Selected quad for the lemma: order_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
order_n day_n house_n lord_n 3,712 5 3.9612 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A33136 Divi Britannici being a remark upon the lives of all the kings of this isle from the year of the world 2855, unto the year of grace 1660 / by Sir Winston Churchill, Kt. Churchill, Winston, Sir, 1620?-1688. 1675 (1675) Wing C4275; ESTC R3774 324,755 351

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

being to advise at the price of his own Head the Arch bishop of York like a man of great Faith was of Opinion to sight them with such present Strength as the King had trusting to the Justice of the Cause the Dukes of Ireland and Suffolk men of Action but wanting the means were for delivering up Calais to the French King to purchase his Assistance But the Majority of Voices coming from such men whose Fears made them rather wise then honest were for appeasing the Enemy with fair promises till there were a fit opportunity to suppress them the first Proposal was thought very hazardous the second much more besides there was such a bitterness in the Pill that no preparation could make the King to swallow it who not knowing what effect it might have when it was done utterly rejected it upon which they secretly withdrew that gave the Counsel and left him to himself Whereupon the Lords Regent found an opportunity to be admitted to a Parley with him who producing to him Letters from the King of France which they had intercepted pursuant to the Design of bringing in a Forreign Enemy they mov'd him no less by shame then dread of the Consequence to consent to the calling another Parliament Upon the day of the Convention the King came not to the House being infinitely troubled in his mind at News he had just then received of the Earl of Derby's Intercepting the Duke of Ireland who being gone as far as Chester in order to his passing into that Kingdom was set upon by the said Earl and totally defeated who hardly escaping fled into the Low-countries where not long after he dyed The Lords heightened with this Success sent a very harsh Message to him letting him know that they attended him there and if he would not come to the House according to promise they would chuse another King that should hearken to their faithful advice This though it were in effect no other but to tell him they would depose him without his consent if he would not come and consent to be depos'd yet having no Retreat from it but down a steep Precipice he chose rather to comp●y and put himself under the mercy of Providence then under the uncertainty of their Mercy Upon his first appearance they presented him with a black Roll of those whom he call'd his Friends they his Enemies some to be prescrib'd some to be imprison'd and others banish'd and in this last List there were not only Lords but Ladies found Delinquents Some were accus'd of imbeziling his Treasure others of purloyning his Affection all for robbing him of his Honour whereupon some were to be try'd for their Lives others for their Fortunes and all for their Liberties but in respect of their other great Affairs which were in order to what followed they referred it to the succeeding Parliament not unfitly call'd the Parliament that wrought wonders which contrary to all other Parliaments that used to swear Obedience to the King requir'd an Oath of him himself to observe such Rules and Orders as they should prescribe to him Here now we have this unfortunate Prince brought to the last year of his Rule though not of his Reign beginning then to enter into his Wardship as he call'd it when he thought he was just got out of it All power was put into the hands of the Dukes of Lancaster and Gloucester who managed all Treaties abroad concluded War and Peace as they thought fit and were indeed absolute in every point but the Command of their own Passions and uncontroulable by any but themselves The Duke of Lancaster having now digested the Kingdom in his thoughts procures the Dutchy of Acquitaine to be setled on him as an earnest of what was to follow being the Inheritance of the Crown and descended on the King from Prince Edward his Father and having married up the King to a Child of eight years old by whom 't was impossible he could have Issue with a Portion that scarce defraid the Charge of the Solemnity he secur'd his own Pretensions by Legitimating three of his Bastard Sons in case his lawful Issue should fail The Duke of Gloucester had the same Ambition in his heart as well as the same Blood in his Veins but Nature having put a disadvantage upon him by placing him so far behind being the sixth Son of King Edward the Third he was forc'd to gratifie his Envy instead of his Ambition and rest content with the hopes of doing his Brother a Mischief when time serv'd without any great probability of doing himself good Accordingly he made a Faction who conspir'd with him to seize the King his two Brothers Lancaster and York and to put them all up in Prison and after to execute divers Lords whom he thought to be more his Enemies then their Friends but the end of his Treason being to be himself betray'd by those he made use of Lancaster came thereby to stand single like a great Tree which being at its full height spread his Limbs the wider and grew to be so conspicuous that the succeeding Parliament desired to shelter themselves under the shadow of his power hereupon he reduced the number of the thirteen Regents to seven only which being all his Confidents he with them concluded aforehand all Affairs of moment and directed how they should pass in Parliament An Example not less mischievous to the Kingdom then the King so that now there wanted no more to make him the Soveraign but the putting on the Crown But see the uncertainty of humane Glory Having just finished the great work of his Usurpation an unexpected blow from that invisible hand that turns about the great Wheel of Causes broke the frame of his projection in pieces His Son Henry Duke of Hereford accused by the Duke of Norfolk of Treason was forc'd to purge himself by the Tryal of Combat a Law that might condemn but never acquit him since it was only possible to discharge himself of the danger but never of the suspition of the Crime This being urg'd so far that they were both brought into the List there was no way left to avoid the uncertainty of the Fight but banishment of both wherein though the Duke of Lancaster got the favour to make the Exile of his Son but temporary when the others was perpetual yet the affront that Fortune seem'd to give him by this accidental Disgrace came so near his heart that his Son had no sooner taken leave of his Country but he bid adieu to the World and so left the King once more Hors de page Thus Time and Fortune seem to have conspir'd in vindicating the wrongs of this abused Prince ridding him at once of those two great Corrivals in Power whose Authority had so far outweighed his that they kept him in the condition of a Minor till they had made the People believe him insufficient for Government the one being remov'd beyond all possibility the other beyond all
