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A35251 The unfortunate court-favourites of England exemplified in some remarks upon the lives, actions, and fatal fall of divers great men, who have been favourites to several English kings and queens ... / by R.B. R. B., 1632?-1725? 1695 (1695) Wing C7351; ESTC R21199 132,309 194

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demolisht the Forts burnt most of the Houses filled their Ships with Plunder and burnt several Spanish Vessels the Fleet returned victoriously home The King of Spain having lost in this Gallant Expedition thirteen of his best men of War forty Merchants Ships from New Spain an hundred Cannon with such vast Stores of Ammunition and Naval Provisions that he was not able to fit out another Fleet for many years after and the Spaniards themselves gave this Character of the brave English That they were Hereticks in Religion but in all other affairs Warlike Politick and truly Noble This happy Success advanced Essex in the opinion both of the Queen Souldiery and Common People though his making so many Knights some of them of very mean fortunes produced this Libel A Gentleman of Wales with a Knight of Cales And a Laird of the North Countree A Yeoman of Kent upon a Rack Rent Will buy them out all three The Queens indulgence increasing by this fortunate Expedition he grew wanton with her favours and was offended if she prefer'd any but those recommended by himself as particularly Sir Francis Vere being made Governour of Brill in Holland and Sir Robert Cecil Secretary of State both which he had designed for other Persons he discovered so severe a resentment for it that his Enemies and Enviers turn'd it at length to his disadvantage After this Essex is made Admiral of a Fleet that were sent against the Islands of Azores belonging to the Spaniard where the Island of Graciosa and Faial yielded to him and likewise Villa Franca And then returning Essex who would be sole Favourite had great contentions with Sir Walter Rawleigh and Cecil c. and likewise with Charles Howard who was now made Earl of Nottingham because the Queen had given him part of the honour of the Victory at Cales However the Queen's affections so blinded her that she passed by many Indignities offered her by him and to pacifie him created him Earl Marshal of England In 1598. Some Proposals being offered for concluding a Peace with Spain the Earl of Essex opposed it urging the Spanish Ambition for gaining the Universal Monarchy his inveterate hatred against the Queen and the Kingdom his Maxim That no Faith is to be kept with Hereticks and that the Pope could dispense with him to break all Leagues when for his advantage these and many such cogent Reasons made a Peace with him impracticable But other great Courtiers whether for Reasons of State or that they had received some Spanish Gold were very much displeased so that the Lord Burleigh told him That he breathed nothing but War and Slaughter and turning to the Psalm he bid Essex read that verse as seeming to presage his future Fate Blood-thirsty men shall not live out half their days Yet many much admired his Conduct as really designing nothing but the honour and security of his Country However the Queen and Essex were of a contrary opinion both as to the Peace and to a fit Person to be sent Lord Deputy into Ireland The Queen judged William Knolles the Earl's Uncle proper for the imployment Essex affirmed George Carew to be much fitter and because he could not persuade the Q. to be of his mind he contemptibly turn'd his back and seem'd to scoff at her At which she growing out of patience stept forward and giving him a sound box on the Ear bid him be gone with a vengeance At which he laid his hand upon his Sword but the Admiral coming up to him he vowed and swore ' That he neither would nor could put up so great an Indignity which he would never have taken from her Father King Henry much less from the hand of a Woman And then in a great rage he withdrew from Court Afterward the Lord Keeper sent him several Letters exhorting him to come and ask the Queen pardon whom if he had justly wronged he could not make her satisfaction and if she had wronged him yet his Prudence Duty and Religion should oblige him to submit himself to so good a Queen since there is a great inequality between a Prince and a Subject Essex answered very haughtily to these Advices and his Followers published his usual expressions upon this account As ' That he appealed for Justice from the Queen to God Almighty That no Tempest rageth more than the indignation of an Impotent Prince That the Queens Heart was hardned I know said he what I have to do as I am a Subject and what as I am an Earl and Marshal of England I cannot live as a Servant and a Bondslave If I should confess my self guilty I should both injure Truth and God the Author of Truth I have received a Dart through my whole body It is absolutely a Sin to serve after having received so great a disgrace Cannot Princes Err Cannot they Injure their Subjects Is their Earthly power Infinite 'T is the Fool says Solomon that being struck laughs They that receive benefit who by the Errors of Princes let them bear the injuries of Princes Let them believe the Queen's Power Infinite believe that God is not Omnipotent As for my part I being rent in pieces by injuries have long enough endured bitterness of Soul for them Yet after all the Queens Passion for him soon admitted of an easie submission so that he was pardoned and restored to favour by her who could be angry with him but could never hate him and soon after made him Lord Deputy of Ireland which was then in an ill condition by the Rebellion of the Natives and impowered him with so ample a Commission as was thought to be contrived by his Enemies on purpose by inflaming his ambition to procure his ruin for he had liberty to pardon or punish the Irish Rebels suitable to his own Will and Power to reward with Lands or Honours all he esteem'd worthy These were such Flowers of the Crown as they seemed designed by his Enemies to deck that head they meant to Sacrifice to their malice and revenge Upon his arrival in Ireland the Earl spent so much time in subduing the petty Rebels while he not only neglected the chief one Tyrone with whom instead of fighting he Treated and made a Truce that the Queen unsatisfied with his dilatory proceedings first reproaches his Conduct and then recalls him Essex was much discontented because the Queen in her Letters had chid him for making the Earl of Southampton General of the Horse and that Cecil his Enemy was prefer'd to be Master of the Wards in his absence So that within a Month after he unexpectedly returned to England having some thoughts to bring so great a force with him as to secure himself from any danger but was dissuaded therefrom by the Earl of Southampton and Sir Christopher Blunt So that only accompanied with six he comes to the Court at Nonsuch to inform the Queen of the affairs of Ireland In the way he met the Lord Grey of Willon his chief Adversary
