te persons and such as knew the young Duke of Yorke will resolve us how he was preserved and secretly conveyed into a foraigne Country also alive many years after the time of this imaginary murder to which may be added strong authorities having layd downe some conjectures that may answer the iniquiry after the other And first whereas it is said the Lord Protector before his Coronation procured this murder To refell and contradict that there bee certaine proofes that the Princes were both living in the moneth of February following the death
or attained of any thing Capitall Therefore now their innocence must bee made guilty And in this I say no more then all our H●storians or others say who agree in one opinion that The KING could not take away the lives of Perkin Warbecke and this Earle of Warwicke untill this practise of their escape was layde to them and they made guilty thereof Therefore they were not Traytors before neither was Perkin now to bee thought a Counterfeit but a Prince of the Bloud clayming the Crowne for otherwayes Hee was Perkin of Flanders a base fellow and a most culpable and notorious Traitor then what neede they looke further for a Crime to put him to Death And if Hee were not a Traitor surely it was a Tyranny to make of an Innocent and guiltlesse Man a guilty Folon and by Traines and Acts to forge an offence out of nothing For doubtlesse an Innocent and a true man may seeke freedome and purpose an act of escape also commit in and yet be still an honest Man and a faithfull good subject for nature and reason teacheth and alloweth all men to eschew injuries and oppression Besides this Practise of those young men to escape was found as Pollidor well observeth Crimen Alienum and not Crimen proprium then how much greater was the wrong to take away their lives But however it may bee laid upon them it was nothing but a desire of liberty out of durance in which they were kept for a small or no offence The Civill law holdeth suspition of flight or escape to bee no crime Suspicio fugae quia non solet detrimentum reipublice ad ferre non censetur crimen so ulpian And by the Lawes of England if a Prisoner doe escape who is not imprisoned for Treason or felony but some lesser fault of trespasse according to the old Law of England Escapae non adjudicabitur versus eum qui Commissus est prisonae pro transgressione Escape shall not bee adjudged for Felony or other crime in one who is committed for trespasse For the offence of the escape is made in the common Law to be of the same nature and guilt with the crime whereof the Prisoner is attainted And certainely neither the Earle of Warwicke nor Richard alias Perkin were attainted of Treason or Felony c. before But to close this dispute and tragedy not long after some of the Instruments which betrayed them into this as Walter Blunt Thomas Astwood servants to the Lieutenant of the Tower finished at Tiburn because they should tell no tales And to this succinct relation there can be no better testimony then the hands of those witnesses who have sealed their confession and knowledge with their bloods Men of all conditions and estates all maintaining at the last gaspe that Perkin was the true Duke of Yorke whose Affirmations I will produce give mee but leave by the way to answer one Objection or Cavill brought against this Duke called in scorn Perkin Warbecke A new Writer affirming him to bee an Impostor whose learning may be as much mistaken in this as other things though he laid a great pretence to knowledge especially in the History of England and other Countreyes indeed his judgement and reading are much exprest alike in his Pamphlet which he cals the History of Perkin Warbecke wherein he forfeits all his skill to make him a parallel in advers fortunes and supposed base quality to the unhappy Don Sebastian late King of Portugall who he also protests an Impostore And to arrive at this huge knowledge he would have us thinke hee tooke much paines in the sifting of Authors and indeed I thinke he did sift them concerning his ignorance in the case of Don Sebastian if he be not too wise to have it informed I will urge some reasons on Don Sebastians side who was King of Portugall and invading the Kingdom of Barbary Anno Dom. 1584. was overthrown in a fierce bloody Battel in the fields of Alcazer by the King of Morucco where it was thought he was slaine but escaped and fled secretly traver sti●e or disguised travailing in that manner through many parts of Africa and Asia some 30. yeares in which time and travaile he suffered much lived in Captivity and misery but at last got away into Europe with purpose to have got into Portugall if possible to repossesse the Kingdome In this returne he came to Venice there discovered himselfe and desires aide of the Venetian States they entertained him as a Prince distressed gave him good words but durst not lend him Assistance fearing the King of Spaine Yet the chiefe Senators and many of the wisest of the Sigmory made no doubt of him Among them Signieur Lorenzo Iustiniano of the Senators Order a man of wise and great abilities was appointed by the States a Commissioner with others to hear and examine this cause of Don Sebastian in which they tooke much paines And this Signieur Lorenzo being lieger Ambassadour in England affirmed and protested solemnly he and all the other Commissioners were clear and very confident he was Don Sebastian King of Portugall notwithstanding they durst not give him aide but councelled him for France where the King favoured right without feare of anothers displeasure But taking Florence in his way in the habit of a Fryer he was observ'd and discovered by some spyes which the Grand Duke of Tuscany had set upon him from Venice who to in sinuate with the King of Spaine Philip the second and for some other commodious considerations delivered Sebastian to the Governour of Orbattelli a Spanish Port in Tuscany from thence sent him by Sea to the Count De le Mos Vice-roy of Naples who conveyed him into Spaine there for a while his entertainment was no better then in the Gallies what other welcome hee had I know not but the fame went certainly he was secretly made away after Philip the third was King The said Vice-roy of Naples confessed in secret to a friend of his he verily believed his prisoner was the true Sebastian King of Portugall and was induced to be of that opinion by the strong Testimonies and many strange and peculiar markes which some Honourable Portugesses did know him by all found about the body of this Sebastian And the French King Henry the 4 th it should seeme was perswaded no lesse for when the newes was told him the Duke of Florence had sent this Sebastian to the King of Spaine he told the Queene what an ill deed her Unckle had done in these words Nostre Uncle a faict un act fort indigne de sa Persone Doctor Stephen de Sampugo in a letter to Ioseph Texere Councellour and Almoner to the most Christian King writes thus The King Don Sebastian is here in Vonice c. So soone as hee arrived here where he hoped to find support the Ambassadour of Castile persecuted him very cruelly perswading the Signeury that he was a Calabrois c. I sweare
