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A57919 Historical collections of private passages of state Weighty matters in law. Remarkable proceedings in five Parliaments. Beginning the sixteenth year of King James, anno 1618. And ending the fifth year of King Charls, anno 1629. Digested in order of time, and now published by John Rushworth of Lincolns-Inn, Esq; Rushworth, John, 1612?-1690. 1659 (1659) Wing R2316A; ESTC R219757 913,878 804

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under the Marquess Ansbach The Evangelicks were put to the worst by General Buquoy in several encounters and were much terrified by the Duke of Bavaria who marched with an Army of Fifteen thousand Horse and Foot and a Train of Artillery proportionable and they were weakned by a Cessation of Arms in Hungary between the Emperor and the Prince of Transylvania In Spain they make all possible preparations for this War onely the King of England will not take the Alarm abhorring War in general and distasting the Palsgraves cause as an ill president against Monarchy and fed with hopes of composing all differences by the success of the Spanish Treaty For which purpose Sir Walter Aston was then sent Ambassador into Spain and Gondomar returned into England there to abide till the long debated Match be fully effected The Articles of Religion for securing Liberty of Conscience to the Infanta and her Family were greatly inlarged by the Commissioners designed for the Treaty and were allowed by the King of England but without a dispensation from Rome the transactions between the two Kings were but Nullities And for this cause it was expected that our King should propound such conditions for the increase and great advantage of the Roman Catholick Religion that the Pope may deliberate whether they be of that nature as may perswade and merit the dispensation To this demand the King made answer in his Letter to the King of Spain That he had done as much in favor of the Catholicks as the times would bear and promised in the word of a King That no Roman Priest or other Catholick should thenceforth be condemned upon any capital Law And although he could not at present rescind the Laws inflicting onely pecuniary mulcts yet he would so mitigate them as to oblige his Catholick Subjects to him And if the Marriage took effect his Daughter in Law should finde him ready to indulge all favors which she should request for those of her Religion Herein the Spanish Council acknowledged great satisfaction given and a Paper was conceived and drawn up by a Iunto of Canonists Lawyers and Divines to perswade the Pope to act his part IN the mean while an Army of Thirty thousand was levying in Flanders under the command of Marquess Spinola The King of England sent to know the cause of so great preparations The Marquess gave answer That he received his Commission sealed up with a charge not to open it till his Army were compleated and brought together to a Rendevouz But the King had proof enough to assure him that this Army was intended for the Palatinate Yet no more then one Regiment under the Command of Sir Horatio Vere could be obtained from him though two more were promised When Spinola had his Rendevouz where he mustered Six and twenty thousand Foot and Four thousand Horse he opened his Commission which required him to make War against all those which should be confederate with the Bohemian Rebels and he communicated the same to the Ambassador of Great Brittain At the same time the English began their march as brave a Regiment as hath appeared in any age consisting most of Gentlemen under a most worthy Leader who was accompanied with the Earls of Oxford and Essex persons innobled as well by their own vertues as by their Progenitors Other Commanders in this Regiment were Sir Edward Sackvile Sir Gerard Herbert Sir Robert Knolles Captain Stafford Captain Wilmot Captain William Fairfax Sir Iohn Burlacy Cap. Burroughs Cap. Robert Knightly c. This handful of men reached the Palatinate with some difficulty by the aid and conduct of Henry Prince of Nassau The Imperial forces became exceeding numerous by large supplies from several Countreys and Provinces The States Protestant of the Upper and Lower Austria upon the approach of the Bavarian Army seeing nothing but manifest ruine renounce their Confederacy with the Bohemians and submit to the Emperor saving to themselves their Rights and Priviledges in Religion Whereupon the Bohemians and their King being but Twenty thousand strong besides an addition of Ten thousand Hungarians from Bethlem Gabor and fearing least Bavaria and Buquoy joyning their forces should fall into Bohemia thought it best to fortifie the Frontiers and to defend their Country which they conceived they might well do if the Elector of Saxony would continue in his Neutrality The Emperor sent to the said Elector to execute his Ban or Declaration of Treason against the Count Palatine and the Bohemian Rebels The Bohemians by their Ambassadors requested him if he would not own their Cause yet at least to remain Neutral The Duke of Saxony replied to King Frederick That he had often represented to him what ruine was like to follow him by taking an others Crown and for his own part being called upon by the Emperor to execute his Ban and chastise the Rebels he could not disobey that just command The Protestant Princes sent to him again and gave him notice of Spinola's advance to subdue the Palatinate but this did nothing move him He entred Lusatia with some forces and quickly reduced a part of that Province In the Palatinate Spinola having got the start of the English by means of a far shorter march had no sooner arived but he took in divers Towns and prevailed greatly over a spiritless people yet he warily declined the hazard of Battel with the Princes of the Union Neither was the Marquess Ansbach very forward to engage or to seek or take advantages The Dutch slowness was not excusable howbeit the great access of strength to the Emperors party and this slender aid from the King of Great Brittain to preserve his Childrens Patrimony must needs dishearten the German Princes and help to dissolve the Union After a while the season of the year drew them into their Winter Quarters the Princes retired into their several Countreys and the English Regiment was disposed into three principal Garisons Sir Horatio Vere commanded in Manheim Sir Gerard Herbert in Heidelborough and Captain Burroughs in Frankendale having onely power to preserve themselves within those Walls whilest the enemy ranged round about them A Letter written from the Marquess of Buckingham to Conde Gondomar discovered the bent of the Kings minde and will touching the German War That he was resolved to continue Neuter for Conscience Honor and Examples sake In regard of Conscience judging it unlawful to inthrone and dethrone Kings for Religions sake having a quarrel against the Jesuites for holding that opinion Besides he saw the World inclined to make this a War of Religion which he would never do In point of Honor for that when he sent his Ambassador into Germany to treat of Peace in the interim his Son in Law had taken the Crown upon him And for Example sake holding it a dangerous president against all Christian Princes to allow a sudden translation of Crowns by the Peoples Authority Nevertheless he could not sit still and
Majesty that he suffered for his good service done His Majesty requires the Lords who are able to do him Justice to punish Yelverton for his slander Sir Henry Yelverton coming shortly after before the Lords gave his particular Answer to each particular charge in serie temporis and spake moreover as followeth I Cannot but present my self this day before Your Highness and my Lords with much fear with more grief for I am compassed with so many terrors from His Majesty as I might well hide my head with Adam His Lordships meaning Buckingham displeasure wounds me more then the conscience of any these facts yet had I rather die then the Commonwealth should so much as receive a scrach from me I that in none of my actions feared that great man on whom they viz. Sir Edward Villers and Sir Giles Mompesson did depend much less would I fear them who were but his shadow But my most Noble Lords knowing that my Lord of Buckingham was ever at His Majesties hand ready upon every occasion to hew me down out of the honest fear of a Servant not to offend so gracious a Master as His Majesty hath ever been to me I did commit them videlicet the Silkmen And speaking concerning the Patent of Inns he said I cannot herein but bemoan my unhappiness that in the last cause laboring by all lawful means to advance the honest profit of His Majesty and in this with the sight almost of my own ruine to preserve His Majesties honor and the quiet of the people I am yet drawn in question as if I had equally dishonored His Majesty in both When Sir Giles saw I would not be wooed to offend His Majesty in his direction I received a Message by Mr. Emmerson sent me from Sir Giles That I would run my self upon the Rocks and that I should not hold my place long if I did thus withstand the Patent of Inns or to this effect Soon after came Sir Giles himself