Insurrection And the Lord Grey Lord Cobham and Sir Walter Rawleigh professed Enemies to Essex and no mean instruments in his destruction fell into a Treason of a like depth with his in the Reign of K. James I. Gray and Cobham dying miserably in Prison and Rawleigh being beheaded at Tower-hill Remarks on the Life Actions and Fatal Fall of George Villers Duke of Buckingham Favourite to King James I. and King Charles I. THIS Favourite rose upon the Fall of the E. of Somerset upon whom K. James had heaped many honours advancing him from a Knight to Viscount Rochester Privy Counsellor E. of Somerset and L. Chamberlain But his Glory was soon overclouded for having married the Countess of Essex who had been divor●ed from her Husband the Son of the preceding Favourite that unfortunate Knight Sir Tho. Overbury for speaking against the Match was by their procurement poysoned in the Tower 〈◊〉 which the Earl and Countess were both Condemned but Pardoned and banisht the Court. K. James who could not live without a bosom Favourite cast his Eye upon George Villers a young Gentleman of a fine shape second Son to Sir George Villers of Brooksby in Leicestershire with whom the K. was so taken finding him a man of quick understanding and fit to make a Courtier that he advanced him by degrees in honour next to himself making him first a Knight then Gentleman of his Bedchamber Viscount Master of the Horse Lord Admiral Earl Marquess and lastly D. of Buekingham And now lying in the King's Bosom every man paid Tribute to his Smiles and he managed all affairs putting men in or out of Office according to his pleasure Yet his Mother who was a Papist having a great hand in all business and a great power over her Son directed him in all matters of Profit and Concernment and was addressed to first in order to procure any favour from him Which caused Gondemar the Spanish Ambassador to write merrily to his Master ' That there was never more hope of England's Conversion to Rome than now for there were more Prayers and Oblations offered here to the Mother than to the Son He Married the Earl of Rutlands Daughter the greatest Match in the Kingdom who pretended to be a zealous Protestant but his Mother and the Jesuits reduced her to the Popish Religion so that between a Mother and a Wife Buckingham himself grew very indifferent being neither Papist nor Protestant K. James affected the name of a Peace-maker and designing the general quiet of Europe and the reconciling all parties he professed that if the Papists would renounce their K. killing Doctrine and some other gross errors he was willing to meet them half way And being zealous also to maintain the height of Regal Majesty after the death of Prince Henry he resolved to match his Son Prince Charles with some Princess of most high Descent though of a different Religion And there having been a Treaty of Marriage between P. Henry and a Daughter of Spain wherein the Spaniards deluded him with their accustomed gravity and formality he now set his thoughts upon a Match with France which the Spanish King doubting would be to his disadvantage he made new Overtures for a Marriage with his Daughter to Sir John Digby the King's Ambassador there though with as little sincerity as before And at length Articles were agreed on and signed by K. James whereby the Children of this Marriage were not to be constrained to be Protestants nor to lose their right of succession if they were Catholicks The Pope's Dispensation was to be procured the new Queen was to have Popish Chaplains Priests Confessors and all other Privileges The K. was mightily pleased with this Alliance but the People as much displeased who had not forgot the intended cruelty of 1588. and dreaded the consequence of this Popish Contract But the K. not thinking that the business went on with that speed he desired sends the Prince and Buckingham to Spain to consummate the Marriage where he is received with all manner of magnificence by that King and universal joy of that People in hope the Prince would turn Catholick they generally discoursing That he came thither on purpose to become a Christian Neither were any endeavours wanting to seduce him Pope Gregory writing a smooth Letter to him Yea condescended to write another to Buckingham his Guide and Familiar to incline him to the Romish Religion The Prince returned an answer to the Pope's Letter and among other expressions says ' Your Holines's conjecture of our desire to contract an Alliance and Marriage with a Catholick Family and Princess is agreeable both to your Wisd●m and Charity for we would never desire so vehemently to be joined in a strict and indissoluble Bond with any Mortal whatsoever whose Religion we hated For it is very certain I shall never be so extreamly affectionate to any thing in the World as to endeavour Alliance with a Prince that hath the same apprehension of the True Religion with my self Therefore I intreat your Holiness to believe that I have been always far from incouraging Novelties or to be a Partizan of any Faction against the Catholick Apostolick Roman Religion 〈…〉 on the contrary I have sought all occasions to take away ●…picion that might rest upon me And I will imploy my self for the time to come to have but One Religion and one Faith seeing that we all believe in one Jesus Christ Having resolved in my self to spare nothing that I have in this World and to suffer all manner of discommodities even to the hazard of my Estate and Life for a thing so pleasing to God I pray God to give your Holiness a blessed Health here and his Glory after so much Travel which yor Holiness takes within his Church After a while the Match was concluded in England and the Articles sworn to by K. James and some private ones much in favour of the Papists And the King was so transported with the ass●rance of it that he was heard to say ' Now all the Devils in Hell cannot hinder it But a stander by said to one of his Attendants ' That there was never a Devil now left in Hell for they were all gone into Spain to make up the Match And indeed the Spirit of the Nation was so averse to this Union that they boldly vented their Sentiments both with their Tongues and ●ens And among others Abbot Archbishop of Canterbury writ a very warm Letter to the K. against a Toleration of Popery which was one of the Articles agreed to The Treaty was likewise Signed and Sealed by the K. of Spain and the Prince Who also obliged himself That as often as the Infanta pleased he would hearken to such Catholick Divines as she should appoint to debate matters of Religion with him but would never dissuade her from her own Religion and would take care to abrogate all the Laws made against Catholicks in three years But after all this Match