nor by Reason Honour or Policy that this crime could be his though many to the contrary for he not onely preserved his Nephew the young Earle of Warwicke but in his confidence a speciall note of his magnanimity gave him libertie pleasure and the command of a Statly house of his owne Now if he had beene so Ambitious and bloudy he would have provided otherwise for him knowing his Title was to take place if his bloud had not beene attainted in his Father in regard whereof King Richard when his owne Sonne was dead caused his Nephew Iohn de la Poole Eldest Sonne of the Duke of Suffolke and of the Dutches his sister then the next lawfull heir to the Crowne to be proclaimed heir apparant an Argument of respect to his kindred next title to the Crowne in whomsoever it was which other men regarded not so much as the unhappy Sequel shewed there was an impious necessitie in that for whilst the Prince of Yorke survived Especially the males no other titular Lord or pretender could be King by his owne right or by colour of right nor by any other meanes unlesse he had married a daughter and the Eldest Daughter of King Edward the Fourth And although the deathes manner of taking away these Princes the Sonnes of King Edward is held by our writers uncertaine and obscure It is manifest at least for the generall manner of their death to be either by the Publicke sword that is the sword of Justice or of Battaile as were King Richard the Children of the Duke of Clarence and the Duke of Suffolke c or by the private sword that is by secret and close slights treachery which the Romans called Insidiae dolus by Smothering Strangling Poyson Sorcery c. And that the sword was used against the family of Yorke there is more then conjecture both by Testimonies of writers and records King Edward himselfe as Credible Authors report dyed of poyson In the Parliament Anno. 1. Richardi tertij there was a●cused and attainted of sorcerie and such other devilish practices Doctor Lewis Doctor Morton William Knevitt of Buckin gham the Countesse of Richmont Thomas Nandick of Cambridge Conjurer with others There was also an Earle accused of the same hellish Art and an old Manuscript Booke which I have seene sayes that Doctor Morton and a certaine Countesse contriveing the death of King Edward and others resolv'd it by poyson Which are conjectures and proofes more positive and strong against them then any they have against King Richard but it was a great neglect in their malice makeing King Richard soe politick and treacherous as they did not to charge him also with these Princes Sisters For it could not serve his turne to rid away the Brothers and not them who were capable of the Crowne and had their turne royall before any Collaterall males Then he had the children of his elder Brother George Duke of Clarence Edward Plantagent Earl of Warwick the Lady Margaret his sister after countesse of Salisbury to make away for they without their Fathers corruption of bloud which might easily have beene salved by Parliament the Lords and Commons affecting them had a Priority of bloud and precedency of Title before the Protector I would aske the reason too why King Richard might not endure his Nephewes being by Parliament held and adjudged illegitimate as well as the Kings Henry 7. and Henry the eight endured Arthur Plantagenet the Bastard of the same King Edward their natales and cases being alike or why Sir Thomas Moore and Doctor Morton should in one place say it was held in doubt when or how they were made away and in another place to averr that Tiroll and Dighton being examined confessed plainely the murder of them and all the manner of it These be contraries which with a great disadvantage drawes their allegation into another argument Bicorne or Crocodilites For in revealing the confession of these men it is implicatively granted their fault was not then to be punished and soe it appeares no fault or not worth the consideration the confession of a man being the greatest evidence can be produced against him Then in regard the confession of those was such as might not be opened nor the crime called in question as the same Authors acknowledge it was but a fained confession and they had done better not to have mentioned such a thing which begot but a jealousie in the falsitie thereof or privity of some great ones in it a just imputation of injustice upon the Magistracy For if Digh●on Tirroll Forrest and Slater confesse the murder in Act and manner King Richard being dead who was said to subborne and protect them necessarily and in due course of justice especially in the Act of so high a nature and notice as this was The punishment should have beene expected with all extremity But being for some unknowne causes deferred and after a while quite omitted and pardoned it may be thought such strange Clemency and impunitie proceeded from a singular high indulgence or else those examinations and confessions werebut Buzes and quaint devises to amaze the people and entertaine them with expectation of a justice to be done in some more convenient time which was never This was after the death of King Richard All that was done before was to make him the Author of that horrible crime and no bodie else For Dighton and the rest were in security and liberty yet it stood in good steed with the Lancastrians to draw the peoples hate upon King Richard not unlike that story of great Alexander and a noble man in his Court who stood so high in the favour of his Nobles and people that the King grew jealous and fearefull of his Popularity studying how he might decline it and him to contempt but could finde no colour or apt occasion because he was soe strongly fixt in the peoples likeing and was a man of so great a desert that noe crime could bee charged upon him The King unbosoming himselfe to the councell and care of a friend one Medius of his Country as I thinke had this advise Sir quoth hee let not this mans greatnesse trouble you cause him to be accused of some hainous crime though falsly and wee will finde meanes to make him guiltie so formally and firmely that the brand of it shall sticke up on him ever which he delivered in these termes though divers yet the same in effect Medeatur licet vulueri qui morsus aut dilaniatus est remanebit tamen Cicatrix And it is truely approved by an Antient Christian Poet thus Paulum distare videntur Suspecti verèque rei The guilty and suspected Innocent In mans opinion are little different For there is no more dangerous or fatall destiny to greatenesse then to be intangled in the multitudes contempt Odium et Contempt us being the two evills that overthrow Kings and Kingdomes the one that is Contempt
Eurinnies and beleeved haunted those men that had purposed or acted a wickednesse upon which the Poet said well Patiturque unos mens saucia Manes And assigned to every man his protecting Spirit whom the Greekes called Doemones the Latines Genios concluding that when the Genius of him against whom the mischiefe aimes is stronger and more active then his who is to act it there the Plot hardly taketh effect For example produce the mortall enmity betweene Octavianus Caesar and M. Antonius in which Anthony could never prevaile by any Attempt who consulting with his Soothsayers they give the reason to beethe power of Octavians Genius above his It is reported the great Philosopher Appollonius had such a secret protection and so strong that the Emperour Domitian had no power over his life though hee studied meanes to take it Suidas adding that this Philosopher in confidence of his Genius when he left the Emperour added this verse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Me non occides quia fataliter protectus sum which is that Flamius Vopiscus calleth Majestatem Apollonij as I ghesse and with it the Profestors of Christian Religion agree in the effects not in the causes for those whom the Heathen