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A67903 The five years of King Iames, or, The condition of the state of England, and the relation it had to other provinces. Written by Sr Foulk Grevill, late Lord Brook.; Five years of King James. Greville, Fulke, Baron Brooke, 1554-1628.; Wilson, Arthur, 1595-1652, attributed name. 1643 (1643) Wing W2887; ESTC R12332 56,301 91

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perdidit Sed hoc quoque ipsos quos beavit pendebit Our lusts our soules our wealth we spend In Court to purchase praise But what reward is in the end For our deserts repaie Their vowes and protestations deepe Not prest in paper but in mind Their sounds of words to lulls asleep From body forc't not from the mind Hands there wee joyne but not our hearts Whereby it happeneth few are blest And many thousand that resort Unto the Court by it are lost And of those few that blessed are Wee often see there fall againe Their blessed dayes they spend in care And after end their lives in paine The complaint for want of treasure The King sets many Lands to Fe● Farme That death of the Lord Harrington The death of his sonne GReat summes of money being disbursed upon her Graces Wedding and dayly imployments for others● some for Ireland The Lord Treasurer wanting there to defray ordinary expences some for the Kings owne use and some for other occasions causes a great complaint for want of treasure Officers at Court goe unpaid and many of the Kings Servants receive not their wages at set times so that the King is forced to set many of his Lands to Fee Farme and the four Deputie Treasurers with some few other have the passing of them now my Lord Harrington obtained a Patent for the making of brasse Farthings a thing that brought with it some contempt though lawfull for all things lawfull are not expedient who being injoyned to go into the Low-countries with her Grace by the way lost his life His sonne succeeded both in honour and Patent and enjoyed them not long before he dyed within short time after the hopefullest gentleman of that name more fit for imployments then for a private life and for a Statesman then for a Souldier he had beene at Cambridge there reputed for a great Scholler he travelled into Italy Venice and France he imployed his time for the most part in study whereby he made himselfe apt for great matters But yet it pleased God even then when he was in his greatest hope to cut off his dayes He gave all that he had to the Countesse of Bedford his Sister defeating her neither of the land nor the right of the Barony esteeming her to be worthy of much more then he had to leave He made a worthy and godly end These things coming so thick one after another left no time for men to dreame of Overburies death The Earle of Somerset his conscience accuseth him Northamptons speech to him He becometh a newter in Religion The Earle of Northamptons course A Nullitie being thus purchased he dignified as is said and the ma●ch concluded about Candlemas 1614. they Marry with much joy and solemnitie a Maske being performed at Somerset's charge and many rumors passe without any respect all these things nothwithstanding a guiltie conscience can never goe without accusation pensivenesse and fulnesse doe possesse the Earle his wonted mirth forsakes him his countenance is cast downe he takes not that felicitie in company as he was wont to do but still something troubles him Verily it is a dangerous thing to fall within the compasse of a guilty conscience it eateth and consumeth the soule of a man as rust doth Iron or as beating waves hallowes the Rocks and though these things are not made publique yet neverthelesse Northampton observed it in him having so admirable capacity he could make use of all things wherefore knowing his disease viz. his mind feared with murther and knowing the Earle tractable as he desired enters into more familiar discourse with him For when the mind of a yong man is corrupted with evill he runs headlong into sinne without stay or feare wherefore amongst many other discourses this falls betweene them That in case the death of Sir Thomas Overbury should come to light they were then in a most dangerous state And the next thing they must expect is losse of life goods lands honours their names to be made scandalous to the world and to conclude to be branded with an ignominious death Neither that there was any way left for to escape this but either by making their owne fortunes so great that he might oppose all accusations or else being Catholiques to endeavour that in defending them they again might assist their cause in case that any matter came against them this carrying some shew and likelihood of truth And that indeed his case was desperate if ever it should come to light concludes to combine with No●h●●pton in wh●tsoever he should undertake and in the conclusion became a ●e●ter in Religion whereupon to the intent he might set further evills on foot besides those before remembred he begins to rip up the ancient quarrell betweene the Welch and the English who now murmur at some discontents and to the intent to hearten on the Irish sends Letters thither by the hands of one Ha●mon a poore man unto such whom ●e knowes to be faithfull in the Romish Religion and thereby confirmes them in their opinion assuring them that God will still provide one or more to protect his Church and that now the greatest Favourite in England would stand for them upon which Letter the Irish grew obstinate as I have said and altogether neglect the service of God and utterly deny the Oath of Supremacy protesting losse of life and goods rather then to be inforced to so damnable a thing Now wee see there the Church utterly forsaken none to heare divine Service The discipline of their owne Church established and the Irish in generall expecting a day to have their libertie and freedome in Religion The same man returning this newes is after sent into Yorkeshire with a black staffe and a knob upon the end within which knob Letters are conveyed from place to place aswell for pointing Assemblies as meetings for Masse and entertaining of Priests now might a man goe to Masse in divers places of the City and who were so publiquely favoured as Priests Their number increase their Priests are entertained Confession in many places publiquely practised and although it was contrary to the Law yet greatnesse overcountenancing them it was little regarded In the meane time quarrells went forward betweene the Scottish and English continuall complaints and the suit of the Cloth-workers with hope of obtaining their request not so much because of the profit as to raise up a discontent betweene the Duchie and them These courses caused divers men to passe divers opinions and many men to passe their opinion as they affected either parties The rumors of the Spanish Fleet A Proclamation against Spanish money A Leaguer in the Low-countries The publique rumors against my Lord of Northampton He exhibits a bill in the Star-chamber against the publishers They justified by my Lord of Canterburie's speech The death of my Lord of Northampton his Funerall his Will The names of those that succeeded him in his Offices NOt long after it was rumoured
envy towards her husband even untill this time makes her repaire unto Mistris Turner a Gentlewoman that from her youth had been given over to a loose kind of life being of a low stature faire visage for outward behaviour comely but in prodigality and excesse most riotous by which course of life shee had consumed the greatest part of her husbands meanes and her owne so that now wanting wherewith to fulfill her expectations and extreme pride falls into evill courses as to the prostitution of her body to common lust to practise sorcery and inchantments and to many little lesse then a flat Bawd her husband dying left her in a desperate estate because of her wants by which meanes shee is made apt to enter into any evill accord and to entertaine any evill motion bee it never so facinerous A Doctors wife who was during his life her Physitian and in that time shee having entertained into her company his said wife by that meanes procured further acquaintance being neere of the said disposition and temperature as Pares cum paribus facile congregantur from thence it happened that shee was suspected even by her meanes and procurement before this to have lived a loose life for who can touch pitch and not be defiled I say having some familiarity with this woman and now taking some discontent at her husband more than heretofore by reason of her falling out with him and his sharpe answers as he conceives to her repaires to her house and there amongst other discourses disgorges her selfe against her husband whereby the cause of her griefe might easily be perceived Mistris Turner as feeling part of her paine pities her and in hope of profit being now in necessity and want is easily drawne to effect any thing that shee requires whereupon by the report of some it was concluded at this time betweene them to administer poison to the Earle but not taking effect according to their expectation the Countesse writes unto her to this purpose Sweet Turner as thou hast been hitherto so art thou all my hopes of good in this world My Lord is as lusty as ever he was and hath complained to my brother Howard that hee hath not layne with mee nor used mee as his wife This makes mee mad since of all men I loath him because he is the onely obstacle and hinderance that I shall never enjoy him whom I love The Earle having overpast this evill and continuing still in his prestine estate procured not any affection but more hatred and loathsomnesse so that it burst forth daily to my Lords great discontent and drawes her headlong into her owne distraction Sir Robert Carre made Viscount Rochester the acquaintance betweene my Lord of Northampton and him the new affection of the Countesse THe King taking great liking to this young Gentleman to the intent that he might be no lesse eminent in honour then hee was powerfull in wealth and substance adornes him with the title of Viscount Rochester bestowes the Secretariship of State upon him so that his honour and his wealth makes him famous to forraign Nations These things comming to my Lord of Northamptons ears having been a long time Favorite in Court and now growne into yeares and by reason thereof knowing the favour of the King to depend upon many incertainties and although at this time he was the greater actor in State affaires yet if this young man continued his height of glory all his dignity would either be abated or overshadowed and that he had not that free accesse to the Kings eares which he had wont to have endevoureth as much as in him lyeth to make this Courtier either to be wholly his or dependent upon his favour that so having relation to him hee might make use of his greatnesse And for this purpose he begins to applaud the wisdom and government of the Viscount his vertues outward Courtship comely carriage and to conclude holding him a man of no lesse worth and desert then any about the King neither were these things spoken to private or particular persons alone but even in the eares of the King to the intent to confirme the Kings favour towards him These things coming to this gentlemans eares takes it as a great favour from so great a personage and therefore so much the more admires his owne worth raising his carriage above his wonted course and in hope of better things applauding every action is performed by the Earle by which meanes there growes a kind of community betweeme them and there wants nothing but entercourse of speech for confirmance of acquaintance and procuring further relation either to other Time offers opportunity the Earle and he meets each changeth acquaintance with acquaintance of greater familiarity so that many times letters passed betweene them in their absence and courtly discourses being present by which meanes on all hands a confident amity is concluded In these times the Countesse of Essex being a spectator of those and perceiving this Viscount to be still raised up unto honours dayly in hope of greater is the more fired with a lustfull desire and the greater is her indeavours by the instigation of some of her friends to accomplish what shee determined for greatnesse doth not quallifie but set an edge upon lustfull appetites and where the most meanes are to maintaine it there the greater affections are cherished The course shee takes to procure affection shee combines with Doctor Forman they conclude to bewitch the Viscount IN these furious fits shee makes her repaire to Mistris Turner and begins a new complaint whereby shee makes manifest an extraordinary affection towards this yong gentleman so that shee could not rest without his company neither knew shee any means to attaine her ends there being no relation nor acquaintance betweene them whereupon Mistris Turner being still her second and ready to put any evill attempt into execution concludes with the Countesse to inchant the Viscount to affect her And for this purpose they fall acquainted with one Doctor Forman that dwelt at Lambeth being an ancient Gentleman and thought to have skill in the Magick Art This man by rewards and gifts was won to joyne with Mistris Turner who now to the intent to prey upon the Countesse endeavour the best they may to enchant the Viscounts affection towards her Much time is spent many words of witchcraft great cost in making Pictures of wax crosses of silver little babies for that use yet all to small purpose At length they continuing in their Sorcery advised her to live at Court where shee had free accesse without controule though of small acquaintance with him whom shee most respected neverthelesse shewing an aff●ble countenance towards him hoping in processe of time to attaine that shee required Time offers opportunity and amongst other at length these two fall into league the Countesse being joyfull of her prey admires him uses all kindnesse that may be to intrap him He whether by these inchantments or by
