summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/1879-h
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to '1879-h')
-rw-r--r--1879-h/1879-h.htm12558
1 files changed, 12558 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/1879-h/1879-h.htm b/1879-h/1879-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2a4c42f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/1879-h/1879-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,12558 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="us-ascii"?>
+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Royalty Restored, by J. Fitzgerald Molloy
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Royalty Restored, by J. Fitzgerald Molloy
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Royalty Restored
+ or, London under Charles II.
+
+Author: J. Fitzgerald Molloy
+
+Release Date: November 7, 2008 [EBook #1879]
+Last Updated: February 6, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROYALTY RESTORED ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by An Anonymous Volunteeer, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ ROYALTY RESTORED
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ or, LONDON UNDER CHARLES II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By J. FITZGERALD MOLLOY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <div class="mynote">
+ <p>
+ Original Transcriber's Note:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Footnotes have been inserted into this etext in square brackets close to
+ the place where they were indicated by a suffix in the original text.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pound sterling symbol has been written as 'L'.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Text in italics has been written in capital letters.
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ <p>
+ PG Editor's Note: Archaic spelling and grammar retained.
+ </p>
+ <br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ TO THOMAS HARDY, ESQ.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ DEAR MR. HARDY,
+
+ In common with all readers of the English language, I owe you a
+ debt of gratitude, the which I rejoice to acknowledge, even in so
+ poor a manner as by dedicating this work to you.
+
+ Believe me,
+
+ Faithfully yours always,
+
+ J. FITZGERALD MOLLOY.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ No social history of the court of Charles II. has heretofore been written.
+ The Grammont Memoirs, devoid of date and detail, and addressed "to those
+ who read only for amusement," present but brief imperfect sketches of the
+ wits and beauties who thronged the court of the merry monarch whilst the
+ brilliant Frenchman sojourned in England. Pepys, during the first nine
+ years of the Restoration, narrates such gossip as reached him regarding
+ Whitehall and the practices that obtained there. Evelyn records some
+ trifling actions of the king and his courtiers, with a view of pointing a
+ moral, rather than from a desire of adorning a tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To supply this want in our literature, I have endeavoured to present a
+ picture of the domestic life of a king, whose name recalls pages of the
+ brightest romance and strangest gallantry in our chronicles. To this I
+ have added a study of London during his reign, taken as far as possible
+ from rare, and invariably from authentic sources. It will readily be seen
+ this work, embracing such subjects, could alone have resulted from careful
+ study and untiring consultation of diaries, records, memoirs, letters,
+ pamphlets, tracts, and papers left by contemporaries familiar with the
+ court and capital. The accomplishment of such a task necessitated an
+ expenditure of time, and devotion to labour, such as in these fretful and
+ impatient days is seldom bestowed on work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As in previous volumes I have writ no fact is set down without authority,
+ so likewise the same rule is pursued in these; and for such as desire to
+ test the accuracy thereof, or follow at further length statements
+ necessarily abbreviated, a list is appended of the principal literature
+ consulted. And inasmuch as I have found pleasure in this work, so may my
+ gentle readers derive profit therefrom; and as I have laboured, so may
+ they enjoy. Expressing which fair wishes, and moreover commending myself
+ unto their love and service, I humbly take my leave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ J. FITZGERALD MOLLOY. <a name="link2H_LIST" id="link2H_LIST">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL BOOKS, PAMPHLETS, TRACTS, AND NEWSPAPERS, CONSULTED
+ IN WRITING THIS VOLUME.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "Elenchus Motuum Nuperorum." Heath's "Flagellum; or, the Life and Death of
+ Oliver Cromwell." Banks' "Life of Cromwell." "Review of the Political Life
+ of Cromwell." "A Modest Vindication of Oliver Cromwell." "The Machivilian
+ Cromwellist." Kimber's "Life of Cromwell." "The World Mistaken in Oliver
+ Cromwell"(1668). "A Letter of Comfort to Richard Cromwell." "Letters from
+ Fairfax to Cromwell." "Cromwell's Letters and Speeches." "A Collection of
+ Several Passages concerning Cromwell in his Sickness." "The Protector's
+ Declaration against the Royal Family of the Stuarts." "Memoirs of Cromwell
+ and his Children, supposed to be written by himself." "Narrative of the
+ Proceedings of the English Army in Scotland." "An Account of the Last
+ Houres of the late renowned Oliver, Lord Protector" (1659). "Sedition
+ Scourged." Heath's "Chronicles of the late Intestine War." Welwood's
+ "Memoirs of Transactions in England." "Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow, M.P., in
+ the year 1640." Forster's "Statesmen of the Commonwealth." "Killing No
+ Murther." Thurloe's "State Papers." Lord Clarendon's "State Papers."
+ Tatham's "Aqua Triumphalis." "The Public Intelligencer." "Mercurius
+ Politicus." "The Parliamentary Intelligencer." Lyon's "Personal History of
+ Charles II." "The Boscobel Tracts, relating to the Escape of Charles II."
+ "An Exact Narrative of his Majesty's Escape from Worcester." Several
+ Passages relating to the "Declared King of Scots both by Sea and Land."
+ "Charles II.'s Declaration to his Loving Subjects in the Kingdom of
+ England." "England's Joy; or, a Relation of the most Remarkable Passages
+ from his Majesty's Arrival at Dover to his Entrance at Whitehall." "Copies
+ of Two Papers written by the King." "His Majesty's Gracious Message to
+ General Monk." "King Charles, His Starre." "A Speech spoken by a Blew-Coat
+ of Christ's Hospital to his Sacred Majesty." "Monarchy Revived." "The
+ History of Charles II., by a Person of Quality." Lady Fanshawe's
+ "Memoirs." "The Character of Charles II., written by an Impartial Hand and
+ exposed to Public View." "Sports and Pastimes of the English People." "A
+ History of Domestic Manners and Sentiments in England." Wright's "Homes of
+ Other Days." Idalcomb's "Anecdotes of Manners and Customs of London."
+ Pepys' "Diary." Evelyn's "Diary." Grammont's "Memoirs." Lord Romney's
+ "Diary of the Times of Charles II." "The Life and Adventures of Colonel
+ Blood." "Diary of Dr. Edward Lake, Court Chaplain." Bishop Burnet's
+ "History of His Own Times." Oldmixon's "Court Tales." Madame Dunois'
+ "Memoirs of the English Court." Heath's "Glories and Triumphs of Charles
+ II." "Continuation of the Life of Edward, Earl of Clarendon." "Original
+ Correspondence of Lord Clarendon." "The Memoirs of Sir John Reresby."
+ Lister's "Life of Clarendon. Brain Fairfax's "Memoirs of the Duke of
+ Buckingham." "Letters of Philip, Second Earl of Chesterfield." Aubrey's
+ "Memoirs." "The Life of Mr. Anthony a Wood, written by Himself." Elias
+ Ashmole's "Memoirs of his Life." Luttrell's "Diary." "The Althorp Memoirs"
+ (privately printed). Lord Broghill's "Memoirs." "Memoir of Barbara,
+ Duchess of Cleveland" (privately printed). Aubrey's "Lives of Eminent
+ Men." Count Magalotti's "Travels in England." "The Secret History of
+ Whitehall: consisting of Secret Memoirs which have hitherto lain conceal'd
+ as not being discoverable by any other hand." "Athenae Oxonienses." Lord
+ Rochester's Works. Brown's "Miscellanea Aulica." The Works of Andrew
+ Marvell. "State Tracts, relating to the Government from the year 1660 to
+ 1689." "Antiquities of the Crown and State of Old England." "Narrative of
+ the Families exposed to the Great Plague of London." "Loimologia; or, an
+ Historical Account of the Plague in 1665." "A Collection of very Valuable
+ and Scarce Pieces relating to the Last Plague in 1665." "London's Dreadful
+ Visitation." "Letter of Dr, Hedges to a Person of Quality." "God's
+ Terrible Voice in the City: a Narrative of the late Dreadful Judgments by
+ Plague and Fire." "Pestis; a Collection of Scarce Papers relating to the
+ Plague." "An Account of the Fire of London, published by authority." Lord
+ Clarendon's "Account of the Great Fire." "A Voyage into England,
+ containing many things relating to the State of Learning, Religion, and
+ other Curiosities of that Kingdom," by Mons. Sorbiere. Carte's "Life of
+ James, Duke of Ormond." Carte's "History of England." Lord Somers'
+ "Collection of Scarce and Valuable Tracts." "Memoirs of the Duchess of
+ Mazarine." "Secret History of the Duchess of Portsmouth." St. Evremond's
+ "Memoirs." "Curialia; or, an Historical Account of some Branches of the
+ Royal Household." "Parliamentary History." Oldmixon's "History of the
+ Stuarts." Ellis's "Original Letters." Charles James Fox's "History of
+ James II." Sir George L'Estrange's "Brief History of the Times." Lord
+ Romney's "Diary of the Times of Charles II." Clarke's "Life of James II."
+ "Vindication of the English Catholics." "The Tryals, Conviction and
+ Sentence of Titus Oates." "A Modest Vindication of Oates." "Tracts on the
+ Popish Plot." Macpherson's "Original Papers." A. Marvell's "Account of
+ Popery." "An Exact Discovery of the Mystery of Iniquity as Practised among
+ the Jesuits." Smith's "Streets of London." "London Cries." Seymour's
+ "Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster." Stow's "Survey of London
+ and Westminster." "Angliae Metropolis." Dr. Laune's "Present State of
+ London, 1681." Sir Roger North's "Examn." "The Character of a Coffee
+ House." Stow's "Chronicles of Fashion." Fairholt's "Costume in England."
+ "A Just and Seasonable Reprehension of Naked Breasts and Shoulders." Sir
+ William Petty's "Observations of the City of London." John Ogilvy's
+ "London Surveyed." R. Burton's "Historical Remarks." Dr. Birch's "History
+ of the Royal Society of London." "A Century of Inventions." Wild's
+ "History of the Royal Society." "The Philosophical Transactions of the
+ Royal Society." Richardson's "Life of Milton." Philip's "Life of Milton."
+ Johnson's "Lives of the Poets." Aubrey's "Collections for the Life of
+ Milton." Langbaine's "Lives and Characters of the English Dramatic Poets."
+ "Some Remarkable Passages in the Life of Mr. Wycherley." "Some Account of
+ what Occurred at the King's Death," by Richard Huddlestone, O.S.B. "A True
+ Narrative of the late King's Death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_LIST"> LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL BOOKS, PAMPHLETS, ETC.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_TOC"> DETAILED CONTENTS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> <b>ROYALTY RESTORED</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII. </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_TOC" id="link2H_TOC">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ DETAILED CONTENTS.
+ </h2>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER I. <br /> Cromwell is sick unto death.&mdash;Fears and
+ suspicions.&mdash;Killing no <br /> Murder.&mdash;A memorable storm.&mdash;The
+ end of all.&mdash;Richard Cromwell <br /> made Protector,&mdash;He
+ refuses to shed blood. Disturbance and <br /> dissatisfaction.&mdash;Downfall
+ of Richard.&mdash;Charles Stuart proclaimed <br /> king.&mdash;Rejoicement
+ of the nation.&mdash;The king comes into his own.&mdash;Entry <br /> into
+ London.&mdash;Public joy and festivity. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER II. <br /> The story of the king's escape.&mdash;He accepts the
+ Covenant, and lands in <br /> Scotland.&mdash;Crowned at Scone.&mdash;Proclaimed
+ king at Carlisle.&mdash;The <br /> battle of Worcester,&mdash;Bravery of
+ Charles.&mdash;Disloyalty of the Scottish <br /> cavalry.&mdash;The
+ Royalists defeated.&mdash;The king's flight.&mdash;Seeks refuge <br /> in
+ Boscobel Wood. The faithful Pendrells.&mdash;Striving to cross the <br />
+ Severn.&mdash;Hiding in an oak tree.&mdash;Sheltered by Master Lane.
+ Sets out <br /> with Mistress Lane.&mdash;Perilous escapes.&mdash;On the
+ road.&mdash;The king is <br /> recognised.&mdash;Strange adventures.&mdash;His
+ last night in England. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER III. <br /> Celebration of the king's return. Those who flocked
+ to Whitehall.&mdash;My <br /> Lord Cleveland's gentlemen.&mdash;Sir
+ Thomas Allen's supper.&mdash;Touching for <br /> king's evil.&mdash;That
+ none might lose their labour&mdash;The man with the fungus <br /> nose.&mdash;The
+ memory of the regicides.&mdash;Cromwell's effigy.&mdash;Ghastly scene
+ <br /> at Tyburn.&mdash;The king's clemency.&mdash;The Coronation
+ procession.&mdash;Sights and <br /> scenes by the way.&mdash;His majesty
+ is crowned <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER IV. <br /> The king's character.&mdash;His proverbial grace.&mdash;He
+ tells a story well.&mdash;"A <br /> warmth and sweetness of the blood."&mdash;Beautiful
+ Barbara Palmer.&mdash;Her <br /> intrigue with my Lord Chesterfield.&mdash;James,
+ Duke of York. His <br /> early days.&mdash;Escape from St. James's.&mdash;Fights
+ in the service of <br /> France.&mdash;Marriage with Anne Hyde.&mdash;Sensation
+ at Court.&mdash;The Duke of <br /> Gloucester's death.&mdash;The Princess
+ of Orange.&mdash;Schemes against the <br /> Duke of York's peace.&mdash;The
+ "lewd informer."&mdash;Anne Hyde is acknowledged <br /> Duchess of York.