call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Daemones c. Genios the Christian Theologues call Angels or Spirits whereof they hold good and bad But to returne to the matters further Allegate Probate The industrious Antiquary Master Iohn Stow being required to deliver his opinion concerning the proofes of this murther affirmed it was never proved by any credible evidence no not by probable suspitions or so much as by the Knights of the Post that King Richard was guilty of it And Sir Thomas Moore being puzelled with his Equivocations sayes that it could never come to light what became of the bodies of these two Princes Grafton Hall and Hollinshead agreeing in the same report that the trueth hereof was utterly unknowne Then where is their farre seeing knowledge that will have them transported into Forraign Countreyes or drowned or their giganticke proofes that say peremptorily they were both murthered and buryed in the Tower by those foure named before if so we need go no further for the truth But these are splenitick reaches and the Parachronisme is too groste as the Comaedian said Quod dictum indictum est Quod modo ratum irritum est Besides if Perkin were not the second Sonne of King Edward he must bee nothing for the Flemish French and Wallons acknowledged no such Noble young man to be borne in Warbecke or in Tourney but make honourable mention of a young Sonne of the King of England who was brought to the Dutchesse of Burgundy his Aunt being then in Flanders and how hee was in France and in other Kingdomes And surely so many Noble and discreet English if they had not knowne him to be the same by most certaine tokens and evidence would not so confidently have laid downe their lives to confirme their knowledge of him or hazarded their judgements and honours upon an Imposture or vanity especially those who had places of Quality and Eminency neare the King then living and were in favour at Court Therefore I would be resolv'd from our Anti-Richards what aim those Noble-men could have in averring him the Son of Edward the Fourth by the hazard of their lives and Estates if the KING pleased and how could they expect lesse for though they were enough to justifie it a truth they were too few to maintaine it against him there could be no aime or hope to super-induce young Richard to be King but meerly I am perswaded in point of truth and honour as they thought themselves bound to doe they freely tendred their lives to make good what their Conscience knowledge witnessed for it would be an Imposture of a miraculous Deception so many worthy and wise persons both of the Nobility and Clergy some of them having served the King his Father and himselfe that they all in their particular and generall intelligence and understandings should be mistaken and cheated I say it was a strange delusion if it could bee so but indeede those that would have it so leave it in question and know not well what to make of their own relations or how to resolve his History and if wee marke Sir Francis Bacon in the life of Henry the Seventh though his speculation be tender and as favourable as hee can that way touching the History of this young Duke hee gently slides from it Explicit liber tertius THE FOVRTH BOOKE OF THE HISTORY OF KING RICHARD the Third The Contents UPon what occasion the sentence of Bastardy was given upon the Children of King Edward the 4 th and why The sundry Loves Wooings Contracts and Marriages of King Edward the Fourth His divers Concubines His device of the Fetterlock and the Faulcon His wooing the Lady Elianor Talbott alias Butler the Lady Bona of Savoy and the Lady Elizabeth Gray widdow his marriage with her His former Marriage or Contract with the said Elianor her wrongs and her death Kings must not marry the daughters of their Vassalls nor other without the consent of their Barons Doctor Stillington Bishop of Bath Imprisoned for speaking of King Edwards Marriage with the Lady Elianor Talbott Spuria vitulamina How King Edward might have salved those Errors and prevented all the mischiefes following them The Children of King Edward the Fourth declared and adjudged illegitimate King Edwards death suspected by poyson the mortality of the Plantagenets The Authority of Parliament Parliaments how so called and derived Parliaments against Parliaments The first Parliament of King Henry the seventh what Treason is whether Soveraigne Princes may be said to commit Treason against their Subiects The treaty of Marriage between K. Richard the third and the Lady Elizabeth Plantagenet and cheifely sought by her selfe and the Queene her Mother The entertainement of the Lady Elizabeth at the Court the first Libell of Divorse the scruples of the Lady Elizabeth King Richard never meant to marry her The marriages of Neeces allowed by the Pope and usuall the true cause of Sir Thomas Moores Condemnation and execution The FOVRTH BOOK OF King Richard The Third THe Title King Richard the Third had to the Crown ac●rued to him by the illegitimacie of the Children of King Edward the Fourth and the Attainder of the Duke of Clarence with the Corruption of his Blood and forfeiture of the Title in him and in his Heirs of which there was no question but of the forfeiture and disheritage of the sons of Edward the Fourth there hath been much The true cause hath not nor cannot be well known without the Narration of King Edward's sundry Loves and Wooings specially his Contracts and Marriages I shall not need to intimate how amorous and wanton this King was his many Mistrisses or Amasia's he kept in several private places whereof the most famous was Katharine de Clarington
Banes asking And such was the want of Reverend Bishops then that he was fain to take an ordinary Priest to marry them in a Chamber too in stead of a Church and that in a Lodge or Foresthouse no body being present but the Dutchesse and some few of her company So where he first saw her and by chance there at the next interview he married her an act of as high exception as improvidence For his Barony thought it a most unworthy and unequal Match distasting it the more as done without their consent which they as●ever'd the King ought to have by their ancient priviledges and were the more exasperated considering the great inequality between her condition and the Imperial Majestie of England being the Relict but of a poor Knight his mortal enemy too Above all the Earl of Warwick took it for an high indignity and scandal to his Honour which stood so far engaged in France to the Lady Bona and her Princely friends knowing the French would be as sensible of the scorn besides the great charge he had been at to manage the employment In the heat of these disgraces for transcendent spirits have their answerable passions and it is as dangerous to stand in their way as in the reaches of an angry Tyde he forsook the King and soon after takes up Arms against him an Induction to those succeeding evils which pursued that inconsiderate Marriage of which the judicious Polidor lib. 24. maketh this Censure ●ex Edwardus mutato Concilio de ducenda in uxorem Bona filia Ducis Sabaudiae Elizabetham viduam Johannis Gray Militis in Matrimonium duxit de eo Matrimonio ob mulieris humilita tem non modo necessarios Principes verum etiam Richardum Woodvillum Patrem mulieris celat qua causa cognita cuncti protivus mirari Principes fremere Passimque voces emittere indignationis Regem non ex sua dignitate fecisse easque nuptias se crimini dare dedecori assignare quod caeco amore non ratione duct us esset sed inde initium profectum