distinct Priviledges 1. Jure (i) Sen●c de benefic lib. 3. Cap. 28. Eut. lib. 10. formali by the distinction of Habit of which they had seven Sorts 1 Saga 2 Pretextae 3 Angusticlavia 4 Laticlavia 5 Paludamenta 6 Trabea and 7 Chlamys of these the Common People wore only the first Sort which were Coats without Sleeves the rest were worn only by Gentlemen and Noblemen differenc'd according to their respective Dignities 2. Jure (k) A●l. G●ll. lib. 3. Cap. 16. Petitionis by the right of their Offices for those that were Senators as afterwards all Noblemen had their Curules or blew Chariots with a Chair plac'd in it to ride through the Streets the Consuls being differenc'd by sitting in an Ivory Chair whereas the rest were wood only 3. Jure (l) Senec. de benef lib. 3. Cap. 18. Imaginum by the use of Images which were the same things to them in point of honour and Ornament as Eschocheons and Arms of Families are to us 4. Jure Gentilitiarum by having names that were hereditary for from the very time of the first League with the Sabins it was agreed that the Romans should praefix Sabin Names and the Sabins Roman before that of their families names which Prenomina being hereditary were therefore call'd Gentilitia whence came our word Gentlemen for at that time no part of the World had taken up that Custome now Tully tells us that these Gentiles were those Qui eodem inter se sunt nomine i. e. Men of the same name for the Common People were not permitted to call their Posterity by their own names but were obliged to give their Children always new uncouth and unheard of names which brought them under such contempt as if they had no names but were as Livy calls them Sine nomine turba a nameless Rabble The original Gentiles or Leaguers of the Latin Stock were the Fabii descended from the Kings of the Aborigines the Romuli Julii Junii Surgii Aurelii Curatii Horatii Servitii Priscorum who were of the Trojan Race that came in with Aeneas at the Conquest of Italy those of the Sabin Race were the Tatii the Issue of King Tatius the Pompilii whereof the Pinarii the Aemuli Mamurcenorum were younger branches the Ancimartii Claudii Regilenses the Tarquinii Publicolae Emilii Aenobarbi the Quintii Capitolinorum and Cincinatorum the Cornelii Scipiorum and Lentulorum these were all the antient Leaguers The Families of most note that sprung from them after they united and mixt together were the Posthumii Cossii Survii Sulpicii Sempronii of which the Gracchi were but a younger branch the Fulvii Flacci Octavii Mutii Pompeii c. These I instance amongst many because it was (m) Vt pat per rescript Dioclesian forbid the Common People under a great penalty to name their Children by any of these names or indeed by any other name that had but a Sound like them or like any name of a Gentleman 5. Jure Suffragii by the difference of Places in all Publick Conventions and Assemblies where they had by the Law of Fulvia a very formal precedence given them as we may see at large in (n) Lip de Amphith c. 14. Lipsius and (o) Senec. de benef lib. 3. cap. 28. Seneca 6. Jure Connubii for by the Law of the Twelve Tables it was forbid under the pain of Degradation for any of the Gentiles to match with a Plebeian 7. Lastly they were distinguish'd Jure Ordinis according to their Titles of Honour wherein they had also Seven gradations of different Stiles the lowest whereof was that of Egregii which were such as we properly call Gentlemen or Esquires next them were the 2 Perfectissimi which were those of the Equestrian Order as our Knights then came the 3 Clarissimi these were the Correctores or Praestas of Provinces much like to our Lord Lieutenants of Counties the next above these were the 4 Spectabiles a title proper only to Dukes and Counts Provincial the 5 Illustres such were all that had any voice in Senate all Praefects Magistri Equitum Peditum the Questores Palatii the Comites Maritimi which were as our Lord Admirals and all Generals and Lieutenant Generals of Armies had the same Stile (p) C. Tit. de Feriis Epigr. L. quoniam 6 Nobilissimi which some barbarous Lawyers of late saith (q) Alciate dispunct lib. 3. Com. 4. Alciate have chang'd and as they think Elegantly into Super-Illustres which the modern more refinedly have render'd Serenissimi this was appropriated only to Princes by birth as were the (r) Seld. Tit. Hon. p. 285. Caesars or heirs apparent of the Empire who were written Principes Juventutis the Emperours took to themselves that of Divi or 7 Augusti which we at this day term Sacred It is further observable that as Romulus was the first of seven Kings so Kingship was the first of seven Orders of Government in that Commonwealth for there were 1 Reges 2 Patricii 3 Tribuni 4 Decemviri 5 Dictatores 6 Triumviri 7 Imperatores the Last of which Titles cost no less than the Lives of seven times seven thousand Citizens a Purchase so dear that it had been impossible for any person to have perswaded them to submit to it but such an one as had first slaughtered seven times seventy thousand Enemies and subdued seven times seven Nations as Caesar did if they that writ his life say truth before he offer'd this Violence to his Country and Friends Again 't is noted that there was just seven hundred years spent betwixt Romulus the first King and Founder and this Caesar the first Emperour and Confounder of the Commonwealth and they that have taken the pairs to compute the years altogether from the time of the Birth to that of the Obsequies of this great State have pointed out just seven Periods which as the seven Ages of man they have measur'd by the 1 Beginning 2 Increase 3 Confirmation 4 Continuation 5 Declination 6 Degeneration 7 Dissolution From the Foundation to the Consulship of Brutus and Tarquinius Colatinus is reckoned the first Age consisting of two hundred and twenty years or thereabouts which we may call its 1 Infancy the time from thence to the beginning of the second Carthaginian War which took up two hundred and fifty years more may be call d its 2 Adolescence the time from that War which happen'd in the Consulship of Ap. Claudius the Bold to the Dictatorship of Caesar being two hundred and twenty years more we may call its 3 Youth Augustus's his Reign passes for its Prime or 4 Full Age continuing so near three hundred years from the time of Gallenus the thirty third Emperour was a sensible 5 Declination unto the time of Arcadius and Honorius which was about two hundred and thirteen years more the time from theirs to the Death of Maximus who slew Valentinian the Third look'd like its 6 Dote Age in which it labour'd with many infirmities
Neither is it so in the Case of a particular Person only but if the whole Body of the people of this Nation should take upon them to do the like absque assensu Regis The Judges holding that where a War shall be so declared against any in League with the King without his consent and allowance the League is not thereby broken The like holds in all cases of Confederacies and Combinations which forced the late Rebels in the time of Charles the First to declare this Kingdom a Common-wealth before they could prevail with any Forrain Princes to treat with them and very few did it then Wherefore it is recorded as a wise answer of that Parliament in the Seventeenth of Richard the Second who when that King out of a necessitous compliance with the People offer'd them leave to take into their consideration some concerns of War and Peace Replied It did not become their Duty neither in Truth durst they presume ever to Treat of matters of so Transcendent Concernment No doubt then can there be of that Jus Foecialis 5. Jus Foecialis or right of Legation in directing sending and receiving all Embassies which Curtius calls Jus Regium a Power so Singular and Absolute that as (b) Bod. de Repub. Bodin and (c) In State Christ printed Anno 1657. H. Wotton both men of sufficient Authority affirm divers of our Neighbour Princes