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER V. <br /> Morality of the restoration.&mdash;Puritan piety.&mdash;Cromwell's
+ <br /> intrigues.&mdash;Conduct of women under the Republic.&mdash;Some
+ notable <br /> courtiers.&mdash;The Duke of Ormond and his family.&mdash;Lord
+ St. Albans and <br /> Henry Jermyn.&mdash;His Grace of Buckingham and
+ Mistress Fairfax.&mdash;Lord <br /> Rochester.&mdash;Delights all hearts.&mdash;The
+ king's projected <br /> marriage.&mdash;Catherine of Braganza.&mdash;His
+ majesty's speech.&mdash;A royal <br /> love-letter.&mdash;The new queen
+ sets sail. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VI. <br /> The king's intrigue with Barbara Palmer.&mdash;The
+ queen arrives at <br /> Portsmouth.&mdash;Visited by the Duke of York.&mdash;The
+ king leaves town.&mdash;First <br /> interview with his bride.&mdash;His
+ letter to the lord chancellor.&mdash;Royal <br /> marriage and
+ festivities.&mdash;Arrival at Hampton Court Palace.&mdash;Prospects
+ <br /> of a happy union.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine gives birth to a second
+ child.&mdash;The <br /> king's infatuation.&mdash;Mistress and wife.&mdash;The
+ queen's misery.&mdash;The king's <br /> cruelty.&mdash;Lord Clarendon's
+ messages.&mdash;His majesty resolves to break the <br /> queen's spirit.&mdash;End
+ of the domestic quarrel. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VII. <br /> Their majesties arrive at Whitehall.&mdash;My Lady
+ Castlemaine a <br /> spectator.&mdash;Young Mr. Crofts.&mdash;New
+ arrivals at court.&mdash;The Hamilton <br /> family.&mdash;The Chevalier
+ de Grammont.&mdash;Mrs. Middleton and Miss Kirke.&mdash;At <br /> the
+ queen's ball.&mdash;La belle Hamilton.&mdash;The queen mother at
+ Somerset <br /> House.&mdash;The Duke of Monmouth's marriage.&mdash;Fair
+ Frances Stuart.&mdash;Those <br /> who court her favour.&mdash;The king's
+ passion. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER VIII. <br /> The Duke of York's intrigues.&mdash;My Lady
+ Chesterfield and his royal <br /> highness.&mdash;The story of Lady
+ Southesk's love,&mdash;Lord Arran plays the <br /> guitar.&mdash;Lord
+ Chesterfield is jealous.&mdash;The countess is taken from <br /> court.&mdash;Mistress
+ Margaret Brooks and the king.&mdash;Lady Denham and the <br /> duke.&mdash;Sir
+ John goes mad.&mdash;My lady is poisoned. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER IX. <br /> Court life under the merry monarch.&mdash;Riding in
+ Hyde Park.&mdash;Sailing on <br /> the Thames.&mdash;Ball at Whitehall.&mdash;Petit
+ soupers.&mdash;What happened at <br /> Lady Gerrard's.&mdash;Lady
+ Castlemaine quarrels with the king.&mdash;Flight to <br /> Richmond.&mdash;The
+ queen falls ill.&mdash;The king's grief and remorse.&mdash;Her <br />
+ majesty speaks.&mdash;Her secret sorrow finds voice in delirium.&mdash;Frances
+ <br /> Stuart has hopes.&mdash;The queen recovers. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER X. <br /> Notorious courtiers.&mdash;My Lord Rochester's satires.&mdash;Places
+ a watch on <br /> certain ladies of quality.&mdash;His majesty becomes
+ indignant.&mdash;Rochester <br /> retires to the country.&mdash;Dons a
+ disguise and returns to town.&mdash;Practises <br /> astrology.&mdash;Two
+ maids of honour seek adventure.&mdash;Mishaps which befell <br /> them.&mdash;Rochester
+ forgiven.&mdash;The Duke of Buckingham.&mdash;Lady Shrewsbury <br /> and
+ her victims.&mdash;Captain Howard's duel.&mdash;Lord Shrewsbury avenges
+ <br /> his honour.&mdash;A strange story.&mdash;Colonel Blood attempts an
+ <br /> abduction.&mdash;Endeavours to steal the regalia.&mdash;The king
+ converses with <br /> him. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XI. <br /> Terror falls upon the people.&mdash;Rumours of a
+ plague.&mdash;A sign in the <br /> heavens.&mdash;Flight from the
+ capital.&mdash;Preparations against the dreaded <br /> enemy.&mdash;Dr.
+ Boghurst's testimony.&mdash;God's terrible voice in the <br /> city.&mdash;Rules
+ made by the lord mayor.&mdash;Massacre of animals.&mdash;O, dire <br />
+ death!&mdash;Spread of the distemper.&mdash;Horrible sights.&mdash;State
+ of the <br /> deserted capital.&mdash;"Bring out your dead."&mdash;Ashes
+ to ashes.&mdash;Fires are <br /> lighted.&mdash;Relief of the poor.&mdash;The
+ mortality bills. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XII <br /> A cry of fire by night.&mdash;Fright and confusion.&mdash;The
+ lord mayor is <br /> unmanned.&mdash;Spread of the flames.&mdash;Condition
+ of the streets.&mdash;Distressful <br /> scenes.&mdash;Destruction of the
+ Royal Exchange.&mdash;Efforts of the king and the <br /> Duke of York.&mdash;Strange
+ rumours and alarms, St. Paul's is doomed.&mdash;The <br /> flames
+ checked.&mdash;A ruined city as seen by day and night.&mdash;Wretched
+ state <br /> of the people.&mdash;Investigation into the origin of the
+ fire.&mdash;A new city <br /> arises. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XIII. <br /> The court repairs to Oxford&mdash;Lady Castlemaine's
+ son.&mdash;Their majesties <br /> return to Whitehall.&mdash;The king
+ quarrels with his mistress.&mdash;Miss Stuart <br /> contemplates
+ marriage.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine attempts revenge.&mdash;Charles <br />
+ makes an unpleasant discovery.&mdash;The maid of honour elopes.&mdash;His
+ majesty <br /> rows down the Thames.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine's intrigues.&mdash;Fresh
+ quarrels at <br /> court.&mdash;The king on his knees. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XIV. <br /> The kingdom in peril.&mdash;The chancellor falls
+ under his majesty's <br /> displeasure.&mdash;The Duke of Buckingham's
+ mimicry.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine's <br /> malice.&mdash;Lord Clarendon's
+ fall.&mdash;The Duke of Ormond offends the king's <br /> mistress.&mdash;She
+ covers him with abuse.&mdash;Plots against the Duke of <br /> York.&mdash;Schemes
+ for a royal divorce.&mdash;Moll Davis and Nell Gwynn.&mdash;The <br />
+ king and the comedian.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine abandons herself to great
+ <br /> disorders.&mdash;Young Jack Spencer.&mdash;The countess intrigues
+ with an <br /> acrobat.&mdash;Talk of the town.&mdash;The mistress
+ created a duchess. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XV. <br /> Louise de Querouaille.&mdash;The Triple Alliance.&mdash;Louise
+ is created Duchess <br /> of Portsmouth,&mdash;Her grace and the impudent
+ comedian.&mdash;Madam Ellen moves <br /> in society. The young Duke of
+ St. Albans.&mdash;Strange story of the <br /> Duchess of Mazarine.&mdash;Entertaining
+ the wits at Chelsea.&mdash;Luxurious <br /> suppers.&mdash;profligacy and
+ wit. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XVI. <br /> A storm threatens the kingdom&mdash;The Duke of York
+ is touched in his <br /> conscience.&mdash;His interview with Father
+ Simons.&mdash;The king declares his <br /> mind.&mdash;The Duchess of
+ York becomes a catholic.&mdash;The circumstances of her <br /> death.&mdash;The
+ Test Act introduced.&mdash;Agitation of the nation.&mdash;The Duke <br />
+ of York marries again.&mdash;Lord Shaftesbury's schemes.&mdash;The Duke
+ of <br /> Monmouth.&mdash;William of Orange and the Princess Mary.&mdash;Their
+ marriage and <br /> departure from England. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XVII. <br /> The threatened storm bursts.&mdash;History of Titus
+ Oates and Dr. Tonge.&mdash;A <br /> dark scheme concocted.&mdash;The king
+ is warned of danger.&mdash;The narrative of <br /> a horrid plot laid
+ before the treasurer.&mdash;Forged letters.&mdash;Titus Oates <br />
+ before the council.&mdash;His blunders.&mdash;A mysterious murder.&mdash;Terror
+ of the <br /> citizens.&mdash;Lord Shaftesbury's schemes.&mdash;Papists
+ are banished from the <br /> capital.&mdash;Catholic peers committed to
+ the Tower.&mdash;Oates is encouraged. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. <br /> Reward for the discovery of murderers.&mdash;Bedlow's
+ character <br /> and evidence.&mdash;His strange story.&mdash;Development
+ of the "horrid <br /> plot."&mdash;William Staley is made a victim.&mdash;Three
+ Jesuits hung.&mdash;Titus <br /> Oates pronounced the saviour of his
+ country.&mdash;Striving to ruin the <br /> queen.&mdash;Monstrous story
+ of Bedlow and Oates.&mdash;The king protects <br /> her majesty.&mdash;Five
+ Jesuits executed.&mdash;Fresh rumours concerning <br /> the papists.&mdash;Bill
+ to exclude the Duke of York.&mdash;Lord Stafford is <br /> tried.&mdash;Scene
+ at Tower Hill.&mdash;Fate of the conspirators. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XIX. <br /> London under Charles II.&mdash;Condition and
+ appearance of the <br /> thoroughfares.&mdash;Coffee is first drunk in
+ the capital.&mdash;Taverns and <br /> their frequenters.&mdash;The city
+ by night.&mdash;Wicked people do creep <br /> about.&mdash;Companies of
+ young gentlemen.&mdash;The Duke of Monmouth kills <br /> a beadle.&mdash;Sir
+ Charles Sedley's frolic.&mdash;Stately houses of the <br /> nobility.&mdash;St.
+ James's Park.&mdash;Amusement of the town.&mdash;At Bartholomew <br />
+ Fair.&mdash;Bull, bear, and dog fights.&mdash;Some quaint sports. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XX. <br /> Court customs in the days of the merry monarch.&mdash;Dining
+ in public.&mdash;The <br /> Duke of Tuscany's supper to the king.&mdash;Entertainment
+ of guests by <br /> mountebanks.&mdash;Gaming at court.&mdash;Lady
+ Castlemaine's losses.&mdash;A fatal <br /> duel.&mdash;Dress of the
+ period.&mdash;Riding-habits first seen.&mdash;His majesty <br /> invents
+ a national costume.&mdash;Introduction of the penny post.&mdash;Divorce
+ <br /> suits are known.&mdash;Society of Antiquaries.&mdash;Lord
+ Worcester's <br /> inventions.&mdash;The Duchess of Newcastle. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CHAPTER XXI. <br /> A period rich in literature.&mdash;John Milton's
+ early life.&mdash;Writing <br /> "Paradise Lost."&mdash;Its publication
+ and success.&mdash;His later works and <br /> death.&mdash;John Dryden
+ gossips with wits and players.&mdash;Lord Rochester's <br /> revenge.&mdash;Elkanah
+ Settle.&mdash;John Crowne.&mdash;Thomas Otway rich in <br /> miseries.&mdash;Dryden
+ assailed by villains.&mdash;The ingenious Abraham <br /> Cowley.&mdash;The
+ author of "Hudibras."&mdash;Young Will Wycherley and Lady <br />
+ Castlemaine. The story of his marriage.&mdash;Andrew Marvell, poet and
+ <br /> politician.&mdash;John Bunyan. <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Time's flight leaves the king unchanged.&mdash;The Rye House <br />
+ conspiracy.&mdash;Profligacy of the court.&mdash;The three duchesses.&mdash;The
+ king <br /> is taken ill.&mdash;The capital in consternation.&mdash;Dr.
+ Ken questions his <br /> majesty.&mdash;A Benedictine monk is sent for.&mdash;Charles
+ professes catholicity <br /> and receives the Sacraments.&mdash;Farewell
+ to all.&mdash;His last night on <br /> earth.&mdash;Daybreak and death.&mdash;He
+ rests in peace. <br />
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ ROYALTY RESTORED
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ or, LONDON UNDER CHARLES II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Cromwell is sick unto death.&mdash;Fears and suspicions.&mdash;Killing no
+ Murder.&mdash;A memorable storm.&mdash;The end of all.&mdash;Richard Cromwell
+ made Protector.&mdash;He refuses to shed blood.&mdash;Disturbance and
+ dissatisfaction.&mdash;Downfall of Richard.&mdash;Charles Stuart proclaimed
+ king.&mdash;Rejoicement of the nation.&mdash;The king comes into his own.&mdash;Entry
+ into London.&mdash;Public joy and satisfaction.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the 30th of January, 1649, Charles I. was beheaded. In the last days of
+ August in the year of grace 1658, Oliver Cromwell lay sick unto death at
+ the Palace of Whitehall. On the 27th day of June in the previous year, he
+ had, in the Presence of the Judges of the land, the Lord Mayor and
+ Aldermen of the City, and Members of Parliament assembled at Westminster
+ Hall, seated himself on the coronation chair of the Stuarts, assumed the
+ title of Lord Protector, donned a robe of violet velvet, girt his loins
+ with a sword of state, and grasped the sceptre, symbolic of kingly power.
+ From that hour distrust beset his days, his nights were fraught with fear.