est simultatis ortae inter Regem Edwardum Richardum Comitem Warwici c. But if you will not give credit to him you shall hear an English Prelate living in those times Edwardus Rex fret us propria electione cujusdam Militis relictam nomine Elizabeth inconsultis Regni proceribus clandestino sibi destinavit Matrimonio postea ipsam in reginam Coronari fecit quod quidem Regni optimates aegrè tulerunt quia de tam mediocri stirpe foeminam procreatam ad Regni Consortium secum praepropere sublimaret Thus this amorous King lost his honour with many of his best and great friends yet escaped well that he had no more real and present feeling of the errour being the first King of England that ever mingled his Royal Blood and Majestie in the Alliance of so private and mean a family The Story of Arragon mentions a King deposed for marrying the daughter of his subject And King Edward was somewhat ●●er it for soon after he was expulsed his Kingdom But being a man that kept an industrious and invincible Courage above his troubles he happily recovered that losse never his honour and friends which he might have preserved and prevented all those ●alamities that overtook him in his issue by the advice of the Dutchesse his mother who upon the secret advertisement of his love to this Lady Gray used all the perswasions and authority of a mother to return him to the Lady Elianor Talbot his forme● love and wife at least his contracted to finish and consummate what he was bound to by publike Solemnity of Marriage and prest it with such ingenious engagements that for the Arguments sake I have transcribed the passage out of Sir Thomas Moor and the rest of our English Writers Thus she disswades him MY Liege Lord and my dear Son It is very commonly reported you are purposed to marry the Lady Gray a widow and a mean Gentlewoman which you cannot but conceive will redound to your disparagement and dishonour all the wise great and noblest persons of your Kingdom thinking it far more to the advantage of your Honour profit and Safety to seek the Alliance of a Noble Progeny and rather in a forraign Countrey then your own as well in regard thereupon may depend great strength to your Estate and great possibility to enlarge your possessions by such Affinity Also if well considered you may not safely marry any other then the Lady Bona the Earl of Warwick having proceeded so far in the Current of that Match already that it is likely he will not sit down contented if his troublesome and costly negotiation should be so slightly blown off and frustrat●d Besides Sir consider it is not Princely for a King to marry his own Subject at least no great and important occasion leading him thereunto nor possessions or other commodity depending thereupon but will be lesse tolerable to all opinion then if a rich man should marry his maid onely for a little wanton dotage upon her person in which kinde of Marriages many men commend more the maids fortune then the masters discretion Yet there must needs be more honesty in such a Marriage then can be honour in this which you affect for the difference is not so great betwixt a rich Merchant and his servant as you must think between the King and the widow Gray in whose person albeit there be nothing to be mistiked there is nothing so excellent but it may be found in divers other women much more noble and many ways exceeding her and more comparatively to your Estate those also Virgins who must be thought of a much more honourable estimation then widows wherefore the Widowhood onely of Elizabeth Gray though in all other things she were convenient for you were enough to restrain you being a King and so great a King And it must needs stick as a foul disparagement to the sacred Majestie of a Prince who ought as nearly to approach the Priesthood in Purenesse and Cleannesse as he doth in Dignity to be defiled with Bigamy in his first Marriage Thus far the King could with attention hear the Dutchesse But being extremly far gone in love or rather in the hot passion of Love he was resolute to marry her and partly in earnest and partly in play as one that well wist he was out of the check of a mother yet reverently thus replied MADAM ALthough Marriage being a Spiritual thing ought rather to be made according to the Will and Ordinance of Almighty God where he by his grace inclineth either parties to love mutually and vertuously as I hope and trust he doth work in ours and not for the regard of any temporal advantage yet neverthelesse this Marriage as it seemeth to me being considered even after the worlds account is not unprofitable nor without fruits for I reckon not the Alliance and Amity of any
The Duke of Gloucester as they desired prest it to the King who became more incens'd against the Bishop saying he had not onely betraid his trust but his children and upon that heat puts him from the Councel Table under a strict imprisonment for a long time which at length he redeemed himself from by a heavy fine as is testified by Doctor Goodwin Bishop of Hereford in his Catalogus Episcoporum who writeth thus Philip de Comines le Roy Edw. de supposé l'Evesque le tient in prison le Ranson d'un bon summe d'Argent Which was taken for a piece of more passion then justice the Bishop not deserving so to suffer in this case where his conscience might very well excuse what he did Not long after King Edward died of what disease it is doubtfully suggested Some thought of an Apoplexy or dead Palsie Polidor Virgil saith of a disease utterly unknown to all the Physitians which leaves it to a further construction The Author of the History of Britain delivers plainly that King Edward was killed by poison as the common report in France went Aucuns disopent que le Roy de Angleterre Edovart avoit estè Empoisonné au mois d'Aurill en l'an 1463. And Euguerrant de Moustrolet writeth that some said he died of an Apoplexy others he was poisoned in Wine of Creu which King Lewis the eleventh sent to him Philip de Comines to that purpose says Aucuns disent que le Roy Eduart mourut d'un Catarhe That is Some say that King Edward died of a Catarhe for that is their phrase in France when a great man is made away by Poison Of such a venemous Catarhe died the young King Edward the Sixth But by whose hand King Edward the fourth had his death it is not said Certain it is he was generally beloved of all his Subjects except those of the Lancastrian faction As soon as he was dead the silence brake into a general muttering against his Marriage then into loud and publike in veighing against it All tongues were at liberty and Pardons were hoped for all offences the general and common opinion being quite against it and the Children And Doctor Morton affirmed The Duke of Buckingham with other noble Lords saw and read certain authentick Instruments made and signed by learned Doctors Proctors and Notaries with the Depositions of sundy credible persons importing and testifying the Children of Edward the fourth were Bastards with which opinion the City of London was also possessed and Doctor Shaw Frier Pinke and other Preachers in the Pulpits declared them Spuria vitulamina To this consented all the people of the North parts in their Supplicatory Scroll before mentioned which the Court of Parliament adjudged and decreed to be so A fault of Improvidence in their Father who might have prevented all quarrels and questions about that and future claims repaired all flaws and defects of Titles also have taken away the errour and inconveniency of the post-Contract or later Marriage that gave the