of friendship the reason whereof was thought to be for the ancient amity that had bee●e had heretofore betwee●e the King of that Nation from thence they went to the Duke of Cleeve and so to the Emperour with salutations The suit of the Cloth-workers my Lord o●Rochester stands for them The complaint of the Countesse shee sues ●or a Divorce NOw this yeare the Cloth-workers being covetous of larger imployments petition the King and Counsell that there might go no more white cloth out of this Kingdome but that they might be all dressed and dyed here before th●y went over and the reasons o● their petition were three First that the Hollander making use of dressing and dying our cloth almost doubled the value they bought it ●or whereby they were enriched and we were impoverished The second reason that whereas there was a multitude of poore in this Kingdome that wanted imployment if they might have the dying and the dressing of those clothes it would find them worke whereby they might be relieved and there was no reason why any other should make benefit of that which wee might make good of our selves Lastly whereas the Trade of dressing of cloth began to decay if now they might but have this in processe of time it might be restored and they might have as good skill to dresse cloth as the Dutchmen My Lord of Rochester my Lord of Northampton my Lord Tre●surer that now is were great agents in this businesse and were thought to have been promised great summes of money to accomplish it Now the Countesse begin● new complaints and findes her Art to continue firme and th●t indeed there was such frigidity quoad hanc accomplishe● That her hu●b●nd the good Earle of Essex could not execute the office of a hu●band she up and tels her friends that shee is still a maid and that shee had good cause to complain since that shee having continued so long his wife shee in that space had never the fruition of that pleasure that ought to be betweene man and wife for which cause shee protested that she would never keep him company any longer and desired a Divorcement because of his insufficiencie This seemed strange unto the world who tooke notice of the Earle to be of an able body and likely to have many children and to undertake any exploit for the good of the Common-wealth indeed valuing this to be but an idle and vain rumour that was spread as often happened to see how such a thing would be liked in the world and therefore let it passe with little notice In the meane time there is a motion betweene Rochester and her for a marriage and since it was so that the world had taken notice of their businesse now to make some satisfaction they would consummate a wedding betweene them This motion was well liked of on both parties but the obstacle remained her husband was alive and the Law would not permit her to have two husbands whereupon shee growes the more eager of a divorce that so shee might have a new hu●band for women of her disposition delight in change and therefore renewes her complaint advice is taken in the businesse whether such a thing may be had there being no cause publique of adultery or dislike of the husband Againe it was a question whether the wife might sue a divorce or not for that the Bill of divorcement was given to the husband and not to the wife many such like objections being disputed to and againe at last it is concluded That in case the Earle was so unable as she reported to execute the office of an husband and that upon the search of twelve matrons shee appeared still to be a maid It was lawfull that there might be a divorce and the reason was two-fold one that there might bee a frigidity quoad hanc another that marriage was appointed for procreation sake for which cause it was thought lawfull to sue a divorce Upon this they proceeded to the search twelve Matrons were empannelled the day appointed the search made and the verdict returned that she was a true maid who should bring this to the eares of the King but my Lord of Northampton and so to the world who growes jealous of fraud doubting either corruption or deceit for it was vulgarly reported that she had a child long before in my Lords absence whereupon some say this some say that and most that the Countesse was not searched but that one of Sir Thomas Monsons daughters was brought in to be searched in her place and so both Jury and Judges deceived But how true this is is not credible yet neverthelesse they grant a bill of divorce and now a seperation being had betweene them the Earle in a great discontent leaves the Court and repaired to his house in Warwickshire and there lives a private life The motion of Marriage goes forward Overburies opinion concerning it He disswades Rochester from it The breach betweene them the principall cause of it NOw might there bee a Lawfull discourse of marriage since there was a lawfull divorce had it neverthelesse been kept private and onely some particular friends made Privie on Rochesters side Overbury whose advice he requires amongst others in this businesse to what end it is unknowne Neverthelesse Overbury was utterly against it and being in serious discourse with him concerning this subject in the passage gallery at White-hall entred into these or the like words as was reported First how much he stood obliged to him for his countenance and favour and therefore would speak nothing but what was truth Then how du●iful and ready he was to performe all his commands from whence he might easily perceive that what he spake was out of affection And lastly that he had often endeavoured to avert his mind from these things that both time and the envie of men might turne his prejudice taxing him that he had made all this to become hurtfull unto him and converting the meaning of good intentions towards him to his disparagement and losse notwithstanding the Viscount still prest him on to passe his opinion protesting great kindnesse and to do nothing without his opinion whereupon he lets him understand that perceiving the common reports of the multitude and weighing them with the greatnesse of his person that he found it to be no lesse hurtfull to his preferment then helpfull to subvert and overthrow him For who would being possessed of so gre●t possibility as he was so great honours and large reve●nues and d●ily in expectation of others cast all away upon a wom●n th●t is noted both for her in●ury and immodesty and pull upon him the hatred ●nd contempt of great person●ges for so small a mat●er then he willed him to consider with himselfe the condition of the person wher●of he sp●ke the m●nner of her c●rriage from her yo●th her present conversation the m●ny ●nvies dishonours and dislikes that were attendant upon her and besides which is now the
art of poysoning entertained for the purpose and with a resolute mind ready to effect it made them neither suspect nor doubt any thing onely how they might get him to the Tower For this purpose it is thought fit that Roches●er having the Kings eare should be a meanes to possesse the King with some misdemeanors that he had committed that thereby the King being incenst against him and the refusall of the Embassage making evident the truth of these complaints that they need not doubt of any such matter whereupon my Lord of Rochester amongst other things as at time convenient lets the King understand how insolent Overbury was growne that he not only contemned him but His Majesty also estimating this imployment to be sent Embassador either too light a preferment for his deserts or else intended to procure him further evill and that he utterly dislik't it and determined to refuse it The King being possessed of these things and by him who to the judgment of the world was his greatest friend took displeasure at it so that by his countenance one might have perceived his anger For the frowning of a King is like the roaring of a Lyon terrible to the spectators and hearers so that now they doubted not of their expectations to get him into the Tower where being a Prisoner in the Kings disgrace under the protection of one who more esteemed their favour then the Kings displeasure sequestred from his friends no intercourse suffered to come unto him but what came from the Countesse Northampton Rochester and Weston a fit agent to execute all manner of evills why to the judgment of the world it is impossible that ever this evill should come to light And thus being ranked up in their owne conceits they run headlong to their owne destruction for when there were but two persons privie to the act of murther as in Cain and Abell it could not passe unpunished but that Cain must be marked with a perpetuall marke of ignomie how much lesse shall this go undiscovered when there are so many privie to it Thus may wee see that one sinne another doth provoke And that murther is as neere to lust as flame to smoake Sir Thomas refuses the Embassage Incurres the Kings displeasure He is sent to the Tower Westom is preferred to him Gresham dyes Fra●cklin entertained into the businesse A new speech of Marriage betweene the Countesse and Rochester SIr Thomas Overbury and Rochester having for some private occasion fallen into a new breach at Newmarket returnes very pensively to London and now the time being come that he should give an answer what he would doe concerning this Embassage he answered That he acknowledged himselfe much bound unto His Majesty for many favours that he had bestowed upon him as to preferre him to so great honour but yet neverthelesse knowing himselfe of such a place unexperienced how to execute it and besides tyed to many domestick businesses desired to be excused This seeming something strange and harsh that he should neglect his owne good and by this meanes incurre the displeasure of the King and lose his expectations makes some of his friends to wonder others to stand in a maze But in the conclusion as he had justly deserved by reason of his contempt he is committed to the Tower but not to be kept as a close Prisoner but after my Lord of Northampton and Rochester being both of the Privie Councell and in great favour at Court sends unto the Lieutenant that he should keep him close Prisoner and afterwards received by word of mouth from Sir Thomas Monson that he should not suffer any Letters tokens or other things to be delivered unto him Their expectation in this thing being accomplished Mis Turner by the instigation of the Countesse becomes a great suitor to Sir Thomas Monson to have his Letter to preferre Weston unto Sir Thomas to waite on him in the Tower who hearing the name of the Countesse and withall understanding the great affection that was betweene her and Rochester condescended wrote and sent him with the Letter to Sir Iervace in the Tower He shewed it to Sir Thomas willing to deserve his petitions chiefest favour with the more readinesse entertained him As when a man ignorantly treads upon a Serpent is stung for his labour So Sir Thomas harbours in his owne brest the author of his owne destruction Now Gresham growing into yeares having spent much time and many foule prayers to accomplish these things at this time gathers all his bables viz. pictures in lead in wax in plates of gold of naked men and women with crosses crucifixes and other implements wrapping them all up together in a scarfe crossed every letter in the sacred word Trinitie crossed A W O crossed these being very holily delivered into the hands of one Weston to be hid in the earth that no man might find them and so in Thames street