and negligent in performing those Royal Offices and Duties that God Almighty required at his ●ands for as subjection belonged to the People so ●e King was likewise obliged to afford them Pro●…ction which yet he had most dishonourably and un●…scionably neglected by exposing his Subjects in ●…e North to the Rage and Fury of the Scots and to 〈◊〉 the Extremities of Hunger and Want And lastly ●hat if he would not instantly discharge those two ●aceless and wicked Councellors from bearing any ●…fice or Imployment in the Realm they then must ●…d would do it themselves though it were with the ●…ard of their Lives and whatsoever else was dear 〈◊〉 them in the World The King could not chuse but know that this brisk ●…monstrance of the Barons about their Grievances was nothing but Truth and founded upon Honour Conscience and true Zeal for their Countrey and wa● as sensible that they were earnestly resolved to re●form what was amiss But though his Countenan●… proclaimed his inward discontent and declared h●… Intentions of surprizing and ruining those Noblem●… who discovered their hatred against his belove● Spencers yet he returned the Barons a favourab●… Answer assuring them all that was amiss should b● redressed by the ensuing Parliament which he woul● assemble with all speed The Lords seemed very mu●… rejoyced at this Answer as well as the commo● People but yet they very much suspected that th● King intended to seize and surprize them at that Solemn Meeting To prevent which they came to Lo●… Son attended with so many of their Friends an T●… pants all in the same Livery as composed a galla●… Army sufficient to secure them against any siniste Attempts The King was much disturbed to find himself the prevented in his secret Designs but his greatest gri● was that he found himself unable any longer to defend and protect his detested Favourites the Spence● for whom he had a more tender affection than fo● his Queen Children and all his Friends besides whom notwithstanding he was compelled by the P●…liament to relinquish by whom it was Enacted wi●… his consent That they should be banished the Ki●…dom never to return again during their Lives und●penalty of High Treason This being concluded on the Barons longing to 〈◊〉 the Spencers under Sail provided several Ships 〈◊〉 their Transportation Being gone to the great sa●faction of the People in general the King instead redressing the remaining Grievances wholly appl●… his thoughts how to be avenged of those Lo●… that had forced him to comply in decreeing th● Exile And to declare his resentment of it wh● he was informed that the younger Spencer hav● got a Squadron of Ships together was turned Pirate in the Narrow Seas Robbing and Plundering all Nations that he could meet with but especially the English Merchants to the unspeakable damage of the Realm having taken out of two Ships only at Sandwich goods to the value of 40000 pound Upon which great Complaints were made and many Petitions presented that a Fleet might be set out for taking him and his Associates and bringing them to punishment as Pirates and Robbers according to the Laws of the Land He was so far from being concerned at it or providing any Remedy that he seemed very merry at the News and soon after sent them a general Pardon of all their Crimes and the more to despight and inrage the Nobility he recalled them both from Banishment and honoured them with more Dignities Offices and Authority than ever they had before These strange proceedings of the King together with the notorious Injuries and Abuses which they daily suffered by the return and advancement of the two Spencers who now defied their utmost Power scorning and deriding them with the most pungent Affronts were sufficient Warnings to the Lords to take timely care of their Safeties Wherefore since neither Petitions Submissions nor any other Legal procedure could procure any Remedy of their repeated Wrongs they raised a strong Army and marcht into the Field and the King with the two Spencers and some few of the Nobility did the like Before any Action between them this odd Accident happened procured as was thought by the Contrivance of the King or his Evil Ministers A certain Knight belonging to John Earl Warren stole away the Wife of Thomas Earl of Lancaster one of the Chief of the Lord's Party from his House at Caneford in Dorsetshire and with great Pomp carried her To E. Warren's Castle at Rygate in Surrey in despight of her I and Husband where one Rich. Maurice a wretched lame deformed Dwarf challenged her for his Wife pretending he had been formerly Contracted to her and that he had lain with her The Countess though the noblest and richest Inheritrix of that Age confirmed his Allegations openly declaring to her immortal infamy that what he said was true and thereby acknowledging her self to be an impudent Strumpet Upon which this deformed Elf being incouraged by some great Persons had the confidence to lay claim to the Earldoms of Lincoln and Salisbury in her Right and the Honour of this great Earl was blasted by a debauched Woman This unhappy passage increased the fatal aversion between him and the King and the Earl and Humfry Bohun Earl of Hereford having likewise received some damage from the Spencers these two allured almost all the rest of the Nobility to join with them So that being now gotten into Arms they marched with Banners display'd under the command of the Earl of Lancaster whom they constituted their General and after many sharp skirmishes and encounters the Armies met at Burton upon Trent where both Parties fought with such obstinate desire of revenge that he was reckoned the most valiant man who drencht his Sword deepest in Blood The Nobles now forgot that they fought against their Sovereign Lord and the King would by no means acknowledge that his Tyranny and Misgovernment had compelled them to take Arms. Now neither Kindred Alliance Neighbourhood Religion Country nor any other obligation had the least power over their inraged minds Nothing but death and wounds must determine the controversie between them At length when many of the Lords and thousands of their Adherents were slain they fled and were pursued by the King the Earl of Hereford wa● slain by a Welshman who thrust a Spear into his Body between the Chinks of a Wooden Bridge The Earl of Lancaster with eighty Lords and Knights were taken Prisoners The occasion of this great defeat of the Barons is attributed in some measure to an unhappy accident a while before For Queen Isabel who upon all occasions used her utmost interest to procure a right understanding between the King and the Peers coming from Canterbury to the Castle of Leeds in Kent where she designed to lodge that Night was denied entrance by Lord Badlesmere one of the Earl of Lancaster's Party wherewith she was so offended that she made great complaint thereof to the King who glad of any opportunity to be revenged of