and like an Herauld at Arms told me to this effect He had a Message to tell me from the Lord of Buckingham that I should not hold my place a moneth if I did not conform my self in better measure to the Patent of Inns for my Lord had obtained it by his Favor and would maintain it by his Power How could I but startle at this Message for I saw here was a great assuming of power to himself to place and displace an Officer I saw my self cast upon two main Rocks either treacherously to forsake the standing His Majesty had set me in or else to indanger my self by a by blow and so hazard my Fortune I humbly beseech your Lordships Nature will struggle when she sees her place and means of living thus assaulted for now it was come to this Whither I would obey His Majesty or my Lord if Sir Giles spake true Yet I resolved in this to be as stubborn as Mordecai not to stoop or pass those gracious Bounds His Majesty had prescribed me Soon after I found the Message in part made good for all the profits almost of my place were diverted from me and turned into an unusual Channel to one of my Lords Worthies That I retained little more then the name of Attorney It became so fatal and so penal that it became almost the loss of a Suit to come to me My place was but as the seat of Winds and Tempests Howbeit I dare say if my Lord of Buchingham had but read the Articles exhibited in this place against Hugh Spencer and had known the danger of placing 〈◊〉 displacing Officers about a King he would not have pursued me with such bitterness But my opposing my Lord in this Patent of Inns in the Patent of Ale-houses in the Irish Customs and in Sir Robert Nantons Deputation of his place in the Court of Wards These have bin my overthrow and for these I suffer at this day in my Estate and Fortune not meaning to say I take it but as I know and for my humble oppositions to his Lordship above Twenty thousand pounds The King hearing of this Speech commanded the Lord Treasurer to acquaint the House of Lords That he understood that Yelverton being called before them the other day as a Delinquent answered not as a Delinquent but as a Judge or accuser of a Member of that House the Lord of Buckingham saying He suffered for the Patent of Inns or to that effect That he was so far from excusing or extenuating of his Offence the last day here that he hath aggravated the same Wherefore His Majesties pleasure is That himself will be judge of what concerns His Majesty for that which concerns the Lord of Buckingham his Lordship hath besought His Majesty that that might be left to the House and so His Majesty leaves that wholly to their Lordships The Lords made an humble Return to His Majesty That forasmuch as he was once pleased to make their House Judge of those words formerly spoken by Sir Henry Yelverton which touched His Majesties Honor that His Majesty will be pleased not to resume the same out of their hands but so far to tender the Priviledges of their House as to continue his first resolution which afterwards the King condescended unto The Lords first examining Emerson who varied in the matter he was examined about proceeded to Sentence Sir Henry Yelverton not upon the Charge exhibited against him by the Commons but for the words spoken by the by and declared That the said Sir Henry Yelverton for his Speeches uttered here in the Court which do touch the Kings Majesty his Honor shall be fined to the King in Ten thousand Marks be imprisoned during the Kings pleasure and make a Submission unto His Majesty And for the scandal committed in these words of his against the Lord Marquess of Buckingham That he should pay him Five thousand Marks and make his Submission As soon as the Judgment was pronounced against him the Lord Marquess of Buckingham stood up and did freely remit him the said Five thousand marks for which Sir Henry humbly thanked his Lordship and the House of Peers agreed to move His Majesty to mitigate Sir Henry Yelvertons Fine and the Prince his Highness offered to move His Majesty therein which accordingly was done and Sir Henry was set at liberty the Duke reconciled to him he afterwards preferred to be a Judge and was esteemed a man Valde eruditus in Lege But the Treaties with the Emperor and the King of Spain were much disrelished Gondomar had raised the peoples fury and was reviled and assaulted in London streets Whereupon the day following the Privy Council commanded the Recorder of London to be careful in the strict Examination of an Insolent and Barbarous affront offered to the Spanish Ambassador and his people for which the King would have exemplary Justice done And forasmuch as His Majesty was informed that there was a fellow already apprehended though not for casting stones or threatning
expressions at the time of his accusation p. 258. His Speech at the delivery of the Articles against the Duke p. 259. Articles exhibited by him against the Duke p. 266. And also against the Lord Conway p. 268. A Message from the King against Bristol p. 270. Reasons why he should onely be tried in the House of Peers p. 271. Iudges opinions concerning that particular p. 272. His Speech by way of Introduction before he gave in his Answer to the Articles p. 273 274 c. His Answer to the Articles p. 278 279 c. Dudley Sir Diggs p. 55 306 307 360 364 365 454 533 544 554 614. Doncaster Viscount sent Ambassador p. 11 13 22. Drummond Mr. p. 167. E. EArl Sir Walter upon a Habeas Corpus p. 462. Edmonds Sir Thomas p. 660. Elector vide Palatinate Elliot Sir John p. 224 357 360 366 433 529 532 561 563 544 554 614 660 669. Information against him in the Upper Bench p. 693 696 697 c. Emperor vide the Palatinate Essex Earl p. 200. F. FAirfax Captain p. 15. A Monument erected at Frandendale in memory of him and Mr. John Fairfax his Brother both slain in the defence thereof p. 155 Felton visited in prison and confesses the Fact p. 650. His examination before the Council ibid. Threatned to be rackt ibid. Tryed p. 652. Tendereth his hand to be cut off ib. Hung in Chains p. 653. Finch Sir Hennage Speaker p. 208 401 Finch Sir John Speaker p. 484 561 Fleetwood Sir Miles p. 561 France about a Treaty of Marriage p. 156 114. A Marriage there p. 172 173. Difference with France p. 428 G. GAge Mr. sent to Rome p. 23 66 121 Glanvile Serjeant p. 313 318 574 Glynn Mr. Recorder Ap. 56 57 Gundamor flatters King James p. 3. The Treaty on the Spaniards behalf ibid. Contrives Sir Walter Rawleighs death p. 4 16 18 20. Assaulted in London Streets p. 34. A Letter to him to expedite the Match 69 see 113 122 Gorge Sir Ferdinando p. 180 Germany vide Palatinate H. Habeas Corpus Debates and Arguments p. 462 463 c. Also vide Parliament quarto Car. and Appendix Hackwel Mr. p. 507 528 568 Hayman Sir Peter p. 528 Heath Sir Robert p. 216 667 689. Ap. 39 53 Henry Prince a Match proposed between him and a Daughter of Spain p. 1 Herbert Mr. p. 312 Herbert Sir Gerrard p. 15 69 Herbert Sir Edward p. 43 Heveningham Sir John brings his Habeas Corpus p. 462 Heidelburg p. 66 69 Hobby Sir Thomas p. 528 Holland Earl p. 173 469 470 Hollis Mr. p. 676 689 693 Hubbard Sir Miles brought upon a Habeas Corpus p. 689 Hide Sir Nicholas made Chief Iustice p. 424 I. Iames King of Scotland affects the Title of Peace-Maker p. 1. Desires to Match Prince Charls with somergeat Princess though of different Religion ibid. and 50. Inclines to a Match with Spain p. 2. Flattered by Gundamor p. 3. Delivers up the cautionary Towns ibid. Gives a Commission to Digby to Treat on a Marriages ibid. Receives Articles about Religion out of Spain p. 4. Imployes Sir Walter Rawleigh upon a design into America p. 4 5. Too credulous of the Spaniard p. 8. A Letter shewing upon what account the King gave way to the beheading of Sir Walter Rawleigh p. 9. Sends Viscount Doncaster Ambassador p. 11 13. His advice craved by the Count Palatine p. 12. He dislikes the Palatines acceptance of the Crown p. 13 a. 14 b. 16 a. Goes to war with one Regiment to assist the Palatines p. 14. Receives news of the defeat given the Palatine at Prague p. 17. Raises money by advice of Privy Council ibid. Flattered again by the Spaniard p. 18. The Spaniards secret Instructions in reference to the King ibid. He calls a Parliament p. 20. Forbids discourse of State affairs p. 21. His Speech to the Parliament ibid. Sends Digby Ambassador into Flanders p. 23. His second Speech in Parliament about Projectors p. 24. Speaks on behalf of the Duke p. 26 27. Sends a Message against Sir Henry Yelverton p. 33 d. Intends to adjourn the Parliament p. 35. The Commons Declaration about the Palatinate before the adjournment p. 36. Reforms grievances by Proclamation ibid. Again forbids speaking of State Affairs ibid. Gives the Great Seal to Dean Williams ibid. Reassembles the Parliament p. 39. In his absence the Lord Keeper speaks ibid. Is tryed with a Petition and Remonstrance from the Commons p. 40. Writes to the Speaker p. 43. Answers the Petition p. 46 47. His Answer qualified by the Lord Keeper p. 52. The Commons Protestation p. 53. The King tears it out of the Iournal ibid. Commits some Members of Parliament p. 55. Imployes others to Ireland ibid. Again forbids speaking of State Affairs ibid. Offers terms to the Emperor on