+ All his keen and subtle foresight, his strong and restless energies, had
+ since then been exerted in suppressing plots against his power, and
+ detecting schemes against his life, concocted by the Republicans whose
+ liberty he had betrayed, and by the Royalists whose king he had beheaded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after he had assumed the title of Lord High Protector, a most daring
+ pamphlet, openly advocating his assassination, was circulated in vast
+ numbers throughout the kingdom. It was entitled "Killing no Murder," and
+ was dedicated in language outrageously bold to His Highness Oliver
+ Cromwell. "To your Highness justly belongs the honour of dying for the
+ people," it stated, "and it cannot but be an unspeakable consolation to
+ you, in the last moments of your life, to consider with how much benefit
+ to the world you are likely to leave it. It is then only, my lord, the
+ titles you now usurp will be truly yours; you will then be, indeed, the
+ deliverer of your country, and free it from a bondage little inferior to
+ that from which Moses delivered his, you will then be that true reformer
+ which you would now be thought; religion shall then be restored, liberty
+ asserted, and Parliaments have those privileges they have sought for. All
+ this we hope from your Highness's happy expiration. To hasten this great
+ good is the chief end of my writing this paper; and if it have the effects
+ I hope it will, your Highness will quickly be out of the reach of men's
+ malice, and your enemies will only be able to wound you in your memory,
+ which strokes you will not feel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The possession of life becomes dearest when its forfeiture is threatened,
+ and therefore Cromwell took all possible means to guard against treachery&mdash;the
+ only foe he feared, and feared exceedingly. "His sleeps were disturbed
+ with the apprehensions of those dangers the day presented unto him in the
+ approaches of any strange face, whose motion he would most fixedly
+ attend," writes James Heath, gentleman, in his "Chronicles," published in
+ 1675. "Above all, he very carefully observed such whose mind or aspect
+ were featured with any chearful and debonair lineaments; for such he boded
+ were they that would despatch him; to that purpose he always went secretly
+ armed, both offensive and defensive; and never stirred without a great
+ guard. In his usual journey between Whitehall and Hampton Court, by
+ several roads, he drove full speed in the summer time, making such a dust
+ with his life-guard, part before and part behinde, at a convenient
+ distance, for fear of choaking him with it, that one could hardly see for
+ a quarter of an hour together, and always came in some private way or
+ other." The same authority, in his "Life of Cromwell," states of him, "It
+ was his constant custom to shift and change his lodging, to which he
+ passed through twenty several locks, and out of which he had four or five
+ ways to avoid pursuit." Welwood, in his "Memoirs," adds the Protector wore
+ a coat of mail beneath his dress, and carried a poniard under his cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was this all. According to the "Chronicle of the late Intestine War,"
+ Cromwell "would sometimes pretend to be merry, and invite persons, of whom
+ he had some suspicion, to his cups, and then drill out of their open
+ hearts such secrets as he wisht for. He had freaks also to divert the
+ vexations of his misgiving thoughts, calling on by the beat of drum his
+ footguards, like a kennel of hounds to snatch away the scraps and reliques
+ of his table. He said every man's hand was against him, and that he ran
+ daily into further perplexities, out of which it was impossible to
+ extricate, or secure himself therein, without running into further danger;
+ so that he began to alter much in the tenour of his former converse, and
+ to run and transform into the manners of the ancient tyrants, thinking to
+ please and mitigate his own tortures with the sufferings of others."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now the fate his vigilance had hitherto combated at last overtook him
+ in a manner impossible to evade. He was attacked by divers infirmities,
+ but for some time made no outward sign of his suffering, until one day
+ five physicians came and waited on him, as Dr. George Bate states in his
+ ELENCHUS MOTUUM NUPERORUM. And one of them, feeling his pulse, declared
+ his Highness suffered from an intermittent fever; hearing which "he looked
+ pale, fell into a cold sweat, almost fainted away, and orders himself to
+ be carried to bed." His fright, however, was but momentary. He was
+ resolved to live. He had succeeded in raising himself to a position of
+ vast power, but had failed in attaining the great object of his ambition&mdash;the
+ crowned sovereignty of the nation he had stirred to its centre, and
+ conquered to its furthest limits. Brought face to face with death, his
+ indomitable will, which had shaped untoward circumstances to his accord
+ with a force like unto fate itself, now determined to conquer his shadowy
+ enemy which alone intercepted his path to the throne. Therefore as he lay
+ in bed he said to those around him with that sanctity of speech which had
+ cloaked his cruellest deeds and dissembled his most ambitious designs, "I
+ would be willing to live to be further serviceable to God and his people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As desires of waking hours are answered in sleep, so in response to his
+ nervous craving for life he had delusive assurances of health through the
+ special bounty of Providence. He was therefore presently able to announce
+ he "had very great discoveries of the Lord to him in his sickness, and
+ hath some certainty of being restored;" as Fleetwood, his son-in-law,
+ wrote on the 24th of August in this same year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, when one of the physicians came to him next morning, the High
+ Protector said, "Why do you look sad?" To which the man of lore replied
+ evasively, "So it becomes anyone who had the weighty care of his life and
+ health upon him." Then Cromwell to this purpose spoke: "You think I shall
+ die; I tell you I shall not die this bout; I am sure on't. Don't think I
+ am mad. I speak the words of truth upon surer grounds than Galen or your
+ Hippocrates furnish you with. God Almighty himself hath given that answer,
+ not to my prayers alone, but also to the prayers of those who entertain a
+ stricter commerce and greater intimacy with him. Ye may have skill in the
+ nature of things, yet nature can do more than all physicians put together,
+ and God is far above nature." The doctor besought him to rest, and left
+ the room. Outside he met one of his colleagues, to whom he gave it as his
+ opinion their patient had grown light-headed, and he repeated the words
+ which Cromwell had spoken. "Then," said his brother-physician, "you are
+ certainly a stranger in this house; don't you know what was done last
+ night? The chaplain and all their friends being dispersed into several
+ parts of the palace have prayed to God for his health, and they all heard
+ the voice of God saying, 'He will recover,' and so they are all certain of
+ it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never, indeed, was there a greater stock of prayers going on for any
+ man," as Thurlow, his secretary, writes. So sure were those around him
+ that Providence must hearken to and grant the fulfilment of such desires
+ as they thought well to express, that, as Thomas Goodwin, one of
+ Cromwell's chaplains, said, "We asked not for the Protector's life, for we
+ were assured He had too great things for this man to do, to remove him
+ yet; but we prayed for his speedy recovery, because his life and presence
+ were so necessary to divers things then of great moment to be despatched."
+ When this Puritanical fanatic was presently disappointed, Bishop Burnet
+ narrates "he had the impudence to say to God, 'Thou hast deceived us.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the Protector lay writhing in pain and terror. His mind was
+ sorely troubled at remembrance of the last words spoken by his daughter
+ Elizabeth, who had threatened judgments upon him because of his refusal to
+ save the King; whilst his body was grievously racked with a tertian fever,
+ and a foul humour which, beginning in his foot, worked its way steadily to
+ his heart. Moreover, some insight regarding his future seemed given to him
+ in his last days, for he appeared, as Ludlow, his contemporary, states,
+ "above all concerned for the reproaches he saw men would cast upon his
+ name, in tramping upon his ashes when dead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 30th of August his danger became evident even to himself, and all
+ hope of life left him. For hours after the certain approach of death
+ became undeniably certain, he remained quiet and speechless, seemingly
+ heedless of the exhortation and prayers of his chaplains, till suddenly
+ turning to one of them, he whispered, "Tell me, is it possible to fall
+ from grace?" The preacher had a soothing reply ready: "It is not," he
+ answered. "Then," exclaimed this unhappy man, whose soul was red with the
+ blood of thousands of his countrymen, "I am safe, for I know I was once in
+ grace." Anon he cries out, whilst tossing wildly on his bed, "Lord,
+ although I am a miserable and a wretched creature, I am in covenant with
+ Thee through grace, and I may and will come to Thee for Thy people. Pardon
+ such as desire to trample upon the dust of a poor worm. And give us a good
+ night if it be Thy pleasure. Amen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now the 2nd of September. As the evening of that day approached he
+ fell into a stupor, and those who watched him thought the end had come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within the darkened chamber in Whitehall all was silence and gloom;
+ without all was tumult and fear. Before the gates of the palace a
+ turbulent crowd of soldiers and citizens had gathered in impatient
+ anxiety. Those he had raised to power, those whose fortunes depended on
+ his life, were steeped in gloom; those whose principles he had outraged by
+ his usurpation, those whose position he had crushed by his sway, rejoiced
+ at heart. Not only the capital, but the whole nation, was divided into
+ factions which one strong hand alone had been able to control; and terror,
+ begotten by dire remembrances of civil war and bloodshed, abode with all
+ lovers of peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As evening closed in, the elements appeared in unison with the distracted
+ condition of the kingdom. Dark clouds, seeming of ominous import to men's
+ minds, gathered in the heavens, to be presently torn asunder and hurried
+ in wild flight by tempestuous winds across the troubled sky. As night
+ deepened, the gale steadily increased, until it raged in boundless fury
+ above the whole island and the seas that rolled around its shores. In town
+ houses rocked on their foundations, turrets and steeples were flung from
+ their places; in the country great trees were uprooted, corn-stacks
+ levelled to the ground, and winter fruits destroyed; whilst at sea ships
+ sank to rise no more. This memorable storm lasted all night, and continued
+ until three o'clock next afternoon, when Cromwell expired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His body was immediately embalmed, but was of necessity interred in great
+ haste. Westminster Abbey, the last home of kings and princes, was selected
+ as the fittest resting-place for the regicide. Though it was impossible to
+ honour his remains by stately ceremonials, his followers were not content
+ to let the occasion of his death pass with-out commemoration. They
+ therefore had a waxen image of him made, which they resolved to surround
+ with all the pomp and circumstances of royalty. For this purpose they
+ carried it to Somerset House&mdash;one of the late King's palaces&mdash;and
+ placed it on a couch of crimson velvet beneath a canopy of state. Upon its
+ shoulders they hung a purple mantle, in its right hand they placed a
+ golden sceptre, and by its side they laid an imperial crown, probably the
+ same which, according to Welwood, the Protector had secretly caused to be
+ made and conveyed to Whitehall with a view to his coronation. The walls
+ and ceiling of the room in which the effigy lay were covered by sable
+ velvet; the passages leading to it crowded with soldiery. After a few
+ weeks the town grew tired of this sight, when the waxen image was taken to
+ another apartment, hung with rich velvets and golden tissue, and otherwise
+ adorned to symbolize heaven, when it was placed upon a throne, clad "in a
+ shirt of fine Holland lace, doublet and breeches of Spanish fashion with
+ great skirts, silk stockings, shoe-strings and gaiters suitable, and black
+ Spanish leather shoes." Over this attire was flung a cloak of purple
+ velvet, and on his head was placed a crown with many precious stones. The
+ room was then lit, as Ludlow narrates, "by four or five hundred candles
+ set in flat shining candlesticks, so placed round near the roof that the
+ light they gave seemed like the rays of the sun, by all which he was
+ represented to be now in a state of glory." Lest, indeed, there should be
+ any doubt as to the place where his soul abode, Sterry, the Puritan
+ preacher, imparted the information to all, that the Protector "now sat
+ with Christ at the right hand of the Father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this pomp and state in no may overawed the people, who, by pelting
+ with mire Cromwell's escutcheon placed above the great gate of Somerset
+ House gave evidence of the contempt in which they held his memory. After a
+ lapse of over two months from the day of his death, the effigy was carried
+ to Westminster Abbey with more than regal ceremony, the expenses of his
+ lying-in-state and of his funeral procession amounting, as stated by
+ Walker and Noble, to upwards of L29,000. "It was the joyfullest funeral I
+ ever saw," writes Evelyn, "for there were none that cried but dogs, which
+ the soldiers hooted away with a barbarous noise, drinking and taking
+ tobacco as they went."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little while before his death Cromwell had named his eldest surviving
+ son, Richard, as his successor, and he was accordingly declared Protector,
+ with the apparent consent of the council, soldiers, and citizens. Nor did
+ the declaration cause any excitement, "There is not a dog who wags his
+ tongue, so profound is the calm which we are in," writes Thurlow to
+ Oliver's second son, Henry, then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. But if the
+ nation in its dejection made no signs of resistance, neither did it give
+ any indications of satisfaction, and Richard was proclaimed "with as few
+ expressions of joy as had ever been observed on a like occasion." For a
+ brief while a stupor seemed to lull the factious party spirit which was
+ shortly to plunge the country into fresh difficulties. The Cromwellians
+ and Republicans foresaw resistless strife, and the Royalists quietly and
+ hopefully abided results.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor had they long to wait. In the new Parliament assembled in January,
+ 1659, the Republicans showed themselves numerous and bold beyond measure,
+ and hesitated to recognise Richard Cromwell as successor to the
+ Protectorate. However, on the 14th of the following month the Cromwellians
+ gained the upper hand, when Richard was confirmed in his title of "Lord
+ Protector, and First Magistrate of England, Scotland, and Ireland, with
+ all the territories depending thereon." Further discussion quickly
+ followed. "One party thinks the Protectorate cannot last; the other that
+ the Republican cannot raise itself again; the indifferent hope that both
+ will be right. It is easy to foretell the upshot," writes Hyde. The
+ disunion spread rapidly and widely; not only was the Parliament divided
+ against itself, but so likewise was the army; and the new Protector had
+ neither the courage nor the ability to put down strife with a strong hand.
+ Richard Cromwell was a man of peaceful disposition, gentle manners and
+ unambitious mind, whom fate had forced into a position for which he was in
+ no way fitted. By one of those strange contradictions which nature
+ sometimes produces, he differed in all things from his father; for not
+ only was he pleasure-loving, joyous, and humane, but he was, moreover, a
+ Royalist at heart, and continued in friendship with the Cavaliers up to
+ the period of his proclamation as Protector. It has been stated that,
+ falling on his knees, he entreated his father to spare the life of Charles
+ I.; it is certain he remained inactive whilst the civil wars devastated
+ the land; and there is evidence to show that, during the seven months and
+ twenty-eight days of his Protectorship, he shrank from the perpetration of
+ cruelty and crime. Accordingly, when those who had at first supported his
+ authority eventually conspired against him, he refrained from using his
+ power to crush them. At this his friends were wrath. "It is time to look
+ about you," said Lord Howard, speaking with the bluntness of a friend.
+ "Empire and command are not now the question. Your person, your life are
+ in peril. You are the son of Cromwell; show yourself worthy to be his son.
+ This business requires a bold stroke, and must be supported by a good
+ head. Do not suffer yourself to be daunted. I will rid you of your
+ enemies: do you stand by me, and only back my zeal for your honour with
+ your name; my head shall answer for the consequences."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Colonel Ingoldsby seconded the advice Lord Howard gave, but Richard
+ Cromwell hearkened to neither. "I have never done anybody any harm, and
+ never will," said he, "will not have a drop of blood spilt for the
+ preservation of my greatness, which is a burden to me." At this Lord
+ Howard was indignant. "Do you think," he asked, "this moderation of yours
+ will repair the wrong your family has committed by its elevation?