imputation of Bastards to his Children and so have avoided all the insuing mischiefs and calamities If first he had procured a Divorce of the former Contract with the Lady Elianor from the Pope who was then held to have all power both of heaven and earth Or if after the second Marriage and while he flourished which was by the space of Fourteen yeers he had either by a due consideration or counsel of his best friends wrought the Popes Pardon for breach of the Pre-contract with the Lady Elianor then his Apostolical Bull of Dispensation for his Post-Contract or Matrimony superinducted as they call it which might easily have been obtained at Rome for money And after that to have summoned a Parliament requiring the three Estates to have ratified and confirmed these Bulls for the approbation of the said Marriage with the Lady Gray and the Legitimation of his Children and made them lawful by Act of Parliament according to the Popes Indulgence which was then a sacred and most inviolable thing Lastly to have Declared Pronounced and Decreed in Parliament That the said Children of the King being so made legitimate were also capable of all Honours Dignities Estates Publike and Private of which the King stood seised or which were any ways appertaining and proper to the Kingdom of England and of France I say If he had done this he had composed all defects and prevented all succeeding dangers of Claims and Practices which might have been done with small or no trouble A course by another afterward opportunely thought on And surely it may be conjectured if this King had not been too secure and lost in his sensualities he would by the like Parliamentary power have rectified those errours these great high and difficult works being indeed proper to Parliaments and pregnant and strong proofs of their great and transcendent power holding in themselves a just desert and claim of such power and authority if assembled and held as they ought being a General Assembly and Convocation of the most wise honourable just and religious persons of the Kingdom Therefore the word Parliament saith one is compounded of Parium and lamentmm because as he thinketh the Peers of the Countrey did at these Meetings complain each to other of the enormities of their Countrey But the better opinion is That Parliament is simply from the French word parler and that from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 both signifying to speak and so by adding the termination ment which is common in the French Tongue as well to many Nouns as Adverbs do make up Parliament meaning thereby an Assembly of men called together to speak or confer c. And it may not unfitly be called Parliament for that each man should parler lament speak his minde But Laurence Valla misliketh that Etymologie It may be ghessed the word Parliament being transported out of France began shortly after the Norman Conquest One of the first authentical reports of that name is found in the Statute 3 E. 1. commonly called Westminster Parliament that Assembly being said to be Primier generall apres Coronament●le Roy. But that is not the first word for in the Statutes called Articuli Cleri published 9 E. 2 these words are read Temporibus progenitorum nostrorum quondam Regum Angliae Parliamentis suis c. Which words Progenitorum quondam must needs reach higher then E. 1. that was but father to him that spake it But at what time soever after the Conquest this Court began to be called a Parliament the same was before known to the Saxons or Englishmen by the word Sinoth and Micell Sinoth of the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now appropriated to Ecclesiastical meetings onely and sometimes by these terms Micell Gemote Witengemott and Calca Witengemott that is the meeting of wisemen or of all the wisemen for witona signifieth wisemen Calca all and Gemott a meeting of which last
to that time a man clean without dissimulation tractable and without injury and that for these respects he was very desirous to advance him and laboured earnestly to make him Protector Therefore whatsoever the Duke said after in reproach of the King it may justly be thought to proceed from spleen and malice There is to this the commendation of his Eloquence and pleasing speech which though no Regal vertue yet it is an ornament to the greatest Princes and commendable The Prior of Croyland repeating the dispute of a Controversie between the two brothers George Duke of Clarence and this Richard of Gloucester at the Councel-Table before the King their brother sitting in his Chair of State relates it thus Post suscitatas inter Duces fratres discordias tot utrinque rationes acutissimae allegatae sunt in presentia Regis sedentis pro Tribunali in Camera Concilii quod omnes circumstantes etiam periti Legum eam orationis abundantiam ipsis principibus in suis propriis causis adesse mirabantur c. Then speaking of the excellent wits extraordinary knowledge and gifts of these three brothers maketh this honourable Praecony Hitres Germani Rex duo Duces tam excellenti ingenio valebant ut si discordare non voluissent suniculus ille triplex difficilime rumperetur Let us look upon his charitable religious and magnificent works He founded a Collegiate Church of Priests in Middleham in York-shire another Colledge of Priests in London in Tower-street neer to the Church called Our Lady Berking He built a Church or Chappel in Towton in Gloucester-shire a Monument of his thankfulnesse to Almighty God for the happie and great Victory his brother had upon the partisans of the family of Lancaster and the sons of Henry the Sixth who before slew Richard Duke of York King designate and father of these two Kings He founded a Colledge in York convenient for the entertainment of an hundred Priests He disforrested a great part of the Forrest of Wich-wood and other vast Woods between Woodstock and Bristow for the good and benefit of the people of Oxford-shire and the places adjacent He built the high stone Tower at Westminster which at this day is a work of good use And when he had repaired and fortified the Castle of Carlisle he founded and built the Castle of Penrith in Cumberland He manumissed many Bond-men For the better encouragement of the Easterling-hanses their Trade being beneficial and profitable to this Kingdom he granted them some good Priviledges as Polidor writeth He also first founded the Colledge and Society of Heralds and made them a Corporation and as the words in the Charter are he ordained it Vt sint in perpetuum Corpus Corporatum in re nomine habeant successionem perpetuam c. A taste of his love to Honour and his Noble care for the conservation of Nobility Chevalry and Gentry Which Corporation this King established by his Royal Charter and placed the Heralds in an ancient fair house which was called Yorkime sometimes after commonly Cole-harbour situate upon the Thames ordaining Four Kings at Arms by the names and Titles of Iohn Writh Garter Thomas Holme Clarentius Iohn Moore Norway and Richard Champney Gloucester For Wales I have seen the Charter wherewith the King created first Richard Champney Esquire King at Arms by the Title and name of Gloucester dated Anno 1 R. 3. at Westminster in the month of March when the Charter of the Foundation was granted He further established That these four Kings at Arms and the rest of the Heralds who are in the Charter called Heraldi Prosecutores sive Pursevandi should lodge live and common together in that house where the Rolls Monuments and Writings appertaining to the Office and