behalf of the Palatinate ibid. Receives an Answer from the Emperor p. 56. Writes to Philip the Fourth to accelerate the Match p. 57. Also to Don Balthazar p. 59. Writes for the raising of moneys p. 61. Opposes the Arminian Sect p. 62. Shews favor to Recusants ibid. Lord Keeper excuses the Kings favor to Recusants p. 63. Writes to the Archbishop about regulating the Clergy p. 64. Gives direction concerning Preachers ibid. New conditions demanded of him by the Pope p. 66. His Answer to those demands p. 67. His Letter to Digby p. 68. Sends him a dispatch in a peremptory stile concerning Heidelburgh p. 70. Signs the Popes demands p. 73. Writes again to Bristol concerning the Palatinate p. 74. Sends the Prince into Spain p. 76. Archbishop Abbots Letter to the King against Tolleration of Popery p. 85. Articles of Marriage sworn to by him p. 86. The Oath taken by him p. 88. He swears also to private Articles p. 88 89. Pope Urban writes to King James p. 95. After the Princes arival sends to Bristol not to deliver the Proxy without restitution of the Palatinate p. 105. And writes to the Palatine to make his submission to the Emperor p. 108. The Palatines Answer p. 109. Seeks a match with France p. 114. Calls a Parliament about the Treaty with Spain p. 115. Makes a Speech ibid. Also another Speech in justification of the Duke p. 127. He makes a third speech unto them concerning their advice to break off the Match p. 129. Desires he may not have a Furrow of Land left without Restitution of the Palatinate p. 130. Scruples at the word insincerity of the King of Spain p. 136. Declares his resolution to dissolve the Treaties p. 138. Accepts Subsidies and makes another Speech to the Parliament ibid. Offers to go to war in his own person p. 139. Is troubled at a Petition against Recusants p. 140. That he hath broke the neck of three Parliaments ibid. His Answer to that Petition p. 143. Receives information concerning the Duke p. 144. His Speech at the adjournment of the Parliament p. 150. A Particular of what Laws he then passed p. 152. Desires a Match with France p. 156. Which he
Cases at the Council Table when great Causes were heard before the King and Council And when matters were agitated at a greater distance I was there also and went on purpose out of a curiosity to see and observe the passages at the Camp at Berwick at the Fight at Newborn at the Treaty at Rippon at the great Council at York and at the meeting of the Long Parliament The Observations I made during all the said time shall be further known if I be encouraged to proceed and that this my Forlorn be not repelled and defeated Thus have I good Reader acquainted thee in plain English with the Lines and rude Draughts of what hath been and what is like to be multorum annorum opus in which as I never did approve so neither could I perswade my self to tread in their Steps who intermingle their Passion with their stories and are not content to write of unless they write also for a Party or to serve an Interest and so declare themselves far better Advocates then Historians●● I profess that in singleness of heart I aim at truth which to me has alwayes seemed hugely amiable even without the tires and advantages of Wit and Eloquence And therefore in order to my greatest purpose I have esteemed the most unaffected and familiar Stile the best Altum alii teneant And so irresistible is the force of Truth and the Divine Providence so great that howsoever all possible diligence may have been used to carry things in secret and to act by colourable Pretences men often acting like Tumblers that are squint-eyed looking one way and aiming another Yet hath God in these our dayes brought to light such Secrets of State such private Consultations such str●nge Contrivances discovered by Letters Papers and Cabinet-memorials seised on in time of the War as otherwise probably neither we nor our Posterity should have ever known I conclude with the learned Spaniards opinion Satis est Historiae si sit vera quae ut reliqua habeat omnia si veritatem non habet obtinere nomen suum non potest J. RUSHWORTH 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 h.e. Anglorum leges Suadam consulta Senatus ausáque cuncta loquor tempore quaeque suo Excipis adverso si pectore ore maligno pluribus invideas Zoile nemo tibi The Printer to the Reader BEing obliged to get this Book finished against the ensuing Term I was constrained to make more haste then ordinary so that possibly some Faults have escap'd which I request the Courteous Reader to Pardon and Amend as they shall be met with VALE The right high and most mightie Monarch ●AMES by the Gra●ce of God King of great Britaine Fraunce and Ireland c Defendor of the Faith Historical Collections THe grand business of State in the latter times of King Iames was the Spanish Match which had the Kings heart in it over-ruled all his Counsels and had a mighty influence upon the Universal State of Christendom This King affecting the name of a King of Peace and Peace-maker as his chief glory had designed what in him lay the setling of a general Peace in Europe and the reconciling of all Parties and professed that if the Papists would leave their King-killing and some other grosser Errors he was willing to meet them half way moreover he was ever zealous for the honor and height of regal Majesty and to maintain the glory of it in his Successors 't was his chief desire and care to match his Son with some Princess of most high descent though of a different Religion There had been a Treaty of Marriage between the late Prince Henry and a Daughter of Spain which on the Spaniards part was found a meer Complement carried on by the accustomed gravity and formality of that Nation For Cecil Earl of Salisbury the great States-man of that time pursued and drove the matter to that point that the Duke of Lerma finding no evasion disclaimed the being of a Marriage Treaty Nevertheless the Spanish Ambassador to acquit himself to this State and to clear his own honesty at a full Council produced his Commission together with his Letters of Instruction given under the Duke's hand Such manner of dealing might have been sufficient Cause of just Indignation against any future motion of this Alliance After death of Prince Henry the King set his thoughts upon a Daughter of Henry the Fourth late King of France as the fittest Match for Prince Charles and by Sir Thomas Edmonds his Legier Ambassador endeavored to know the minde of that State but could not discern their affections and was not willing to discover his own At length taking occasion to send the Lord Hayes Extraordinary Ambassador to the French King to Congratulate his Marriage with Anne the Infanta of Spain he resolved to make a thorow Trial The matter was put forth and in appearance well taken but proved of no effect For the Duke of Savoy was before-hand and prevailed for his Son the Prince of Piedmont During this Negotiation of Alliance with France the Duke of Lerma frequently intimated unto Sir Iohn Digby Ambassador Resident in Spain an extraordinary desire in the King his Master not onely to maintain Peace and Amity with the King of great Britain but to lay hold on all means that might be offered for the nearer uniting of their Majesties and their Crowns as also a disposition in this regard to match his second Daughter to the Prince of Wales The Ambassador replyed that His Majesty had little reason to give ear to this overture having not long since in the Treaty for the late Prince received such an unexpected Answer and Demands so improper and unworthy and that there needed more then ordinary assurance to induce him to believe that there was now so great a change and the match desired in good earnest and not propounded meerly to divert the match with France wherefore he expected the proposal of such terms of advantage and certainty as might gain a belief of their sincere Intentions Lerma promised a further Conference But by reason of a strong report that the Match with France was absolutely concluded and within few dayes to be published the business lay asleep until Sir Iohn Digby going for England was desired by the Duke to give him notice of the state of this Affair From hence Digby gives him to understand that there was no cause of dispair concerning this new overture unless the difficulty of the Conditions should make it desperate but if the Demands in point of Religion were no more then what would satisfie another Catholick Prince and to which his Majesty might yeild with Honor he knows that divers persons not of the meanest power were well inclined and ready to give their helping hand He said further that it were much better not to revive this motion then by impossible and unfitting
