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A58417 A Relation in the form of journal of the voiage and residence which the most mighty Prince Charls the II King of Great Britain, &c. hath made in Holland, from the 25 of May, to the 2 of June, 1660 rendered into English out of the original French by Sir William Lower ... Lower, William, Sir, 1600?-1662.; Keuchenius, Robertus, 1636-1673. 1660 (1660) Wing R781; ESTC R9642 103,435 176

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us of an immutable affection for the good of this Republick We render most humble thanks unto your Majesty for them and particularly for the illustrious proof which it pleased you to give us thereof by the glorious visit wherewith you honoured our assembly We shall conserve the memory of it most dearly and make the marks of that goodness to pass to our last posterity to the end you acknowledge it with the same respect with which we have received it The constitution wherein we see your Majesty ready to take horse for the continuation of your voiage forbids us to enlarge our selves upon a subject which would never weary us if we had words conformable to our respectful sentiments But we have no mind to increase the just impatience which your Majesty should have to see your self returned into your Kingdom We pray God SIR that it be quick and happy and that as he hath disposed the hearts and affections of your subjects to acknowledge their lawfull and soveraign Prince it will please him also to command the sea and winds to favour your voiage to the end that after you have received on your own coast the same prayer which we shall reiterate you may enjoy in your royal person and in your posterity forever all the felicity and prosperity which your most humble servants wish unto your Majesty The King thanked the Lords the Estates of Holland for the civilities they had done him during the residence he had made in their Province as also for the affection they had expressed unto him by the prayers they made for the success of his voiage and prosperity of his reign He promised them also that he would not only continue to live with that Republick in a perfect good correspondence but would also take a great pleasure to make a good and most streight alliance with it After this the King who staied but till this complement was ended went forth of his chamber at the same time the Estates of Holland retired He took his way to the Princess Royal her apartment whom he would visit at home before he took horse and seeing that the Lords the Estates conducted him he would not be covered from his house to the chamber of the Princess Royal where being come the Estates retired to take coach when they saw the King to go a horse back The conversation which his Majesty had with the Princess was but a moment for immediately after he went thence and came down into the Court of the Palace where he mounted a horse back with the Princes his brothers and took his way for Scheveling with the report of the great artillery which thundred from the Rampire marching in the mid'st of those two Princes and having before him the Prince of Orange accompanied with Prince William of Nassau Governour of Freesland with Mr of Wassenaer Lieutenant Admiral of the Province and with many other persons of condition The Queen of Bohemia the Princess Royal the Princess Dowager and the Princesses her daughters took coach as well as the Estates of Holland who would accompany him in body even to the place of his embarkment The Embassadours and other Ministers of forraign Princes who sent not there their coaches for the same reason that had dispensed them thereof at the entrance and almost all persons of condition took the avantguard and disposed themselves along the coast where the Citizens the Horse and the Regiment of the Guards stood in Battalia A great part of the inhabitants of the neighbour Towns were there already and those that came not forth of the Hage early in the morning or the nightbefore followed the Royal Persons in so great a multitude that that place which is very populous and could not lodge the people that were come there from all places of the Province was abandoned and converted into a desart in very few hours As soon as they saw the King to appear on the hill which covereth the village of Scheveling on the sea side the Cannon which was transported two daies before from the Viverberg upon the strand saluted him with its whole battry which ceased not to shoot continually untill being drawn off from those coasts could see no longer the honour they indeavoured to render him The Citizens and the Guards answered thereunto with their vollies of Musket shot and the Cavallery with their Carbines and invited thereby the Fleet to make all their artillery to thunder which afving lightened the air filled it with so thick a smoak that those great floating Castles disappeared in a moment to the eys of those that were on the