+ Everybody knows that by violence your father procured the death of the
+ late king, and kept his sons in banishment: mercy in the present state of
+ affairs is unreasonable. Lay aside this pussillanimity; every moment is
+ precious; your enemies spend the time in acting which we waste in
+ consulting." "Talk no more of it," answered the Protector. "I am thankful
+ for your friendship, but violent counsels suit not with me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The climax was at hand; his fall was but a question of time. "A wonderfull
+ and suddaine change in ye face of ye publiq," writes Evelyn, on the 25th
+ of April, 1659. "Ye new Protector Richard slighted; several pretenders and
+ parties strove for the Government; all anarchy and confusion. Lord have
+ mercy on us!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the month of May had expired, the House of Commons commissioned two
+ of its members to bid Richard Cromwell leave the palace of Whitehall, and
+ obtain his signature to a deed wherein he acknowledged complete submission
+ to Parliament. His brief inglorious reign was therefore at an end. "As
+ with other men," he wrote to the House of Commons, "I expect protection
+ from the present Government: I do hold myself obliged to demean myself
+ with all the peaceableness under it, and to procure, to the utmost of my
+ power, that all in whom I have any interest to do the same." He retired
+ into Hampshire, where he dwelt as a private gentleman. His brother Henry
+ resigned his position as Lord Lieutenant of Ireland and settled in
+ Cambridgeshire. From this time the name of Cromwell was no longer a power
+ in the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During two years subsequent to the death of Oliver the government of
+ England underwent various changes, and the kingdom suffered many
+ disorders; until, being heartily sick of anarchy, the people desired a
+ king might once more reign over them accordingly, they turned their eyes
+ towards the son of him whom "the boldest villany that ever any nation saw"
+ had sent to the block. And the time being ripe, Charles Stuart, then an
+ exile in Breda, despatched Sir John Grenville with royal letters to both
+ Houses of Parliament, likewise to the Lord Mayor of London and members of
+ the Common Council, to Monk, commander of the forces, and Montagu, admiral
+ of the fleet. These letters were received with so universal a joy and
+ applause, that Parliament forthwith ordained Charles Stuart should be
+ proclaimed "the most potent, mighty, and undoubted King of England,
+ Scotland and Ireland." Moreover, both Houses agreed that an honourable
+ body of Commissioners, all men of great quality and birth, should be sent
+ to the king with letters, humbly begging his majesty would be pleased to
+ hasten his long-desired return into England. And because they knew full
+ well the royal exchequer was empty, Parliament ordered these noble
+ gentlemen to carry with them a present of fifty thousand pieces of gold to
+ the king, together with ten thousand to his brother of York, and five
+ thousand to his brother of Gloucester. Nor was the City of London
+ backwards in sending expressions of loyalty and tokens of homage and
+ devotion; to evince which twenty valiant men and worthy citizens were
+ despatched with messages of goodwill towards him, and presents in gold to
+ the amount of twelve thousand pounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And presently Admiral Montagu arriving with his fleet upon the coast of
+ Holland, awaited his majesty near Scheveling; and all things being in
+ readiness the king with his royal brothers and a most noble train set sail
+ for England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It came to pass that on the 25th day of May, 1660, a vast concourse of
+ nobility, gentry, and citizens had assembled at Dover to meet and greet
+ their sovereign king, Charles II., on his landing. On the fair morning of
+ that day a sound of cannon thundering from the castle announced that the
+ fleet, consisting of "near forty sail of great men-of-war," which conveyed
+ his majesty to his own, was in sight; whereon an innumerable crowd betook
+ its joyful way to the shore. The sun was most gloriously bright, the sky
+ cloudless, the sea calm. Far out upon the blue horizon white-winged ships
+ could be clearly discerned. By three o'clock in the afternoon they had
+ reached the harbour, when the king, embarking in a galley most richly
+ adorned, was rowed to shore. Then cannon roared once more from the castle,
+ and were answered from the beach; bells rang from church towers, and a
+ mighty shout went up from the hearts of the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of these rejoicings Charles II. landed, and the gallant
+ General Monk, who had been mainly instrumental in bringing his royal
+ master to the throne without loss of blood, now fell upon his knees to
+ greet his majesty. The king raised the general from the ground, embraced
+ and kissed him. Then the nobility hastened to pay their duty likewise, and
+ the Mayor and Aldermen of Dover presented him with a most loyal address.
+ And presently, with the roar of cannon, the clangour of bells, the sound
+ of music, and the shouts of a great multitude ringing in his ears, the
+ king advanced on his way towards Canterbury. At the gates of this ancient
+ city he was met by the mayor and aldermen, and was presented by them with
+ a golden tankard, Here he spent the following day, which being Sunday, he
+ went with a great train to the cathedral, where service according to the
+ Church of England, long disused by the Puritans, was restored, to the
+ satisfaction of many.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Setting out from Canterbury on Monday, the 29th of May&mdash;which was,
+ moreover, the anniversary of his birth&mdash;he journeyed to Blackheath,
+ where he reviewed the forces drawn up with great pomp and military
+ splendour to greet him, and bestowed many gracious expressions on them.
+ Then, having received assurances of their loyal homage through their
+ commander, Colonel Knight, he turned towards London town. And the nearer
+ he approached, the more dense became crowds thronging to meet him; the
+ fields on either side the long white road being filled with persons of all
+ conditions, who cheered him lustily. As he passed they flung leaves of
+ trees and sweet May flowers beneath his horse's feet, and waved green
+ boughs on high, And when he came to St. George's Fields, there was my lord
+ mayor in his robes of new velvet, wearing his collar of wrought gold, and
+ attended by his aldermen in brave apparel likewise. Going down on his
+ knees my lord mayor presented the king with the city sword, which his
+ majesty with some happy expressions of confidence gave back into his good
+ keeping, having first struck him with it upon the shoulder and bade him
+ rise up Sir Thomas Allen. Whereon that worthy man rose to his feet and
+ conducted the king to a large and richly adorned pavilion, and entertained
+ him at a splendid collation, it being then one of the clock. And being
+ refreshed his majesty set forth again, and entered the city, which had
+ never before shown so brave and goodly an appearance as on this May day,
+ when all the world seemed mad with joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From London Bridge even to Whitehall Palace the way was lined on one side
+ by the train-bands of the city, and on the other by the city companies in
+ their rich livery gowns; to which were added a number of gentlemen
+ volunteers, all in white doublets, commanded by Sir John Stanel. Across
+ the streets hung garlands of spring flowers that made the air most sweet,
+ and at the corners thereof were arches of white hawthorn in full bloom,
+ bedecked with streamers of gay colours. From wooden railed balconies,
+ jutting windows, and quaint gables hung fair tapestries, rich silks, and
+ stuffs of brilliant hues; and from the high red chimneys, grey turrets,
+ and lofty spires, floated flags bearing the royal arms of England, and
+ banners inscribed with such mottoes as loyalty and affection could
+ suggest. The windows and galleries were filled with ladies of quality in
+ bright dresses; the roofs and scaffolding, with citizens of all classes,
+ who awaited with eager and joyous faces to salute their lord and king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And presently, far down the line of streets, a sound was heard of
+ innumerable voices cheering most lustily, which every minute became nearer
+ and louder, till at last a blare of trumpets was distinguished, followed
+ by martial music, and the tramp and confusion of a rushing crowd which
+ suddenly parted on all sides. Then there burst on view the first sight of
+ that brave and glorious cavalcade to the number of twenty thousand, which
+ ushered the king back unto his own. First came a troop of young and comely
+ gentlemen, three hundred in all, representing the pride and valour of the
+ kingdom, wearing cloth of silver doublets and brandishing naked swords
+ which flashed in the sunlight. Then another company, less by a hundred in
+ number, habited in rich velvet coats, their footmen clad in purple
+ liveries; and next a goodly troop under the command of Sir John Robinson,
+ all dressed in buff coats with cloth of silver sleeves, and green scarves
+ most handsome to behold. These were followed by a brave troop in blue
+ doublets adorned with silver lace, carrying banners of red silk fringed
+ with gold. Then came trumpets, and seven footmen in sea-green and silver
+ liveries, bearing banners of blue silk, followed by a troop in grey and
+ blue to the number of two hundred and twenty, and led by the most noble
+ the Earl of Northampton. After various other companies, all brave in
+ apparel, came two trumpets bearing his majesty's arms, followed by the
+ sheriffs' men in red cloaks and silver lace, and by a great body of
+ gentlemen in black velvet coats with gold chains. Next rode six hundred
+ brave citizens, twelve ministers, the king's life guards, led by Sir
+ Gilbert Gerrard, the city marshals with eight footmen, the city waits and
+ officers, the sheriffs and aldermen in scarlet gowns, the maces and
+ heralds in great splendour, the lord mayor carrying a naked sword in his
+ strong right hand, the Duke of Buckingham, and General Monk, soon to be
+ created Duke of Albermarle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now other heralds sound their trumpets with blasts that make all hearts
+ beat quicker; church bells ring far louder than before; voices are raised
+ to their highest pitch, excitement reaches its zenith, for here, mounted
+ on a stately horse caparisoned in royal purple and adorned with gold,
+ rides King Charles himself; on his right hand his brother of York, on his
+ left his brother of Gloucester. Handkerchiefs are waved, flowers are flung
+ before his way, words of welcome fall upon his ear, in answer to which he
+ bows with stately grace, smiles most pleasantly, and gives such signs of
+ delight as "cheared the hearts of all loyal subjects even to extasie and
+ transportation." Last of all came five regiments of cavalry, with back,
+ breast, and head piece, which "diversified the show with delight and
+ terrour." John Evelyn stood in the Strand and watched the procession pass,
+ when that worthy man thanked God the king had been restored without
+ bloodshed, and by the very army that had rebelled against him. "For such a
+ restauration was never mention'd in any history ancient or modern, since
+ the returne of the Jews from the Babylonish captivity; nor so joyfull a
+ day and so bright ever seene in this nation, this hapning when to expect
+ or effect it was past all human policy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For full seven hours this "most pompous show that ever was" wound its way
+ through the city, until at nine of the clock in the evening it brought his
+ majesty to the palace of Whitehall, where the late king had "laid down his
+ sacred head to be struck off upon a block," almost twelve years before.
+ Then the lord mayor and his aldermen took their goodly leave, and the king
+ entered into the banquet hall, where the lords and commons awaited him,
+ and where an address was made to him by the Earl of Manchester, Speaker to
+ the House of Peers, congratulating him on his miraculous preservation and
+ happy restoration to his crown and dignity after so long and so severe a
+ suppression of his just right and title. Likewise his lordship besought
+ his majesty to be the upright assertor of the laws and maintainer of the
+ liberties of his subjects. "So," said the noble earl, "shall judgment run
+ down like a river, and justice like a mighty stream, and God, the God of
+ your mercy, who hath so miraculously preserved you, will establish your
+ throne in righteousness and peace." Then the king made a just and brief
+ reply, and retired to supper and to rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The worthy citizens, however, were not satisfied that their rejoicements
+ should end here, and "as soon as night came," says Dr. Bate, "an
+ artificial day was begun again, the whole city seeming to be one great
+ light, as, indeed, properly it was a luminary of loyalty, the bonfires
+ continuing till daybreak, fed by a constant supply of wood, and maintained
+ with an equal excess of gladness and fewel." Wine flowed from public
+ fountains, volleys of shot were discharged from houses of the nobility,
+ drums and other musical instruments played in the streets, citizens danced
+ most joyfully in open places, and the effigy of Cromwell was burned,
+ together with the arms of the Commonwealth with expressions of great
+ delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The story of the king's escape.&mdash;He accepts the Covenant and lands in
+ Scotland.&mdash;Crowned at Scone.&mdash;Proclaimed king at Carlisle.&mdash;The
+ battle of Worcester.&mdash;Bravery of Charles.&mdash;Disloyalty of the Scottish
+ cavalry.&mdash;The Royalists defeated.&mdash;The King's flight.&mdash;Seeks refuge
+ in Boscobel Wood.&mdash;The faithful Pendrells.&mdash;Striving to cross the
+ Severn.&mdash;Hiding in an oak tree.&mdash;Sheltered by Master Lane.&mdash;Sets out
+ with Mistress Lane.&mdash;Perilous escapes.&mdash;On the road.&mdash;The king is
+ recognised.&mdash;Strange adventures.&mdash;His last night in England.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ That King Charles had been miraculously preserved, as my Lord Manchester
+ set forth, there can be no doubt. His courageous efforts to regain the
+ Crown at the battle of Worcester and his subsequent escapes from the
+ vigilant pursuits of the Cromwellian soldiers, would, if set down in
+ justice and with detail, present a story more entertaining than any
+ romance ever written. Here they must of necessity be mentioned with
+ brevity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1645, Charles I., having suffered the loss of many great
+ battles, became fearful of the danger which threatened his family and
+ himself. He therefore ordered his son Charles, who had already retired
+ into the west, to seek refuge in the Scilly Isles. The prince complied
+ with his desires, and went from thence to Paris, where his mother,
+ Henrietta Maria, had already taken shelter, and, after a short stay with
+ her, travelled to the Hague. Soon after the king was beheaded, the Scots,
+ who regarded that foul act with great abhorrence, invited Charles to come
+ into their kingdom, provided he accepted certain hard conditions, which
+ left the government of all civil business in the hands of Parliament, and
+ the regulation of all religious matters in charge of the Presbyterians. No
+ other prospect of regaining his rights, and of enabling him to fight for
+ his throne presenting itself, he accepted what was known as the Covenant,
+ and landed in Scotland in 1650. He was received with the respect due to a
+ monarch, but placed under the surveillance forced on a prisoner. The
+ fanatical Presbyterians, jealous of that potent influence which his blithe
+ ways exercised over all with whom he associated, neither permitted him to
+ attend the council nor command the army; they, however, preached to him
+ incessantly, admonished him of his sins and those of his parents, guarded
+ him as a captive, and treated him as a puppet. Meanwhile Cromwell, being
+ made aware of his presence in the kingdom, advanced at the head of a
+ powerful body into Scotland, fought and won the battle of Dunbar, stormed
+ and captured Leith, and took his triumphal way towards Edinburgh town.
+ Charles was at this time in Perth, and being impatient at his enforced
+ inaction whilst battles were fought in his name, and lives lost in his
+ cause, made his escape from the Covenanters, with the determination of
+ arousing the Royalists who lay in the north. But the Scots soon overtook
+ and recaptured him. However, this decisive action awoke them to a better
+ understanding of the deference due to his position, and therefore they
+ crowned him at Scone on the first day of the year 1651, with much
+ solemnity, and subsequently made him commander of the army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After spending some months in reorganizing the troops, he boldly declared
+ his intention of marching into England, and fighting the rebel force.
+ Accordingly, on the 31st of July, 1651, he set out from Sterling with an
+ army of between eleven and twelve thousand men. At Carlisle he was
+ proclaimed king, and a declaration was published in his name, granting
+ free grace and pardon to all his subjects in England, of whatever nature
+ or cause their offences, saving Cromwell, Bradshaw and Cooke. He then
+ marched to Lancashire, and on the 23rd of August unfurled the Royal
+ standard at Worcester, amidst the enthusiastic acclamations of his troops
+ and the loyal demonstrations of the citizens. Weary of civil strife,
+ depressed with fear of Cromwell's severities, and distrustful of the
+ Presbyterians, who chiefly composed the young king's army, the Royalists
+ had not gathered to his standard in such numbers as he had anticipated.
+ His troops, since leaving Scotland, had been reinforced merely by two
+ thousand men; but Charles had hopes that fresh recruits would join him
+ when news of the rising got noised abroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Republicans were filled with dismay at the king's determined action,
+ but were prompt to make a counter-move, Accordingly, additional troops
+ were levied, London was left to be defended by volunteers, and Cromwell,
+ heading an army of thirty-four thousand men, marched against the
+ Royalists. On the 28th of August, they drew near Worcester, and on the 3rd
+ of September the battle was fought which will remain for ever famous in
+ the annals of civil war. On the morning of that day, the king, ascending
+ the cathedral tower, saw the enemy's forces advancing towards Worcester:
+ before reaching the city, it was necessary they should cross the Severn,
+ and, in order to prevent this if possible, Charles hurried down and
+ directed that some of his troops, under the command of Montgomery, should
+ defend Powick Bridge; whilst he stationed others under Colonel Pitscottie
+ lower down, at a point of the river towards which the Republicans were
+ marching with pontoons, by means of which they intended to cross. The
+ young king, hopeful of victory and full of enthusiasm, rode speedily out
+ at the head of his troops and placed them at their various stations.
+ Scarcely had he done so, when he became aware that the main body of the
+ enemy had opened an artillery fire on Fort Royal, which guarded the city
+ on the south-east side. He therefore galloped back in hot haste to
+ headquarters, and reconnoitred the advanced posts eastward of the city, in
+ full front of the enemy's fire. Meanwhile Montgomery, having exhausted his
+ ammunition, was obliged to retreat in disorder from Powick Bridge,
+ followed by the Cromwellians. The king now courageously resolved to attack
+ the enemy's camp at Perry Wood, which lay south-east of Worcester.