Art of Heraldry and Armory should be kept giving also Lands and Tenements for the perpetual maintaining of a Chaplain or Chantry Priest to say and sing Service every day and to pray for the King Queen and Prince and for their souls when they were dead Lastly he gave sundry good Priviledges and Immunities to the said Corporation which Charter was kept continually in the Office until within these few yeers but now is in another place the want of it importeth nothing being the Duplicate is upon Record in the Archives kept in the Convert-house now called the Rolls It was confirmed by the Parliament and dated 20 die Martii anno regni primo apud Westmonasterium Baron and underneath was written Per Breve de privato Sigillo de datu predicto autoritati Parliamenti He also built or repaired some part of the Tower of London towards the Thames in memory whereof there be yet his arms impaled with those of the Queen his wife standing upon the Arch adjoyning to the Sluce-gate He began many other good works which his sudden fate prevented as Polidor thus witnesseth Richardus Tertius multa opera publica privata inchoavit quae immaturâ morte praereptus non perfecit Which works and monuments of Piety shew not the acts of a Tyrant Polidor Virgil being neither Yorkist nor Lancastrian speaks much in commendation of his pious and charitable disposition to which I refer the Readers and put it to their indifferent judgements How many of those called Good Kings have exceeded him in their longer and prosperous time being in quiet possession too of their Crown and Kingdoms Let me adde for a Corollary what that of the worthy Prelate Archebald Quhitlaw chief Secretary and a Privie Councellor of Scotland in his Oration when he was one of the Commissioners for a conclusion of a Peace and Marriage between Prince Iames eldest son to the King of Scotland and the Lady Anne daughter to Iohn de la Pool from whence I have collected these Serenissime Princeps Una me res consolatur juvat tua scil in omni virtutis genere celeberrimafama per omnem Orbis terrarum ambitum disseminata tuae etiam innatae benignitatis clarissima praestansque humanitas tua mansuetudo liberalitas sides summa justitia incredibilis animi magnitudo tua non humana sed pene divina sapientia te non modo singulis facilem verum vulgo popularibus affabilem praebes quibus virtntibus altâque prudentiâ cuncta pronunciata dicta in meliora commutas Serenissimus Princeps Rex Scotorum Dominus meus qui te alto amore prosequitur te desiderat tuam Amicitiam Affinitatem affectat supra captum cogitationis meae si quid a me erratum erit tuis divinis virtutibus quibus Commercium cum Coelestibus numinibus societatem contraxeris tribuendum putato Faciem tuam summo Imperio Principatu dignam inspicit quam moralis Heroica virtus illustrat de te dici praedicarique potest quod Thebanorum Principi inclytissimo statui Poeta his verbis attribuit Nunquam tantum animum natura minori corpore nec tantas visa est includere
vires Major in exiguo regnabat corpore virtus In te enim sunt rei militaris virtus peritia foelicitas autoritas quae omnia in optimo exercitus principe Cicero requirit In te Serenissime Princeps praeclari Regis Imperatoris praecepta it a concurrunt ut nihil ad tuam Bellicam aut domesticam virtutem cujusquam oratoris verbis apponi possit Tu igitur Serenissime Domine Princeps de ineunda inter te nostrum Principem charitate amicitia sic age ut Angli Scoti dilectionis respectu nullum penitus discrimen habeatur sed in unum amoris benevolentiae vinculum videantur esse connexi sic numerabiles commoditates ex tui nostri populi dilectione dulci connubio unione Matrimonio Affinitate consurgent In freta dum fluvii current dum montibus umbrae Lustrabunt connexa polus dum sidera pascet Dum juga montis aper fluvios dum piscis amabit Dumque Thymo pascentur apes dum rore cicadae Semper honos nomenque tuum laudesque manebunt But what is this or more to malice and detraction that haunt him to his death and after that making the Catastrophe or last Tragical act of his life at Bosworth-field an immediate stroke of the divine vengeance for such offences as they please to particular from women or superstitious Clerks whose natures startle at the noise of War and Martial trial to whose fears and weaknesse such reasons would sound tolerable But if Bishop Morton and Sir Thomas Moor although they were men of the long Robe had considered with whom they conversed and where they most lived how could they forget That to die valiantly in the field for Countrey life and friends was always held a glorious farewel to the world or what infinite numbers of vertuous and most noble Captains have fallen so by the Sword and fate of War Lampridius affirmeth that all the best men have died violent deaths and what higher Quarrel could call any Heroical spirit then King Richard's fighting for a Crown kingdom and all his happie Fortunes here God hath many times taken away Princes and changed the Government of kingdoms for the iniquities of the people why then should not King Richard's fate be held in a modest Scale until we can better know or judge it Nor can it be safe to enquire or peremptorily to determine further after Gods proceedings in such cases He that owes him no malice things looked upon thorow judgement and charity may with more justice say he died valiantly and in a just quarrel when many of his enemies fell by deaths more vile and shameful Executions But he that hath but a reasonable pittance of Humanity will censure no mans life by the manner of his death for many good and holy men have suffered by violent deaths though it be this Princes fortune to fall under the ill affections of envious pens more then many that committed more publike and proved crimes then he which wanted much of his vertues and desert Examine him with Henry the First the good Clerk and learned Prince but so covetous and ambitious that he could not be content to usurp in this Kingdom the Right and Primogeniture of his elder brother Robert Courthose but by force took the Dukedom of Normandy from him and to make his injuries more exact and monstrous cast him into the Castle of Gloucester there kept him in cruel durance and caused his eyes to be put out so wearied him to most miserable death King Iohn by the general voice is charged with the murder of Arthur Plantagenet the son of his eldest brother and so the next Prince in right of blood to King Richard the First And it is written by good Authors that Edward the Third was not onely privie and consenting to the deposing the King his father a King anointed but also to his Massacre And because Edward Plantagenet Earl of Kent Protector and his Uncle moved him to restore the Crown to his father Edward the Second he called him Traitor and cut off his head at Westminster How King Henry the Fourth caused King Richard the Second the true and anointed King to be cruelly butchered at Pomfret is too notorious and this was Scelera sceleribus tueri King Edward the Fourth is accused of the murder and death of the King Saint Henry and of Edward Prince of Wales his son Ut supra King Henry the Seventh although amongst the best Kings in his general character is not thought guiltlesse of that Crimen sacrum vel regale in cutting off Edward Plantagenet Earl of Warwick an innocent Edwardum filium Ducis Clarenciae puerum infantem in suam suorum securitatem capite plexit And to secure his Estate had more then learnt other smart rules of Policie That reach of State upon Philip of Austrich Duke of Burgundy King of Castile and