land The King being alighted received the last complement of the Lords the Estates of Holland who had conducted him in body to the very brink of the sea and left him Deputies to conduct him to his ship by the mouth of the Pensionary Councellour His Majesty next took leave of the Duke of Brunswick-Lunenbourg of the Princess Dowager of Orange of the Princess of Nassau and of the young Lady of Orange her daughter and of all the other persons of quality which could not follow him or might trouble him in waiting on him to the Fleet There were none but his nearest relations the Queen of Bohemia the Princess Royal and the Prince of Orange that conducted him aboard the Admiral ship which was to pass him into England The Estates of Holland had caused one of the greatest barks of the place to be fitted for the Royal persons The body of the vessel was garnished with Tapistry its Mast carried the Royal Flag and its yards were loaden with garlands and crowns of verdure and flowers amongst which there was one fastned accompanied with a streamer which carried for Devise Quo fas fata to denote that the King in embarking himself went to the place where the justice of his cause and the providence of God called him and to allude to the ordinary Motto of the Kings of England Dieu mon droict The King entred there with all the Royal Family but seeing a shallop to approach covered glased and tapistred which the Admiral Montague had sent from aboard him as soon as he saw the King to appear on the Strand he entred into her and the Queen of Bohemia followed him This Shallop was accompanied with many others and was rowed with oars by the sea men who seeing themselves in possession of their Soveraign Prince made the whole neigbour shore to resound with their shouts and expressed their joy by all the marks that could be required from persons of that quality some in casting their caps up into the air and others in casting them into the sea to which some likewise abandoned their doublets and wastcoasts The Lord Montague who had changed the Flag of the pretended Republick before he departed from the coast of England and born that of the three Kingdoms whil'st he was in the rode seeing the King to approach caused the Royal Flag to be put to
Regalis scintillant fulgura recti Jamque Deum visu publicus orbis habet Floret tergemino constans Concordia Regno Sceptraque tot validis colligat arcta modis Nunc inscripta novis nascentur nomina terris Regis in Geminis conspicienda Rosis Quin auro qui floret ovans florentia Musis Condet Imperiis aurea secla suis. KEUCHENIUS VOTVM ET SALVS AD ILLUSTRUM VIRUM CONSTANTINUM HUGENIUM EQUITEM ZULECHEMI ET ZEELHEMI TOPARCHAM CELSISSIMO ARAUSIONENSIUM PRINCIPI A CONSILIIS ET SECRETIS PRO SALUTE ET IMPERIO MAGNI BRITANNIARUM REGIS CAROLI II. KALENDIS AUSPICIBUS ANNI POST RESTITUTO MIRABILEM SEQUENTIS CHRISTI M DC LXI SAlve Poëta plurimumque CONSTANTER Salve Senator Toparcha ter salve ZULECHEME salve vive Principi salvus Idemque Princeps Salus Poëtarum CONSTANS perenna dum STUARTUS BELGA Regisque constat Belgicaeque Majestas Haec vota festis nuncupata sub fastis Cape tota Regi queis Britannico sacros Precamur annos Imperîque longaevam FIDEIQUE Solio praevalente Tutelam Non jam Triumphis maximisque mirandis Superbus insto grandiorque regales Apto cothurnos ALITER HOC SACRUM CONSTAT CUI CONSTAT UNUS QUI SUIS SUUS CONSTAT DEBEMUS OMNES Debito repraesentat Hos insolutos Musa Gelra 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 MARS ORBIS HAERES TERROR ORBIS AC TUTOR MARS ORBIS ATHLAS IMPERANTIUM LUMEN FIDEIQUE NUMEN COELITUS REDONATUM DOLOS ET ARMA MACHINASQUE TRANSGRESSUS INVICTUS ARMIS NEC TAMEN FEROX ARMIS ASTU STUARTUS MAJOR AT VALENS ASTU FELIX TRIMPHIS ET PIUS TRIUMPHATOR CUNCTIS VERENDUS INDOMABILIS CUNCTIS DIS ET BRITANNIS BELGIOQUE SUBVECTUS DIS ET BRITANNIS BELGIOQUE REX VIVAT KEUCHENIUS The beginning of free Parliament The King's Letter to the Parliament The King sends a general Act of Oblivion The Army declares it self The Speaker of the Lower House his discourse to Sr. Iohn Greenvil The King arrives at Breda Lambert's defeat The Prince of Orenge comes to Breda As also Prince Frederic of Nassau And the Duke of Brunswic Lunenburg They know at Breda the Declation of the Parliament The news whereof is carried to the Hague The Estates of Holland send Deputies to the King The Estates General send Deputies to the King Mr. Beverweert goes to Breda The Marquess of Caracene desires the King to pass into Flanders Order of the precedence between the States General and the Estates of the Province of Holland Thurlo's Secretary comes to Breda The Deputies of the Estates General and of Holland depart The Deputies of the Estates General arrive at Breda The Deputies of the Estates General have audience of the King Have audience of their Royal Highnesses The Deputies of Holland have audience of the King Particular audience of the Deputies of the States General Mr. d'Amerongen