Bridg thy Bowels taken out and Burnt thy Body quartered and thy four Quarters set up in four principal Cities of England for an example to such heinous Offenders And this Sentence was accordingly executed upon him Thus ended this unfortunate expedition to the great reproach and loss of the English and the scandal of the King who was grown sufficiently infamous already for making the Kingdom a shambles for the Nobility Yet in the midst of these calamities the two Spencers rid Triumphant in the Chariot of Favour Power Honour and Riches enjoying great part of the Estate of the late unfortunate Earl of Lancaster and in this grandeur they continued for the space of five years notwithstanding the utmost efforts of their potent and numerous adversaries who continually meditated their destruction During which time the Queens Interest extreamly declined who for shewing some relentings for the severity used to the Lords and expressing her dislike of the overgrown authority of the two wicked Favourites by whose persuasions she was sensible the King her Husband abandoned her Company and Bed was extreamly hated by them So that they continued their impious Artifices to allure the King with the Company and Dalliance of Leud and Lascivious Harlots and to avoid any converse with her And it did appear that these evil minded and vile men working upon the King's inclination were the principal Authors and Advisers of that sharp revenge taken upon the Lords for their own ambitious and avaritious ends whereby at length they brought inevitable ruin upon the Crown Dignity and Life of their Soveraign Which the following instance see●… plainly to confirm Among those who were condemned for joining with the Earl of Lancaster the King's Uncle there was one very poor Fellow for whose life because he had long continued at Court many great Court●…rs interceeded very earnestly and pressed the matter so far that the King in a rage replied 'A plague upon you for a company of Cursed Whisperers malicious Backbiters Flatterers and wicked Counsellors who can beg so heartily for saving the life of a notorious wicked Knave and yet could not speak a word in the behalf of the most noble Knight Earl Thomas of Lancaster my near Kinsman whose Life and Counsels would now have been of great use and service to the Kingdom Whereas this wretch the longer he lives the more villanies will he commit having already made himself notorious throughout the Realm for his horrid Crimes and desperate Outrages For which by the Soul of God he shall dye the death he hath justly deserved And he was accordingly executed This may be some evidence that the King was over persuaded to commit those Tragedies upon the Lords 〈…〉 was reckoned to be naturally merciful and 〈◊〉 according to the Religion of those times but 〈◊〉 ●…i●led by depraved Counsellors though he 〈…〉 inexcusable since it is usually said That good 〈◊〉 cannot satisfie for publick Errors and Mischiefs The Spencers still continued their Rapines and Profligate courses and aspiring to more absolute Dominion resolved to leave nothing unattempted that might rivet them in the affections of the King and inrich themselves which begot implacable enmity in the People both against them and their Master their insolence rising to such an height that they abridged the Queen of her usual allowance so that she had not wherewith to maintain her self while themselves abounded in all manner of plenty and magnificence Which caused her publickly to complain ' That the Daughter and Sole Heir of the King of France was Married to a miserable Wretch who did not allow her necessaries and that being promised to be a Queen she was now become no better than a waiting Gentlewoman subsisting only upon a Pension from the Spencers And dreading their malice she took her Eldest Son Prince Edward and privately withdrew into France to her Brother King Charles by whom she was kindly received and comforted with solemn Oaths and Promises that he would effectually assist her against all her Enemies and redress the grievances of the Kingdom A while after the Barons by their Letters assured her of their best help and service to her Self and Son declaring that if she would return to England with the aid of only a thousand valiant men at Arms they would raise so great a strength here to join them as should make the Spencers feel the smart of their unsufferable follies The Queen was exceedingly rejoiced with the hopes of her fortunate success But the two Spencers much doubting the event if she should return with Forces and having the Treasure of the Kingdom at command they corrupted King Charles and his Council with such prodigious sums of Gold and Silver and of Rich Jewels that not only all succour was denied her but the French K. reprimanded her very sharply for having so undutifully and imprudently forsaken her Lord and Dear Husband Yea the Pope likewise and many of the Cardinals being ingaged with rich Presents by the Spencers required King Charles under the Penalty of Cursing to send the Queen and Prince to King Edward And doubtless she had been unnaturally betrayed by her own Brother had she not privately and speedily made her escape to the Earl of Heynault in Germany where she was entertained with extraordinary joy by the Earl and the Lord Beumont his Brother who resolved to accompany her to England In the mean time King Edward and his profligate Favourites having intelligence of their Intentions he sent to demand his Wife and Son to be returned home but not succeeding and the Spencers knowing that if an happy Agreement should have been made between the King his Queen and the Barons they must both have been made Sacrifices of Peace-Offering to appease the resentments of the People they therefore resolve to make the Breach irreconcileable by persuading the King to proclaim the Queen and Prince with all their Adherents Traytors and Enemies to the King and Kingdom banishing all that he thought were well-affected to them and keeping a severe Eye over the disco●ented Barons and it was reported That a secret Plot was laid to have taken away the Lives both of the Queen and her Son While the Queen continued in Heynault she concluded a Marriage between the Prince then about fourteen years old and the Lady Philippa that Earl's Daughter and with the Money of her Dowry Listed Souldiers in Germany and soon after with three hundred Knights and gallant Warriours and about 1700 Common Souldiers Germans and English commanded by the Earl of Heynault with the Earls of Kent Pembroke the Lord Beumont and many other English-men of Quality she safely arrived at Orwell in Suffolk Upon the first Intelligence of their Landing the Lords and Barons with joyful hearts and numerous Troops of resolute Gallants compleatly Armed repaired to her Assistance with all speed so that her Forces hourly increased Her Arrival being reported to the King He poor Prince was so surprized that he knew not what course to take