Arragon is not the least memorable This Prince Philip was by crosse Fortune put into the Kings hands purposing out of Flanders to go into Spain with the Queen his wife took shipping at Sluce and passing by the coasts of England was by a tempest forced for his safety to put into the Port of Weymouth in Dorset-shire the Queen being ill and distempered much with the storm was compelled to make some stay there Sir Iohn Carew and Sir Thomas Trenchard principal men in those parts gave speedy intelligence of this to the King who was glad of the accident and purposed to make good use of it as speedily returning his command to give them all honourable entertainment but not suffer them to depart until he had seen and saluted them The Duke ignorant of this as soon as the Queen and the rest had recover'd and refresht themselves thought he was onely to give those Knights thanks and take his leave which they by way of courtesie and request interpose in behalf of the Kings vehement desire to salute him and the Queen a motion the Duke much prest to be excused from as the necessity of his journey stood but the intreaty was so imperious he must stay and alter his journey for Windsor to meet the King who received him there in a magnificent manner and at the height of a Feast propounds a suit to the Duke for Edmund de la Pool then in his Dominions a pretender to the Crown of England and not so soundly affected to him a suit of a harsh exposition as the Duke apprehended it and to the blemish of his honour and piety as he nobly urged but no argument had vertue nor no vertue argument enough to excuse it the King must have him or the Duke must stay Cast upon this extreme and foreseeing what disadvantages were upon him some honourable conditions granted that he should neither lay punishment nor death upon him he gave his promise to send him and the King strictly and religiously bound himself to the exceptions
The Duke accordingly sent this de la Pool into England who upon his arrival was delivered to the Tower but his life not toucht until the King lay a dying then he equivocated his Vow by a Mental Reservation enjoyning his son after his death to cut off his head which was done when he came to be King and was held some taint to them both though the son held himself acquit warranted by the example of King Solomon who was made the instrument of such another subtil slaughter by his father David that thought he kept himself by equivocation examples not to be imitated by any Christian Prince being a sin and sins are to be avoided not imitated The eldest brother of these de la Pools Iohn de la Pool heir to the Duke of Suffolk and Head of this Family was slain casually at the Battel of Stoke and is he who as neerest kinsman to King Richard the Third was proclaimed heir apparant The sister of these Princely de la Pools the Lady Katherine was kept close prisoner in the Tower until grief and sorrow bowed her to the grave Nor is it much from our purpose to note that the chief Plantagenets namely the children of King Edward the Fourth had but cold influences then for the Lady Bridget was thrust into a Nunnery at Dartford chiefly as it was thought that she should live sterile and die without issue The Lady Cecily was married to a base fellow that so her issue might be ignoble and contemptible the wrong being the greater in regard she was offered Matches to her quality the King of Scotland propounding Prince Iames unto her and the French King Lewis demanded her for the Dolphin Charles of France It was observed too that this King was but an unkinde and severe husband to his Queen indeed they had all but short lives and our Stories report he picked a quarrel with the Queen-Dowager-Mother for an old and venial errour because she delivered her son Richard to the Protector for which there was a Confiscation upon all her Goods Chattels and Revenues and she confined to Bermondsey Abbey where she lived not long care and grief untwisting the threed of her sad fate And when death had seized him from all the glories and policies of this world his son succeeds and then Residuum Locustae Bruchus comedit residuum Bruchi comedit Rubigo for what remained of the House of York he gave the last blowe to and after the dispatch of the aforesaid Edmund de la Pool caused the Lady Margaret Plantagenet Countesse of Salisbury then daughter and heir of George Duke of Clarence to be attainted of Treason by Act of Parliament and condemned unheard being dragged to the Block barbarously by the hair of her head though above Threescore yeers in age Anno 33 Henr. 8. Not long after Sir Henry Pool her eldest son was put to death and her son Reynold Pool was attainted of Treason with her no man knowing what the Treason was but got suddenly out of the Kingdom into Italy where he became much favoured by the Princes there and by the Popes afterward made Cardinal and highly renowned in those times for his Learning Piety and other noble merits Richard Pool another son of the Countesse of Salisbury fled and lived a banished man in forraign Countreys yet at the height of a good reputation until he was slain at the Battel of Pavia These be sad pauses which my Pen but touches at to note the Partiality of some on one side and the malignity of some on the other side who have made King Richard the worst of all Princes when other of our own have had as great an appetite of Empire whose fames and sacred names we gratulate with honour Nor let my just and plain meaning be mistaken which urges nothing in dislike or exprobation that King Henry the Seventh had the Crown whom our age must acknowledge a wise provident and religious Prince The restorer of the ancient Line of the British Kings to their Raign and Kingdom Nephew of King Henry the Sixth by his Grandmother Queen Katherine widow of King Henry the Fifth and mother of King Henry the Sixth and of his brother Uterine Edmund Teudor Earl of Richmond the father of this King Henry the Seventh and so he was Nephew also to Charles the Seventh King of France I onely conceive he took it by too violent a hand not staying tempus bene placiti And here I may fitly take occasion to make up a Defect or Brack covertly imputed to the Titles of the Normans and Princes of York by our vulgar Historians and Chroniclers And first we are to suppose If there be it grew by the errour of King Edwards Marriage by which they hold that Title was weakned at the least blemished but that could have no continuance being made sound again as soon as King Richard came to raign and after cured and confirmed by the mighty power of sundry Parliaments by which it was made as strong and firm as ever besides the aid of the Dispensations Apostolical in those times sacred and authentick And without that if need were our King now raigning hath other Royal Rights more then funiculusi Triplex some more ancient authentick and just therefore more secured and of more prosperous hopes then that Norman Title which was a violent acquest of the Sword and a purchase made by blood so consequently none of the best which was well conceived by that great Macedon when he said Non est diuturna possessio in quam gladio inducimus Neither would it avail in this behalf to cite or avouch the Donation of this Kingdom which the Confessor is said to have made to William the Conquerour being to no purpose because that gift or Legacy was disclaimed and disallowed by the Barons of this Land and found to be void Yet time now and prescription have also made that Title good for prescription hath power to ratifie and confirm the Titles both of Princes and of private men But our King is the immediate and sole lawful Heir of King Egbert who first gave the name of England to this Land and was absolute Lord of it from him by the glorious Kings Edgar Edmund Athelstan Alfred and many others as well Saxons and Angles as Anglo-Saxons the Right and Title of this Kingdom is duely descended and devolved to Edmund Ironside King of England who was father to the most Noble Clyto Edward sirnamed Exul whose fair daughter and heir a religious Lady the Princesse Margaret of England was married to Malcom Canmoire King of Scotland from which ancient and happie Alliance the King our Soveraign Lord is directly and certainly descended and is the true and onely Heir to the Rights and Titles which were without flaw so the most ancient and famous Title and Right of the first Kings of Britain are in him being the next Heir of our last British King Henry Teudor