who yet call themselves absolute as the Kings of Hungary Poland Denmark Bohemia c. have nothing like it being bound up to consult with their People about all publick concerns before they can make any Conclusion of Peace or War Whereas all Addresses of State are made to Our Kings as I shewed in part before without any Obligation of their parts to communicate any thing to any of the Members of their great Council Privy Council or Common Council much less to either of the Ministers of State whether Secretaries or others however sworn to Secrecy and Trust Nor needs there a more pregnant Instance of the Kings inherent and determinate Prerogative in this point than that verbal Order of King Henry the Eight to the Lord Gray Governour of Bullen who upon a dispute about demolishing a Fort the French were then erecting by the name of Chastilons Garden contrary to the Sence of all the Lords of his Council expressed in Scriptis and which was more the formality of his own Letters confirming their Order did by a verbal Commission only privately whisper'd to him Justifie him in flinging down that Work which was a manifest breach of the Peace with the French and consequently a Capital crime in the Governour had not the same breath that made him forfeit it given him his life again which President as it was very remarkable so it proves that which follows 6. Jus Vitae Necis 26. Jus Vitae Necis that highest power of Life and Death to be only in the King being signaliz'd by the Ceremony of carrying the Sword before him in all publick Processions and is in truth so antient and undoubted a Right of the Crown that upon this Account only we find all the Pleas touching life and member to be call'd by the Lawyers Placita Coronae and all Capital Offences of high treason are termed Crimina Laesae Majestatis in proceeding whereon no Original Writ is necessary as in civil Causes but every Constable as the Kings Deputy may Ex Ossicio without any Process seize on any Murtherer Traytor or Felon and till the Statute of Magna Charta 17 of King John it is manifest that every mans Person was so subjected to the King by his Oath of Allegiance from those words De vita de membro that the (d) Vita Membrasunt in Potestate Regis Bracton l. 1. fol. 6. Cap. 5. Sect. 18. King at his pleasure might Imprison any man without process of Law or giving any cause for it and however the King has been pleas'd to circumscribe himself by Law since for the greater assurance of his Grace to his People yet the Judges have still so far respect to the Kings honour in this particular that upon the Commitment of any person by the Kings Command or by Order of the Lords of his Council they do not take upon them as perhaps by strictness of Law they might to deliver the Person till the Cause be first shewn and then expecting a Declaration of the Kings further pleasure bind him to answer what may be objected in the Kings behalf 7. Jus Rerum Sacrarum 27. The last and highest Prerogative as being purely Spiritual is that Jus Rerum Sacrarum to which no Princes in the World had a fairer Pretence than those here if considered as the only Christian Kings foster'd with the milk of a distinct National Church The Kings of great Britain the only Kings of a distinct national Church that may as properly be called the Sister as those of France Germany and Italy are call'd the Daughters of Rome and therefore the Pope when he naturaliz'd as I may say all the Christian Nations within the bosom of the Church he declared the Emperour to be Filius Major the French King Filius Minor but our King Filius Adoptivus neither matters it much though they prove our Church to be the younger Sister that disparagement if any it be being abundantly recompensed by being as indeed she is the most innocent the most beautiful and perhaps the most fruitful Parent of the two having Matriculated no less than eight Nations now as great almost as her self in the first Ages of Christianity and been the Foster-Mother to as many more in this last and most knowing age The Protestant Religion more properly called the Catholi●k Religion than that of Rome whereby the Reformed Religion as it is now vulgarly called to difference it from that of Rome is become as universal as that they call with so much Ostentation Catholick which if confined within the Range of the Church of Rome is not above a (c) Purchas Pilgrim cap. 13. lib. 1. fourth part of Christendom if so be the Computation of our modern Geographers be not mistaken who put Sweden in the Scale against both the Iberia's Italy and Spain and England Denmark and the Hans Towns against France which yet we know is Checquer'd in their Religion having divers Towns of the Reformed Judgment besides those Lesser Congregations in Poictou Gascony Languedoc and Normandy and take out of Germany suppos'd to be the third part of Europe two intire parts the whole being divided into three that at this day are integrally Protestant that is to say in the East Poland Lithuania Livonia Podolia Russia minor with divers Parts of Hungary and Transilvania even to the Euxine Sea in the West the Cantons of Swizzerland the United Provinces with the Grisons and the Republick of Geneva the South and North parts being yet more intirely Protestant and the heart of it every
defensive War for three hundred years with so good success that they not only kept what they call'd their own but were for the most part on the winning side being once in as fair a probability to have enlarg'd their Territories as any of their Neighbourhood had they not been over-charg'd in the Flank by an unequal Enemy and of all others least expected the Invincible Dane a People prepar'd for mischief and heightned by the Desolations they had made in Northumberland Yorkshire Nottinghamshire and the Countreys thereabouts the Fame of whose cruelty having made their way they broke in upon this tyred Province weary'd and weakned with giving and taking wounds from their own Countreymen surprizing them ere they had time to recover strength or means to recover time to make so good a defence as otherwise they would have done Yet they did not submit to the first misfortune nor fell like Fools or men affrighted but strug●ed with all their power near fifty years without any other aid than what was maintain'd by their own proper strength and courage being the Bulwark that defended all their Neighbours against the Dane who the whilst wasted each other with intestine Feuds till they fell a Sacrifice to their private lusts and ambition and these only to the publick safety THE ORDER OF THE KINGS OF NORTHUMBERLAND VII I. date of accession 584 ETHERICK the fourth Son of Ida Lord of Bernicia was the first that stiled himself King of Northumberland though indeed he had but the half call'd Bernicia which descended on his Son II. date of accession 593 ETHELFRID sirnam'd the Wild a Prince of much fierceness and insolence which render'd him so odious to his Subjects that his Enemies easily found an opportunity to depose him and set up one III. date of accession 617 EDWIN the Son of Ella Lord of Deira which was the other part of Northumber●and who was the first Christian of this House and got such repute that he was acknowledged the eight Monarch of the Eng●ishmen he was at last however unhappily overcome and slain by the Pagan Penda King of Mercia IV. date of accession 633 OSRICK Son of his Uncle Alfrid succeeded him whose Reign was as confus'd as the time he liv'd in he was Lord of Deira only which upon his death was united to Bernicia and so descended on