having finished his evill times he dyed leaving behind him a man and a maid the one hanged for a Witch the other for a Thiefe After his death with much writing many entreaties and rewards one Francklin was entertained into these actions a man of a reasonable stature crook shouldred of a swarthy complexion and thought to be no lesse a Witch then the two former Gresham and Forman This man was more imployed to make poysons fit to be administred by Weston then otherwise for he was excellent in that art to mitigate or increase their strength so that sometimes a poyson should be a moneth ere it should worke Verily evill actions shall never want evill actors and in all ages Physitians Apothecaries Druggists ●ashired Serving-men that have fallen into want have still beene the agents in such enterprises Tiberius his Physitian Spado an Apothecarie and Ligdo Drusius Servant are made agents to be his Poysoners Neroes Bond-man must kill him Pisoes Captaine under Germanicus must poyson him and by the helpe of a woman poysoner of Cowe a towne in Gretia who was so skilfull that shee had poyson in his poyson in his haire to kill himselfe a Centurian to Maximus must poyson him Alexanders Phisitian Antipater and Aristotle must be the author of his owne death And here Francklin a kind of Phisitian Weston a Servant to Sir Thomas and Sir Iervace Yeluis who is as hereafter you shall heare Privado to the Earle and Viscount and the Countesse and Mistris Turner are made instruments to kill and dispatch Sir Thomas Overbury so that it hath beene almost in all ages and in all such outrages sound that either such persons or women have beene actors in such attempts Over●ury being thus confined into the Tower and accompted amongst them as a Fryer a dead person in the Law in whose brest many secrets were contained being still fed on with hope of preferment and liberty lest he should disclose what he knew They at their will and pleasure carrouse full healths of sin and abomination and freely discourse of a marriage to
abroad that the Spaniard had drawne out a Navie of Ships of an hundred Saile but to what purpose no man knew many suspected for England because they were come so farre upon those Coasts others said for the use of the Marriners to accustome them to Sea but most of all were of opinion that these were but shadows and that the Spaniard was to have taken advantage of the time Howsoever upon this there followed a Proclamation against Spanish money that their money should not go currant in England which caused many to suspect worse then the worst some said one thing some another upon the neck of that comes wars in the Low-countries some say against the Palsgrave some against the State The Scots begin to flie out in Rebellion and are supprest The wild Irish in Ireland begin to stirre sometimes thirtie sometimes fortie sometimes three hundred flie out and stand upon their guard These things minister occasion of wonder to the ignorant and many of them who knew the truth of things knew not what to say to it Priests come into the Kingdom by tens fifteenes twentie at a time and have free accesse so that my Lord of Northampton being Warden of the Cinque Ports begins to be called into question Some say he hath a hand in those things others say he lets Priests have their free accesse and that in Bloomesberie amongst his owne buildings they have free harbour others say that through his countenance thither any man might go to publique Masse besides many other Intelligences being brought from beyond the Seas drawes him further into suspition and the King begins to withdraw his favour from him wherefore he exhibits his Bill against such as defamed him into the Star-chamber some are for this cause committed to the Tower others to Newgate others to the Fleete till they come to their Answer And in the end openly in the Star-chamber he is accused for suffering Priests to have free accesse into Yorkshire under pretence of his Office for countenancing them for sending Letters to and againe to encourage men in their opinions and many other such like things And when the Lords should come to passe their voyces my Lord of Canterburie amongst the rest made a speech to this effect That although many have beene the rumours and reports that had passed in these times some of them shut up for uncertaine truths and flying fables then entertained for approved truths yet neverthelesse such things are grounded upon reason and for which men of upright consciences have some occasion to speak to have such either lightly valued or punished was rather injustice then any way beseeming the equity of that Court But in truth these whereof wee now speak are grounded upon some cause and my Lords owne Letters make evident that he hath done some things both against his owne conscience and meaning meerly to attaine unto honour and soveraigntie and to please the King And with that he pulls out a Letter written from my Lord to Cardinall Bellarmine to this effect THat howsoever the condition of the times compelled him and His Majesty urged him to turne Protestant yet neverthelesse his heart stood with the Papists and that he would be ready to further them in any attempt This and much more being read to some purpose he proceeded and shewed how that those things were not meerly uncertaine but even the actions that followed them did justifie them to be true For there was never knowne to be so many Priests to come over into this Kingdome in so short a time as of late there had done neither could he assure himselfe that my Lord was true hearted unto the State Also he harboured such about him as would undertake to write in defence of the Gunpowder Treason This and much more being said about the latter end of Easter Terme in the yeare 1614. my Lord being hereat much discouraged after the Court brake ●ooke his Barge went to Greenewich there made his Will wherein he published himselfe to dye in the Faith he was Baptized made some of his Servants his Executors others he bestowed gifts upon his faire house he disposed to my Lord Chamberlaine his Lands to my Lord Theophilus Howard retired back to his house at London and before Midsommer Terme following was dead Many were the rumours that were raised of this man after his death That he was a Traytor to the State and that he was not dead but carryed beyond Sea to blind the world and the reason was because he would be buryed at Dover and not at London Others say that if he had lived he would have beene the author of much stirre many dislike him and as was reported even the King himselfe towards his latter end which made him to fall into these courses but truly he was a notable polititian and carryed things more commodiously for the Papists then ever any before him His Funerall was kept privately at Rochester where he desired to be buryed because it was the chiefe Port Towne of his Office without any state to outward appearance My Lord Treasurer that now is succeeded him in his Treasurership My Lord of Somerset made Chancellor of Cambridge My Lord Zouch Warden of the Cinque Ports My Lord of Worcester some short time after Lord privie Seale These succeeded him in his Offices The Cloth-workers obtaine their Petition The old Charter of the Merchant adventurers is seized into the Kings hands The Dutch grow discontented at it The doubtfulnesse of Somerset's mind He sues for his pardon obtaines it My Lord Chancellor refuseth to seale it Falls into suspition Begins to be neglected THe Cloth-workers still persisting in their suit and having such strong friends to stand for them and Alderman Cocking a rich Merchant to back them they at length obtained what they desired and Proclamation goes forth that no more white Cloth shall goe over undied undrest and for this purpose the old Charter of the Merchants Ad●enturers is seized into the Kings hands so that the Company fall to decay Now the Dutchmen they begin to murmur ag●inst the English and make Proclamation there that no man shall buy any such Cloths as come over so drest and dyed wh●reupon the English make a new Proclamation that no man shall tr●nsport Wooles out of the Kingdome These things fed some with hope of some further troubles yet neverthelesse it is so ordered by the Councell that all things are pacified and some quantity amounting to a certaine number of white Cloths are suffered to be transported aswell to give content to the Hollander as satisfaction and imployment to some yong Merchants that had entred into this Trade by which meanes these clamors are a little stayed yet neverthelesse great impression of envie is betweene these two Countries Now one of the greatest friends that Somerset had being dead and himselfe still jealous of his safety he begins to cast about how he might avoid the danger of the Law for his intelligencers gave him notice of many
desperate words that were uttered concerning Overburie's death whereupon finding the King in a good humour he moves him to this effect That whereas it had pleased His Majesty to commit many things into his charge and some of them proving something too waighty for him to undergoe it was so that ignorantly he run himselfe into a Praemunire whereby he had forfeited to him both his lands goods and libertie and that he came now to surrender them all up into His Majesties hands unlesse it pleased him of his wonted favour towards him to grant him pardon for that and many other offences that he had ignorantly committed The King still bearing a good affection towards him bid him draw his pardon and he would signe it whereupon he makes his repaire to Sir Robert Cotton and entreats him to looke him a pardon the largest he could find in former presidents so he brings him one that was made by the Pope to Cardinall Woolsey The effect of which was That the King of his meere motion and speciall favour did pardon all and all manner of Treasons misprisions of Treason Murders Felonies and outrages whatsoever by the said Sir Robert Carre Earle of Somerset committed or hereafter to be committed with many other words to make it more ample and large according to forme which he caused to be drawne and ingrossed and brought it into the King The King signed it at length it comes to my Lord Chancellor's hand he peruses it and refuseth to let it passe the Seale My Lord askes the reason answer was made That he could not justifie the doing of it but that he should incurre a praemunire as well as himselfe This struck Somerset to the heart and now he was in greater doubt then ever he was before for still he is stung with feare to be touched with Overburies death and so very pensively retires to White-hall and there remaines The King coming to London my Lord Chancellor acquainted him with the Pardon and shewed the King what danger he had incurred in case he had sealed it The King perceiving the truth of the businesse suspecting some greater matter then he knew of withdrawes his countenance from Somerset who now wanting vertue to support his greatnesse without the Kings favour falls into the contempt of many and those that are his enemies neglect him and doe as it were deride his manner of carriage by which meanes he runnes headlong into his owne perdition as shall be hereafter shewed My Lord Chancellour sued in the Star-thamber for being within the compasse of a Premunire The King goes to Cambridge A breach about Ignoramus My Lord Coke stands against my Lord Chancellor The King graces Sir George Villers Bestowes great honours upon him Somersets courses to conceale Overburies death His covetousnesse His insolencie He is crost by Villers The report of the vulgar IN this yeare 1614 the King by the entreaty of Somerset determined to go to Cambridge and there was entertained with great solemnity but amongst the rest there was a Play called by the name of Ignoramus that stirred up a great contention betweene the common Lawyers and the Schollers in so much as their flouts grew unsufferable but at last it was stayed by my Lord Chancellour and the explaining of the meaning About this time it happened that divers Citizens having recovered certaine summes of money in the Kings Bench and thereof having had Judgement against the party Defendant neverthelesse exhibites his Bill into the Chancery to have reliefe of the Plaintiffes at the Common-law having already had Judgement of the same matter there stands out and disobeyes the Kings Processe whereupon a Writ of Contempt issues against them they are taken committed to the Fleet and there continue in their obstinacy neverthelesse not long after upon some advice they exhibit their Bill into the Star-chamber against my Lord intending that hee ought not to intermeddle with any matter that were already determined at the Common-law and whereof a Judgement had been passed And this was ordained by the Statute of 