Hen. 7. and dies of greife 143. Elizabeth daughter of Ed. 4. desired by her letter to marry with Richard 3. 128. 129. Elianor Talbot alias Butler married to E. 4. 116. her wrongs death 122. Escape what the offence is 100. F. FAulcon Serrure a French devise of obseen signification 115. Faulconbridge a famous Pyrate apprehended by a wile 9. Flattery and Flatterers 52. 133. 78. Fortune inconstant 41. Vertuous Master of her 57. Fortitude a notable example in Rio. 3. 59. 60. 61. Friends and friendship 52 best known in adversity Ib. French King payes a tribute of 75000. crownes to K. Edw. 4. and rich pensions to diverse Noble men 29. G. GAston de Foix K. of Navarr 19. Gray Woodvile and others of the Reginists executed at Pomfret for treachery 13 Glocester City rewarded by Rich. 3. for their loyalty 28. G●mot what it is 125. Genius or Angell Guardian 106. H. HAstings his affection to Edw. 4. his children 13. Is betrayed and executed in the Tower ibid. Henry 2. K. of England his great descent and spacious Empire 4. his penance for Tho Beckets death 5. Sirnamed du Court Mantea why 4. Henry 4. King of England caused his soveraigne Rich. 2. anointed King to bee Murthered 14. Entailes the Crowne to his heires 50. Henry 6. K. of England not murthered by Rich. 3. but dyed a naturall death of griefe and melancholy 80 81. Henry Te●dor Earle of Richm. borne in Pembrooke castle 16. His noble descent 144 145. by his mother 50. by his Grand-mother and Father Ib. His escape into France 16. And there detained prisoner 17 18 19. His various and doubtfull fortunes Ib. 43. 57. Is attainted of high Treason 30. A description of his Person and qualities 42 58. 144. A wise provident a religious Prince 58. 144. Laies claime to the Crowne of England 17. Made good by marriage 53. And the Popes Bull 55. And act of Parliament 145. His title de jure belli or of conquest confirmed by the Pope and distasted by the Barons 54 55. Invades England with ill successe 43. His 2. invasion by aid of the French 56 57. 59. Overthrowes K. R. 3. at Redmore heath and is crowned by the name of Henry 7 th 62. His vow at the high Altar in Vannes 42. Is very covetous 88. too partiall and credulous 51. Unkinde and severe to his Wife 143. And to the Wife and Children of Edw. 4. Ib. His pretence against the Ea of Warwick 105. 141. And Perk. Warbeck alias Rich. Plantag 95. His breach of promise 93. He feared 3. men specially Ib. His reach upon the Duke of Burgundy 142. His charge to his son upon his death-bed ib. Henry the first K. of England sirnamed Beauclerke 16. Or the good Clerk His ambition and covetousnesse 141. cruelty to his elder Brother ib. Heralds whence the name derived 138. a Colledg of Heralds founded by R. 3. ibid. Herbertus Chamberlaine to W. Rufus Ancestor to the Herberts of Pemb. and Mountgom founder of that name 16. Historians their great partiality 134 135. 143. The errours of vulgar Historians 41. Howards their great Nobility alliance and discent from Hewardus or Herewardus the story of him 66. signification of the name ib. of Hawardus 67. Tho Howard Barl of Surrey escapes Bosworth field 64. A notable speech of his showing his integrity ibid. Is advanced by Henry 7. ib. Triumphator Scotorum 67. Sir Charles Howard Lord Admirall in 88. His noble fame 67. I. IAmes the 4 th King of Scotland denies his tribute to England 10. An army is sent to recover it ib. But a Truce concluded ibid. James the 5 th of Scotland challenges Thomas Earle of Arundel in Campe fight 62. James King of Great Brittaine his Noble elemency to some regall Titulars 135. Jane Shore King Edw. 4. his Concubine 115. 135. Jerusalem a barren soile 6. Imperiall Ensigns of England their signification 26. Ingratitude ex 59 60. John King of England charg'd with the murther of his Nephew 141. K. KAtherin wife of Sir Otho Swinford Mother of the Beauforts 44. Kings have their bounds 29. Their prerogatives in Iudgments and Controversies 54. Cannot commit high Treason 63. May not marry their Subjects 119. A King deposed for so doing ib. Kings and kingdomes in Gods disposing 63. changed by him why 140. Two evils especially the overthrow of Kings and kingdomes 103. To kill an Anoynted King a sacrilegious offence p. 80. Knights and Lords created 25. L. LAncaster and Beaufort how they differ 30. 44. 47. Legitimation What the Popes legitimation is and what the Princes 47 48. Liars need of good memories 84. Lancaster escheated to Edward 4. 35. 47. Don Duart de Lancastro 45. Laws good Laws made by R. 3. Lawes against Bastards 48. Loyalty a rare example 64. M. MArgaret Plantag daughter of Geo. Duke of Clarence put to dearh 143 Matilda or Maud the Empress daughter and heir of H. 1. 4. Anglor Dom. ibid. Malice malitious 130. Height of malice 75. Marble stone or fatall stone prophesie of it 146. Brought out of Scotland into England by Edward the 1. And placed at Westminster ib. The stone that Jacob laid his head upon ib. Marriage not lawfull between those that have lived in adultery 45. Between Uncles and Nieces frequent in other Countreys 129. Monasteries supprest with the true cause of it 77. Monuments of the British Empir● 146 Sir Thomas Moore a great enemie of R. 3. 76. Came short of the learning is ascribed to him dyed scoffing ib. Lord Chancellor of Eng. 77. And a sworn vassall to the Pope 76. Morton Bishop of Ely a subtle man 15. A great enemie of K. R. 3. ib. 75 76 77. A temporizer 52. His extreame pride and covetousnesse 53. Lord Chancellor of Eng. 77. N. NAmes taken from Offices other occasions 5 6 66. Nandick a conjurer Parl. 1. H. 7. Natural Father natural sons daughters why so called Naturall daughters may take the sirname of France 46. Noblenesse of nature Examp. 61. c. O. OFficers of State 25. 32. Oxford Iohn de Vene Earl of Ox. fevere against nick-named Perkin Warb 105. he gave sentence of death gainst the innocent Earl of Warwick ib. Strange dissipation of a mighty estate ib. Oppression many examples of it 99. 141. and pastime alibi P. PArasites the nature of them p. 27. 78. Parliaments their power authority 124. From whence the word is derived ib. A Court of great antiquity 125. Called by the Saxons Witengemot the meeting of wise men ibid. The honour and obedience due unto them 126. Parl. 1. R. 3. Many good Lawes enacted Pater mater parentes or parents words of larger signification among other Nations then among us 69. Perkin Warbeck his story 84. Confirmed by many noble and learned men 100 101. Philip Duke of Burgundy K. of Castile driven by a storm with his Qu upon the coast of England 141 142. His entertainment ib. Plantaganest or Plantagenet original occasion of that