goes to Breda Order between the Estates General and those of Holland for precedence in the Province The Estates send to pray the Embassadours not to send their Coaches to meet the King The speech of the Burgemaster of Breda The King embarks himself The town of Amsterdā makes a present of a fair Yacht to the King of Englād The King passeth in sight of Rotterdā The King arrives at Delf The King is complemented at Delf by the Deputies of every member The King arrives at the Hage The Queen of Bohemia and the Princess of Orange attended him The Estates General go to salute the King in a body The Speech of the Lord of Gent. The Counsel of Estate and the Reckoning chāber have audience Difficulties upon the audi ence of the Embassadours Audience of the Embassadour of France Audience of the Extraordinary Embassadours of Denmark The Embassadour of Portu gal cannot have audience The King giveth audience to the Deputies of the town of Amsterdam The Estates of Holland forbid the Courts of Iustice and the other Bodies to complemēt the King * The Estates General cause the Queen of Bohemia their Royal Highnesses and the Prince of Orange to be complemented The Estates General make a foundation of three hundred thousand gilders for the King's expence Audience of the Commissioners of the Parliament Particulars of the King's escape after the battel of Worcester Major Cromwell doth reverence to the King As also Sir Williā Davisson The Regiment of the Guards exercise Audiencé of the Deputies of Amsterdam Speech of Mr. de Groot Audience of the Extraordinary Envoy of Swethen How the King was served False advertisemēt of a design upon the King's person The Estates of Holland send victuals and provisions to the fleet The Estates General furnish Uessels to transport the King's stable And cause the Commissioners of Parliament to be complemented The Estates of Holland give charges upon the Kings recommendation They send to complement the Commissioners of Parliament Advise of the Coun cel of Estate of Holland for a foundation of six hundred thousand Gilders The Councel of Estate gives order for the imbarkment of the baggage Audience of the Ministers of Brandenbourg Audience of the Resident of Hessen Mr. Raet is made Knight Barronet The Embassadour of Spain entertaines the King Downing presents himself to the King The King toucheth the sick The English doubt not the effect of this remedy Feast of the Estates of Holland Order of the Estates General and those of Hollād to complement the King in taking leave The Estates of Frees land send to complement the King The Count of Oldenbourg is the first of the strangers which complemēted the King The Duke of York caused the Fleet to take an oath Changeth the name of the Admiral ship Descriptiō of the Admiral The King renders a visit to the Estates General The King makes a visit to the Estates of Holland The Estates General take leave of the King in a body The Speech of Mr. of Gent. Presents of the Estates of Holland to the Dukes of York and of Glocester The King departs from the Hague The Speech of Mr. de Wit The King goes out of the Hage He imbarks * York * The Princess Royal. * Neptune * The Rump * Sueton. in Tiber.
row Of beautious buildings much indeed I ow To their rich merit but I cannot stay Prince Maurice Palace calls my thoughts away To contemplate its beauties and the rare Magnifick structure which may well compare With any modern VVork in all respects Of the best and the skilfull'st Architects But its chief glory is that it can say It lodged him whom Nations must obey Great Britains King Let 's make but one step more And only look upon the Court before VVe take our leave here do the Prince and States Meet and resolve on all their wise debates Here is their Councel here their Residence Here is their gain and here is their expence Our survey's ended we have gone the round It resteth only that the Peece be crown'd WILL LOWER THE GREAT FEAST The Estates of Holland made to the King and to the Royal family Pag. 80. THe Roman Story tells us that the feasts Lucullus made to entertain his guests Were such and so prodigious that the Sea The Land and Air were emptied every day To serve his table with all delicates Of Fish of Flesh of Foul and dainty cates Great Master of the mouth voluptuous Lord Had'st thou liv'd now to see this Princely bord This stately and magnifick service here Thou would'st cry out mine was but homely cheere This a repast for pallets all divine As those that sit here in these orbs and shrine Rap'd too with admiration thou would'st say That all the Elements do strive to pay A voluntary tribute to th' Estates Of their most rich and choicest delicates And that their fin'd and winged subjects all Offer themselves in sacrifice and fall Into the dishes of their own accord To furnish and adorn this Royal bord What is there wanting here that may invite The quaintest and most curious appetite Ladies feed freely 't is no mortal