Laws made against any Roman Catholick whatsoever nor will execute any punishment inflicted by any of those Laws but in all things which belong to me will faithfully observe his Majesties word given in that behalf But in the taking of the solemn Publick Oath it is said there arose a difficulty between the King and the Spanish Ambassadors concerning the Popes title Most holy which the King refused to pronounce openly in the Chappel at Whitehall alleadging that it was repugnant to his Religion and might be an impeachment to his honor But the Ambassadors would proceed no further till the King had yielded to give him that Title There was another rub which the King soon removed The Ambassadors had heard that in the Kings Chappel when they should come to see the swearing of the Articles they should be present at such Prayers and Singing as were used in the Protestant Church whereunto they declared that they could not yield since the end of their coming thither was to maintain and warrant the Catholick Apostolical and Roman Church Whereupon the King commanded that nothing should then be sung but what was chanted when the Constable of Castile did swear the Peace between the two Crowns which was a Hymn of Joy in praise of Peace At that time England had swarms of Priests and Jesuites who were busie in drawing the people from the Protestant religion And a titular Bishop of Calcedon privately came to London to exercise Episcopal jurisdiction over the Catholicks of this Kingdom 'T is said that King Iames had now so much confidence of the Match as to say openly in the Court That now all the Devils in hell could not break it In Spain the Infanta was stiled the Princess of England and was kept no longer in her Virgin-retirements In England a Chappel was building for her at S. James and Don Carlos de Colona laid the first stone Her Picture was every-where to be seen and a Fleet was prepared for her passage And the greatest Enemies to this Alliance submitted to the Kings will But in all this Capitulation between the two Crowns hitherto the Restitution of the Palatinate was laid aside the King conceiving that the Consummation of the Match would overrule and settle that affair to his entire satisfaction In the height of the Spanish Treaty there was a notable Letter writ from Mr. Alured to the Duke perswading him not only to endeavor the breaking off the Match with Spain but also the preventing of any Match with a Princess of a different Religion THe Parable in the Gospel said he tells of a great King that married his Son and bade many thereunto yea upon the excusal of some and re●usal of others all of whatsoever condition as well out of the high-ways as the high-places were called and invited As every true Christian hath an interest in the Marriage of that Kings Son of Heaven so every good Subject as well as every great Subject hath an interest in the Marriage and welfare of the Kings Son here on Earth Which occasions so many and me the meanest of those many to wish that it may bring with it glory to Him on high good will and peace to those on earth Which is much doubted cannot be from Spain since the motioning of that Match makes a general fear that it can neither be safe for the Kings person nor good for his Church and Commonwealth because that thereby there may be an inlet to the Romish Locusts who like the Cankerworm may in an instant smite our Gourd under whose shadow we sit safe To address this poor discourse to your Lordships more particular Kings have almost ever used to have their Favorites Alexander had long since his Ephestion and Henry the Third of France of late his Espernon and Philip of Spain had since his Lermas Yea the best Princes have not wanted them For after the reckoning of David's great Officers Hushai the Archyte is called the Kings Friend and Ira the Iarite is set down to have been Chief about David Which stands to Reason and agrees with Nature For every private man is left to affect as he likes neither can Affection be forced Now to disallow or confine that in a King which is left at liberty in the meanest Subject were preposterous and injurious For though they command Nations as they are Kings yet they are subject to their Passions as they are men And if I may alleadge it without misinterpretation of others as I am free from ill meaning my self Who knows but Christ the rather to shew himself a Natural man expressed so much ●he more his Passion in his often weeping and his Affection to divers particulars but especially to S. John if I may not say his Favorite certainly the Disciple whom Iesus loved more then any of the rest It is Gods blessing and your happiness if you account it so to be the Kings Favorite As Peter therefore not presuming to ask Christ who it was he spake of beckoned to the Disciple whom Iesus loved on whose breast he leaned to ask for him so since most men neither may or ought to be so bold to ask or advise the King in this business so much spoken of yet they point at you who the higher you are in the Kings favor the more you are in the Peoples eye and observation and they expect you will not be wanting in the duty of a Subject a Councellor and a Favorite We do not read of any servant almost better respected of his Lord and Master then Eliezar of Damascus whom Abraham had meant had he died childless to have made his heir and we read not of any service he did Abraham more at least greater then in choice of a Wife for his son Isaac Among the Servants of our Patriarch the Defender of our Faith we observe none better respected then your self For the King hath manifested he loves not your person only but takes care for your soul and labors to make you as good as great and as happy in another world as high in this Yet we know not wherein you can do him better service then with Eliezar to help to choose a Rebeccah for our hopeful Prince We have not heard said he of any Protestant King that ever married with a contrary Religion save the last Henry of Navar with the last Margaret of France which Marriage so unfortunate to the parties having never Issue and being afterwards divorced was also so fatal to our Religion that there was more Blood spilt at those Nuptials then Wine spent For while the Protestants dreamed of the glory and security they should have by the Match they were most miserably massacred And who doubts but what the French Papists committed in their own Country upon that colour and occasion the Spanish Papists would be glad to see done in this Kingdom upon the like For without breach of charity we may doubt of their sincere meaning though there be
a Treaty of a Match since in Eighty Eight even while there was a Treaty of Peace their Armado came upon us Again we shall find it was forbidden in the best people in the world to marry with a differing Religion The injunction the reason and the effect are laid down in Deuteronomy to the Jews And if we descend to our own Books and Chronicles we shall find that God hath crossed if not cursed our alliance and association particularly with the Spanish Nation the position of that Country and the disposition of that People being as it were so malignant and ill-agreeing with us The Prince of the greatest performance that ever this Kingdom or Christendom had was the Black Prince Yet our Chronicle records that going into Spain to settle Don Pedro in that Kingdom besides the monstrous ingratitude and peafidiousness of the Spaniard who failed in the performance of those Conditions he had promised which caused the miserable Revolt in France to the loss of our inheritance the Prince was so poisoned in that Country that he never had his health after Moreover he beseeched his Lordship to observe that all the Marriages which the Heirs and Princes of this Crown have made in England for these last six-score years except the several second Matches of Henry the Eight have been onely and no-where else but with Spain which how little God hath blest the success shews Prince Arthur married the Spanish Kings daughter We know God took him away suddenly within a very small time and without any issue In a Politick respect we would yet make a second Match so Prince Henry afterwards King married the same daughter But doubtless God was less pleased with that Match which was less lawful and therefore God took away all the male-children of it and left only a daughter in whose short Reign was shed more blood for the true Religion in six years then for the false in these succeeding sixty years We made then a third Adventure and Marriage with Spain Queen Mary with King Philip which was so discontenting to the People that it caused Wyats Rebellion so discomfortable to the Queen that it brake her heart being left and neglected of her Husband and so dishonorable and prejudicial to the Kingdom that merely for the Spaniards sake we having no difference at all with France we lost Calis in six days which had been above two hundred years in our possession He added lastly Though I have not so much judgment nor so little wit as to presume to advise where to match yet I assume so much as to think a Match at home cannot be held any ways inconvenient We find the first and the last of our Kings that ever matched with their Subjects were Ed. 4. and Hen. 8. From which two Matches God as it were to shew the less we rely upon others abroad the more he will help us himself at home gave two daughters two Elizabeths two such Queens then which there were never two more blessed Instruments of Gods glory and this Kingdoms good by establishing Peace in the Land and Religion in the Church until his Majesties happy coming who brought both with him The French were very jealous of the Conjunction between Spain and