+ Accordingly he marched out with the flower of his Highland infantry and
+ the English cavaliers, led by the Dukes of Hamilton and Buckingham.
+ Cromwell, seeing this, hastened to intercept the king's march, whereon a
+ fierce battle was bravely fought on either side. Nothing could be more
+ valiant than the conduct of the young king, who showed himself wholly
+ regardless of his life in the fierce struggle for his rights. Twice was
+ his horse shot under him; but increasing danger seemed but to animate him
+ to greater daring. So bravely did his army fight likewise, that the
+ Republicans at first gave way before them. For upwards of four hours the
+ engagement raged with great fierceness. Cromwell subsequently declared it
+ was "as stiff a contest as he had ever seen," and his experience was
+ great. Success seemed now to crown the Royalists, anon to favour the
+ Roundheads. The great crisis of the day at length arrived: the
+ Cromwellians began to waver and give way just as the Royalist cavalry had
+ expended their ammunition; the king had still three thousand Scotch
+ cavalry in the rear under the command of Leslie, who had not yet been
+ called into action. He therefore ordered them to advance; but, to his
+ horror, not one of these men, who had looked on as passive spectators,
+ made a movement. In this hour, when victory or defeat hung upon a thread
+ the Scots ignominiously failed their king. Charles instantly saw he was
+ undone. The English cavalry continued to fight bravely, in their
+ desperation using the butt ends of their muskets; but they were gradually
+ compelled to give way before the enemy, who, seeing their condition, had
+ renewed the attack. The Royalists therefore fell back into the city. When
+ the king re-entered Worcester he saw before him a scene of the most
+ disastrous confusion. Royalists and Republicans encountered and fought
+ each other in every thoroughfare; the air was filled with the report of
+ muskets, the imprecations of soldiers, the groans of wounded men, and the
+ shrieks of women. The streets ran red with blood. At such a sight his
+ heart sank within him, but, manning himself for fresh efforts, he called
+ his troops together and sought to incite them with courage to make a final
+ charge. "I would rather," he cried out, "you would shoot me than keep me
+ alive to see the sad consequences of this fatal day." Those who heard him
+ were disheartened: it was too late to retrieve their heavy losses: most of
+ them refused to heed him; many sought safety in flight. Then the young
+ king's friends, gathering round, besought him to make good his escape; and
+ accordingly, with a sad heart, he rode out of St. Martin's Gate humbled
+ and defeated. In order to cover his retreat from the enemy now advancing,
+ my Lord Cleveland, Sir James Hamilton, Colonel Careless, and some other
+ worthy gentlemen defended Sudbury Gate, towards which the main body of the
+ Republicans approached. They held this position a sufficient time to gain
+ the end for which it was undertaken. But at length the Republicans,
+ forcing open the gate, marched upon the fort, defended by fifteen hundred
+ soldiers under Colonel Drummond. This loyal man refusing to surrender, the
+ fort was speedily stormed; and he and those of his men who survived the
+ attack were mercilessly put to the sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. George Bate gives a quaint and striking picture of what followed.
+ "Deplorable and sad was the countenance of the town after that," writes
+ he; "the victorious soldiers on the one hand killing, breaking into
+ houses, plundering, sacking, roaring, and threatening; on the other hand,
+ the subdued flying, turning their backs to be cut and slashed, and with
+ outstretched hands begging quarter; some, in vain resisting, sold their
+ lives as dear as they could, whilst the citizens to no purpose prayed,
+ lamented, and bewailed. All the streets are strewed with dead and mangled
+ bodies. Here were to be seen some that begged relief, and then again
+ others weltering in their own gore, who desired that at once an end might
+ be put to their lives and miseries. The dead bodies lay unburied for the
+ space of three days or more, which was a loathsome spectacle that
+ increased the horror of the action."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Concerning his subsequent dangers and narrow escapes, the king, in his
+ days of peace and prosperity, was wont to discourse at length, for they
+ had left impressions on his mind which lasted through life. Edward Hyde,
+ Lord Clarendon, his Lord High Chancellor, Dr. George Bate, his learned
+ physician, and Samuel Pepys, Esquire, sometime Surveyor-General to the
+ Victualling Office, have preserved the records of that time of peril, as
+ told by his majesty. True, their various stories differ in minor details,
+ but they agree in principal facts. The king had not ridden many miles from
+ Worcester when he found himself surrounded by about four thousand of his
+ army, including the Scots under the command of Leslie. Though they would
+ not fight for him, they were ready enough to fly with him. At first he
+ thought of betaking himself to Scotland; but having had sad proof of the
+ untrustworthy character of those with whom he travelled, he feared they
+ would further betray him if pursued by the enemy. He therefore resolved to
+ reach London before the news of his defeat arrived thither, and make his
+ escape from thence; but this scheme presented many difficulties. Amongst
+ the persons of quality who accompanied him were my Lord Duke of
+ Buckingham, the Earls of Derby and Lauderdale, and the Lords Wilmot and
+ Talbot. During their journey it fell from my Lord Derby's lips, that when
+ he had been defeated at Wigan, one Pendrell, an honest labourer and a
+ Papist, had sheltered him in Boscobel House, not far distant from where
+ they then rode. Hearing this, the king resolved to trust this same
+ faithful fellow, and for the present seek such refuge as Pendrell could
+ afford. It was not easy, however, for his majesty to escape the Scots; but
+ when night came, he and his gentlemen slipped away from the high road,
+ which the others continued to pursue, and made for Boscobel Wood, led by
+ Charles Giffard, a loyal gentleman and true. The house they sought was
+ situated between Tong Castle and Brewood, in a woody place most fitting
+ for retreat; it was, moreover, six and twenty miles from Worcester, and
+ stood in Shropshire, on the borders of Staffordshire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to gain this haven of rest, it was necessary for them to pass
+ through Stourbridge, where a troop of the Republican army lay quartered.
+ Midnight had fallen ere they reached the town, which was now wrapt in
+ darkness, and was, moreover, perfectly still. The king and his friends,
+ dismounting, led their horses through the echoing streets as softly as
+ possible, being filled the while with dire apprehensions. Safely leaving
+ it, they rode into the wood until they came to the old convent of
+ Whiteladies, once the home of Cistercian nuns, who had long since been
+ driven from their peaceful retreat. The house was now the habitation of
+ the Giffard family, with whom George Pendrell lived as servant. On being
+ aroused, he came forth with a lantern, and admitted them, when Charles
+ Giffard made known to him in whose presence he stood, and acquainted him
+ with their situation. Thereupon the honest fellow promised to serve the
+ king faithfully, and sent immediately for his brothers four: William, who
+ took charge of Boscobel House, not far removed; Humphrey, who was miller
+ at Whiteladies; Richard, who lived at Hobbal Grange; and John, who was a
+ woodman, and dwelt hard by. When they had all arrived, Lord Derby showed
+ them the king's majesty, and besought them for God's sake, for their
+ loyalty's sake, and as they valued all that was high and sacred, to keep
+ him safe, and forthwith seek some place of decent shelter where he might
+ securely lurk. This they readily swore to compass, though they risked
+ their lives in the attempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It being considered that greater safety lay in the king being unattended,
+ his loyal friends departed from him with many prayers and hopes for a
+ joyful reunion: all of them save my Lords Wilmot and Buckingham set out to
+ join Leslie's company, that they might proceed together towards Scotland;
+ but they had not marched six miles in company with the Scots when these
+ three thousand men and more were overtaken and were routed by a single
+ troop of the enemy's horse, and my Lord Derby, being taken, was condemned
+ and executed. Lords Wilmot and Buckingham set out for London, to which
+ place it was agreed the king should follow them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When his majesty's friends had departed, the Pendrells undertook to
+ disguise him; towards which end one of them cut the long locks reaching
+ his shoulders, another rubbed his hands and face with dust, and a third
+ brought him a suit of clothes. "The habit of the king," says Pepys, "was a
+ very greasy old grey steeple-crowned hat, with the brims turned up,
+ without lining or hatband, the sweat appearing two inches deep through it
+ round the band place; a green cloth jump-coat, threadbare, even to the
+ threads being worn white, and breeches of the same, with long knees down
+ to the garter; with an old sweaty leathern doublet, a pair of white
+ flannel stockings next to his legs, and upon them a pair of old green yarn
+ stockings, all worn and darned at the knees, with their feet cut off: his
+ shoes were old, all slashed for the ease of his feet, with little rolls of
+ paper between his toes to keep them from galling; and an old coarse shirt,
+ patched both at the neck and hands, of that very coarse sort which go by
+ the name of nogging shirts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Charles was attired in this fashion, Richard Pendrell opened a back
+ door and led him out into the wood; not a moment too soon, for within half
+ an hour Colonel Ashenhurst, with a company of Cromwell's soldiers, rode up
+ to Whiteladies, rushed into the house, searched every chamber and secret
+ place, pulled down the wainscoting, and otherwise devastated the mansion
+ in the search for the king. A damp cold September morning now lengthened
+ to a day of gloom and depression. Rain fell in heavy torrents, dripped
+ from the leafless branches of trees, and saturated the thick undergrowth
+ and shrubs where his majesty lay hidden. Owing to the condition of the
+ weather, the soldiers neglected to search Boscobel Wood; and, after
+ uttering many threats and imprecations, withdrew from Whiteladies. When he
+ considered himself quite alone, Richard Pendrell ventured forth, taking
+ with him a billhook, that if observed he might seem engaged in trimming
+ hedges; and drawing near the spot where his majesty lay, assured him of
+ his safety. Later on he besought an old woman, his neighbour, to take
+ victuals into the wood to a labourer she would find there. Without
+ hesitation the good woman carried some eggs, bread, butter, and milk
+ towards the spot indicated to her. On seeing her the king was much alarmed
+ fearing recognition and dreading her garrulity; wherefore he said to her:
+ "Can you be true to anyone who hath served the king?" Upon which she
+ readily made answer: "Yes, sir; I'd die sooner than betray you." Being
+ reassured at this, he ate heartily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When night fell, Richard brought him into the house again, and the king,
+ now abandoning his intention of proceeding to London, expressed his
+ anxiety to reach Wales where he had many friends, and which afforded him
+ ready opportunities of escaping from the kingdom. Pendrell expressed
+ himself willing to conduct him thither. Accordingly, about nine of the
+ clock, they set out with the determination of crossing the Severn,
+ intending to pass over a ferry between Bridgenorth and Shrewsbury. When
+ they had walked some hours they drew near a water-mill. "We could see the
+ miller," said the king in relating the story, "as I believe, sitting at
+ the mill-door, he being in white clothes, it being a very dark night. He
+ called out sturdily, 'Who goes there?' Upon which Richard Pendrell
+ answered, 'Neighbours going home,' or suchlike words. Whereupon the miller
+ cried out: 'If you be neighbours, stand, or I will knock you down.' Upon
+ which, we believing there was company in the house, Richard bade me follow
+ him close, and he ran to a gate that went up a dirty lane up a hill. The
+ miller cried out: 'Rogues&mdash;rogues!' And thereupon some men came out
+ of the mill after us, which I believe were soldiers; so we fell a-running,
+ both of us up the lane as long as we could run, it being very deep and
+ very dirty, till at last I bade him leap over a hedge, and lie still to
+ hear if anybody followed us&mdash;which we did, and continued lying down
+ upon the ground about half an hour, when, hearing nobody come, we
+ continued our way."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This led to the house of an honest gentleman named Woolfe, living at
+ Madeley, who was a Catholic, and loyal to his king, and as such was known
+ to the Pendrells. When they drew near to his house, Richard, leaving his
+ majesty in a field, went forward and asked this worthy man if he would
+ shelter one who had taken part in the battle of Worcester; whereon he made
+ answer he would not venture his neck for any man unless it were the king
+ himself, upon which Pendrell made known to him it was his majesty who
+ sought refuge from him. Mr. Woolfe came out immediately and carried the
+ king by a back way into a barn, where he hid him for the day, it being
+ considered unsafe for him to stay a longer period there, as two companies
+ of militia were at that time stationed in the town, and were very likely
+ to search the house at any minute. Moreover he advised his majesty by no
+ means to adventure crossing the Severn, as the strictest guard was then
+ kept at the ferries to prevent any Royalist fugitives from escaping into
+ Wales. The king was therefore obliged to retrace his steps, and now sought
+ Boscobel House, not far distant from his first resting-place of
+ Whiteladies. Arriving there, he remained secreted in the wood, whilst
+ Richard went to see if soldiers were in occupation of the dwelling. There
+ was no one there, however, but Colonel Careless, the same good man and
+ true who had helped to keep Sudbury Gate whilst Charles made his escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Colonel had been hiding in the forest, and, being sore pressed by
+ hunger, had come to beg a little bread. Being informed where the king was,
+ he came forth with great joy, and, the house not being considered a safe
+ refuge, they both climbed into the branches of a leafy oak, situated in an
+ open part of the wood, from whence they could see all round them. They
+ carried with them some bread and cheese and small beer, and stayed there
+ that day. "While we were in the tree," says the king, "we saw soldiers
+ going up and down in the thicket of the wood, searching for persons
+ escaped, we seeing them now and then peeping out of the wood." When this
+ danger had passed away, the king, worn out by his sore fatigues, laid his
+ head on his friend's breast and slept in his arms. At night they
+ descended, and going to Boscobel House, were shown a secret hiding-place,
+ such as were then to be found in the mansions of all Catholic families,
+ called the priests' hole a little confined closet built between two walls,
+ in the principal stack of chimneys, and having a couple of exits for the
+ better escape of those compelled to seek its shelter. Here the king rested
+ in peace for a day and a night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Humphrey Pendrell went into Shifnal to pay his taxes; and it
+ being known he had come from Whiteladies, he was questioned closely as to
+ whether he knew aught of Charles Stuart. On stoutly denying all knowledge
+ of him, he was told that any man who discovered him would gain a thousand
+ pounds, but he that sheltered him would suffer death without mercy; these
+ being the terms of a proclamation just issued. This the honest miller on
+ his return narrated to the king, swearing roundly he would run all risks
+ for his sake. It chanced at this time one of the Pendrells heard that my
+ Lord Wilmot who had not been able to make his way to London, was hiding in
+ a very secure place, at the house of a gentleman named Whitegrave, above
+ seven miles distant. This coming to the king's knowledge, he became
+ anxious to see his faithful friend and hold communication with him.
+ Accordingly one of the Pendrells was despatched to request Lord Wilmot to
+ meet his majesty that night, in a field close by Mr. Whitegrave's house.