4. H. 4. cap. 23● whereby it was enacted that Judgement given in the Kings Court shall not be examined in Chancery Parliament or else-where untill it bee undone by attaint or errour c. Now my Lord having laid them fast up upon a Bill exhibited before him and Judgement being already given that therefore my Lord had incurred a Premunire and humbly prayed reliefe in this case Many were the opinions of Lawyers concerning this matter some stood on my Lord Chancellors side some said the poore men had injury and that they might justifie what they had done and amongst many my Lord Coke stood out very stiffely that my Lord Chancellor could not justifie that action And thus it stood still in question whether my Lord be in a Premunire or no My Lord of Somerset continuing still in his loose courses and utterly neglecting that severity that ought to be in a man of his place besides the former suspitions and jealousies gives occasion of others also whereby the King doth more and more fall into dislike There being at this time about the Court a young Gentleman that not long before had arrived from Travels out of France his name was Villers a Leicester-shire Gentleman and of an ancient House who as well in respect of carriage as of his countenance was more remarkable then many others On this man the King casts a particular affection holding him to be the onely properest and best deserving Gentlemen of England whereupon he entertained him into favour bestowes a thousand pound upon him after adornes him with the title of Knighthood And now he begins to grow every day more eminent then other greater honours are bestowed upon him as the dignitie to be Knight of the Garter and Master of the Horse places not common to every person and so much the more remarkable because they are bestowed upon him being so yong in yeares his wisdome is commended of the wisest and his expectations greater then many that went before him This stings Somerset to the heart to see another step to his place he more feares his subversion and downfall wherefore hee goes about to circumvent danger and for this purpose sends into France to make away the Apothecary that administred the Phisicke that killed Sir Thomas endeavouring to get in all Letters and writings that had past concerning the businesse and disgracing and discountenancing all such as at any time once spake of the death of Overbury to the intent that it might be concealed and kept close but what God will have disclosed sh●ll never be concealed messengers are sent from place to place he being a Privie Councellor and in favour his Warrant passes currant so that in all places Truncks Chests Boxes Studies Daries and such houses wherein he suspected any Letters or other matters that appertained to that mischief lay hid were broken open and se●rched to the intent that they might bring some writings to my Lord yet
intent to incense the people the more against them and to make the matter the more hainous and grievous to the world At this time the Lady Arbella died a matter more remarkable then was observed and gave some occasion of speech to many but yet neverthelesse past over in silence These Hurly-burlies being growne somewhat calme and the minds of men a little setled the Countesse and others authorised for that purpose to be examined and my Lord Coke was the man that prest the Evidence against them which as it was thought procured some great enemies two and twenty Articles were objected against them Somerset pleaded Ignorance and that these Objections were meere tricks to intrap him and set the King against him The same answer was in the Countesse and that it might rather seeme to proceed out of envie then for any just cause They cause it to be given out that their accusations were wrong●ull and none were accused but such as were the greatest Favourites to the King so that there was much ado to little purpose At last when they heard that Weston Turner Francklin and Yeluis were all hanged and that they had confest the matter the Countesse being brought before the Councell confest the whole truth but Somerset stood to it still that he was not agent in it and that these accusations did nothing touch him and therefore ought to be excused Neverthelesse his lands and goods were committed to custodie part to my Lord Treasurer and part to others to the Kings use The Money Plate and Jewels which he had heaped up together amounted by report unto 200000. pounds his lands 19000. pounds per annum and the King bestowed many of them upon the Prince There was little speech of this in respect that both person and matter wherein hee was agent were both envied and facinerous nei●her was there any that pitied him but most said that hoe had but his just deserts for the injuries and wrongs that he offered unto Essex The Arraignment was put off and in the meane time Sir Walter Rawleigh was set at liberty This man had continued in the Tower now almost ten yeares a condemned person for a plot intended against his Majesty at his first comming in he bore a great envie against Somerset because he had begged his lands of the King and got it into possession giving him many quips and taunts during the time that he was in the Tower These two accidents happening beyond expectation that the one being the speciall favourite of the King the other a condemned man the one imprisoned the other set at liberty gave great occasion of speech and rumour and so much the more wonder and admiration because of Rawleighes wit and policie And this yeare also the Countesse of Shrewsbury who was committed for being privie to the escape of the Lady Arbella was set at liberty and the Earle her husband dyed leaving the greatest part of his land unto his daughters during all this time that is from Michaelmas Terme unto the short vacation betweene Easter and Trinity Terme the Arraignment was put off some attributed the cause to be for because the Countesse was with child and in the meane time was delivered of a daughter some that further proofes of incertainties might be brought in others to give them longer time to consider on the matter and that it was a great favour I say these rumours being published amongst the people at length the King authorised my Lord Chancellor to be High Steward of England for the time being and joyned eight of his Judges with him for his assistance viz. The foure Judges of the Kings Bench my Lord Chiefe Justice of the Common Pleas Justice Niccols my Lord Chiefe Barron and others of the Barrons with power to call Somerset and the Countesse before them to shew cause why they should not have sentence of death passed upon them for this offence committed both against the Laws of the Land and against the King his Crowne and Dignity So upon the foure and twentieth of May in this yeare 1616. There being a Seat Royall placed at the upper end of Westminster-hall a little short of the Kings Bench and seats made round about it for the rest of the Justices and Peeres to sit on and a little cabbin built close by the Common Pleas for the Prisoners when they came from the Tower to be put to rest them in They proceed to the triall after this manner As soone as my Lord High Steward with great State came into Westminster-hall with his assistants the Judges divers Lords and Gentlemen attending and foure Serjants at Armes before him ascending a little gallery made of purpose to keep off the croud he takes his seat and the rest of the Assistants and Peeres according to their places This being done after silence proclaimed one of the Harrolds at Armes reaches the High Steward his Patent and delivers it to the Clerke of the Crown to reade it After Sir Ralph Conis●y reaches him his staffe and i● there present according to his place to give attendance After the Patent read and proclamation for silence and that the accusers should come in the Prisoners were sent for by the Clerke of the Checker whose office it was to attend the Prisoners This being done and the Prisoners placed at the Barre Sir Henry Fanshaw reades the Indictment to which the Countesse pleaded guilty and confessed the fact But Somerset pleaded not guilty and had time from ten of the clock at night to cleare himselfe much was said but to little purpose At last the Peeres having conferred of the matter returne their verdict laying their hands upon their brests and swearing by their Honours for they doe not m●ke an Oath as ordinary Jurors do that he was guilty of the murther and poysoning of Sir Thomas Overbury whereupon my Lord High Steward pronounced sentence of death ag●inst him and so he was had back to the Tower where hee remaineth at the mercy of the King This man may justly say as Pope Barbaressa said when hee was put from the Popedome Qui modo summus eram laetatus nomine praecel Tristis abjectus nunc mea fata gemo Excelsus solio nuper versa●ar in alto Cunctaque gens pedibus oscula prona dabant Nunc ego poenarum sundo devulvor in imo Vultum deformem pallidaque ore gero Omnibus e terris aurum mihi sponte ferebant Sed nec gaesa juvet nec quis amicus adest Sic varians fortuna vices adversa secundis Su●dit ambiguis nomine ludit atr● Cedit in exemplum cunctis quos gloria tollit Vertice de summo mox ego Papa cado Loe here I am that sometime tooke delight in name of Pope Now being sad and abject doe bewaile my fate and hope Of late preferr'd I did converse with stately pompe and grace And every Nation to my feet their ready kisses place But now in dungeon deepe am throwne of paines
taken by another so that men dye other mens deaths Concidit infelix alieno vulnere and it is as the Psalmist calleth it Sagitta no●●e volans The arrow that flyeth by night that hath no ayme nor certainty and therefore if any man shall say to himself here is great talke of impoysonment but I am sure I am safe for I have no enemies neither have I any thing another man should long for why that is all one hee may sit next him at the table that is meant to be impoisoned and pledge him of his cup As we may see in the example of 21. H. 8. that where the purpose was to poyson one man there was poyson put into barme or yeast and with that barme pottage or grewell was made whereby sixteene of the Bishop of Rochesters servants were poysoned nay it went into the alms-basket likewise and the poore at the gate were poysoned And therefore with great judgement did the Statute made that year touching this accident made impoisonment high Treason because it tends to the dissolving of humane societie for whatsoever offence doth so is in the nature thereof high Treason Now for the third degree of this particular offence which is that it is committed upon the Kings prisoner who was out of his owne defence and meerely in the Kings protection and for whom the King and the State were a kind of respondent it is a thing that aggravates the fault much for certainly my Lord of Somerset let me tell you this that Sir Thomas Overbury is the first man that was murthered in the Tower of London save the murther of the two young Princes by the appointment of Richard the third Thus much of the offence now to the proofes For the nature of proofes you may consider that imprisonment of all offences is the most secret even so secret as that if in all cases of imprisonment you should require testimony you should as good proclaime impunity Who could have impeached Livia by testimony for the poysoning of the sigges upon the tree which her husband was wont to gather with his owne hands who could have impeached Parasetis for the poysoning of the one side of the knife shee carried with her and keeping the other side cleane so that her selfe did eat of the same peece of meat that they did whom shee did impoyson These cases are infinit and need not to be spoken of the secresie of impoysonment but wise men must take upon them in these secret cases Salomons spirit that when there could be no witnesses collected the act by the affection But yet we are not at our cause for that which your Lordships is to trie is not the act of impoysonment for that is done to your hands all the world by Law is concluded to say that Overbury was poysoned by Weston but the question before you is of the procurement onely and as the Law termeth it as accessary before the fact which abetting is no more but to doe or use any act or meanes which may aide or conduce to the impoisonment So that it is not the buying nor the making of the poyson nor the preparing nor confecting nor commixing of it or the giving or sending or laying of the poyson that are the only acts that doe amount unto the abetment but if there be any other act or meanes done or used to give opportunity of impoysonment or to facilitate the execution of it or to stop or divert any impediments that might hinder it and that it be with an intention to accomplish and atchieve the