were obliged by Act of Parliament to pay the King one hundred eighteen thousand eight hundred and forty Pounds Cromwel after this came into great Favour with the King who made him a Knight Master of his Jewel House and a Privy Councellour and soon after Knight of the Garter Earl of Essex Lord Privy Seal and Lord Great Chamberlain of England and lastly he was constituted Vicegerent in all Ecclesiastical Affairs by Virtue whereof both in Parliament and elsewhere he had the precedence of the Archbishop of Canterbury This Authority he used upon all occasions for the extirpating Romish Superstition and Idolatry to which he always was an utter Enemy and for which there was a fair occasion offered For the King being inraged against the Pope for refusing to annul his Marriage with Queen Katherine though he had the Judgement of nineteen Universities on his side he resolved to have the matter determined by the Clergy of his own Kingdom and having summoned a Convocation they after mature debate declared the Marriage null and void from the beginning and confirmed the Kings second Marriage with Queen Ann of Bullen which he had consummated some time before And a Parliament being called several Acts were passed against the Popes Supremacy whereby all Clergymen that should make any appeal to Rome were declared guilty of a Praemunire and that the King should have power to visit examine and reform all the Monasteries and Nunneries of the Kingdom and should give Licenses for electing Bishops to all Vacancies without the Popes consent or approbation and declaring the King Supream Head on earth of the Church of England after which a stop was put to the Persecutions which the Protestant Ministers had suffered many of whom were cruelly burnt by the Popish Clergy for want of stronger Arguments to convince them The Nobility and Gentry were generally well satisfied with this change but the Body of the People who were more under the Power of the Priests were by them possest with great fears of a change of Religion being told that the King had now joined himself with Hereticks and that Queen Ann Cranmer now Archbishop of Canterbury and the Lord Cromwel favoured them For the Monks and Friers saw themselves left at the King's Mercy the Trads of new Saints was now at an end they had also some Intimations that Cromwel was forming a Project for suppressing Monasteries so that in Confessions and Discourses they infused into the People a dislike of the Kings Proceedings which prevail'd so far upon them as they afterward broke out into formidable Insurrections and Rebellions in divers Parts of the Kingdom Cromwel by his Vicegerency had precedence of all next the Royal Family and as the King came in the Popes Room so the Vicegerents Authority was in all Points the same that the Legates had in the time of Popery the first Act of Cromwel's after his being Vicar General was with a Delegation of the Kings Supremacy to him to visit all the Monasteries and Churches in England of which the Bishops and Abbots were so jealous that of their own accord before any Law was made about it they swore to maintain the Kings Supremacy however the Visitation went on throughout England and in many places monstrous disorders were found as the Sin of Sodomy in some barbarous Murthers and Cruelties in others Tools for false Coining in others and great Factions and Divisions in many The Report that was made contained many other abominable Crimes not fit to be named hereupon Cromwel procured the Parliament to pass an Act that thirty Persons Spiritual and Temporal such as his Majesty should impower under his Great Seal should have Authority to make and establish Laws and Ordinances Ecclesiastical which should be obligatory upon all the Subjects of this Realm and likewise that all Religious Houses either Monasteries Priories or Nunneries whose revenues did not exceed two hundred pounds a Year should be supprest and dissolved and all their Possessions and Lands setled on the Crown for ever And the Reasons alledged for doing this were because these Houses were erected upon gross abuses and subsisted by them the Foundation of all their Wealth being founded upon the belief of Purgatory and of the Virtue that was in Masses to redeem Souls out of it and that these eased the Torments of departed Souls and at last delivered them out of them so it past among all for a piece of Piety to Parents and of care for their own Souls and Families to endow those Houses with some Lands upon Condition they should have Masses said for them the number of which were usually according to the value of the Gift this was like to have drawn the whole Wealth of the Nation into those Houses had not some restraint been put to that Superstition they also perswaded the People that the Saints interceded for them and would kindly accept offerings made at their Shrines and the greater they were the more earnestly would they use their Interest for them The credulous Vulgar measuring the Court of Heaven by those on Earth believed that Presents might be very prevalent there so that every new Saint must have new Gifts presented him Likewise some Images were believed to have an extraordinary Virtue in them and Pilgrimages to them were much extolled and there was great Contention among the Monasteries every one magnifying their one Saints Images and Reliques above others the Wealth that these Follies brought in occasioned great Corruptions so that the Monks and Friers were very debaucht and very Ignorant And the begging Friers under the appearance of Poverty course Diet and Cloathing gained much esteem and became almost the only Preachers and Confessort in the World but not being able to conceal their Vices they were now fallen under much Scandal and a general Disesteem and the King designing to create new Bishopricks thought it necessary in Order thereto to make use of some of their Revenues and that the best way to bring them into his hands would be to expose their vices that so they might quite lose the esteem they yet had with some and it would be the less dangerous to suppress them Cromwel was imploy'd in this Reforming Work and for removing all Images and Superstitious Pictures out of the Churches many of the Abbots surrendred their Monasteries and in most Houses the Visitors made the Monks sign a Confession of their former Vices and Disorders in which they acknowledged their Idleness Gluttony and Sensuality for which the Pit of Hell was ready to swallow them up others acknowledged that they were sensible that the manner of their former pretended Religion consisting only in some Dumb Ceremonies whereby they were blindly led without any Knowledge of God's Laws and being exempted from the Authority of their own Bishops and wholly subjecting themselves to a Forreign Power who took no care to reform their abuses it had occasioned great disorders among them but the most perfect way of Life revealed by Christ and