meat 'T is rather an Ambrosia that ye eat Will you drink Nectar Princes here 's a Wine That 's richer more delicious more divine Th' Italian Malvoisy cannot compare With this rare Juice sent down here from the air To please your tasts and to be swallowed In every health drunk to the Crowned Head The joyful thunder of th' Artillery Proclaims it louder then that of the Sky The Violins and other Instruments Strike pleasant airs here to delight the sense In an harmonious consort and the Spheres Descend with Musick to enchant those ears WILL. LOWER His Majesty taking his leave in the Assembly of the Estates Generall Pag. 90. SO look'd great Caesar when from his high Throne He would descend sometime to honour Rome By sitting in the Senate but we see Not the least sign of any Sympathy Between these modern Hero's here and those Old Senators whose surly brows spake foes Under a false respect unto their King Though his bright glory through the world did ring 'T is different here these brave Estates though free And Soveraign pay yet humility And lowly reverence through a candid love Unto this Prince as if he were their Jove And they his subjects see with what respects They entertain him by their sweet aspects And sober postures how they seem to say You shall rule here Sir and we will obey Mount our Tribunal all your words shall be Our Oracles and all your actions free As saving to us since so wise a King Draws them from perfect justice as their Spring WILL. LOWER HIS MAJESTY TAKING HIS leave in the Assembly of the Estates of Holland Pag. 93. STrange revolution Fate here 's Monarchy In Councel met with Aristocracy Though different in themselves here they agree And by their pleasant gestures seem to be Unanimous in all things what the one Demands the other grants division Is banish'd hence here is all harmony Love and alliance perfect amity A lasting League reciprocally sign'd By promises and both have but one mind Though different bodies and a different frame Of constitution as a different name In cordial terms here they congratulate Each others happy government and state Like twin-born brothers they salute embrace The one vows fealty and the other grace Long may they live united thus and never By any chance in their affections sever So shall they flourish both grow great and be Feared throughout the Worlds vast Monarchy WILL. LOWER ON HIS MAJESTIES DEPARTURE from the Hage to his Fleet before Scheveling Pag. 105. THus from the Belgick States delicious Seat Triumphantly departed Charls the Great The VVorld assembled from all parts to see This Monarch pass unto his Dignity The Continent could not contain the press VVhich crowded in all places to express Their common joy the Military Bands Of Horse and Foot were ranged on the sands To make a Royal Guard young Mars stood by Th' Illustrious Duke who by his hand and ey Gave full directions all the Cannon were Dispos'd in order by his Martial care The Sky was cleer the Winds were still the Sea Look'd like a fair Bride on her Marriage day When from the Crowned Bark the King betook Himself to Sea with Her whose only look Can calm the Tempests in the Skiff they went Sent from the Fleet the Seamens high content To see their Soveraign cannot be express'd But by their shouts the Seas most loyal breast Sweetly receiv'd its Master the old God Freely resign'd his trident Mace and Rod To him who better could command and sway That Element The gentle Dolphins play About the Boat they dance in rounds they skip And make a Sea-guard for him to his Ship Thus was the King embark'd when suddenly The thunder of the Cannon shook the sky From Sea to Shore the smoak obscur'd the Sun And made a night ere half the day was done Th' Artillery and small shot on the Strand Mov'd the Sand-hills and terrifi'd the Land As if it felt an Earth-quake but at last All this dissolv'd and that great Triumph past When our bright Star which grac'd the Belgick Sphere Drew off from thence his clouded own to cleer WILL LOWER AN ACROSTICK POEM In honour of his Majesty Call all those Sages whose extended hearts Heaven fils with light in th' Astrologick Arts Ask their opnions of this Monarch they Reply he 's born the Universe to sway Look on this calculation read his Star Seven Planets here all in conjunction are They smile upon his birth no rude jars here Hinder his motions under any Sphere Excellent Aspects long live this great King Supream of all let his bright glory ring Even round about that Globe held in his hand Can earthly powers his conquering Arm withstand Or check his fortune which the Stars proclaim Not possible since Heaven inspires his claim Draw presently with an immortal pen Kings in their colours some quick Cherubin In Characters drop'd drown suiting their souls Note revolutions in these sacred Rolls Greatly to the advantage of our State Of much import to make us fortunate For many years under this glorious Reign Giving us hopes of th' golden Age again Return