impoysonment all these are abetments and accessaries be●ore the fact As for example if there be a conspiracie to murther a man as he journeyeth on the way and it be one mans part to draw him forth to that journey by invitation or by colour of some businesse and another taketh upon him to disswade some friend of his company that he be not strong enough to make his defence and another hath a part to hold him in talke till the first blow be given all these my Lords without scruple are accessaries to the murther although none of them give the blow nor assist to give the blow My Lords he is not the hunter alone that lets slip the dog upon the Deere but he that lodgeth him and hunts him out or sets a traine or trap for him that he cannot escape or the like But this my Lords little needeth in this case for such a chaine of acts of impoisonment as this I thinke were never heard nor seene And thus much of the nature of the Proofes To descend to the Proofes themselves I shall keep this course First I will make a narration of the fact it selfe Secondly I will breake and distribute the proofes as they concerne the Prisoner And thirdly according to the distribution I will produce them or reade them to use them So that there is nothing that I shall say but your Lordships shall have three thoughts or cogitations to answer it First when I open it you may take your ayme Secondly when I distribute it you may prepare your answers without confusion And lastly when I produce the witnesses or the examinations themselves you may againe ruminate and readvise to make your defence And this I do because your memory and understanding may not be oppressed or overladed with length of evidence or with confusion of order nay more when your Lordships shall make your answer in your time I will put you in mind where cause shall be of your omission First therefore Sir Thomas Overbury for a time was knowne to have great interest and streight friendship with my L. of Somerset both in his meaner fortunes and after in so much that he was a kind of oracle of direction unto him and if you will beleeve his owne vaunts being indeed of an insolent and thrasenicall disposition he tooke upon him that the fortunes reputation and understanding of this Gentleman who is well knowne to have an able teacher proceede● f●om his company and counsell and this friendship rested not only in conversation and businesse at Court but likewise in communication of secrets of Estate for my Lord of Somerset exercising at that time by his Majesties speciall favour and trust the Office of Secretary provisicually did not ●orbeare to acquaint Overbury with the Kings Packets and dispatches from all p●●ts of Spaine France and the Low-countries and this not by glimses or now and then rounding in the eare for a favour but in a setled manner Packets were sent sometimes opened by my Lord sometimes unb●oken unto Overbury who perused them copied them registred them made table●talke of them as they thought good So I will undertake the time was when Overbury knew more of the Secrets of Estate then the Councell Table did nay they were growne to such inwardnesse as they made a play of all the world besides themselves so as they had Cyphers and Jurgons for the King and Queene and great men of
prospered then those that were profitable to the Common-wealth Of my Lord of Northamptons coming to honour the cause of the division betweene the Hollanders and the English betweene the Scottish and English betweene the English and Irish NOw Henry Howard yongest sonne of the Duke of Norfolke continuing a Papist from his infancy unto this time beginning to grow eminent and being made famous heretofore for his learning having beene ●rained and brought up a long time in Cambridge by the perswasion of the King changeth his opinion of Religion in outward appearance and to the intent to reape unto himselfe more honour became a Protestant for which cause he was created Earle of Northampton and had the Kings favours bountifully bestowed upon him first the office of Privie-seale then the Wardenship of Cinque Ports and lastly the refusall of being Treasurer This man was of a subtile and fine wit of a good proportion excellent in outward courtship famous for secret insinuation and for cunning flatteries and by reason of these flatteries became a fit man for the conditions of these times and was suspected to be scarce true unto his Soveraigne but rather endeavouring by some s●cret wayes and meanes to set abroad new plots for to procure innovation And for this purpose it was thought he had a hand in the contention that happened amongst the Hollanders and English concerning the Fishing the Hollanders clayming right to have the Fishing in the Levant and the English claiming right upon this contention they fell from clayme to words of anger from words of anger to blowes so that there dyed many of them and a starre was left for further quarrell but that it was salved by wise Governors and the expectation of some disappointed Neverthelesse the Papists being a strong faction and so great a man being their favourer grew into heads malice and indeavour to make the insolency of the Scotts to appeare who to this intent that they might be the more hated of the English not contented with their present estate would enter into outrages some count●rfeit the seale Manuell others quip the Nobility in disdaine and a third sort secretly contrive the English death whereby it happened besides common clamor that there were added secret discontents of private persons which caused jealousie to happen in those two Nations But His Majesty being both wise and worthy fore-saw the evill and prevented it by Proclamation by which meanes these clamors are stopt and the injurie and offences of both parties redressed The Irish seeing these sores and hearing of these misdemeanours for they have their intelligents here also begin to grow obstinate and make religion a pretence to colour their intentions for which cause they stand out and protest losse of life and goods rather then to be forced from their opinion being wavering and unconstant rather thirsting for Rebellion to the intent to purchase their owne liberty then peace every new alteration gives occasion of discontent and causes new complaints to be brought to the Kings eare under pretence whereof they grew contemptuous to their Governors and haters of the English Lawes The Captaines and Souldiers grew negligent for want of pay the great men envying one another through private covetousnesse and many insolencies being suffered causeth there also to be nourished many misdemeanours to the ruine of that Government These things being thus handled administers occasion to the Papists to hope for some alteration and change And that as a body that is violent consumeth it selfe without some speciall cause to maintaine it so these occurrents will be the cause of their owne destruction At this time there was a Leaguer in Denmarke and shortly after another in the Low-countries but to what end their beginnings were intended is yet unknowne The rising of the Earle of Somerset his favour and greatnesse with the King and his Parentage and discontent AMong other accidents that happened about these times the rising of one Master Carre was most remarkable a man borne of meane parentage inhabitant in a Village neere Edenborough in Scotland and there through the favour of friends was preferred to His Majesty to be one of his Pages for he kept twelve according to the custome of the French and so continued it so long as he was in Scotland afterwards coming into England the Counsell thought it more honourable to have so many Foot-men to run with His Majesty as the Queene had before these Youths had cloathes put to their backs according to their places and 50● a piece in their purses and so were dismissed the Court This youth amongst the rest having thus lost his fortunes to repaire them againe makes haste into France and there continued untill he had spent all his meanes and money So that now being bare in a strange countrey without friends or hope to obtaine his expectation returnes back for England bringing nothing with him but the Language and a few French fashions neverthelesse by the helpe of some of his countrey men and ancient acquaintance he was preferred unto the Lord Haies a Scotchman and favourite of the Kings to waite upon him as his Page not long after that Lord amongst many others was appointed to performe a Tilting who bearing an affection to this yong man aswell in respect he was his countrey man as that he found him to be of a bold disposition comely visag'd and of proportionable personage commixt with a courtly presence preferres him to carry his devise to the King according to the custome in those pastimes used Now when he should come to light from off his Horse to performe his Office his Horse starts throwes him downe and breakes his Legge this accident being no lesse strange then suddaine in such a place causes the King to demand who he was answer was made his name was Carre he taking notice of his name and calling to remembrance that such a one was his Page causes him to be had into the Court and there provided for him untill such time as he was recovered of his hurt after in processe of time the yong man is called for and made one of his Bed-chamber to His Majesty he had not long continued in his place before by his good endeavours and diligent service in his Office the King shewed extraordinary favour unto him doubling the favour of every action in estimation so that many are obscured that he may be graced and dignified Thus the hand of the diligent maketh rich and the dutifull servant cometh to honour he of all other either without fraud to obtaine or desert to continue it is made the Kings favourite no suit no petition no grant no l●tter but Mast●r Carre must have a hand in it so that great rewards are bestowed upon him by su●tors and large sums of money by His Majesty by which meanes his wealth increased with his favour and with both Honours for vertue and riches dignifie their owners being from a Page raysed to the dignity of Knighthood After his favour increasing
with his honours there was no demand but he had it no suit but he obtained it whether it were Crowne lands lands forfeited or confiscated nothing so deare but the King bestowed upon him whereby his revenues were enlarged and his glory so resplendent that he drowned the dignity of the best of the Nobilitie and the eminencie of such as were much more excellent By which meanes envy the common companion of greatnesse procures him much discontent but yet passing through all disadventures continues his favour and men being drawne to applaud that which is either strange or new began to sue him and most to purchase him to bee their friend and assistant in Court so great and eminent was his favour Of the breach that happened betweene the Earle of E●●ex and his Countesse her hatred towards him his lenity her lightnesse his constancy Now the cares of the vulgar being filled with the fortunes of this gentleman it ministreth occasion to passe to their opinions concerning his worth and desert some extoll and laud his vertues others the proportion of his personage many his outward courtship and most as they stood affected either praised or dispraised him insomuch that amongst the rest the Countesse of Essex a woman of this time did not greatly affect her Husband and withall being of a lustfull appetite prodigall of expence covetous of applause ambitious of honour and light of behaviour having taken notice of this yong gentlemans prosperity and great favour that was shewed towards him above others in hope to make some profit of him most advances him to every one commending his worth spirit audacity and agility of body so that her ancient lawfull and accustomed love towards her Lord begins to be obscur'd and those embraces that seemed heretofore pleasing are turned into frownes and harsh unseemly words usher her discontents unto her husbands eares The good Earle carrying an extraordinary affection towards her and being a man of a mild and curteous condition with all honest and religious care ready rather to suffer then correct these outrages patiently admonisheth her to a better course of life and to remember that now all her fortune dependeth upon his prosperity and therefore shee offered more injurie to her selfe then hurt unto him yet neverthelesse shee persisted and from bare words returned to actions thereby giving people occasion to passe their censure of this disagreement some attributing it to the inconstancy and loosenesse of the Countesse others to the Earles travailes and that in his absence shee continued most unconstant of a loose life suffering her body to be abused and others to make shipwrack of