+ And the time of night being come, the king was impatient of delay; but his
+ feet were sore from the rough shoes he had worn on his journey, so that he
+ was scarce able to walk; therefore he was mounted on Humphrey's
+ mill-horse, and, the four loyal brothers forming a guard, they directed
+ their way towards Moseley. The king's eagerness to see Wilmot being great,
+ he complained of the horse's slow pace. "Can you blame him, my liege,"
+ said Humphrey, who loved a jest, "that he goes heavily, having the weight
+ of three kingdoms on his back?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they had travelled with him a great part of the journey it was
+ thought safer three of them should withdraw themselves. They therefore
+ turned away; but scarcely had they gone when the king, who, being lost in
+ thought, had remained unconscious of their departure, suddenly stopped,
+ and caused John, who remained, to speedily summon them back. When they
+ returned he gave them his hand to kiss, and, with that charm of manner
+ which never failed in winning friends, said to them sadly, "My sorrows
+ make me forget myself. I earnestly thank you all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They kissed his hand heartily, and prayed God to save him. In the days of
+ his prosperity he remembered their kindness and rewarded their loyalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arriving at the trysting place the king found Mr. Whitegrave, a
+ Benedictine monk named Father Huddlestone, Sir John Preston, and his
+ brother awaiting him. It may be mentioned here this monk was destined,
+ many years later, to play an important part in the closing scene of his
+ majesty's life. Mr. Whitegrave conducted Charles with great show of
+ respect to his house, where the king spoke with my Lord Wilmot, feasted
+ well, and rested safe that night. Next morning the worthy host had private
+ notice given that a company of soldiers were on their way to arrest him as
+ one who had served in the king's army. He, being innocent of this charge,
+ did not avoid them, but received them boldly at his door, spoke
+ confidently in his own defence, and referred them to the testimony of his
+ neighbours, whereon they departed quietly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was feared, however, the house was no longer safe, and that another
+ refuge had best be sought for his majesty. Therefore, Father Huddlestone
+ informed the king of an honest gentleman, the owner of a fair estate some
+ six miles removed, who was generous and exceedingly beloved, and the
+ eldest justice of peace in the county of Stafford. This gentleman was
+ named Lane, "a very zealous Protestant, yet he lived with so much civility
+ and candour towards the Catholics, that they would all trust him as much
+ as they would any of their own profession." The king, however, not being
+ willing to surprise this worthy man, immediately despatched the
+ Benedictine to make certain of his welcome; receiving due assurances of
+ which he and Lord Willmot set out by night for Master Lane's mansion,
+ where they were heartily received, and where Charles rested some days in
+ blessed security. Knowing, however, in what risk he placed those who
+ sheltered him, and how vigilant the pursuit after him, he became most
+ anxious for his safe delivery out of the kingdom. To this end it was
+ desirable he should draw near the west coast, and await an opportunity of
+ sailing from thence for France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The members of Master Lane's family then living with him consisted of a
+ son and a daughter: the former a man of fearless courage and integrity,
+ the latter a gentlewoman of good wit and discretion, as will be seen
+ hereafter. Consulting, amongst themselves as to the best means of
+ compassing the king's escape, it was resolved Mistress Lane should visit a
+ kinswoman of hers with whom she had been bred, that had married one
+ Norton, and was now residing within five miles of Bristol. It was likewise
+ decided she should ride on her journey thence behind the king, he being
+ habited in her father's livery, and acting as her servant; and for greater
+ safety her sister and her sister's husband were to accompany them on the
+ road. Mistress Jane Lane then procured from a colonel of the rebel army a
+ passport for herself and her servant, her sister and her brother-in-law,
+ to travel without molestation to her cousin Mistress Norton, who was ready
+ to lie in. With this security Jane set out, her brother bearing them
+ company part of the way, with a hawk upon his fist and two or three
+ spaniels at his heels, which warranted him keeping the king and his
+ friends in sight without seeming to be of their company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first day's journey was not accomplished without an exciting incident.
+ The horse ridden by Mistress Lane and the king&mdash;now bearing the name
+ of William Jackson&mdash;lost a shoe; and being come to Bromsgrove, he
+ must dismount and lead the animal to the village blacksmith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As I was holding my horse's foot," said his majesty, when narrating the
+ story to Mr. Pepys, "I asked the smith what news. He told me that there
+ was no news that he knew of, since the good news of the beating the rogues
+ of the Scots. I asked him whether there was none of the English taken that
+ joined with the Scots, He answered he did not hear if that rogue, Charles
+ Stuart, were taken; but some of the others, he said, were taken. I told
+ him that if that rogue were taken, he deserved to be hanged more than all
+ the rest, for bringing in the Scots. Upon which he said I spoke like an
+ honest man; and so we parted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of the first day's journey they were met by Lord Wilmot at the
+ inn; and he continued to join them wherever they rested at night, without
+ appearing to travel with them by day. Mistress Lane took all possible care
+ to guard the king against recognition, stating at every house of
+ accommodation where they tarried he was "a neighbour's son whom her father
+ had lent her to ride before her in hope that he would the sooner recover
+ from a quartan ague with which he had been miserably afflicted, and was
+ not yet free." Which story served as sufficient excuse for his going to
+ bed betimes, and so avoiding the company of servants. At the end of three
+ days they arrived at their destination. Jane Lane was warmly received by
+ her cousin, and the whole party made heartily welcome. Jane, however, did
+ not entrust her secret to Mistress Norton's keeping, but repeated her tale
+ of the good youth being newly recovered from ague, and desired a chamber
+ might be provided for him, and a good fire made that he might retire early
+ to bed. Her desires being obeyed, the king withdrew, and was served with
+ an excellent good supper by the butler, a worthy fellow named Pope, who
+ had been a trooper in the army of Charles I., of blessed memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The next morning" said the king continuing his strange story, "I arose
+ pretty early, having a very good stomach, and went to the buttery-hatch to
+ get my breakfast, where I found Pope and two or three other men in the
+ room, and we all fell to eating bread and butter, to which he gave us very
+ good ale and sack. And as I was sitting there, there was one that looked
+ like a country fellow sat just by me, who, talking, gave so particular an
+ account of the battle of Worcester to the rest of the company that I
+ concluded he must be one of Cromwell's soldiers. But I, asking how he came
+ to give so good an account of that battle, he told me he was in the King's
+ regiment, by which I thought he meant one Colonel King's regiment. But
+ questioning him further, I perceived he had been in my regiment of Guards,
+ in Major Broughton's company&mdash;that was my Major in the battle. I
+ asked him what kind of man I was; to which he answered by describing
+ exactly both my clothes and my horse, and then, looking upon me, he told
+ me that the king was at least three fingers taller than I. Upon which I
+ made what haste I could out of the buttery, for fear he should indeed know
+ me, as being more afraid when I knew he was one of our own soldiers than
+ when I took him for one of the enemy's. So Pope and I went into the hall,
+ and just as we came into it Mistress Norton was coming by through it; upon
+ which I, plucking off my hat and standing with it in my hand as she passed
+ by, Pope looked very earnestly in my face. But I took no notice of it, but
+ put on my hat again and went away, walking out of the house into the
+ field."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he returned, however, the butler followed him into a private room,
+ and going down on his stiff knees, said, with tears in his old eyes, he
+ was rejoiced to see his majesty in safety. The king affected to laugh at
+ him, and asked him what he meant; but Pope told him he knew him well, for
+ before he was a trooper in his father's service he had been falconer to
+ Sir Thomas Jermyn, groom of the bedchamber to the king when he was a boy.
+ Charles saw it was useless longer to deny himself, and therefore said he
+ believed him to be a very honest man, and besought he would not reveal
+ what he knew to anyone. This the old man readily promised, and faithfully
+ kept his word. Having spent a couple of days at Norton's, the king, by
+ advice of Lord Wilmot, went to the house of a true friend and loyal man,
+ one Colonel Windham, who lived at Trent. This town was notable as a very
+ hotbed of republicanism; a proof of which was afforded his majesty on the
+ very day of his entrance. As he rode into the principal street, still
+ disguised as a waiting man to Mistress Lane, he heard a great ringing of
+ bells, and the tumult of many voices, and saw a vast concourse of people
+ gathered in the churchyard close by. On asking the cause he was informed
+ one of Cromwell's troopers was telling the people he had killed Charles
+ Stuart, whose buff coat he then wore; whereon the rebels rang the church
+ bells, and were about to make a great bonfire for joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having brought him to Trent, Mistress Lane returned home, carrying with
+ her the king's friendship and gratitude, of which he gave her ample proof
+ when he came unto the throne. Charles stayed at Colonel Windham's over a
+ week, whilst that gallant man was secretly striving to hire a ship for his
+ majesty's safe transportation into France. Presently succeeding in this
+ object, the king, yet wearing his livery, and now riding before Mistress
+ Judith Coningsby, cousin of Colonel Windham, started with high hopes for
+ Lyme; but at the last moment the captain of the vessel failed him, and he
+ was again left in a state of painful uncertainty and danger. Lord Wilmot
+ was sent to ascertain the cause of this disappointment, and for greater
+ safety the king rode on to Burport with his friends. Being come to the
+ outskirts of the town, they were alarmed at finding the streets in a state
+ of confusion, and full of Cromwell's soldiers, fifteen hundred of whom
+ were about to embark for Jersey. His majesty's coolness and presence of
+ mind did not fail him; he resolved to ride boldly into the town, and hire
+ a chamber at the best inn. The yard of the hostelry was likewise crowded
+ with troopers; but this did not dismay his majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I alighted," said he, "and taking the horses, thought it the best way to
+ go blundering in among them, and lead them through the middle of the
+ soldiers into the stable; which I did, and they were very angry with me
+ for my rudeness. As soon as I came into the stable I took the bridle off
+ the horses, and called the ostler to me to help me, and to give the horses
+ some oats. And as the hostler was helping me to feed the horses, 'Sure,
+ sir,' says he, 'I know your face?' which was no very pleasant question to
+ me. But I thought the best way was to ask him where he had lived, or
+ whether he had always lived there or no. He told me that he was but newly
+ come thither; that he was born in Exeter, and had been ostler in an inn
+ there, hard by one Mr. Potter's, a merchant in whose house I had lain in
+ the time of the war. So I thought it best to give the fellow no further
+ occasion of thinking where he had seen me, for fear he should guess right
+ at last; therefore I told him, 'Friend, certainly you have seen me then at
+ Mr. Potter's, for I served him a good while above a year.' 'Oh,' says he,
+ 'then I remember you a boy there;' and with that was put off from thinking
+ any more on it, but desired that we might drink a pot of beer together,
+ which I excused by saying that I must go wait on my master, and get his
+ dinner ready for him; but told him that my master was going to London, and
+ would return about three weeks hence, when he would be there, and I would
+ not fail to drink a pot with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king and his friends, having dined at the inn, got word that the
+ master of the ship, suspecting that it was some dangerous employment he
+ had been hired for, absolutely refused to fulfil his contract. Therefore
+ they, being sad at heart and fearful, retraced their steps to Trent, and
+ presently his majesty went further into Sussex, and abode with a staunch
+ Royalist, one Colonel Gunter, who resided within four miles of Salisbury.