England and thought it the safest way to make peace at home and imploy their strength to bound the Incroachments of Spain and the House of Austria By which means a bitter Persecution ceased in that Kingdom The Protestants of France were permitted to call home their banished Ministers to build their ruined Temples and to enjoy their liberty in Religion This benefit did the Kings closing with Spain procure to a people almost ruined But after all the Kings concessions the Spaniards contrived new delays and proposed harder terms The Pope had obliged the Catholick King to see the Conditions performed and to protract the Marriage till matters in England were in perfect execution Whereupon the Divines advise that King that the Promises of Marriage be made presently but the Consummation thereof and the delivering of the Infanta be deferred till May the year following And the death of Pope Gregory did strengthen this contrivance For the Spanish Ministers pretended that in regard there was no Contract but a Treaty only on foot the Dispensation which lay in the Nuncio's hands was by the Popes death suspended and a Ratification from the new Pope was requisite before any further progress could be made Cardinal Barberine was chosen Successor to Gregory the Fifteenth and took the name of Urban the Eight Soon after his election he wrote these ensuing Letters the one to King Iames the other to Prince Charls Serenissimo IACOBO Magnae Britanniae Regi Illustri URBANUS P. ● VIII SErenissime Rex salutem lumen Divinae gratiae Scotiae regnum quod inclytos terris Reges sanctissimosque coelo cives peperit cum ad Cardinalatus nostri patrocinium pertinuerit laetitiae simul ac moeroris uberem nobis materiam afferebat Exultabamus gaudio cogitantes in ea Regione quam Romanorum arma expugnare omnino non potuerunt Romanae Ecclesiae fidem feliciter triumphasse Scotumque Regem nullum hactenus extitisse qui Pontificiae authoritatis hostis obierit At enim vertebatur in luctum cythara nostra cum ad praesentium temporum miserias oculos lachrymis manantes converteremus Videmini enim laborante discordiarum patre obliti esse eum qui nutrivit vos contristati nutricem vestram Hierusalem Quare Apostolica sedes quae populos istos jampridem Christo genuit moerore conficitur dum tam praecla●am haereditatem verti videt ad extraneos damnique sui magnitudinem Britannorum Regum laudibus istarumque Provinciarum gloria metitur Id vero praeter caetera dolendum orbi Christiano videtur Jacobum regem Catholicorum regum prolem sanctissimae Parentis filium à Pontifice Maximo atque à Majoribus suis in Religionis cultu dissentire Si enim sublime istud ingenium quod literarum studiis prudentiae artibus Rex celeberrimus excoluisti affulgenti Patri luminum assentiretur facilè conjicit Christiana Respublica quanto publicae concordiae bono factum esset ut Nationes istas Insulasque aut montium claustris aut Oceani gurgitibus dissitas Scoticus rex imperio conjungeres Videtur enim Majestas tua ob eam rem facta esse tot Provinciarum domina ut ab eo cui parent facilius celeriusque Regna ista medelam ac salutem acciperent Quare assiduis precibus jam tum eum venerabamur qui dat salutem Regibus ut to Divinae clementiae beneficia quibus in conspectu Potentium admirabilis es ad Britanniae incolumitatem Ecclesiae gaudium conferret Affulsit autem nobis non ita pridem beata spes oriens ex alto cum te Austriacae affinitatis cupidum cognovimus ex Catholica matre progigni exoptantem eos qui tuam haereditatem adire populosque istos ditione tenere debent
express command to Bristol to deliver his thanks to the King of Spain for the high entertainment personal kindness respect and favor received by his Son the Prince who was returned so well satisfied as that he was not able to magnifie it sufficiently And further to let him know That to make a firm and indissoluble union between their Families Nations and Crowns and withal not to abandon his own Honor nor at the same time to give joy to his only Son and to give his onely Daughter her Portion in Tears he had by the advice of that Kings Ambassadors entred into a Treaty for the Restitution of the Palatinate that he always understood and expected that upon the effecting of this Marriage he should obtain the restoring of his Son-in-law both to his Countrey and Dignity and that the Emperor either by sinding out some great Title or by increasing the number of the Electoral Stiles might satisfie the Duke of Bavaria And for these Reasons the King commanded Bristol instantly to procure from that King a punctual Answer touching the course he resolves to take for the restitution of the Palatinate and Electorate and what assurance shall be given for his contentment if the Emperor or Duke of Bavaria should oppose any part of the expected restitution Moreover he gave direction and signified his special desire that the Espousals should be made in one of the Christmas Holidays because that holy and joyful time would best become an action so notable and blessed The Earl of Bristol with the Concurrence of Sir Walter Aston took boldness to demur upon these new Instructions and yet again to represent to his Majesty the state of these affairs they inform him that by deferring the Epousals till Christmas the powers were made altogether useless and invalid there being a Clause in the body of them That they shall remain in force till Christmas and no longer And the suspending of the execution of the powers till the validity of them be expired is an effectual revoking of them Besides the pretexts of this delay are no new but old matters which were often under debate but never insisted on to retard the main business And it will be thought that they should rather have hindered the Grant of these powers then the execution of them being granted Surely a staggering in the former resolutions will be suspected and the clearing thereof between Spain and England will cost much time As concerning the Prince Palatine it was the care of the Spanish Ministers that that business might be well compounded before the Infanta's coming into England For they say that otherwise they might give a Daughter and a War presently follow Besides the Instructions given under his Majesties hand were indeed to insist upon the restoring of the Prince Palatine yet not so to annex it to the Treaty as thereby to hazard the Match For he seemed to be confident that the one would never grow to a conclusion without a setled resolution to effect the other And the Prince and Duke during their being in Spain observed the same course Moreover the Palatinate affairs have relation to many great Princes interessed therein and cannot be ended but by a formal Treaty which will require a great length of time and if the conclusion of the Match should depend thereon the Prince may be long enough unmarried for the advancement of their interest who desire he should so continue or not match with Spain The preparations for the Marriage go on chearfully the Popes Dispensation is hourly expected with an intention to demand the powers immediately and upon what pretext shall they be detained Shall we alledge his Majesties pleasure that the solemnity be performed in the Christmas Holidays But that is impossible for the powers are then expired Shall we urge the restoring of the Palatine This was not made a condition but was treated as a business a part The delay of the Desponsario's will put a scorn upon the Infanta and upon the King of Spain who hath called himself the Infanta's Desponsado And this cannot stand with that exact and honorable dealing which his Majesty hath hitherto used Now upon these Inducements in the result and close of all the Ambassador humbly advised the King to return to the former state of the Treaty and to nominate a day for the delivery of the Proxies and resolved somewhat to protract the time for the receiving of his Majesties further direction Thus did the Earl of Bristol endeavor to restore the business and the better to bring it on Sir Walter Aston labored to reconcile the Duke to Spain by this manner of Insinuation He believed that his Grace was infinitely provoked to be an enemy to this Match and might have many Reasons suggested how much it concerned him to break it with all the force he hath yet he could not believe that the Error of one Man can make him an enemy to that which carries in it so much content to the King and Prince nor that his judgment can be led by these Arguments which under colour of safety would bring him into a dangerous labyrinth For the most prosperous War hath misfortune enough to make the Author of it unhappy and how innocent soever his Grace might be yet the occasions which have been given him will make him liable to such an aspersion But if the Match proceed and take effect he will have the honor thereof and the Infanta being duly informed must needs acknowledge him to be the person unto whom in that behalf she is most obliged But these Motions incensed Buckingham And now having the Prince linked to him he could over-rule the King and bear down all his Adversaries The Prince and the Duke began to take a popular way and to close with those of the Privy Council and the Nobility that were opposite to Spain and best liked of by the Puritan party They projected also the calling of a Parliament to consult the Nation and to clear the Kings integrity and to gain to themselves a great esteem in the hearts of the people And some there were that suggested to the King that the Dukes design was to prevent the Princes Marriage not onely with Spain but any where else that his own greatness might still be absolute For say they were it love to his Countrey that led him to a breach and War with Spain there was as much reason for a breach of the Match and Peace when the Parliament urged it as now there is And they said That the approaching Parliament was to marry the Duke to the Commonwealth that he might stand not onely by the King but by the people and popular humor which of late he hath courted earnestly and so they warned the King to have more special care of his own preservation But the Earl of Bristol was straightly commanded to follow the new Instructions namely before he deliver the Powers or move to the Contract to procure from