V. date of accession 634 OSWALD the ninth Monarch whilst he liv'd and dying esteem'd the first Martyr of all the Englishmen his Successor was VI. date of accession 643 OSWY the tenth Monarch of the English who left the Succession to his furious Son VII date of accession 671 EGFRID who making War with the Picts that were backt by their Confederates the Irish he was by them slain and his Bastard Brother took place VIII date of accession 686 ALKFRID a Prince more beholding to Providence than Nature for the first gave him the right of a Son when the last deny'd him a Son to enjoy that right whereby the Crown devolv'd upon IX date of accession 705 OSRED a Child of eight years old of a collateral Branch and as indirect a Disposition not old enough to govern himself nor wise enough to govern others so that his Subjects withdrew their Allegiance to give it to X. date of accession 716 KENRED the next of the whole Blood who conspiring with Osrick the next of kin to himself to kill Osred the next of kin to the Crown was undermin'd by his Confederate who set up for himself XI OSRICK the second knew better it seems how to get than to keep a Kingdom for he was as easily depos'd by XII date of accession 729 CEONULPH younger Brother to Kenred one of the most glorious of all the Northumbrian Race this was he to whom Bede dedicated his History of England and one that render'd himself more glorious by a voluntary obscurity preferring a Capush before a Crown whose Example was a Rule to his Successor XIII date of accession 738 EGBERT who did the like being mov'd by the delusion of this pious fraud to surrender to his Son XIV date of accession 758 OSWOLPH who liv'd not long to enjoy the pleasure of his Royalty being made away by some of his Domesticks as was his Successor XV. date of accession 759 EDELMAULD commonly call'd Mollo slain by his own Steward XVI date of accession 765 ALURED who had no better Title than his successful Villany which being rais'd upon the sandy foundation of the Peoples favour quickly foundred and fell to the ground so that XVII date of accession 774 ETHELRED Son of the aforesaid Mo●● rec●ver d the thr●ne who n●t answering the expectation was depos'd to make way for XVIII date of accession 778 ALFWALD Brother to Alured a Prince worthy of greater Title and better Subjects for the Northumbrians being flusht with the blood of their Princes began to be very tumultuous and disloyal and amongst the rest murther'd him to make way for one XIX date of accession 789 OSRED a worthless person but the Darling of the multitude he h●ld the Scepter till it was taken from him by XX. date of accession 790 ETHELRED who liv'd to revenge his indignity upon the Heirs of his Adversaries and being puff'd up with that success and an alliance he afterwards made with the great Mercian Offa grew cruel and provoked his People to fly to Arms who in one battel took from him both his Life and Kingdom XXI date of accession 794 OSWALD a common Man was put up in his place for the good Omen of his Name but his good Fortune lasted not above thirty days so fickle is the favour of the common People not unfitly compar'd to the Sea whose fluxes and refluxes are of no long continuation before XXII date of accession 794 ADULPH was set up in his stead he was a banisht Duke and look'd on as their Martyr for taking part with them against Ethelred but his glory was not much longer liv'd than the others so that XXIII date of accession 795 ALSWALD succeeded who having only shew'd himself upon the Stage turned about and made his Exit to give place to another XXIV date of accession 795 ETHELRED a Man of a hated Name and not very well belov d who stept up to make way for three of his Sons to come after him one of which having committed some insolence against a Danish Lady gave that cruel People a just occasion to fall into this Countrey and haraze it to that degree that it became not long after a prey to the West-Saxon THIS though it were the first intire Province the Saxons were Masters of yet it was the last made a Kingdom being the only part of the whole that cost them no blood to get it for it was by consent delivered up to them by the Britains to make a Colony against the Picts but that of all others cost most to defend it for besides those without they had Enemies within themselves having cut themselves into two distinct Principalities either
which broke out like a Fire that being long smother'd was all in a Flame as soon almost as it was perceiv'd and however Fate for some time seem'd to make a Pause whether she should begin the Tragedy which she could not end turning the Storm another way by several Invasions from Scotland which held long enough to have diverted the virulent humour and let out blood enough to have cool'd all their heat allaying it so far that easie Intercessions prevail'd to keep them asunder for some years yet nothing could so stop the Course of Nature but that the monstrous Issue when it was come to its birth forc'd its way the Discontents that had been so long ripening even from the time of this Kings Great-grand-father breaking out like a Boyl surcharg'd with Anguish and Corruption which was no sooner emptied by the death of one but it was fill'd with Rancor and Envy by the Entertainment of New Favourites As Gaveston before so the two Spencers afterward the Farher and the Son took upon them to Monopolize his Grace and were thereupon generally charg'd with the odious design of bringing in an Arbitrary Government with imbezeling the Treasure of the Nation and doing several ill Offices betwixt the King and Queen maintaining their own by apparent wrong to the Estates of other Lords particularly of the Earls of Hereford and Mortimer out of whose hands it seems they had bought some Lands which lying convenient to their Estates was in the first place offered to them These though they were such Objections as relating but to particular Persons perhaps not without particular Reasons might be excus'd if not justified yet being heaped up together made a general grievance and the Earl of Lancaster the Bell-weather of Rebellion at that time thought it worthy the Barons taking up of Arms to punish them The King answer'd for them and undertook they should come and answer for themselves the Father he said was imployed by him beyond the Seas and the Son was guarding the Cinque Ports according to his Duty and therefore he thought it was against Law and Custome to condemn them unheard But nothing would satisfie their Accusers without a Declaration of Banishment and though the President was such as might as well affect themselves as their Posterity yet Hatred being no less blind then Love they preser'd their present Revenge before the Fears of a future inconvenience All differences being thus compos'd I cannot say calm'd an accidental affront given to the Queen by one that was over-wise in his Office put all again out of order beyond recovery A Castelan of the Lord Badlismers at Leeds denying her Majesty Lodging there as she was passing by in her Progress out of a Distrust she might possess her self of the Castle and keep it for the King she exasperated the King to that degree that he besieged the place took it and in it the politick Governour whom without legal Process he hang'd up presently and seizing all the Goods and Treasure of his Lord sent his Wife and Children to the Tower This was taken for so great a violation of the Liberty of the Subject that being done by the King himself nothing could determine the Right but the Sword and accordingly they met