her modesty and to abrogate the rights of marriage but most because shee could not have wherwith to satisfie her in●atiate appetite and ambi●ion her husband living a private life For these causes I say shee run at random and play'd her pranks as the toy tooke her i th' head sometimes publickly sometime privately whereby shee disparaged her reputation and brought her selfe into the contempt of the world yet notwithstanding the Earle retained her with him allowed her honourable attendance gave her meanes according to her place and shewed an extraordinary affection endeavouring rather by friendly and faire perswasions to win her then to become super●idious over her But these things little availe where affections are carryed to another scope and those things that to the judgment of the wise become fit to be used are of others contemned and despised so that almost all men speake of the loosenesse of her carriage and wonder that the Earle will suffer her in those courses whereupon he modestly tells her of it giving her a check for her inordinate courses shewing how much it both dishonoured him and disparaged her in persisting in the eye of the world after so loose and unseemly a sort● desiring her to be more civill at home and not so oft abroad and thus they parted Of my Lord Treasurers death of Master Overburies coming out of France his entertainment he growes into favour MY Lord Treasurer Cecill growing into years having been a good States-man the only supporter of the Protestant faction discloser of treasons and the onely Mercury of our time having beene well acquainted with the affaires of this Common-wealth falls into a dangerous sicknesse and in processe of time through the extremity of the malady dyes not without suspition of poyson according to the opinion of some others say of secret disease some naturally and many not without the privitie of Sir Robert Carre and the reason of their opinion was because the King upon a time having given Sir Robert the summe of twenty thousand pounds to be paid by my Lord Treasurer Sir Robert Carre was denyed it upon which denyall there grew some difference bet●●●ne them the King was privie to it after this manner my Lord having told out five thousand pounds laid it in a passage Gallery the King demands whose mony that was answer was made by my Lord Treasurer that it was but the fourth part of that which His Majesty had given unto Sir Robert Carre whereupon the King retired from his former grant and wished Sir Robert to satisfie himselfe with that holding it to be a great gift hee being thus crost in his expectation harbor'd in his heart the hope of revenge which after happened as was suspected but it is not certaine therefore I omit it Upon the death of this gentleman one Master Overbury sometimes a Student of the Law in the Middle Temple was newly arrived out of France who having obtained some favour in Court beforetimes because of some discontents got licence to travell and now at his returne was entertained into the favour of Sir Robert Carre whether it proceeded of any love towards him or to the intent to make use of him is not certaine yet neverthelesse he puts him in trust with his most secret employments In which he behaves himselfe honestly and discreetly purchasing by his wise carriage in that place the good affection and favour not only of Sir Robert but of others also In processe of time this favour procures profit profit treasure treasure honour honour larger employments and in time better execution For where diligence and humility are associate in great affaires there favour is accompanied with both so that many Courtiers perceiving his great hopes grew into familiarity with him the Knights expectations are performed and his businesse accomplished rather more then lesse according to his wishes So that taking notice of his diligence to outward appearance gives him an extraordinary countenance uniting him into friendship with himself in so much that to the shew of the world his bond was indissolvable neither could there be more friendship used since there was nothing so secret nor any matter so private but the Knight imparted it to Master Overbury Of Mistris Turners life how the Countesse and shee came acquainted The combination of the Earles death THe Countesse of Essex having harboured in her heart
be consummated betweene the Countesse and Rochester that so being tyed in this bond of matrimony and joyned in affinity with my Lord of Northampton more trust might be had in him and better use might be made of his Honour and greatnesse Now there is none to support him no man to disswade him his loosenesse with the Countesse gaules his conscience and that it might be the more offensive to him and make him the willinger to consent unto this motion he is still prest with it and that it is both unfit and unseemely whereas on the otherside if they marry it will be both lawfull honourable and commendable and the eares of the vulgar will be then stopt and none dares bee so bold as to touch it This carries shew of truth so that what with his former affection what with his present offence that he conceives at these courses concludes the marriage Times are appointed to conferre how impediments might be avoyded and what should be fitting to be dome in this behalfe How the Lieutenant came acquainted with the businesse Encouraged to persist by Northampton Rewards promised him Be examined Sir Thomas to find out his affection Most thinke of Religion Some think towards the Countesse IT is now high time to enter into this action and the Countesse meanes to be the first and for this purpose shee went and got a glasse of blew water some two inches long this being wrapped in a paper shee delivers to Westons sonne with instructions that he should go to the Tower and deliver it to his father he doth so who having his matter aforehand put into his head at supper time takes the same in one hand and part of Sir Thomas Overburies supper in the other hand and who should he meet withall but Sir Iarvace Yeluis the Lieutenant So he demanded of him with a kind of caution whether he should give it him now the Lievtenant stopt and asked him what to which Weston answered Sir you know what is to be done This made him stand in a maze and doubt the worst whereupon he cals Weston into examination and makes him confesse all his intention from what grounds and of whom he received it and partly the cause of it he now being made a slave unto greatnesse and having laid out much mony to purchase his place for feare to lose the one and to offend the other lets Weston go with this caution to omit it for that time whereas a wise man rather then he would have run himselfe headlong into perdition would have discovered and have made them a meanes to have manifested his faithfulnesse in his office But what shall we say to a man lost The next day he is sent for to the Lord of Northampton These after many long and large discourses at length the Earle discloses to him his intention concerning Overbury and with those things mingles many of his insolencies First of his obstinacie against the Viscount his insolencie against the Countesse his opposition almost against all good men and that for the causes of such a thing happened there being none to look after him it would passe unregarded or unrespected but withall gives him many cautions how he should manage himselfe in the businesse letting him understand what manner of man he was a Scholler and one that had an excellent tongue and wit a Traveller experienced in the course of the world and besides that favoured the contrary Faction and as great a Polititian as any was this day in England therefore in regard he ought to be the more wary both who came to him and who went from him and above all that no Letters passe to and fro These and many other such like speeches having past betweene them for the Earle was two houres by his owne confes●ion prompted him with cautions and considerations that he might be the readier to act his part in this adventure he was to deale in Lastly he concludes that above all he should insinuate with him to see how he stood affected to these proceedings and what words he uttered from a heart full of thirst with griefe and sorrow must either speake or burst and his service and diligence herein shall be rewarded with a thousand pounds Whether it was the greedinesse of the reward or the foolish desire he had to give content to the Earle and Viscount they being his only Favourers or some other hope still unknowne but he by this meanes is brought to his owne destruction and so gives consent to conceale that which was intended At his comming back he repaires to Sir Thomas Overbury under pretence to comfort him in his sorrow and adviseth him to be more lightsome and not to consume himselfe with griefe by this meanes entring into further discourse secretly insinuates into his intentions Sir Thomas having a good opinion of him and supposing all was done out of faith and honesty towards him having by this meanes learned what he could of him writes unto the Lord of Northampton a Letter to this effect MY especiall good Lord having undertooke my Prisoner according to your instructions after long silence as standing betweene hope and fear he takes his Bible and after he had read upon it and by it protested his innocencie after upon further conference concerning the Countesse he said that he had justified her already and that hee could doe no more then what he had done But for himselfe alas quoth he what will they doe with mee I answered so reason you as you shall make no question hereafter of your purenesse and I left him in some sense to worke upon him As I was going he concluded that in the generality shee was so worthy that shee might be a wife in particular ●or my Lord of Rochester he would not say it lest my Lord should condemne him for weighing his worth At my next comming to him I found him not in sense but fury He let fly at you but was respective to my Lord of Rochester whose part hee taketh altogether I see the event I desire it may be safely covered what my service may doe you in this or any thing else I will be faithfull to your Lordship and so I rest Jervace Yeluis These and many other things being inserted into this Letter was sent unto the Earle which he read and in reading laughs and smiles at the simplicity of the one and ignorance of the other neverthelesse in outward appearance hee applauds all the actions of Sir Iervace but especially to my Lord of Rochester holding him both a discreet and wise man and that his secrecie and honest dealing in this imployment deserves everlasting praises with after ages More Poysons are sent from the Countesse Sir Thomas Monson is suspected to have a hand in the businesse Overbury growes sickly Iealous of his dyet No accesse is suffered to him WEston having received 24l of his allowance and yet neverthelesse nothing accomplished according to the Countesse her expectation is checkt by Mistris