other Ambassadors will do so no more I am a good Master that never doubted of him for I know him to be so good a Schollar of mine that I say without van●ty he will not exceed his Masters Dictates And I trust the Report not the worse he made because it is approved by you all yet I believe an honest man as much as all the World and the rather because he was a Disciple of mine And I am glad he hath so well satisfied you and thank you heartily for taking it in so good part as I finde you have done The Lords having debated those high Matters of State which the King put into their hands delivered their opinions That his Majesty cannot with honor and safety and with the conveniency of State and Religion proceed any further in the Treaty of the Princes Marriage nor relie any longer upon the Treaty for the recovery of the Palatinate in which Vote the Commons concurred with them And in this manner both Houses Addressed themselves to the King May it please your most Excellent Majesty WE are come unto you imployed from your most faithful Subjects and Servants the Lords and Commons assembled in this present Parliament And first They and we do give most humble and hearty thanks unto Almighty God that out of his gracious goodness he hath been pleased now at last to dispel the Clouds and Mists which for so many years have dimmed the eyes of a great part of Christendom in the business whereof we do now consult And secondly We acknowledge our selves most bound unto your Majesty that you have been pleased to require the humble Advice of us your obedient Subjects in a Case so important as this is which hitherto dependeth between your Majesty and the King of Spain Which we jointly offer from both Houses no one person there dissenting or disagreeing from the rest And it is upon mature consideration and weighing many particulars of sundry natures that finding so much wan● of Sincerity in all their Proceedings We super totam materiam present this our humble Address unto your Majesty That the Treaties both for the Marriage and the Palatinate may not any longer be continued with the honor of your Majesty the safety of your People the welfare of your Children and Posterity as also the assurance of your antient Allies and Confederates Reasons were also presented to fortifie this Vote Whereas the Propositions of the Match were at the first no more then Liberty of Conscience to the Infanta and her Family which the King might in honor grant The Spaniards taking advantage of the Prince's being in Spain importuned a General Connivence of Religion to the diminution of the Kings Soveraignty and against the usage of other Catholick Princes in the like Treaties and to the discouragement of all his well-affected Subjects And this they have labored with the Pope being of mischievous consequence During this Treaty the Popish Faction hath mightily increased And whereas heretofore they were wont to be divided some taking part with the Secular Priests and some with the Iesuites they are united which is a matter of great consequence considering they do as well depend on Spain for Temporal matters as on Rome for Spiritual And they cannot be suppressed as long as the Treaty holds They have by this Treaty devoured our Allies and the Protestant party in Germany and elswhere to the decay of true Religion and to the jealousie of our Friends beyond the Seas During this Treaty of Love they have spoiled his Majesties Son-in-law of his Lands and Honors and notwithstanding promises of Restitution still invaded his Rights and at length turned pretended Difficulties into apparent Impossibilities They have deluded our King and offered indignity to our Prince by importuning him again and again to a Conversion contrary ●o the Law of Hospitality and the Priviledge of Princes The Insincerity of their Proceedings is to be seen by that former Overture of Marriage for the late Prince Henry which after many specious Motions was followed with a disavowing of their own Ambassador and a scornful Proposition made to the King of the Prince's altering his Religion As also by the Treaty of Bruxels where the Lord Weston found nothing but Delays and Deceit and after divers peremptory Commands from Spain for his Majesties satisfaction it wrought no other effect then the Besieging and taking of Heidelburgh insomuch that the Ambassador was forced to protest and return To these things were added the Translation of the Electorate to the Duke of Bavaria and the Letter of the King of Spain to Conde Olivares with the Conde's Answer which imported that the Match was never intended As also after the Prince had taken a hazardous Journey they devised a shift by a Iuncto of Divines to let him come home without the Lady These Reasons were presented to the King by the universal consent of the House of Commons Hereupon the King came to Parliament and made a Speech deliberative enquiring into the Condition of the War which they advised and the means to uphold and carry it on My Lords and Gentlemen all I Have cause first to thank God with my heart and all the faculties of my mind that my Speech which I delivered in Parliament hath taken so good effect amongst you as that with an unanimous consent you have freely and speedily given me your Advice in this great Business for which I also thank you all as heartily as I can I also give my particular thanks to the Gentlemen of the Lower House for that I heard when some would have cast Jealousies and Doubts between me and my people they presently quelled those motions which otherwise might indeed have hindred the happy Agreement I hope to find in this Parliament You give me your Advice to break off both the Treaties as well concerning the Match as the Palatinate And now give me leave as an old King to propound my Doubts and hereafter to give you my Answer First it is true that I who have been all the days of my life a peaceable King and have had the honor in my Titles and Impresses to be stiled Rex Paci●icus should be loth without necessity to imbroil my self with War far from my Nature and from my Honor which I have had at home and abroad in endeavouring to avoid the effusion of Christian blood of which too much hath been shed and so much against my heart I say that unless it be upon such a Necessity that I may call it as some say merrily of Women Malum necessarium I should be loth to enter into it And I must likewise acquaint you that I have had no small hope given me of obtaining better Conditions for the Restitution of the Palatinate and that even since the sitting down of the Parliament But be not jealous or think me such a King that would under pretence of asking your Advice put a scorn upon you by disdaining and rejecting it For you
King so straitned in time as by the said Article is pretended will appear by the said Earls Dispatch of September 28. 