the second time in Arms where Fortune was pleas'd to confirm the Sentence given by the King by giving up into his hands many more considerable Lives then that for which they were hazarded amongst the rest was that of the Earl of Lancaster himself the first Prince of the Blood that ever was brought to the Block here in England and with him fourteen of the Principal Barons none of which were spar'd but forc'd to give up their Lives and Estates as a Reward to the Victors And not long after the Spencers were recall'd and re-stated who finding the publick Treasure wholly exhausted and a chargeable War yet continued with Scotland thought it but necessary to make such Retrenchments as might enable his Majesty to carry on that great Work wherein he had been so unlucky without oppressing the People amongst the rest they presum'd unfortunately to abridge the Queen lessening hers as they had done the Kings Houshold-Train by which Improvident Providence they so irritated her being a Woman of a proud vindictive Spirit that she privately complain'd thereof to the King of France her Brother who took that occasion to quarrel with the King about his Homage for Gascoigne and upon his Refusal possessed himself of several Pieces there and notwithstanding all that Edmond Earl of Kent could do whom his Brother the King sent over with sufficient Strength as 't was thought to repell him by force continued his Depredations there this bringing a Necessity that either the King must go over himself or the Queen the first to compel or the other being his beloved Sister to mediate with h●m for a Truce each equally inconvenient to the Spencers who thought not sit that the King should go in respect of the general and were as loath the Queen should in respect of her particular discontent They chose the least of the Evils as they judged and sent over her who having a great Stomach and but a small Train meditated more upon her own then her Husbands Vindication and accordingly put an end to the difference betwixt her Brother and him but on such terms as afterward made a wider difference betwixt him and her self The Conditions were these that K●ng Edward should give to the Prince his Son the Dutchy of Acquitain and Earldom of Ponthein and send him over to do the King of France Homage for the same which was to excuse that Homage before demanded from himself and thus she pretended to have found out an expedient to save the honour of both Kings in allowing each his end But having by this sineness got her Son into her own power she gave her self so wholly up to her Revenge that she suffer'd her self to be led by a hand she saw not through the dark Paths of dangerous Intreagues managed by those who having other ends then hers did work beyond though under her Authority Principal in her Councel as being so in her Affections was young Mortimer a Servant fit for such a Mistress and such a Master as this Queen and her Husband who having escaped out of the Tower where he had been long a Prisoner and as he thought very injuriously in respect he render'd himself to Mercy before the great Battel with the Barons and by his Submission contributed much to the Kings gaining that Victory contriv'd with her how to set up the Prince and with him himself and because the Earl of Kent was upon the place they made it their first business to work off him to the Party Here began that fatal breach from whence the World concluded that this unhappy King having lost one half of himself could not long hold out before he lost the whole it not being reasonable to expect that his Subjects should be truer
notwithstanding his great good Fortunes as to see his Glory unravel'd as well as his Happiness in great part there being nothing left him of all his great Gettings abroad purchased with so much Travel Expence and Bloodshed but only the poor Town of Calais which signified no more then a Gate of a City left open when all the rest is possest by too potent an Enemy But we must look on 't as a Curse that he inherited with his Crown not to be permitted to dye till he saw himself as his Father was forsaken of every Body but a poor Priest that only tarried to torment him with the remembrance of his Sins and left him at last as he left the World in such a state of uncertainty that our Historians are yet to seek whether to place him amongst the rank of our fortunate or unfortunate Princes the fatal divisions of his Posterity which took their first rise from his weakness being so pernicious to the whole Kingdom as well as to themselves that if the Dead know any thing of what is done amongst the Living he needed no other Hell to torture his guilty Spirit then the vision of those murthered Princes of his own Blood whose Ghosts just led one another where ere they met HONI · SOIT · QVI · MAL · Y · PENSE DIEV ET MON DROIT Now as it is easie to kindle a great Fire with very little blowing when the matter is fitly dispos'd to burn so it happen'd very unluckily that from the casual Rudeness of an inconsiderable Tax-gatherer that came into the House of a poor Tiler of Deptford and would have turn'd up the Coats of his young Daughter to see whether she were of Age to pay her Poll-mony there was occasion'd so over-grown a Riot as bearing down all respect of Laws Order or Government was not to be appeas'd with the Blood of three of the principal'st Ministers of State that is to say the Chancellor although he were Arch-bishop of Canterbury the Treasurer and the Lord Chief Justice and came at last so near to Majesty it self for some of the Rebels were little less rude with the Kings own Mother then his Officer had been with their Captains Daughter that 't was thought nothing could deliver the King himself from the approaching Danger but meeting it half way which he did with so well temper'd a Courage as never King before him shew'd except Caesar and he but once or his own Father at the Battel of Poctiers when begirt with as many perhaps but not so insolent nor unworthy Foes This being as much beyond the expectation of his Years as of his Enemies charmed them into a Submission for a while but the Distemper being universal and raging and the Contagion spread insensibly through so many parts of the Kingdom it was not possible to heal the Evil with a Touch only However one would have thought so hopeful a Prince as this was the Son of so brave a Father and fortified with so unpregnable a Title could not likely have miscarried but must have stood firm as a Mountain whose top was above all Storms but the same Stars ruling at his Birth that govern'd his Great-grand-fathers Nativity 't is no marvail being of the same temper he should fall under the same fate to be kept by Flatterers from the knowledge of himself till being not himself he too late saw his Error in the experience of their Falshood The first ten years of his Government which were the better though not the longer part of it he reign'd with great splendor if so be we may properly say he reign'd whiles he was under the dispose of others taking all occasions to let those that attempted to disturb him both at home and abroad especially his right and left-hand Enemies the French and Scots feel the sharpness of his Sword and the weight of his Power forcing the first to quit their chief Design having prepar'd a Navy of 1287 Ships to invade him the other to quit their chief City which he thereupon reduced into Ashes to make a Bonefire that might give the whole Kingdom notice of his Victory But after he came to be of Age to do all himself he began very visibly to