+ This excellent man at last succeeded in hiring a ship to carry away the
+ king, and so Charles made another journey to Brighthelmstone, where he met
+ the captain of the vessel and the merchant that had hired her on behalf of
+ Colonel Gunter, both of whom had been kept in ignorance of their future
+ passenger's identity. Arriving at Brighthelmstone, they entered an inn and
+ ordered supper, during which the captain more than once looked hard at the
+ king. And the meal being ended, the captain called the merchant aside and
+ said he was not dealt with fairly, inasmuch as he had not been told the
+ king was the person to be conveyed from thence. The merchant, not being so
+ wise as the master, denied such was the case; but the honest fellow told
+ him not to be troubled. "For I think," said he, "I do God and my country
+ good service in preserving the king: and by the grace of God I will
+ venture my life and all for him, and set him safely on shore, if I can, in
+ France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor was this the last of his majesty's numerous risks, for being presently
+ left alone, he stood thoughtful and somewhat melancholy by the fire,
+ resting one hand on a chair; and the landlord, coming in and seeing him
+ engaged in this manner, softly advanced, suddenly kissed the king's hand,
+ and said, "God bless you, wherever you go." Charles started, and would
+ have denied himself; but the landlord cried out, "'Fore God, your majesty
+ may trust me; and," he added, "I have no doubt, before I die, to be a
+ lord, and my wife a lady."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night, the last his majesty was to spend in England for many years,
+ he was sad and depressed. The scenes of bloodshed he had witnessed, the
+ imminent dangers he had escaped, were vividly present to his mind. The
+ past was fraught with horror; the future held no hope. Though a king, he
+ was about to become an outcast from his realm. Surmising his thoughts, his
+ companions sought to cheer him. Now the long-desired moment of escape was
+ at hand, no one thought of repose. The little vessel in which he intended
+ sailing lay dry upon the shore, the tide being at low water. The king and
+ his friends, the merchant, the captain, and the landlord, sat in the
+ well-lighted cosy parlour of the seaport inn, smoking, playing cards,
+ telling stories and drinking good ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With all such diversions the hours wore heavily away. Their noisy
+ joviality had an undercurrent of sadness; jokes failed to amuse; laughter
+ seemed forced; words, mirthful in leaving the lips, sounded ominous on
+ reaching the ear. At four o'clock the captain rose to survey his ship, and
+ presently returned saying the tide had risen. Thereon the king and his
+ friends prepared to depart. A damp, chilly November fog hung over the sea,
+ hiding its wide expanse without deadening its monotonous moan. A
+ procession of black figures leaving the inn sped noiselessly through
+ darkness. Arriving at the shore, those who were not to accompany his
+ majesty, knelt and kissed his hand. Then he, with Lord Wilmot and the
+ captain, climbed on board the vessel and entered the cabin. The fog had
+ turned to rain. Four hours later, the tide being favourable, the ship
+ sailed out of port, and in due time the king was safely landed in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Celebration of the Kings return.&mdash;Those who flocked to Whitehall My Lord
+ Cleveland's gentlemen.&mdash;Sir Thomas Allen's supper.&mdash;Touching for King's
+ evil.&mdash;That none might lose their labour.&mdash;The man with the fungus
+ nose.&mdash;The memory of the regicides.&mdash;Cromwell's effigy.&mdash;Ghastly scene
+ at Tyburn.&mdash;The King's clemency.&mdash;The Coronation procession.&mdash;Sights and
+ scenes by the way.&mdash;His Majesty is crowned.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The return of the king and his court was a signal for universal joy
+ throughout the nation in general and the capital in particular. For weeks
+ and months subsequent to his majesty's triumphal entry, the town did not
+ subside from its condition of excitement and revelry to its customary
+ quietude and sobriety. Feasts by day were succeeded by entertainments at
+ night; "and under colour of drinking the king's health," says Bishop
+ Burnet, "there were great disorder and much riot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed as if the people could not sufficiently express their delight at
+ the presence of the young king amongst them, or satisfy their desire of
+ seeing him. When clad in rich velvets and costly lace, adorned with many
+ jewels and waving feathers, he walked in Hyde Park attended by an
+ "abundance of gallantry," or went to Whitehall Chapel, where "the organs
+ and singing-men in surplices" were first heard by Mr. Pepys, a vast crowd
+ of loyal subjects attended him on his way. Likewise, when, preceded by
+ heralds, he journeyed by water in his barge to open Parliament, the river
+ was crowded with innumerable boats, and the banks lined with a great
+ concourse anxious for sight of him. Nor were his subjects satisfied by the
+ glimpses obtained of him on such occasions; they must needs behold their
+ king surrounded by the insignia of royalty in the palace of his ancestors,
+ and flocked thither in numbers. "The eagerness of men, women, and children
+ to see his majesty, and kisse his hands was so greate," says Evelyn, "that
+ he had scarce leisure to eate for some dayes, coming as they did from all
+ parts of the nation: and the king being as willing to give them that
+ satisfaction, would have none kept out, but gave free access to all sorts
+ of people." Indeed his loyal subjects were no less pleased with him than
+ he with them; and in faith he was sorry, he declared, in that delicate
+ strain of irony that ran like a bright thread throughout the whole pattern
+ of his speech, he had not come over before, for every man he encountered
+ was glad to see him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Day after day, week after week, the Palace of Whitehall presented a scene
+ of ceaseless bustle. Courtiers, ambassadors, politicians, soldiers, and
+ citizens crowded the antechambers, flocked through the galleries, and
+ tarried in the courtyards. Deputations from all the shires and chief towns
+ in the three kingdoms, bearing messages of congratulation and loyalty,
+ were presented to the king. First of all came the worshipful lord mayor,
+ aldermen and council of the city of London, in great pomp and state; when
+ the common-sergeant made a speech to his majesty respecting the affection
+ of the city towards him, and the lord mayor, on hospitable thoughts
+ intent, besought the honour of his company to dinner, the which Charles
+ promised him most readily. And the same day the commissioners from Ireland
+ presented themselves, headed by Sir James Barry, who delivered himself of
+ a fine address regarding the love his majesty's Irish subjects bore him;
+ as proof of which he presented the monarch with a bill for twenty thousand
+ pounds, that had been duly accepted by Alderman Thomas Viner, a right
+ wealthy man and true. Likewise came the deputy steward and burgesses of
+ the city of Westminster, arrayed in the glory of new scarlet gowns; and
+ the French, Italian, and Dutch ministers, when Monsieur Stoope pronounced
+ an harangue with great eloquence. Also the vice-chancellor of the
+ University of Oxford, with divers doctors, bachelors of divinity,
+ proctors, and masters of arts of the same learned university, who, having
+ first met at the Temple Church, went by two and two, according to their
+ seniority, to Essex House, that they might wait on the most noble the
+ Marquis of Hertford, then chancellor. Accompanied by him, and preceded by
+ eight esquires and yeomen beadles, having their staves, and three of them
+ wearing gold chains, they presented themselves before the king, and spoke
+ him words of loyalty and greeting. The heads of the colleges and halls of
+ Cambridge, with some masters of arts, in like manner journeyed to
+ Whitehall, when Dr. Love delivered a learned Latin oration, expressive of
+ their devotion to royalty in the person of their most illustrious monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst others came, one day, my Lord Cleveland at the head of a hundred
+ gentlemen, many of them being officers who had formerly served under him,
+ and other gentlemen who had ridden to meet the king when coming unto his
+ own; and having arrived at Whitehall, they knelt down in the matted
+ gallery, when his majesty "was pleased to walk along," says MERCURIUS
+ PUBLICUS, "and give everyone of them the honour to kiss his hand, which
+ favour was so highly received by them, that they could no longer stifle
+ their joy, but as his majesty was walking out (a thing thought unusual at
+ court) they brake out into a loud shouting."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the nobility entertained the king and his royal brothers with much
+ magnificence, his Excellency Lord General Monk first giving at his
+ residence in the Cockpit, a great supper, after which "he entertained his
+ majesty with several sorts of musick;" Next Earl Pembroke gave a rare
+ banquet; also the Duke of Buckingham, my Lord Lumley, and many others. Nor
+ was my lord mayor, Sir Thomas Allen, behindhand in extending hospitality
+ to the king, whom he invited to sup with him. This feast, having no
+ connection with the civic entertainments, was held at good Sir Thomas's
+ house. The royal brothers of York and Gloucester were likewise bidden,
+ together with several of the nobility and gentry of high degree. Previous
+ to supper being served, the lord mayor brought his majesty a napkin dipped
+ in rose-water, and offered it kneeling; when his majesty had wiped his
+ hands, he sat down at a table raised by an ascent, the Duke of York on his
+ right hand, and the Duke of Gloucester on his left. They were served with
+ three several courses, at each of which the tablecloth was shifted, and at
+ every dish which his majesty or the dukes tasted, the napkins were
+ moreover changed. At another table in the same room sat his Excellency the
+ Lord General, the Duke of Buckingham, the Marquis of Ormond, the Earl of
+ Oxford, Earl of Norwich, Earl of St. Albans, Lords De la Ware, Sands,
+ Berkeley, and several other of the nobility, with knights and gentlemen of
+ great quality. Sir John Robinson, alderman of London, proposed his
+ majesty's health, which was pledged standing by all present. His majesty
+ was the while entertained with a variety of rare music. This supper was
+ given on the 16th of June; and a couple of weeks later, on the 5th of
+ July, the king went "with as much pompe and splendour as any earthly
+ prince could do to the greate Citty feast, the first they had invited him
+ to since his returne."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whilst entertainments were given, and diversions occupied the town,
+ Charles was called upon to touch for the evil, an affliction then most
+ prevalent throughout the kingdom. According to a time-honoured belief
+ which obtained until the coming of George I., when faith in the divinity
+ of kings was no longer possible to the most ignorant, the monarch's touch
+ was credited with healing this most grievous disease. Majesty in those
+ days was sacred, and superstition rife. Accordingly we read in MERCURIUS
+ PUBLICUS that, "The kingdom having for a long time, by reason of his
+ majesty's absence, been troubled with the evil, great numbers flocked for
+ cure. Saturday being appointed by his majesty to touch such as were so
+ troubled, a great company of poor afflicted creatures were met together,
+ many brought in chairs and baskets; and being appointed by his majesty to
+ repair to the banqueting house, the king sat in a chair of state, where he
+ stroked all that were brought to him, and then put about each of their
+ necks a white ribbon with an angel of gold on it. In this manner his
+ majesty stroked above six hundred; and such was his princely patience and
+ tenderness to the poor afflicted creatures, that though it took up a long
+ time, the king, being never weary of well doing, was pleased to make
+ inquiry whether there were any more that had not been touched. After
+ prayers were ended the Duke of Buckingham brought a towel, and the Earl of
+ Pembroke a basin and ewer, who, after they had made their obeysance to his
+ majesty, kneeled down till his majesty had washed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was on the 23rd of June, a few days earlier than the date fixed by
+ Evelyn as that on which the king first began "touch for ye evil." A week
+ later we find he stroked as many as two hundred and fifty persons. Friday
+ was then appointed as the day for those suffering from this disease to
+ come before the king; it was moreover decided that only two hundred
+ persons should be presented each week and these were first to repair to
+ Mr. Knight, his majesty's surgeon, living at the Cross Guns, in Russell
+ Street, Covent Garden, over against the Rose tavern, for tickets of
+ admission. "That none might lose their labour." the same Mr. Knight made
+ it known to the public he would be at home on Wednesdays and Thursdays,
+ from two till six of the clock; and if any person of quality should send
+ for him he would wait upon them at their lodgings. The disease must indeed
+ have been rife: week after week those afflicted continued to present
+ themselves, and we read that, towards the end of July, "notwithstanding
+ all discouragements by the hot weather and the multitude of sick and
+ infirm people, his majesty abated not one of his accustomed number, but
+ touched full two hundred: an high conviction of all such physicians,
+ surgeons, and apothecaries that pretend self-preservation when the
+ languishing patient requires their assistance." Indeed, there were some
+ who placed boundless faith in the king's power of healing by touch;
+ amongst whom was one Avis Evans, whom Aubrey, in his "Miscellanies,"
+ records "had a fungus nose, and said it was revealed to him that the
+ king's hand would cure him. And at the first coming of King Charles II.
+ into St. James's Park, he kissed the king's hand, and rubbed his nose with
+ it, which disturbed the king, but cured him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The universal joy which filled the nation at the restoration of his
+ majesty was accompanied, as might be expected, by bitter hatred towards
+ the leaders of Republicanism, especially towards such as had condemned the
+ late king to death. The chief objects of popular horror now, however, lay
+ in their graves; but the sanctity of death was neither permitted to save
+ their memories from vituperation nor their remains from moltestation.
+ Accordingly, through many days in June the effigy of Cromwell, which had
+ been crowned with a royal diadem, draped with a purple mantle, in Somerset
+ House, and afterwards borne with all imaginable pomp to Westminster Abbey,
+ was now exposed at one of the windows at Whitehall with a rope fixed round
+ its neck, by way of hinting at the death which the original deserved. But
+ this mark of execration was not sufficient to satisfy the public mind, and
+ seven months later, on the 30th of January, 1661, the anniversary of the
+ murder of Charles I., the bodies of Oliver Cromwell, Henry Ireton, and
+ John Bradshaw were taken from their resting places in Westminster Abbey,
+ and drawn on hurdles to Tyburn, the well-known site of public executions.
+ "All the way the universal outcry and curses of the people went along with
+ them," says MERCURIUS PUBLICUS. "When these three carcasses arrived at
+ Tyburn, they were pulled out of their coffins, and hanged at the several
+ angles of that triple tree, where they hung till the sun was set; after
+ which they were taken down, their heads cut off; and their loathsome
+ trunks thrown into a deep hole under the gallows. The heads of those three
+ notorious regicides, Oliver Cromwell, John Bradshaw, and Ireton are set
+ upon poles on the top of Westminster Hall by the common hangman. Bradshaw
+ placed in the middle (over that part where the monstrous high court of
+ justice sat), Cromwell and his son-in-law Ireton on either side of
+ Bradshaw."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before this ghastly execution took place, Parliament had brought to
+ justice such offenders against the late king's government and life as were
+ in its power. According to the declaration made by the king at Breda, a
+ full and general pardon was extended to all rebellious subjects, excepting
+ such persons as should be hereafter excepted by Parliament. By reason of
+ this clause, some who had been most violent in their persecution of
+ royalty were committed to the Tower before the arrival of his majesty,
+ others fled from the country, but had, on another proclamation summoning
+ them to surrender themselves, returned in hope of obtaining pardon. Thirty
+ in all were tried at the Old Bailey before the Commissioners of Oyer and
+ Terminer and a special jury of knights and gentlemen of quality in the
+ county of Middlesex. Twenty-nine of these were condemned to death. The
+ king was singularly free from desires of revenge; but many of his council
+ were strangers to clemency, and, under the guise of loyalty to the crown,
+ sought satisfaction for private wrongs by urging severest measures. The
+ monarch, however, shrank from staining the commencement of his reign with
+ bloodshed and advocated mercy. In a speech delivered to the House of Lords
+ he insisted that, as a point of honour, he was bound to make good the
+ assurances given in his proclamation of Breda, "which if I had not made,"
+ he continued, "I am persuaded that neither I nor you had now been here. I
+ pray, therefore, let us not deceive those who brought or permitted us to
+ come together; and I earnestly desire you to depart from all particular
+ animosities and revenge or memory of past provocations." Accordingly, but
+ ten of those on whom sentence of death had been passed were executed, the
+ remainder being committed to the Tower. That they were not also hung was,
+ according to the mild and merciful Dr. Reeves, Dean of Westminster, "a
+ main cause of God's punishing the land" in the future time. For those
+ destined to suffer, a gibbet was erected at Charing Cross, that the
+ traitors might in their last moments see the spot where the late king had
+ been executed. Having been half hung, they were taken down, when their
+ heads were severed from their trunks and set up on poles at the south-east
+ end of Westminster Hall, whilst their bodies were quartered and exposed
+ upon the city gates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Burnet tells us that "the regicides being odious beyond all expression,
+ the trials and executions of the first who suffered were run to by crowds,
+ and all the people seemed pleased with the sight;" yet by degrees these
+ cruel and ghastly spectacles became distasteful and disgusting. "I saw not
+ their executions," says Evelyn, speaking of four of the traitors who had
+ suffered death on the 17th of October, "but met their quarters mangled and
+ cutt and reeking as they were brought from the gallows in baskets on the
+ hurdle. Oh the miraculous providence of God!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seven months later, the people were diverted by the more cheerful pageant
+ of the king's coronation, which was conducted with great magnificence.