1623. In which upon scruple that was then made of the Infanta's entring into Religion he wrote to the same effect Viz. That if the Dispensation should come he knew no means how to detain the Proxies above twenty or twenty four dayes So that although difficulty happened until the middest of November 1623. yet it was foreseen that it must of necessity happen whensoever the Dispensation should come and then was warning of two moneths given thereof viz. from September 24. until November 29. which was the time appointed for the Desponsories So as he most humbly submits himself unto your Lordships which of the two wayes was the safer or dutifuller for him to take whether upon inferences and conjectures to have overthrown so great a business or on the otherside first to have presented unto his Majesty the truth and sincerity as he did the true estate of his Affairs with his humble opinion therein with an intimation that if his Majesty should resolve to break the Match that for the said Earl his honest discharge of the publick Trust reposed in him when the Proxies were deposited in his hands and for his sufficient warrant in so great a cause his Majesty would be graciously pleased to give him clear and express order which he had not and in the interim whilest his Majesty might take into consideration the great inconveniences that might ensue the said inconveniences might be suspended and the business kept upon fair terms that his Majesty might have his way and choice clear and unsoiled before him And as to the evil Consequences which are pretended would have followed if the said Earl had proceeded to the consummation of the Match before he had express order and warrant to the contrary he supposeth his Majesty should speedily have seen the Marriage which he so long sought to have effected that the Prince should have had a worthy Lady whom he loved that the Portion was much greater then ever was given in money in Christendom that the King of Spain had engaged himself for restitution of the Palatinate for which the said Earl conceived a daughter of Spain and Two Millions had been no ill pawn besides many other additions of advantage to the Crown of England Whereas on the contrary side he foresaw that the Prince would be kept a year longer unmarried a thing that so highly concerneth these Kingdoms he doubteth that the recovery of the Palatinate from the Emperor and Duke of Bavaria by force would prove a great difficulty and that Christendom was like to fall into a general Combustion So that desiring that his Majesty should have obtained his ends and have had the honor and happiness not onely to have given peace plenty and increase unto his own Subjects and Crowns but to have compounded the greatest differences that had been these many years in Christendom And by his Piety and Wisdom to have prevented the shedding of so much Christian Blood as he feared would ensue if these businesses were disordered These Reasons he confesseth and the zeal unto his Majesties service made him so earnestly desire the effecting of this business and cannot but think himself an unfortunate man his Majesties affairs being so near setling to his Majesties content as he conceived they were and hoping to have been unto his Majesty not onely a faithful Servant but a successful Servant to see the whole estate of his affairs turned up-side down without any the least fault of his and yet he the onely Minister on the English and Spanish side that remained under disgrace XI To the Eleventh Article the said Earl saith That the Article is grounded upon a Petition by him preferred to this Honorable House supposed to be scandalous which your Lordships as he conceiveth according to the Customs and Priviledges of the House of Peers would have been pleased first to have adjudged so to have been either for matter appearing in it self or upon hearing the said Earl for if the matter appearing in the Petition it self be not to be excepted unto it cannot as he conceiveth by Collateral accidents be taken for a Scandal till it be examined and found false For a plain and direct Answer thereunto he saith That the said Petition is such as will not warrant any such inference as by the said Article is inforced And that he hopeth to justifie the Contents of the said Petition in such sort as shall not displease his Majesty nor deserve that expression which is used in the Charge but contrarily what he hath said or shall say therein in his defence shall in all things tend to the Honor and Service of his Majesty by reducing into his Memory divers Circumstances and laying before him the passages of divers particulars which by undue practices have been either concealed from his Majesty or mis-related to him Having thus offered to this High and Honorable Court such Proofs and Reasons as he hopeth shall in your Lordships W●sdom and Justice clearly acquit him of any capital Crime or wilful Offence if it shall appear that out of Errors of Judgment too much ferventness of zeal to his Majesties service or the ignorance of the Laws of this Realm wherewith he hath not been able to be so well acquainted as he ought by reason of Foreign Employments by the space of many years or by any other ways or means he hath faln into the danger of the Laws for any thing pardoned in the General Pardon made in the Parliament holden at Westminster Anno Vicesimo primo Regni Imp. Iacobi Angliae c. of Blessed Memory he humbly prayeth allowance of the Pardons and the benefit thereof with this Clause That he doth and will aver that he is none of the persons excepted out of the same although he is very confident he shall not need the help of any pardon having received many significations as well from his Majesties own mouth that he had never offended his Majesty as lately by several Letters from the Lord Conway that he might rest in the security he was in and sit still and should be no further questioned But he hopes your Lordships will not onely finde him so far from blame but that he hath served his late Majesty of Blessed memory and his most gratious Son the Kings Majesty that now is with that fidelity care and industry that your Lordships will take such course as you in your wisdoms shall think fit not onely for the upholding the Honor and Reputation of a Peer of this Realm after so many employments but likewise become humble and earnest Suitors to his Majesty on his behalf which he humbly prayeth That he may be restored to his Majesties most gratious Favor which above all worldly things he most desireth The Eighth of May the Commons brought up their Charge against the Duke which was delivered at a Conference of both Houses
first to direct and make Laws There is no Law made till the King assent unto it but if it be put simply to make Laws it will make much startling at it 3. Page 10. If nothing may excuse from active obedience but what is against the Law of God or of Nature or impossible How doth this agree with the first Fundamental Position Page 5. That all Subjects are bound to all their Princes according to the Laws and Customs of the Kingdom wherein they live This is a fourth Case of Exception 4. Page 11. The Poll-Money mentioned by him in St. Matthew was imposed by the Emperor as a Conqueror over the Iews and the execution of it in England although it was by a Law produced a terrible effect in King Richard the Second's time when onely it was used for ought that appeareth 5. Page 12. It is in the bottome view the Reign of Henry the Third and whether it be fit to give such allowance to the Book being surreptitiously put out 6. In the same Page let the largeness of those words be well considered Yea all Antiquity to be absolutely for absolute Obedience to Princes in all Civil and Temporal things For such cases as Naboths Vineyard may f●ll within this 7. Page 14. Sixtus Quintus was dead before the year One thousand five hundred and eighty 8. In the same Page weigh it well How this Loan may be called a Tribute and when it s said We are promised it shall not be immoderately imposed How that agreeth with his Majesties Commission and Proclamation which are quoted in the Margent It should seem that this Paper did prick to the quick and no satisfaction being thereby accepted Bishop Laud is called and he must go to answer to it in writing This man is the onely inward Counsellor with Buckingham sitting with him sometimes privately whole hours and feeding his humor with malice and spight His life in Oxford was to pick quarrels in the Lectures of the Publick Readers and to advertise them to the then Bishop of Durham that he might fill the ears of King Iames with discontents against the honest men that took pains in their places and setled the truth which he called Puritanism in their Auditors He made it his work to see what Books were in the Press and to look over Epistles Dedicatory and Prefaces to the Reader to see what faults might be found It was an observation what a sweet man this was like to be that the first observable act that he did was the marrying of the Earl of D. to the Lady R. When it was notorious to the World that she had another Husband and the same a Nobleman who had divers Children then living by her King Iames did for many years take this so ill that he would never hear of any great preferment of him insomuch that the Bishop of Lincoln Doctor Williams who taketh upon him to be the first promoter of him hath many times said That when he made mention of Laud to the King his Majesty was so averse from it that he was constrained oftentimes to say That he would never desire to serve that Master which could not remit one fault unto his Servant Well in the end he did conquer it to get him to the Bishoprick of St. Davids which he had not long enjoyed but he began to undermine his Benefactor as at this day it appeareth The Countess of Buckingham told Lincoln that St. Davids was the Man that undermined him with her Son and verily such is his aspiring nature that he will underwork any man in the World so that he may gain by it This Man who believeth so well of himself framed an Answer to my Exceptions But to give some countenance to it he must call in three other Bishops that is to say Durham Rochester and Oxford tryed men for such a purpose and the whole stile of the Speech runneth We and We. This seemed so strong a confutation that for reward of their service as well as for hope that they would do more Doctor Neal Bishop of Durham and the Bishop of Bath were sworn of the Privy Council The very day being Sunday Mr. Murrey was sent unto me with a Writing but