undo himself hastning the slow pace of his De●●iny by quarrelling with his Parliaments who being actuated by the subtilty of his emulous Uncles gather'd strength by the discovery of his weakness and taking all advantages against him in point of Right or Reputation urged their Priviledges so far in derogation of his Prerogative that he could not forbear telling them the very next Sessions after he was out of his Wardship as he was wont to call it that he perceived they had a mind to rebel and therefore thought he could do no better then to ask Aid of his Cosin the King of France into whose hands he said he had rather fall being a Prince then submit to his own Subjects A rash and unadvised Reply which however it seem'd to be the Result of a proud and vindictive Stomach was in truth so abject and low so unlike himself and so like his little Great-Grandsire Henry the Third that they taking Example from the Nobility of that time as he from that King immediately put the Government into the hands of thirteen Lords of whom his turbulent Uncle Gloucester was the Chief who having Divisum Imperium lookt like a great Wen upon the Face of the State that drew all the ill humours of the Body Politick to it The Duke of Ireland that was the principal Councellor of his party and his Uncle by Marriage was so amaz'd at the sudden birth of this Oligarchy that not daring to give any Opinion of his own in the Case although he were a man of sufficient Courage and Authority he put him upon advising with all the Judges possibly that what himself should think fit might pass for Law out of their mouths and accordingly Questions were fram'd to be propos'd to them by which it was easier understood what the King would have to be Law then what in truth was so To all which having receiv'd positive Resolves on the Kings side the next Consultation was how to frame such a House of Commons as might be brought to take part with the King against the Lords and forthwith Letters were directed to all the Sheriffs and Justices of Peace in every County to interpose their Credit and Authority for the chusing of such Persons Knights and Burgesses for the next Sessions as the King and his Councel had nam'd in a List sent to them This look'd like so dangerous an Industry that the Regency took the Alarm at it and trusting to no other remedy flew to Arms. The King thereupon demanded Aid of the City of London but they failing his Expectation the Lords grew so bold as to send to him to deliver up his ill Councellors whom they call'd Traytors and Seducers Upon this there were very great and grave Deliberations each man
it or had she kept the Second Son which she had in her own hands after she saw what was like to become of the eldest that was in his 't is possible the one might have been a security for the other since without taking both the Treason had not been worth the hazard much less the guilt of destroying t'other and 't is more than probable she might have stop'd him upon the very last step to the Throne But yet it is hard to call that the Mothers fault which might be the Sons fate design'd by Destiny for ought we know to a Death as private as his Birth who was born whilst she was in a Cloyster and his Father in Banishment Fain she would have recover'd her Error when it was too late craving Protection for her self and the younger Children in a Sanctuary but in vain seek they Refuge from The Treachery of others who have been of the Plot to betray themselves the Protector resolved to have them all into his hands to effect which he makes the Effect become a Cause for finding the young King more than usually melancholly with the Apprehensions he had of the danger of his present condition he made that Melancholly an important reason for his brother to be brought to keep him company and because this could not be done without the Queens consent but by offering some Violation to the rights of Sanctuary it being reasonably to be supposed that she would never let the Child go without apparent force upon her he singled out a Clergy-man to be the Picklock of Priviledge a grave State-drudge and by his degree no worse a man then an Arch bishop who having only so much Divinity as to know that Obedience was better then Sacrifice so far perswaded or rather terrified the disconsolate Queen into a Complyance that she consulting with her Fears only gave up the innocent Infant to his Grace who thereby had the honour to be the third great Instrument in that great Treason that followed The Monster having thus got his desired Prey within his own Denn did not yet think fit to devour them immediately but before he entred upon so solemn an act of horrour as the plunging himself into that fathomless Gulf of Cruelty he thought fit to wade in blood by degrees that sounding the depth of the danger as well as of the guilt he was to enter into he might at the same time harden and secure himself First then he cut off all their Friends beheading the Lord Rivers Sir Anthony Woodvill and the principal persons of the Queens Relations upon pretence of treachery against his Person and Government which being in some sense true for doubtless they meant to oppose his intended Usurpation he thought it a reasonable Justification for taking their Lives In the next place he charged the Queen her self with Sorcery making the poor Innocent Jane Shore to be her Hand-mate in the Inchantation with whom the Lord Hastings having had a known Familiarity from the time of the death of King Edward he most maliciously design'd him to be their Accuser who scorning to assist him in such dark purposes was himself made a Conspirator with them being deservedly executed as a Traytor because he refused to be one his Execution following so close upon his Sentence and the Proclamation of his Treason so close upon that that at the reading of it in the Street a stander by observing how fairly they had drawn the foul Charge against him being ingrossed at large in Parchment he cried out aloud That it was written by Prophecy Thus having clear'd the Foundation and sufficiently tamper'd his Mortar with blood to make it more strong and binding he laid the Ground-work of his Usurpation upon the Illegitimacy of the two young Princes pretending that the King their Father was never lawfully married to the Queen their Mother but was before God Husband to the Lady Elizabeth Lucy This as it had something of Truth in point of Fact for 't is said he was betrothed to her so being matter of Divinity in point of Right it was agreed that a Chaplain to the Duke of Buckingham who was his great Confident and bound to him by the stipulation of a Match betwixt their Children and a promise of equal partition of the Treasure of the Kingdom should open the Case at large in a Sermon at Paul's Cross who taking his Text from that place where 't is said that Bastard Plants shall not Inherit so over-acted his part that he not only made King Edward's Children but he himself a Bastard too and all the Children of his Father the Duke of York the Protector only excepted who he said was the express Image of his Father and pre-ordained by God to the great Charge of the Kingly Office But all this was delivered with so apparent flattery and dissimulation that not believing himself 't is no wonder the People gave so little credit to him who instead of crying out thereupon as 't was expected they should God save King Richard cryed out the Devil take the shameless Preacher This scorn put upon the Priest or rather upon him did not yet so deter him but that two dayes after