Turner for delaying it whereupon he gets into his hands certaine Poysons viz. Rosacre white Arsnick Mercury sublimate Cantarides red Mercury with three or foure more severall poysons tempering them with his broth and his mea● according as he saw them affected increasing and diminishing their strength as he was instructed by his ancient friend Master Franklin besides these Tarts and Jellies are sent by the Viscount and Countesse to Sir Thomas Monson as from thence by the hands of one Simon master servant unto Sir Tho to be delivered to Weston and so to Overbury every of which Tarts and Jellies were poysoned with a severall poyson These courses caused Sir Thomas Monson to be suspected of this act and to have a hand in it First in respect he preferred Weston to his service Secondly poysoned Tarts and Jellies went out of his house And lastly for that he did not discover these things his men only having accesse to the Tower and that to speak with Weston Now his salt his meat his drink and whatsoever he eates is mingled with poyson and for the increase of his torment is increased or diminished as the saw Sir Thomas Overbury affected By this meanes he begins to grow extreme sickly having beene hereto●ore accustomed to very good health insomuch that he can s●arce stand or goe what with the paine of his body and the heat yet neverthelesse being a strong man he stood it out a long time till at length he begun to grow jealous of his man Weston for his maladie increased or diminished as he affected but yet some Physick he desired and at his speciall instance and request and not without some gratitude as was thought one Paule de la Bell an Apothecarie by the advice of Doctor Marvin brought a Bath to coole his body with advice to be sparing of his dyet for that he suspected that his meate was not wholsome Surely this did him much good and preserved his life longer then they expected insomuch that they misdoubt some fallacy or fraud and therefore send new Letters to the Lieutenant to have a speciall care that none may be suffered to see him or speak with him for evill men are full of needlesse feares and now there is such speciall watch had over him that none of his men might be permitted so much liberty as to speak with him out at a Window and the reason being asked Answer was made that the Lieutenant had commandment from the Councell that it should be so Thus the good gentleman passed away his tedious and sorrowfull dayes with many discontents being filled with paines and griefe without friends and comforters ready to be vext and tormented upon every occasion and consuming and languishing away without any common society that was allowed to the meanest Prisoner in the house In this man may wee see the misery of such as fall into the hands of Popish Catholiques for by Northamptons meanes was this strictnesse shewed towards him here will wee leave him languishing in sorrow and lamenting his misfortune The Marriage betweene the Viscount and the Countesse published questioned whether it might be lawfull A nullity obtained to make it lawfull My Lord of Essex repayes the Portion The Viscount made Earle of Somerset TIme can no longer conceale these secret meetings but they must at length come to light The Marriage betweene the Viscount and the Countesse is published this is strange to the world and so much the more strange by how much three such great and eminent persons as the Earle of Essex the Countesse and the Viscount were interessed in it And now according to the common course every one speakes as he stands affected some boldly some sparingly some call her a loose woman and pities the good Earle of Essex and say that he had sustained more wrong then ever any English Peer had done First to suffer disgrace by the Prince now by his wife others blame her with words harsh and unseemly a third sort Rochester and that it is pity but that shee should prove as bad a wife to him as ever shee was to the Earle of Essex then if Overbury had beene at liberty this had never happened Others that were more stayed and judicious in their opinion foresaw the ruine and downfall of Rochester by this meanes but none durst speake of it For who will put his finger into the fire unlesse he be compelled neverthelesse to stop the mouthes of the vulgar this Marriage is called into question whether it may be lawfull or not because her Husband was then living For this cause the Bishops of this Land were divided By the opinion of some shee might by the opinion of others she might not my Lord of Canterbury London and many others were ut●erly against it But Winchester and Ely stood stiffely it might provided a Nullitie might be had for by that meanes the former Marriage should bee utterly determined A Nullity was obtained and upon the grant of that it was ordered that my Lord of Essex should repay her Portion that he received with her at his marriage that so to the shew of the world it might be said there had been no marriage betweene them This afterwards was called into question and thought a meere tricke of Northampton to discharge some of the greatest of the Clergie and to discountenance our Religion it left a foule scarre and gave a foule occasion to the Adversary to speake broadly where they had liberty and of some even in our Kingdome This Order being sent to my Lord of Essex hee forthwith prep●res for the repayment of five thousand pound for so much hee had received with her and for this purpose he sold and fell divers woods at Adderston and neere thereabouts His Grandmother the Countesse of Leicester helpt him much or else he should have been constrained to sell much land to have paid it verily a hard course having sustained so many injuries The King neverthelesse continues his favour towards Rochester and that he might be as eminent as the best he is installed Earle of Somerset Thus favours are heapt upon him though hee little deserved them And the Countesse what shee desireth is still to be a Countesse but called after another name that is Countesse of Somerset many are the chances that happen in the world some good some bad and those things we least suspect do soonest happen to divert us At this time my Lord of Somerset little thought to have been laid in the Tower and made heire of Overburies bed-chamber but by this we may see that all things are in the hands of God The Marriage comes to Overburies Eares Hee prophesieth his owne death He falleth into a relapse He writes to the Earle to remember his promise Answer is sent him with white Mercury instead of a medicinable Powder His death The state of his body after his death The Rumour th●t is spread of him The Authors Lamentation NOw although Sir Thomas Overbury was kept private and that no man
might have accesse to him yet the newes of this Marriage comes to his eares and presently upon hearing of it hee tels the messenger that hee had almost as good have said to morrow he should die for he was sure now not to live long and thereupon fals into great lamentations as well in regard of the Earle of Somerset that he had so cast away his Fortunes as of himselfe for that now he more suspected his life then ever heretofore Whereupon he falls into a Relapse and his malady increased every day more and more upon him whether weakened with griefe or for want of libertie or through abstinencie it is not unknown that the poyson had more power over him then ever heretofore in so much that he could scarce containe himselfe by reason of his extreme languishing away as a man in a consumption But with much more extremity so that now being in this extremity he thinkes it high time to put Somerset in mind of his promise And for this purpose he writes a Letter to this effect RIght Noble and worthy Sir the ●ormer accustomed favours and absolute promise concerning my present delivery hath caused mee at this time by these lines to solicite your Lordship and to put you in remembrance if the same not doubting that your Honour is at all forgetfull of me but only by reason of my imprisonment being possest of a dangerous disease would for my bodies safety pertake of the felicity of the open aire In which case if your Lordship please to commiserate my present necessities and procure mee my speedy delivery I shall not only stand so much the more obliged but also acknowledge you the defender and preserver of my life These lines being subscribed were sent to Somerset and delivered into his owne hands the messenger returnes answer that presently he could not accomplish what he required but willed him not to doubt for shortly he should heare of his deliverance Thus being fed with hopes he ●akes new comfort to him in the meantime Weston repaires to Mistris Turner for more of his pay being in want answer was made that as soone as he had ended his imployment he should not faile to receive it but before then he must not expect any thing whereupon he returnes and enters into new designes for in all this time that is from the one and twentieth of April untill the beginning of September following in the yeare 1613. Sir Thomas had held out while he was thus pusling himselfe to bring this to perfection Somerset sent him a Letter to this effect THat as yet the Court was busie about important businesse and the Kings eare was not at leasure to entertaine any motion but as soone as he could find opportunity hee would not faile to speake in his behalfe In the meane time to ease the paine of his malady he had sent him a soveraigne Powder either to be eaten or drunke which Powder was rancke poyson This feeds him still with hope but brings him small comfort Now Weston had found out an unknowne Apothecary and with him concludes for twenty pounds to administer a Glister wherein should be put Mercury sublimate the youth was to come to die it Weston prepares it perswades Sir Thomas that it will bee much for his health whereupon about the fourteenth day of September hee brings the said Apothecary to execute his office assists him therein and by the infusion thereof he falls into a languishing disease with a paine in his guts the next day ofter with extremity of paine he gave up the ghost After his death Weston receives the rest of his pay and dispatches the unknowne Apothecarie into France After it was given out that Sir Thomas lived a base loose life in the Tower and not according to that strictnesse as became a Prisoner but being suffered to have too much libertie he run into excesse of lasciviousnesse so that thereby he got the Pox and thereof dyed This went for currant amongst some amongst others that were ignorant some little respect had to it But to others that sought narrower into the matter they found it farre otherwise for De la Bell the Apothecarie before spoken of having relation to him a little before his death repor●ed he was changed in his complexion his body consumed away and full of yellow blisters uglie to looke upon and it appeared by a Letter my Lord of Northampton wrote unto Rocheste● to pick a thank That there was found in his arme ablister and upon his belly twelve kirnells raised not like to breake each as broad as three pence and as bigge as a small button one issue upon his back whereupon was a plaister from his shoulders downeward of a dark tawnie colour strange and uglie to behold he stunck so intollerably as was not to be borne withall glad to be throwne into a loose sheer into his coffin buryed without knowledge or privitie of his friends upon the Tower hill at lasts he conclude● that God is gracious in cutting off ill instruments befor● their time Some of the factious crew had a purpose if he had got out to have made some use of him from whence may be gathered how that Northampton held Protestans factious and suspected Sir Thomas to have further knowledge of his secrets then he would have had him which was the cause as was thought besides the former evills that hastned his end and caused him to be taxed with so great infamie as to dye of the Pox This passeth currant and the mischefe lyes conceal'd who dare to speake of it two such great men having their hands in it Thus may wee see that good and bad men come to miserable ends and oftentimes those that are vertuous do soonest suffer disgrace and contempt This man before he came to Court was brought up in all Gentlemanlike qualities in his youth at Cambridge after in the Middle Temple there instructed in those qualities became a gentleman by the intreatie of my Lord Treasurer Sir Robert Cecill preferred to Court found favour extraordinary yet hindred of his expectation by some of his enemies and to shift off discontents forced to travell and therein spent not his time as most doe to losse but furnished himselfe with things fitting a Statesman by experience in forraigne governments knowledge of the language passages of imployment externall courtship and good behaviour things not common to every man notwithstanding such are the imperfections of our times he is brought into ignomie and contempt and all those good qualities obscured by the disgracefull reproaches of a dissolute woman What shall we then say since that both vice and virtue do both end in miserie he is most happy that liveth most private for according to the saying of the Poet Vitam animas operam sumptus impendimus aula Praemia pro meritis quae retributa putas Aula dedit nobis rescripta votata papiro Et sine mente sonos sine corde manus Paucos beavit Aula plnres