his Apostles being now discovered to them they thought it very fit that they should be governed by the King their Supream Head and therefore resigned their Abbies to him So that in the whole one hundred fifty nine Resignations were made to the King before the Meeting of the next Parliament who made an Act for the Total Dissolution of all the Abbies in England the Rents of which were then valued at being one hundred thirty two thousand six hundred and seven pound six shillings four pence but they were worth above ten times as much in true value These Proceedings against the Pope and Holy Church caused the Rude Ignorant and wilful People in Lincolnshire to assemble in Arms to the number of twenty thousand The King levied a strong Army and went in Person to suppress them and approaching them they sent him an humble Petition that if he would reestablish the Monasteries and the Popes Authority they would freely lay down their Arms and return to their Duty hut the King disdaining these Rusticks should dictate Politicks to him rejected their Petition sending them Word that if they did not instantly deliver up a hundred of the principal Rebels into his hands he would immediately fall upon them with the utmost Fury and Sacrifice them all to his resentment This daring Resolution so daunted the Hearts of this undisciplined Multitude that their Leaders expecting each would deliver the other up to the King they secretly deserted them and returned home but Captain Cobler their Chief Commander otherwise Dr. Makarel and some other being taken were executed according to their merits and the Common People being left without Officers made haste home and were pardoned by the King This was succeeded by another Insurrection in the North where 40000 got together upon the same pretences calling themselves ' The Holy Pilgrims who intended nothing but the establishing of the true Religion and restoring the Rights of Holy Church The Dukes of Norfolk and Suffolk were ordered to suppress these brainsick Zealots who seemed very joyful they were to fight not doubting of success in this Religious War but the Night before the intended day of Battel a little Brook which ran between the Armies and might have been passed over dry foot grew so broad by the next Morning by a violent Rain which fell that they could not approach each other which being reckoned by both Parties a great Miracle the Rebels upon promise of free pardon quietly departed home In these commotions those men whose profession was only their Books and their Beeds mistaking the Command of Christ To sell their Coats and buy a Sword came armed into the Field and being taken several Abbots Monks and Priests were executed The Kingdom being again setled in peace Cromwell proceeded in the Work of Reformation and because the People seemed discontented that the abuse of these Monasteries should be turn'd to the utter ruin of them from whence they used to have relief and alms Therefore Cromwell thought fit to make them sensible of the Cheats and Tricks which the Priests had imposed upon them And many Impostures about Relicks and Wonderful Images or Roods were now discovered to which Pilgrimages had been formerly made As at Reading where they shewed the Wing of the Angel that brought over thither the point of the Spear which pierced our Saviour's side And so many pieces of the Cross were found in several Abbies as joined together would have made a large Cross The Rood of Grace at Boxley in Kent which had drawn so many Pilgrims to it was brought to St. Paul's Cross which by many springs used to bow down and lift up it self to rowl the Eyes shake the Head Hands and Feet move the Lips seem pleased or angry by bending the Brows which the credulous multitude imputed to a Divine Power but was now made appear to be a Cheat and the Springs openly shewed that governed its several motions Likewise the Images of our Lady of Walsingham and Ipswich adorned with rich Jewels and divers others both in England and Wales were removed out of the Churches and being brought to London were openly burnt in the presence of the Lord Cromwell at Chelsey The blood of Christ was shewed in a Glass Vial at Hales in Glocestershire and the Priests said it was not visible to any that were in Mortal Sin So that after the People had well paid it became visible to them and the deluded Souls went away well satisfied that they were now free from any damnable transgression But this was proved to be the Blood of a Duck renewed every Week and put into a Glass thick on one side and thin on the other so that till the Pilgrim had offered what the Priest thought fit the dark side was turned to him and afterward the light side Several such Impostures were discovered which tended much to undeceive the People But the richest Shrine in England was that of St. Thomas of Becket that great Rebel to King Henry II. and for whose death he severely whipt himself a great way to the Cathedral of Canterbury where he was killed by four of King Henry's officious Servants and he thereupon Canonized a Saint to whose Altar greater Oblations were made than to that of our Saviour or the Virgin Mary Every fiftieth year there was a Jubilee and an Indulgence granted to all that came and visited his Tomb who were sometimes thought to be an hundred thousand on that occasion he prints of their kneeling and devotion remaining in the Stones to this day So that it was immensly Rich with Gold Jewels Plate and Money the Gold only being so heavy that it filled two Chests which required eight men a piece to carry them out of the Church The Timber work of this Shrine was covered with Plates of Gold Damasked and Imbossed with VVires of Gold garnished with Images Angels great Orient Pearls and Precious Stones the chief whereof was a rich Jewel offered by Lewes seventh of France who came over in Pilgrimage to visit this Tomb and to obtain that for the future no Passenger should be drowned betwixt Dover and Callice It was valued to be the richest Jewel in Europe St. Thomas's Skull which had been so much VVorshipped was proved an Imposture for the true Skull was with the rest of his Bones in the Coffin and were now so mixt with other Bones that it had been a Miracle indeed to have distinguisht them afterwards Then the Axes and Hammers went to work in pulling down the Nests of Superstition and Idolatry whose number as Camden reckons them were six hundred forty five Monasteries ninty Colleges an hundred and ten Hospitals and two thousand three hundred seventy four Chauntries and free Chappels and their Lands and Revenues being by Act of Parliament settled on the Crown the King by the advice of the Lord Cromwell politickly exchanged them for others with his Nobility and Gentry allowing them good Bargains for their Incouragement many of whose Estates do now consist