he sent the Duke himself into the City to see whether his Authority might move any thing more then the Doctors Eloquence who confidently affirm'd to the Citizens at Guild-hall That all the Nobility judging the Issue of King Edward spurious had chosen him to succeed and only expected a Declaration of their Consents But as it was not likely that they who but two dayes before could not be moved when they were told the Lord from Heaven had made choice of him should now concur in the Election with any Lords on Earth so neither could the Rhetorick of his Greatness prevail for any other confirmation then what was couched sub alto silentio This gave little satisfaction to his Lordship for that he knew it would give none to his Master and therefore rather then depart without something like a Vote he secretly ordered some few of his own Servants at the lower end of the Hall to cast up their Caps and cry King Richard King Richard which impudence of theirs though it apparently abasht the greatest part of the Company there yet his graceless Grace taking it up at the first bound for an unanimous consent said it was a goodly Cry and such as shew'd their universal approbation requiring thereupon the Mayor and his Fraternity to meet him the next day at the Protectors Court in Baynard's Castle in order to Petition him to accept their freely offer'd Subjection And here I cannot but think it worth the notice although we that have lived in these latter times have seen perhaps more exquisite Scenes of Hypocrisie to observe the instability and levity of the common Peoples Faith who like the Sea to which they are compared have their fluxes and refluxes of Loyalty It was not two dayes since they shew'd as great Affections to the Son as
which were likewise confirm'd by Act of Parliament the great Lords having as yet heard nothing of any Commission of Surrendries which was that great Rock of Offence against which his Successor King Charles the First did so unluckily dash himself to pieces Due care being thus taken for Establishment of Truth and Order in the Church the next great Work was to establish quiet in the State that Righteousness and Peace might kiss each other which he judged to be a consideration not less necessary then prudent the active Government of his Predecessor Queen Elizabeth who led all the brave men in her time to hard duty having tired out almost a l the stirring Spirits of the Nation However though it did ease it did not generally please the People the humor of Fighting being not so wholly spent but that it broke out afterward to worse purpose it being in our Fate as has been observ'd by some Melancholy States-men that whenever we are long kept from quarrelling with others we are apt to quarrel with one another But that which discontented the Men of Mars most was to see the Faction of the Gown-men pricking up and wholly predominant Upon this lower Orb as in the Skie Aleyn Vit. H. 7. Sol constantly is nearest Mercury Neither did he take part with them so much out of the pleasure he had in Books as out of an aversness to Arms whereunto he seem'd to have such an Antipathy that by his good will he did not care to see any Sword-man within his Palace whereby the Court came by degrees to loose two points of its ancient Lustre one in the Exercise of Tilting which was an Entertainment that added much to the Grandeur and Magnificence of the late Queen and King Henry her Father the other in the choice of the Gentlemen Pentioners an Order which being set up by the Wisdom of her Grand-father Henry the Seventh a Prince of severe Gravity she was so fond of and so curious in ordering the state of their attendance that none could attain to that honour all her time but who were men of very good Quality and yet more goodly Stature who by their graceful Personage might set forth the place as she design'd the place should set forth them so that in time it became a kind of Nursery for Officers and Men of Command who were sent abroad into France and the Low-Countries to learn the Art of cutting Throats if need were and so return'd again But this King it seems being taken with no such armed Pomp neglected it so far that some of the ruffling Gallants about the Town began to speak of it with more freedom then became their Duty or Discretion taxing him downright with Pusillanimity and causless fears saying that he trifled away more money in insignificant Embassies and Negotiations for a dishonorable Peace then would have maintain'd an honorable War But he having before shut up the Gates of Janus all his talk was as we commonly say without Doors for he esteem'd it honour enough that he had conquer'd himself according to that of the Poet Fortior est qui se quam qui fortissima vincit Moenia Peace he had at home without his seeking for it O Neil the great Disturber of his Predecessors quiet being presented to him as a Prisoner by the Lord Mountjoy as soon almost as he came in which gave him the occasion to begin with the settlement of Ireland first by giving the possession of the whole Province of Ulster O Neil's Country and the sink of Rebellion to the Citizens of London who thereupon setled two Colonies there the one at Derry every since call'd London-derry t'other at Colraine which they stor'd with Four hundred Artizans whilst the King for the better supplying them with Souldiers erected a new Order of Knighthood call'd Baronets from their taking place next the Sons of Barons each of which was ingaged to lay down as much money at the Sealing of his Patent as would maintain thirty Foot Souldiers one whole year at the rate of Eight pence a day a piece which came to twenty shillings a day And the Complement of these Knights being Two hundred there was a compleat Establishment of Three thousand Souldiers without any further noise to be ready for his Service whenever he had occasion to make use of them Now in order to the having Peace abroad there needed no more but to renew the Leagues he had made before with the Princes his Neighbours under another stile The great Question was Whether he should accept of the Olive-branch from the King of Spain with whom his Predecessor had so long contended for the Laurel and upon debating the whole matter besides the motives of the Half-peace already made with him whilst he was King of Scotland and the whole benefit of Trade that he was like to have as he was King of England the certainty of setting the Catholick and the most Christian Kings together by the Ears the uncertainty of being able to raise monies to maintain a War so easily as Queen Elizabeth did who had the knack of borrowing money which serv'd her to as good purpose as if it had been given the Parliament being for the most part the Pay-masters there were many Reasons of State some whereof were not fit to be publish'd perhaps not to be understood which induced him to call in the Letters of Mart and conclude that League which how acceptable it was to both Kings may be guess'd by the mutual Caressings of each other with extraordinary Embassies and Presents and the more then ordinary Ratification of the Articles of Peace but how far the People were content to have any Friendship with the Catholick King it is easie to guess especially after the discovery of that Catholick Plot commonly call'd the Gun-powder Treason which as it was contriv'd in a hotter place then Spain so it was hatch'd up in Darkness never to partake of the Light but when it was to be all Light and to give such a terrible blow as was at once to Extinguish the Light the Hope and the Glory of this Nation This the All-seeing Eye of Providence which pierces thorow the dark Womb of Conspiracy and blasts the Embrio of Treason before it can be form'd miraculously detected to the amazement of all Mankind no body imagining there could be such danger by Fire so near unto the Water the meaning of it being so little understood even after it was discovered that neither could the Lord Monteagle who receiv'd the first notice in a Letter writ in an unknown hand tell to what Friend he owed his Preservation nor any one else guess from what Enemy they were to expect their destruction till the King himself by inspiration rather then instinct yet admonish'd perhaps by the subversion of that House wherein his Father was murther'd apprehended by the word Blow what the Element must be that was to be so subtil in its Execution as that they who were hurt for