finding me all in a sweat by a fit of the Stone which was then upon me he forbore for that time to trouble me and said That on the morrow he would repair unto me again I got me to Bed and lying all that night in pain I held it convenient not to rise the next day And on the Monday Mr. Murrey came unto me which was the Eighth time that he had been with me so uncessantly was I plyed with this noble work I had shewed it before to a friend or two whereof the one was a Learned Doctor of Divinity and the other had served many times in Parliament with great commendation We all agreed That it was an idle work of a Man that understood not Logick that evidently crossed himself that some times spake plausibly and in the end of his Sermon fell so poor and flat that it was not worth the reading Mr. Murrey coming to my Bed-side said That he was sent again by the King and had a Paper to be shewed unto me Archb. You see in what case I am having slept little all this last night but nevertheless since you come from the King I will take my Spectacles and read it Murrey No my Lord you may not read it neither handle it for I have charge not to suffer it to go out of my hands Archb. How then shall I know what it is Murrey Yes I have order to read it unto you but I may not part with it Archb. I must conceive that if I do not assent to it his Majesty will give me leave to reply upon it which I cannot do but in my Study for there are my Books Murrey I must go with you into your Study and sit by you till you have done Archb. It is not so hasty a work it will require time and I have not been used to Study one sitting by me but first read it I pray you The yong Gentleman read it from the one end to the other being two or three sheets of Paper Archb. This Answer is very bitter but giveth me no satisfaction I pray you leave the Writing with me and I shall batter it to peeces Murrey No my Lord I am forbidden to leave it with you or to suffer you to touch it Archb. How cometh this about Are the Authors of it afraid of it or ashamed of it I pray you tell his Majesty that I am dealt with neither Manly nor Schollar-like Not Manly because I must fight with Adversaries that I know not not Shollar-like because I must not see what it is that must confute me It is now Eight and forty years ago that I came to the University and since that time I have ever loved a Learned Man I have disputed
Voyages and Land Travels by Englishmen and others By Samuel Purchas in Four Volumes Folio The History of the Parliament of England which began November the Third 1640. With a short and necessary view of some precedent years By Thomas May Esq Folio The Text of the New Testament of Jesus Christ Translated out of the Vulgar Latine by the Papists of the Traiterous Seminary of Rhemes Whereunto is added the Translation out of the Original Greek commonly used in the Church of England c. By W. Fulke D. D. and sometimes Master of Pembroke-Hall in Cambridge Folio The History of the Reformation of the Church of Scotland containing Five Books together with some Treatises conducing to the History By Iohn Knox. Folio Two Treatises In the one of which the Nature of Bodies in the other the Nature of Mans Soul is looked into In way of discovery of the Immortality of Reasonable Souls By Sir Kenelme Digby Folio Histoire de l'entre de la Reyne Mere du Roy tres Chrestien dan● les Provinces Vnies des pays has avec des Figures Histoire de l'entre de la Reyne Mere du Roy tres Chrestien dans la Grande Britaigne avec des Figures par le Sieur de la Serre Historiographe Folio Ad Serenissimum Jacob●m primum Britanniarum Monarcham Ecclesiae Scoticanae libellus supplex Authore Jacobo Melvino Quarto Polycarpi Ignatii Epistolae unà cum vetere vulgata interpretatione Latina ex trium Manuscriptorum codicum collatione integritati suae restitutae quibus praefixa est Iacobi Vsserii Archiepiscopi Armachani dissertatio Quarto Appendix Ignatiana in qua continentur 1. Ignatii Epistolae Genuinae 2. Ignatii Martyriam à Philone Agathopode aliis descriptum 3. Tiberiani Plinii Secundi Trajani imp de Constantia Martyrum illius temporis Epistolae 4. Smyrnensis Ecclesiae de Polycarpi Martyrio Epistola 5. In Ignatii Polycarpi Acta atque in Epistolas etiam Ignatio perperàm adscriptas Annotationes Iacobi Vsserii Armachani Quarto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clementis ad Corinthios Epistola Prior. Patritius Junius ex lateris Reliquiis vetustissimi examplaris Bibliotherae Regiae eruit Quarto Purchas his Pilgrim Microcosmus or the History of Man relating the wonders of his Generation Vanities in his Degeneration necessity of his Regeneration meditated on the words of David Psal. 39.5 By Samuel Purchas Octavo Saint Augustine his Enchyridion to Laurence or the cheif and principal Heads of all Christian Religion the Second Edition Twelves Theologia Naturalis sive liber Creaturarum Specialiter de homine de Natura ejus in quantum homo de his quae sunt ei necessaria ad cognoscendum Deum seipsum omne debitum ad quod homo tenetur obligatur tam Deo quàm proximo Authore Raymundo de Sabunde Octavo Frederici Spanhemii Epistola ad Nobilisstmum Virum Davidem Buchananum super controversiis quibusdam quae in Ecclesiis Anglic●nis agitantur Octavo The Works of Edward Reynolds D. D. containing three Treatises of the Vanity of the Creature Sinfulness of Sin the Life of Christ. An Explication of Psal. C X. Meditations on the Sacrament of the Lords Supper An Explication of the Fourteenth Chapter of Hosea A Treatise of the Passions and Faculties of the Soul Collected in Folio Divers Sermons Preached upon several occasions by Edward Reynolds D. D. Quarto A Treatise touching the Peace of the Church or an Apostolical Rule how to judge aright in differences which concern Religion Published by Authority Quarto A Treatise of Use and Custome By Mer. Causabon D. D. Quarto Deus Natura Gratia sive tractatus de Praedestinatione de meritis peccatorum Remissione sen de Justificatione denique de sanctorum invocatione reliquiarum imaginum veneratione de indulgentiis Purgatorio sub finem de Excommunicatione Accessit Paraphrastica Expositio reliquorum Articulorum confessionis Anglicae Per Fr. Franciscum Sancta Clara. Octavo Apologia Episcoporum seu Sacri Magistratus Propugnatio Multa multorum vocibus ventilantur mendacia adversus sacerdotes Dei de Diaboli ore prolata ad rumpendam Catholicae unitatis concordiam ubique jactantur Authore Francisco à Sancta Clara. Octavo King Iames much desired to match his Son Henry with a daughter of Spain After Prince Henry's death the King propounded a match with France In this interim the Spaniard gives the overture of a match Sir Digby's advice to the King in that matter Gondomar mannages the Treaty on the Spaniards part The English Navie neglected The Cautionary Towns rendred to the Hollander The Spaniard proceeds not sincerely in the Treaty Articles of Religion agreed upon between the Kings of England and Spain The people of England averse from the march The Catholicks desirous of it Gondomar contrives the death of Sir Walter Rawleigh an enemy to Spain A War begins in Germany Both parties Protestant and Catholicks grow jealous and each enter into League The Emperor Matthias Adopts his Cousin-German Ferdinand For joy of this Adoption the Catholicks keep a Jubilee and the Protestants another in memory of Luther An Assembly of the Protestants and States of Bohemia at Prague The first occasion of the troubles of Bohemia A Ryot committed by the Protestants in the Castle of Prague The Protestants put forth a Declaration The Emperor disgusted with the Declaration He publishes a Manifesto Both Parties Arm. A Comet appears at this time King Iames ingages not in these troubles flattering himself with the Spaniards seeming forwardness to effect the Match A Letter from a great Minister of State to Mr. Cottington Nov. 17. Queen Anne dieth Matthias the Emperor dies A Cessation of Arms proposed by Ferdinand is refused King Iames interposes by his Ambassador the Viscount Doncaster The Elector Palatine sends an Ambassador to oppose the Election of Ferdinand The Bohemians chuse the Palatine for their King Bethlem Gabor makes a union with the Protestants The Palatine craves the advice of King Iames touching his accepting the Crown Before answer came he had accepted it King Iames disavows the Act and ●●●ars himself of it to the King of Spain● The King of Spain testifies his resentment of Viscount Doncasters proceedings in Germany The King of Poland aids the Emperor Ferdinand publishes a Proscription against the Palatine Prince Anhalt Generalissimo of the Bohemians Marquess Ansbach commands the forces of the Princes of the Union Kings Iames will not engage in the War sends Sir Walter Aston Ambassador into Spain to negotiate the March and Gondomar returns Great immunities promised by King Iames to the Catholicks 18 Iacob 1620. A great Army levied in Flanders under the command of Spinola A Regiment under the command of Sir Horati● Vere sent from England The Protestant States of Austria renounce the confederacy of the Bohemians The Elector of Saxony assists the Emperor and executes the Ban against the Palatine Spinola prevails much in the Palatinate The Armies