wholly of Possessions of this nature or else were greatly inlarged by them and the restoration of them to their former uses was thereby rendred so impracticable that all the flaming zeal of Queen Mary for Popery was never able to effect any thing of that kind And this may be thought to have been one strong Barrier and Security of this Nation against Popish Slavery to this very day notwithstanding the many attempts that have since been made to reduce us back to that House of bondage The Churches being thus cleansed from rubbish the magnanimous Lord Cromwell resolved to place better Ornaments in them and therefore he sent out Injunctions requiring the Clergy to set up English Bibles in their Churches and to incourage all to read them Exhorting the People not to dispute about the sense of difficult places but to leave that to better Judgments Ministers were likewise commanded to instruct the People and to teach them the Creed the Lord's Prayer and the Ten Commandments in English and that once every Quarter there should be a Sermon to declare the true Gospel of Christ and to exhort the People to works of Charity and not to trust to other mens Works to Pilgrimages or Relicks or telling their Beads which was only Superstition Also the folly of offering Candles to Images and that to make any use of Images in Divine Worship was Idolatry and the praying to Saints unnecessary These struck at some of the main Points of the former Superstition but the free use of the Scriptures gave the deadliest blow of all Yet all the Clergy submitted to them without murmuring The Death of Queen Ann Bullen who was beheaded some time before for several pretended Crimes which she utterly denied at the Scaffold and of which a great number of worthy men thought her Innocent gave fresh hopes to the Popish Clergy that a stop would have been put to any further Reformation of which she was reckoned a great promoter and inconrager And the Succession of the Crown being likewise altered by Parliament By whom Queen Mary was declared Illegitimate as born of Queen Katherine in unlawful Marriage and a new Oath imposed upon all the People to acknowledge the Children of the Queen Ann to be rightful Heirs to the Crown and she leaving one Daughter who was afterward the renowned Queen Elizabeth that Party had likewise expectations that she being dead the Lady Mary would succeed to the Crown to which end she was persuaded to submit her self to the King and own him as Supream Head of the Church of England which she had hitherto refused But within twenty days after this Tragedy was over the King Married the Lady Jane Seymour Daughter of Sr. John Seymour by whom he had the most excellent Prince Edward who succeeded him though within few days after the good Queen died The birth of a Son blasted the Papists expectations and therefore Gardiner Bonner and the rest of that Clergy seemed now very zealous in promoting the Injunctions that Cromwell had lately published Yet Gardiner still retaining a secret hatred against the Reformation he by his Artifices and Flatteries prevailed much with the King persuading him that his zeal against Heresie was the greatest advantage that his Cause in renouncing the Pope could have over all Europe Which meeting with the King 's own persuasion of the Corporal presence of Christ in the Sacrament caused him to sit in Person upon the Trial of one John Lambert a learned man who because he would not recant his opinion about Transubstantion was cruelly burnt in Smithfield and in the next Parliament an Act was made for making it death not to consent to the six Articles following which were after called the six bloody Articles I. That after the words of Consecration the Real and Natural Body and Blood of Christ was in the Sacrament II. That Communion in both kinds was not necessary to Salvation III. That Priests by the Laws of God ought not to Marry IV. That Vows of Chastity are to be observed V. That private Massies were agreeable to the Word of God VI. That Auricular Confession was necessary to be retained Against most of these Cranmer argued several days and Cromwell promoted Bonner to the Bishoprick of Hereford to be a faithful second to Cranmer in his Pious designs though he afterward proved a violent Persecutor and indeed Cranmer wanted support against the other Bishops who made great complaints of the rashness of the Protestant Preachers who were very furious against some things not yet abolished Upon which Letters were writ to the Bishops to take care that as the People should be rightly instructed so they should not be offended with too many Novelties Thus was Cranmer's interest so low that he had none but Cromwell to depend on There was not a Queen now in the King's Bosom to support them and the refusal of owning these Articles caused the death of many Protestants as the denying the King's Supremacy cut off several Papist so that at the same time Protestants were burnt on one side Smithfield and Papists hanged on the other which made Forreigners admire as not understanding what Religion King Henry was of Hereupon Cromwell contrived how the King should be ingaged in a nearer Alliance with the Protestant Princes of Germany with whom he had already setled a League and who was acknowledged its Patron he sending over an hundred thousand Crowns a year for the support of it all ingaging That they would join against the Pope as the Common Enemy and set up the true Religion according to the Gospel Now that the King might be prevailed upon both by Affection and Interest to carry on what he had thus begun Cromwell resolved to bring about a Match between the King and the Lady Ann Sister to William Duke of Cleve whose other Sister Frederick Duke of Saxony a very zealous Protestant had espoused And the King unwilling to live any longer a Widower both the Emperor and the King of France proposed Matches to him but Reasons of State inclined him powerfully to that with the Lady Ann. Her Father had before Treated with the Prince of Lorrain about Marrying her but it went no farther than a Contract between the two Fathers And the famous Painter Hans Holbin much favoured her in the Picture which was sent to the King who never liked the Original so well as he did that The Duke of Saxe dissuaded the Match because the King was going backward in the Reformation as appear'd by his enacting the six bloody Articles but Cromwell carried it on with the greatest vigor Some write that the Lady was handsome enough but could speak only Dutch which the King understood not neither had she learned Musick and was also so stiff in her Carriage as no way suited the King's temper However the Marriage was concluded and arriving at Rochester the King was so impatient to see her that he went thither incognito but was much dampt at first sight for he thought