as himself observ'd for the most part their Graves the Vote of Non-Addresses being as Earth flung upon him Fortune cruelly brings him to Life again by the Cordial of unexpected hopes heightned by the Zeal of several Counties declaring for him Divers Lords in Arms again at Land and his own Son with others at Sea these incouraged by the Revolt of several Towns those by the coming in of several Ships so that there were no less then Two thousand in Arms for him at Sea with Twenty good Ships and not so litt e as Ten thousand at Land with Horses Arms and Ammunition suitable And which was yet more considerable the Grand * Call'd The Committee of Danger Committee of State in Scotland whose very name carried Danger in it allarm'd them by sending the Propositions following 1. To bring the King to London or some of his Houses near with Freedom and Safety 2. To disband the Army 3. To punish those that had deteined him in Obscurity 4. To restore the Secluded Members 5. To establish the Presbyterian Government and suppress Sectaries And that they might yet appear more like a Committee of Danger they sent a formidable Army under the Conduct of Duke Hamilton to make good their Demands and to give their Nation the Honour of being the last as they were the first in Arms in this unhappy War The terror of these formidable Preparations incourag'd by several Petitions out of the City and Country moved the affrighted Parliament to consent to a Personal Treaty whilst the Army was busie in disputing the Points with the Sword and accordingly they recal●'d the Vote of Non-Addresses and sent their Commissioners to wait on the King at the Isle of Wight where he argued so like a Divine with the Divines so like a Lawyer with the Lawyers so like a States-man with their Matchiavillians that they went all away fully satisfied in their belief of his Wisdom Piety and Justice and upon the publishing his Conditions the Houses voted him to be in Honour Freedom and Safety according to the Laws Here seem'd to be nothing wanting now but a Sword in his hand to have once more disputed it with the Sword-men too and then possibly he might have saved himself and the despairing Nation But just as every man was making ready to bring in his Peace-Offering in Confidence that the King and Parliament were fully agreed the inraged Army returning home from the Conquest of all those that had oppos'd them doubly dyed with Blood and Treason alike Enemies to Peace and Reason broke down the great Chain of Order which binds even the Divels themselves and first seizing on him next on them sent no less then Forty of their principal Members to Hell a Place purposely made their Prison not so much for any conveniency of Reception or nearness of Scituation as the Uncoughness of the Name that by the conceipt of being typically damn'd they might bring them into despair and tempt some of them as after they did to become their own Executioners Ninety more they turn'd quite out of the House and appointed a day for turning out all the rest In the mean time they publish'd a Modification which to make the more acceptable they term'd The Agreement of the People by which the number of the Representatives of the Nation was reduc'd to Three hundred half which were to have power to make a Law and during the Intervals of Sessions a Councel of State was to govern This Model was put into the hands of those Members of their own Faction who besides the Confirmation thereof had Instructions given them for passing six other Votes 1. For renewing that of Non-Addresses 2. For annulling the Treaty and Concessions at the Isle of Wight 3. For bringing the King to publick Justice to answer with his own all the Blood shed in the War 4. For summoning in his two Sons the Prince of Wales and the Duke of York to render themselves by a day certain to give satisfaction on their parts otherwise to stand exil'd as Traytors to their Country 5. For doing publick Justice upon all the Kings Partakers 6. For paying off all their own Arrears forthwith How obedient Slaves this Rump of a House were to these their own Servants who could not find in their Heart to pay the least respect to their natural Prince appears by the Sequel For immediately they gave them or rather permitted them to give themselves above Sixty thousand pounds and voted that the General should take care to secure the King and the Councel of war to draw up a Charge of High Treason against him Lord Faul●land Behold the frailty of all humane things How soon great Kingdoms fall much sooner Kings This as it was an Insolence beyond all hope of pardon so nothing could justifie it but such a Violation of all sacred and humane Rights as must not only out-do all Example but out-face all Divinity and Majesty at once by erecting that High Court of Justice as they call'd it to try him as a Rebel against himself Preparatory whereunto they made Proclamation at Westminster-hall Cheapside and the Old Exchange that all that had any thing to say against him should come in at the prefix'd time and be heard And for the greater solemnity of their intended Paricide the Law was silenced that is the Tearm put off for fourteen dayes in order to the better formalizing the disorder that was to follow And now having brought the Royal Prisoner to their Judgment Seat they proceed to arraign him with not unlike Impudence and Impiety to that of the Rascal Jews when they brought the King of Kings to Tryal whom as they charg'd to be a Perverter so these charg'd him with being a Subverter of his People both Prisoners being in this alike Guilty that eithers Crime was the owning himself to be a King which as the Jews could not indure then so neither could these now Their King thought not fit to give any Answer to his Accusers this King preparing to give sitting Answers could not be heard But he had this satisfaction to hear Pontius Bradshaw the President by whom he was to be condemn'd condemn himself first and all his Fellow Paricides by a Reply to him not less absurd then observable For his Majesty reasoning upon the unreasonableness of not being suffer'd to speak for himself said Where is there in all the World that Court in which no Place is left for Reason to which t'other unwittingly reply'd Sir you shall find that this very Court is such an one Nay then retorted the King in vain will my Subjects expect Justice from you who stop your Ears to your King ready to plead his Cause Thus they strangled him before they beheaded him and designing to murther his Soul if possible as well as his Body added to their Denial of Justice so many Contumelies Indignities and Affronts as were enough to have tempted him to despair had not his Faith been as strong