the Realme things seldome used but either by Princes or their Confederates or at the least by such as practise and worke against or at the least upon Princes But understand mee my Lord I shall not charge you with disloyaltie this day and I lay this for a foundation that there was great Communication of Secrets betweene you and Sir Thomas Overbury and that it had relation to matter of State and the great causes of this Kingdome But my Lords as it is a principle in Nature that the best things are in their corruption the worst and the sweetest wine maketh the sowrest vinegre so fell it out with them that this excesse as I may say of friendship ended in mortall hatred on my Lord of Somersets part I have heard my Lord Steward say sometimes in the Chanc●ry that Frost and Fraud ends soule and I may adde a third and that is the Friendship of ill men which is truly said to be conspiracie and not friendship For it fell out some twelve moneths or more before Overbury his imprisonment in the Tower that the Lord of Somerset sell into an unlawfull love towards that unfortunate Ladie the Countesse of Essex and to proceed to a Marriage with Somerset This Marriage and purpose did Overbury mainly impugne under pretence to doe the true part of a friend for that hee accompted her an unworthy woman But the truth was Overbury who to speake plainly had little that was sollide for Religion or morall vertue but was wholly possest with ambition and vain-glory was loath to have any partners in the favour of my Lord of Somerset and especially not any of the House of the Howards against whom he had alwayes professed hatred and opposition And my Lords that this is no sinister construction will appeare to you when you shall heare that Overbury made his brags to my Lord of Somerset that he had won him the love of the Lady by his Letters and industrie so far was he from cases of conscience in this point And certainely my Lords howsoever the tragicall misery of this poore Gentleman Overbury might somewhat obliterate his faults yet because wee are not upon points of civilitie but to discover the face of Truth before the face of Justice for that it is materiall to the true understanding of the state of this cause Overbury was naught and corrupt the ballads must be mended for that point But to proceed when Overbury saw that hee was like to be possessour of my Lords Grace which hee had possessed so long and by whose greatnesse he had promised himselfe to doe wonders and being a man of an unbounded and impudent spirit hee began not onely to disswade but to deterre him from the love of that Lady and finding him fixed thought to find a strong remedie supposing that hee had my Lords head under his girdle in respect of communication of Secrets of State as he calls them himselfe secrets of Nature and therefore dealt violently with him to make him desist with menaces of discovery and the like Hereupon grew two streames of hatred upon Over●ury the one from the Ladie in resp●ct that hee crossed her love and abused her name which are ●uries in women the other of a more deepe nature from my Lord of Somerset himselfe who was affraid of Overburies Nature and that if he did breake from him and fly out hee would winde into him and trouble his whole fortunes I might adde a third s●reame of the Earle of Northamptons Ambition who desires to be first in favour with my Lord of Somerset and knowing Ove●●uries malice to himselfe and to his House thought th●t man must be removed and cut off so as certainely it was resolved and decreed that Overbury must dye Hereupon they had vari●ty of devices to send him beyond the Seas up●n occasion of imployment That was too weake and they were so far from giving way to it as they crossed it there rested but two wayes of quarrell assault and poyson For that of assault after some proposition and attempt they passed from it was a thing too open and subject to more varietie of shame that of poyson likewise was an hazardous thing and subject to many preven●ions and caution especially to such a working and jealous braine as Overbury had except he was first fast in their hands therefore the way was first to get him into a trap and lay him up and then they could not misse the marke and therefore in execution of this plot it was denyed that hee should be designed to some honourable imployment in forraigne parts and should underhand by my Lord of Somerset be incouraged to refuse it and so upon contempt he should be laid prisoner in the Tower and then they thought he should be close enough and death should be his Bayle yet were they not at their end for they considered that if there were not a fit Lieutenant of the Tower ●or their purpose and likewise a fit Underkeeper of O●●r●ury First they should meet with many impediments in the giving and the exhibiting of the poyson Secondly they should be exposed to note an observation that might discover them And thirdly Overbury in the meane time might write clamorous and ●urious Letters to his friends and so all might bee disappointed And therefore the next linck of the chaine was to displace the then Lieutena●●Wade and to place Yeluis a principall abettor in the impoysonment to displace Cary that was Underkeeper in Wades●ime and to place Weston that was the Actor in the impoysonment And this was done in such a while that it may appe●re to be done as it were in a breath Then when they had this poore Gentleman in the Tower close p●isoner where he could not scape nor stir where hee could not feed but by their hands where he could not speake or write but thorow their truncks then was the time to act the last day of his tragedy Then must Francklin the purveyour of the Poyson procure five six seven severall Poysons to be sure to hit his complexion Then must Mistris Turner the Lay Mistris of the Poysons advise what workes at present and what at distance Then must Weston bee the tormentour and chase him with Poyson after Poyson Poyson in salt meats Poyson in sweet meats Poyson in medicines and vomits untill at last his bodie was almost come by use of Poyson to the state of Mithridates bodie by the use of Treacle and preservatives that the force of the Poysons was blunted upon him Weston confessing when hee was chid for not dispatching him that hee had given him enough to poyson twentie men And lastly because all this asked time courses were taken by Somerset both to divert all the true meanes of Overburies delivery and to entertaine him with continuall Letters partly with hopes and protestations for his delivery and partly with other fables and negotiations somewhat like some kind of persons which keepe in a tale of fortune telling when they have a
felonious intent to picke their pocket and pur●es And this is the true narration of this act which I have summarily recited Now for the distribution of the Proofes there are foure heads to prove you guilty whereof two are precedent to the impoysonment the third is present and the ●ourth is following or subsequent for it is in Proofes as it is in lights● there is a direct light and there is a direct light and there is a reflection of light and a double light The first head or Proofe thereof is that there was a root of bitternesse a mortall malice or hatred mixed with a deepe and bottomlesse mischiefe that you had to Sir Thomas Overbu●y The second is that you were the principall Actor and had your hand in all those acts which did conduce to the impoysonment and gave opportunity to effect it without which the impoysonment could never have been and which could seeme to tend to no other end but to the impoysonment The third is that your hand was in the very impoysonment it selfe th●t you did direct Poyson and that you did deliver Poyson and that you did continually harken to the successe of the impoysonment and that you spurred it on and called ●or dispatch when you thought it lingered And lastly that you did all things after the impoisonment which m●y detect a guilty conscience for the smothering of it a●d the avoyding of punishment for it which can be but of three kindes Th●t you suppressed as much as in you was testimony th●t you did de●ace destroy clip and misdate all writings that might give light to the impoysonment and you did fly to the Altar of guiltinesse which is a Pardon of murther and a P●rdon ●or your selfe and not for your selfe In th●● my Lord I convert my speech unto you because I woul● have you alter the points of your charge and so make your d●●ence the better And two of these heads I have taken to my selfe and left the other ●o the Kings two Serjeants For the ●irst maine part which is the mortall malice coupled with feare that was in you to Sir Thomas Overbury although you did palliate it with a great deale of hypocrisie and dissimul●tion even to the very end I will prove it my Lord Steward the root of this hate was that which cost many a mans life that is feare of discovering of Secrets I say of Secrets of a dangerous and high nature wherein the course that I will hold shall be this I will shew that a breach and malice was betwixt my Lord and Overbury and that it burst forth into violent threats and menaces on both sides Secondly that these Secrets were not of a light but an high n●ture I will give you the elevation of the Pole they were such as my Lord of Somerset had made a vow that Overbury should neither live in Court nor Country that he had likewise opened himselfe so far that either hee or himselfe must dye for it and of Overburies part he had threatned my Lord that whether he did live or die my Lords shame should never dye but that he would leave him the most odious man in the wo●ld And ●urther that my Lord was like enough to repent where Overbury wrote which was in the Tower of London he was a Prophet in that so there is the highest of the Secret Thirdly I will shew you that all the Kings businesse was by my Lord put into Overburies hands so as there is worke enough for Secrets whatsoever they write them and like Princes Confederates they had their Cyphers and their Jurgons And lastly I will shew you that i● was but a toy to say the malice was only in ●espect he spake dishonourably of the Ladie or for doubt of breaking the Marriage for that Overbury was ●oadjutor to that love and the Lord of Somerset was as deepe in speaking ill of the Lady as Overbury and againe it was too late for that matter for the bargain of the match was then made and past and if it had been no more then to remove Overbury for disturbing the match it had been an easie matter to have landed over Overbury for which they had a faire way but that would not serve And lastly periculum periculo vincitur to go so far as an impoysonment must have a deeper malice then flashes for the cause must have a proportion in the effect For the next generall head or proofe which consists in the acts preparatory or middle acts they are in eight severall points of the Compasse as I may terme them First there were divers devices and projects to set Overburies head on worke to dispatch him and to overthrow him plotted betweene the Countesse of Somerset and the Earle of Somerset and the Earle of Northampton before they fell upon the impoysonment for alwayes before men fix upon a course of mischiefe there will be some rejection but dye hee must one way or other Secondly that my Lord of Somerset was principall practiser I must speake it in a most perfidious manner to set a traine and trap for Overbury to get him into the Tower without which they durst not attempt the impoysonment Thirdly that the placing of the Lieutenant Yeluis one of the impoysonments was done by my Lord of Somerset Fourthly that the placing of Weston the Underkeeper who was the principall impoysoner and the displacing of Carey and the doing all this within the while of fifteene dayes after Overburies commitment was by the meanes and countenance of my Lord of Somerset And these were the active Instruments of the impoysonment and this was a businesse the Ladies power could not reach unto Fifthly that because there must be a cause of this Tragedie to be acted and chiefly because they would not have the Poysons worke upon the sudden and for that the strength of Overburies natnre or the very custome of receiving the Poysons into his body did overcome the Poysons that they wrought not so fast therefore Overbury must be held in the Tower as well as he was laid in and as my Lord of Somerset got him into the Trap so he keepes him in and abuses him with continuall hope of liberty but diverted all the true and effectuall meanes of his liberty and makes light of his sicknesse and extremities Sixthly that not onely the plot of getting Overbury into the Tower and the devises to hold and keepe him there but the strange manner of the close keeping of him being in but for a Contempt was by the device and meanes of my Lord of Somerset who denied his father to see him denied his servants that offered to be shut up close prisoners with him and in effect handled it so that he made him close prisoner to all his friends and exposed to all his enemies Seventhly that all the advertisement the Lady received from time to time from the Lieutenant or Weston touching Ove●buries state of body and health were ever sent nigh to the Court though it were in Progresse and that from my Ladie such a thirst and listening he had to heare that he was disp●tched Lastly that there was a continuall negoti●tion to set Over●u●ies head on worke that he should make some to cle●re the Honour of the Ladie and that he should be a good ins●rument toward● her and her friends all which w●● but enter●ainment Fo● your Lordships shall see diver● of my Lord of Northamptons Letters whose hand was d●epe in this businesse written I must say in darke word● a●● clauses that there was one thing pretended and anot●er ●hing i●tended That there was a reall charge and somewhat not re●ll a main drift and dissimulation n●y further there be some p●ss●g●s which the Peeres in their wisdomes will discerne to point directly at the impoisonment FINIS