the Council going into the House with Essex The People cried Shut 'em up close keep 'em fast Whereupon the Earl bolted them into the room saying ' Be patient but a little my Lords I must needs go to the City to take order with my Lord Mayor and the Sheriffs and I will return instantly The Lords being thus made Prisoners the Earl issued forth with about 200 Followers without Order among whom were the Earl of Bedford the Lord Cromwell and some other of the Nobility and coming into London Essex cries out continually ' For the Queen for the Queen there is wait laid for my Life Exhorting the Citizens to take Arms and join with him but notwithstanding their pretended kindness not a man appeared for him And soon after he was proclaimed Traytor and the Earl of Nottingham marched with all speed against him which so discouraged him that casting away all hopes of success he thought of returning home and making his Peace with the Lords which he had in Custody But found his way Chained up at the West end of St. Pauls Whereupon he drew his Sword to have forced his passage but had three of his associates slain besides two Citizens and his own Hat shot through So that making haste to Queen Hith he there got a Boat wherein he returned to his own House where he was soon Besieged both by Water and Land and was advised by the Lord Sands to issue out upon his Enemies telling him ' The most valiant Counsels were the most safe and that it was far more honourable to dye fighting with Noblemen than by the hand of an Hangman But Essex his Mind being as inconstant as his Fortune he at length yields to the Admiral And soon after he is brought to a Trial for High Treason with the Earl of Southampton where they made the best defence they could but at length were both condemned the Lord Chief Justice Cork concluding his Sentence with this bitter Sarcasm against Essex ' That it w●…e to be wisht that this Robert should be last of the name of Earl of Essex who affected to be Robert the First of that name King of England ' Feb. 25. 1601. was the day appointed for his death on a Scaffold upon the Green within the Tower where sate several Lords and Aldermen of London The Earl mounting the Scoffold uncovered his Head and lifting his Eyes to Heaven confest the many and grievous sins of his youth and especially the last which he said was a bloody crying and contagious sin for which he asked God and the Queen forgiveness protesting he never had any ill design against her Person wishing her long life and a happy reign He thanked God that he was neither Atheist nor Papist but put all his trust and hopes in the Merits of Christ Beseeching God to strengthen him against the fears of death Then he forgave the Executioner and fitted his Neck to the Block Intreating the Spectators to join in a short but fervent prayer and ●aculation to God He then repeated the Creed and the five first verses of the 51. Psalm adding Lord I submit humbly and obediently to my deserved punishment Thou O Lord have mercy upon thy Servant that is cast down Into thy hand O Lord I commit my Spirit ' So laying down his Head it was stricken off at the third ●…w but the first took away all sense and motion Sir Walter R●w●eigh his great Enemy was present which many thought very unbecoming him King Henry IV. of France and Marshal Byron his Prime Favourite hearing the Christian manner of his death scoft at him saying He died more like a Parson than a Souldier ' But this very Byron was soon after beheaded by this very King for Treason raving at his Death against his Master and dying more like a madman than a Christian And King Henry having renounced the Protestant Religion was stab'd to Death in his Coach by a bloody Villain without having hardly time to say Lord have mercy upon him Thus was this noble E. snatcht out of the Arms of his Mistri●s and torn from the Hearts of the People that doted on him and by the subtilty of his Enemies brought to an untimely end in the sight of them both who were quiet Spectators of his ruin in the 34 year of his Age. The tears of her Subjects for his loss and the little kindness they discovered afterward for her for signing the Warrant for his Death together with her own passion for him cast the Q into a deep melancholy which was much augmented by the following Passage When Essex was in greatest favour with her which was on his return from Cales he importuned her to give him some token of her affection that might renew her favour to him if at any time his Enemies should mis-represent him Whereupon in much familiarity she gave him a Ring which she vowed and swore should free him from all danger upon his s●nding it to her even in the greatest distress After his Commitment to the Tower he sent this worthy Token to her Majesty by the Countess of Nottingham but Sir Robert Cecil would not suffer her to deliver it This made the Q think her self scorned and that what his Enemies had reported he should say was true That she grew old and doted and that her mind was now as crooked as her body Which she though● to be high Blasphemy against such a divine beauty as he● 〈…〉 persuaded her she was But the Lady Nottingham com●ing to her death-bed and finding by the daily sorrow the Q. exprest for the loss of Essex that she was the principal Agent in his destruction could not be at rest till she had sent for her and discovered all imploring mercy from God and Forgiveness from her Earthly Soveraign The relation of which so inraged the Q. that shaking her as she lay in her Bed she said she would never forgive her and sent her with most fearful Curses to the Judgment Seat of God Not long after the Queen's sickness appeared Mortal For having thus unfortunately cut off her endeared Favourite she took comfort in nothing besides But upon all occasions of signing Pardons would say to her Courtiers You can beg Pardons for these wretches but could never speak a word for the gallant Essex whose less to my self and the Nation can never be recovered Some thought Essex would have discovered some secret commerce between the Q. and himself at his Death but others were of opinion that nothing Criminal ever passed between them only a generous kindness that she had for a man noble lovely and every way accomplisht To conclude her happiness and her power both seemed to be buried in the Tomb of Essex whose absence with continued fighs and tears she bemoaned for some few months and then was likewise laid in her Grave The E. of Southampton was pardoned but Sir Christ Blount Sir Charles Danvers Sir Gill. Merick and Henry Cuffe were condemned and executed for this