+ "Two days," as Heath narrates, "were allotted to the consummation of this
+ great and most celebrated action, the wonder, admiration and delight of
+ all persons, both foreign and domestick." Early on the morning of the 22nd
+ of May, the day being Monday, the king left Whitehall, by water, for the
+ Tower, in order that he might, according to ancient custom, proceed
+ through the city to Westminster Abbey. It was noticed that it had
+ previously rained for a month together, but on this and the next day "it
+ pleased God that not one drop fell on the king's triumph." At ten o'clock
+ the roaring of cannon announced the procession had left the Tower on its
+ way to Whitehall, where his majesty was to rest the night. The splendour
+ of the pageant was such as had never before been witnessed. The procession
+ was headed by the king's council at law, the masters of chancery and
+ judges, who were followed by the lords according to their rank, so
+ numerous in all, that those who rode first reached Fleet Street, whilst
+ the king was yet in the Tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No expense was spared by those who formed part of that wonderful
+ cavalcade, towards rendering their appearance magnificent. Heath tells us
+ it was incredible to think "what costly cloathes were worn that day. The
+ cloaks could hardly be seen what silk or satin they were made of, for the
+ gold and silver laces and embroidery that was laid upon them; the like
+ also was seen on their foot-cloathes. Besides the inestimable value and
+ treasures of diamonds, pearls, and other jewels worn upon their backs and
+ in their hats, not to mention the sumptuous and rich liveries of their
+ pages and footmen, some suits of liveries amounting to fifteen hundred
+ pounds." Nor had the city hesitated in lavishing vast sums towards
+ decorating the streets through which the king was to pass. Four triumphal
+ arches were erected, that were left standing for a year in memory of this
+ joyful day. These were "composed" by John Ogilby, Esquire; and were
+ respectively erected in Leadenhall Street, the Exchange on Cornhill, Wood
+ Street, and Fleet Street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thoroughfares were newly gravelled, railed all the way on both sides,
+ and lined with the city companies and trained bands. The "relation of his
+ majesty's entertainment passing through the City of London," as narrated
+ by John Ogilby, and by the papers of the day, is extremely quaint and
+ interesting, but too long for detailed description. During the monarch's
+ progress through "Crouched Friers," he was diverted with music discoursed
+ by a band of eight waits, placed upon a stage. At Aldgate, and at several
+ other stages of his journey, he was received in like manner. Arriving at
+ the great arch in Leadenhall Street, his ears were greeted by sounds of
+ trumpets and drums playing marches; when they had finishes, a short scene
+ was enacted on a balcony of the arch, by figures representing Monarchy,
+ Rebellion, and Loyalty. Then the great procession wended its way to the
+ East India House, situate in the same street, when the East India Company
+ took occasion to express their dutiful affections, in a manner "wholly
+ designed by person of quality." As the king advanced, a youth in an Indian
+ habit, attended by two blackamoors, knelt down before his majesty's horse,
+ and delivered himself of some execrable verse, which he had no sooner
+ ended than another youth in an Indian vest, mounted on a camel, was led
+ forwards and delivered some lines praying his majesty's subjects might
+ never see the sun set on his crown or dignity. The camel, it my be
+ noticed, bore panniers filled with pearls, spices, and silks, destined to
+ be scattered among the spectators. At Cornhill was a conduit, surmounted
+ by eight wenches representing nymphs&mdash;a sight which must have
+ rejoiced the king's heart; and on the tower of this same fountain sounded
+ "a noise of seven trumpets." Another fountain flowed with wine and water;
+ and on his way the king heard several speeches delivered by various
+ symbolic figures. One of these, who made a particularly fine harangue,
+ represented the River Thames, as a gentleman whose "garment loose and
+ flowing, coloured blue and white, waved like water, flags and ozier-like
+ long hair falling o'er his shoulders; his beard long, sea-green, and
+ white." And so by slow degrees the king came to Temple Bar, where he was
+ entertained by "a view of a delightful boscage, full of several beasts,
+ both tame and savage, as also several living figures and music of eight
+ waits." And having passed through Temple Bar into his ancient and native
+ city of Westminster, the head bailiff in a scarlet robe and the high
+ constable, likewise in scarlet, on behalf of the dean, chapter, city, and
+ liberty, received his majesty with great expressions of joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never had there been so goodly a show so grand a procession; the citizens,
+ still delighted with their young king, had certainly excelled in doing him
+ honour, and some foreigners, Heaton says, "acknowledged themselves never
+ to have seen among all the great magnificences of the world any to come
+ near or equal this: even the vaunting French confessed their pomps of the
+ late marriage with the Infanta of Spain, at their majesties' entrance into
+ Paris, to be inferior in its state, gallantry, and riches unto this most
+ illustrious cavalcade." Amongst those who witnessed the procession was Mr.
+ Pepys, who has left us a realistic description, without which this picture
+ would be incomplete. He tells us he arose early on this day; and the vain
+ fellow says he made himself as fine as could be, putting on his velvet
+ coat for the first time, though he had it made half a year before. "And
+ being ready," he continues, "Sir W. Batten, my lady, and his two
+ daughters, and his son and wife, and Sir W. Pen and his son and I, went to
+ Mr. Young's, the flag-maker, in Corne-hill; and there we had a good room
+ to ourselves, with wine and good cake, and saw the show very well. In
+ which it is impossible to relate the glory of this day, expressed in the
+ clothes of them that rid, and their horses and horses' clothes; among
+ others, my Lord Sandwich's embroidery and diamonds were ordinary among
+ them. The Knights of the Bath was a brave sight of itself. Remarquable
+ were the two men that represent the two Dukes of Normandy and Aquitane. My
+ Lord Monk rode bare after the king, and led in his hand a spare horse, as
+ being Master of the Horse. The king, in a most rich embroidered suit and
+ cloak, looked most noble. Wadlow, the vintner, at the Devil, in Fleet
+ Street, did lead a fine company of soldiers, all young comely men in white
+ doublets. There followed the Vice-Chamberlain, Sir G. Carteret, and a
+ company of men all like Turkes. The streets all gravelled, and the houses
+ hung with carpets before them, made brave show; and the ladies out of the
+ windows, one of which over against us, I took much notice of, and spoke of
+ her, which made good sport among us. So glorious was the show with gold
+ and silver, that we were not able to look at it, our eyes at last being so
+ much overcome with it. Both the king and the Duke of York took notice of
+ us as they saw us at the window. The show being ended, Mr. Young did give
+ us a dinner, at which we were very merry and pleased above imagination at
+ what we have seen."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next day, being the feast of St. George, patron of England, the king
+ went in procession from Whitehall to Westminster Abbey, where he was
+ solemnly crowned in the presence of a vast number of peers and bishops.
+ After which, surrounded by the same brilliant company, he passed from the
+ Abbey to Westminster Hall, the way being covered with blue cloth, and
+ lined with spectators to the number of ten thousand. Here his majesty and
+ the lords, spiritual and temporal, dined sumptuously, whilst many fine
+ ceremonies were observed, music of all sorts was played, and a great crowd
+ of pretty ladies looked down from the galleries. And when the banquet was
+ over, and a general pardon had been read by the lord chancellor, and the
+ champion had drank out of the king's gold cup, Charles betook himself to
+ Whitehall. Then, after two days of fair weather, it suddenly "fell
+ a-raining, and thundering and lightning," says Pepys, "as I have not seen
+ it do for some years; which people did take great notice of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The King's character.&mdash;His proverbial grace.&mdash;He tells a story well.&mdash;"A
+ warmth and sweetness of the blood."&mdash;Beautiful Barbara Palmer.&mdash;Her
+ intrigue with my Lord Chesterfield.&mdash;James, Duke of York.&mdash;His
+ early days.&mdash;Escape from St. James's.&mdash;Fights in the service of
+ France.&mdash;Marriage with Anne Hyde.&mdash;Sensation at Court.&mdash;The Duke of
+ Gloucester's death.&mdash;The Princess of Orange.&mdash;Schemes against the
+ Duke of York's peace.&mdash;The "lewd informer."&mdash;Anne Hyde is acknowledged
+ Duchess of York.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the kingdom was absorbed by movements consequent on its change of
+ government, the court was no less engrossed by incidents relative to the
+ career it had begun. In the annals of court life there are no pages more
+ interesting than those dealing with Charles II, and his friends; in the
+ history of kings there is no more remarkable figure than that of the merry
+ monarch himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Returning to rule over a nation which, during his absence, had been
+ distracted by civil strife, King Charles, young in years, brave in deeds,
+ and surrounded by that halo of romance which misfortune lends its victims,
+ entirely gained the hearts of his subjects. Nature had endowed him with
+ gifts adapted to display qualities that fascinated, and fitted to hide
+ blemishes which repelled. On the one hand his expressive features and
+ shapely figure went far towards creating a charm which his personal grace
+ and courtesy of manner completed; on the other, his delicate tact screened
+ the heartlessness of his sensualism, whilst his surface sympathies hid the
+ barrenness of his cynicism.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the coolness and courage he had shown in danger, the shrewdness and
+ wit he continually evinced, and the varied capacities he certainly
+ possessed, Charles II. might have made his reign illustrious, had not his
+ love of ease and detestation of business rendered him indifferent to all
+ things so long as he was free to follow his desires. But these faults,
+ which became grievous in the eyes of his subjects, commended him to the
+ hearts of his courtiers, the common purpose of whose lives was pursuit of
+ pleasure. Never was sovereign more gracious to those who came in contact
+ with him, or less ceremonious with his friends; whilst abroad he had lived
+ with his little band of courtiers more as a companion than a king. The
+ bond of exile had drawn them close together; an equal fortune had gone far
+ towards obliterating distinctions of royalty; and custom had so fitted the
+ monarch and his friends to familiarity, that on his return to England
+ neither he nor they laid aside a mutual freedom of treatment which by
+ degrees extended itself throughout the court. For all that, "he was
+ master," as Welwood says, "of something in his person and aspect that
+ commanded both love and admiration at once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among his many gifts was that of telling a story well&mdash;a rare one
+ 'tis true in all ages. Never was he better pleased than when, surrounded
+ by a group of gossips, he narrated some anecdote of which he was the hero;
+ and, though his tales were more than twice told, they were far from
+ tedious; inasmuch as, being set forth with brighter flashes of wit and
+ keener touches of irony, they were ever pleasant to hear. His conversation
+ was of a like complexion to his tales, pointed, shrewd, and humorous;
+ frequently&mdash;as became the manner of the times&mdash;straying far
+ afield of propriety, and taking liberties of expression of which nice
+ judgments could not approve. But indeed his majesty's speech was not more
+ free than his conduct was licentious. He could not think, he gravely told
+ Bishop Burnet, "God would make a man miserable for taking a little
+ pleasure out of the way." Accordingly he followed the free bent of his
+ desires, and his whole life was soon devoted to voluptuousness; a vice
+ which an ingenious courtier obligingly describes as a "warmth and
+ sweetness of the blood that would not be confined in the communicating
+ itself&mdash;an overflowing of good nature, of which he had such a stream
+ that it would not be restrained within the banks of a crabbed and
+ unsociable virtue."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ease and freedom of his continental life had no doubt fostered this
+ lamentable depravity; for his misfortunes as an exiled king by no means
+ prevented him following his inclinations as an ardent lover. Accordingly,
+ his intrigues at that time were numerous, as may be judged from the fact
+ of Lady Byron being described as "his seventeenth mistress abroad." The
+ offspring of one of his continental mistresses was destined to plunge the
+ English nation into civil warfare, and to suffer a traitor's death on
+ Tower Hill in the succeeding reign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The profligacy which Charles practised abroad not being discontinued at
+ home, he resumed in England an intrigue commenced at Brussels a short time
+ before the restoration. The object of this amour was the beautiful Barbara
+ Palmer, afterwards, by reason of her lack of virtue, raised to the peerage
+ under the titles of Countess of Castlemaine, and Duchess of Cleveland.
+ This lady, who became a most prominent figure in the court of the merry
+ monarch, was daughter of William, second Viscount Grandison, a brave
+ gentleman and a loyal, who had early in life fallen in the civil war
+ whilst fighting for his king. He is described as having, among other
+ gifts, "a faultless person," a boon, which descended to his only child,
+ the bewitching Barbara. In the earliest dawn of her womanhood she
+ encountered her first lover in the person of Philip Stanhope, second Earl
+ of Chesterfield. My lord was at this time a youthful widower, and is
+ described as having "a very agreeable face, a fine head of hair, an
+ indifferent shape, and a pleasant wit. He was, moreover, an elegant beau
+ and a dissolute man&mdash;testimony of which latter fact may be gathered
+ from a letter written to him in 1658, by his sister-in-law, Lady Essex, to
+ prevent the "ruin of his soule." Writes her ladyship: "You treate all the
+ mad drinking lords, you sweare, you game, and commit all the extravagances
+ that are insident to untamed youths, to such a degree that you make
+ yourselfe the talke of all places, and the wonder of those who thought
+ otherwise of you, and of all sober people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Barbara was sixteen, my lord, then in his twenty-third year,
+ inherited the title and estates of his grandfather: he therefore became
+ master of his own fortune and could bestow his hand where he pleased. That
+ he was in love with Barbara is, indeed, most true; but that his passion
+ was dishonourable is likewise certain: for though he wrote her letters
+ full of tenderness, and kept assignations with her at Butler's shop, on
+ Ludgate Hill, he was the while negotiating a marriage with one Mrs.
+ Fairfax, to whom he was not, however, united. His intrigue with Barbara
+ continued for upwards of three years, when it was temporarily suspended by
+ her marriage to one Roger Palmer, a student of the Inner Temple, the son
+ of a Middlesex knight, and, moreover, a man of the most obliging temper,
+ as will hereafter be seen. Barbara's loyalty to her husband was but of
+ short duration. Before she had been nine months a wife, we find her
+ writing to her old lover she is "ready and willing to goe all over the
+ world" with him&mdash;a sacrifice he declined to accept! though eager to
+ take advantage of the affection which prompted it. A little while later he
+ was obliged to quit England; for it happened in the first month of the
+ year 1660 he quarrelled with and killed one Francis Woolley, a student at
+ law, to avoid the consequences of which act he speedily fled the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arriving at Calais, he wrote to King Charles, who was then preparing to
+ return, throwing himself on his mercy, and beseeching his pardon; which
+ the king granting, Lord Chesterfield sought his majesty at Brussels. Soon
+ afterwards Barbara Palmer and her complaisant husband, a right loyal man,
+ joined the king's court abroad, when the intrigue begun which was
+ continued on the night of the monarch's arrival in London. True the loyal
+ PARLIAMENTARY INTELLIGENCER stated "his majesty was diverted from his
+ pious intention of going to Westminster to offer up his devotions of
+ prayer and praise in publick according to the appointment of his Majesty,
+ and made his oblations unto God in the presence-chamber;" but it is, alas,
+ equally certain, according to Oldmixon, Lord Dartmouth, and other reliable
+ authorities, he spent the first night of his return in the company of
+ Barbara Palmer. From that time this abandoned woman exercised an influence
+ over the king which wholly disgraced his court, and almost ruined his
+ kingdom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another prominent figure, whose history is inseparable from the king's,
+ was that of his majesty's brother, James, Duke of York&mdash;a man of
+ greater ambition and lesser talents than the merry monarch, but one whose
+ amorous disposition equalled the monarch's withal. At an early period of
+ his life the Duke of York was witness of the strife which divided his
+ unhappy father's kingdom. When only eight years old he was sent for by
+ Charles I. to York, but was forbidden by the Parliament to leave St.
+ James's Palace. Despite its commands he was, however, carried to the king
+ by the gallant Marquis of Hereford. That same year the boy witnessed the
+ refusal of Sir John Hotham, Governor of Hull, to admit his majesty within
+ the gates; and James was subsequently present at the siege of Bristol, and
+ the famous battle of Edgehill, when his life at one period of the
+ engagement was in imminent peril.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Until 1646 he continued under the guardianship of his father, when, on the
+ entrance of Fairfax into Oxford, the young duke was found among the
+ prisoners, and by Cromwell's orders committed to the charge of Sir George
+ Ratcliffe. A few months later he was removed to St. James's Palace, when
+ in company with his brother, the Duke of Gloucester, and his sister, the
+ Princess Elizabeth, he was placed under the care of Lord Northumberland,
+ who had joined the Republican cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though by no means treated with unkindness, the young duke, unhappy at the
+ surveillance placed upon his actions and fearful of the troubles quickly
+ gathering over the kingdom, twice sought escape. This was a serious
+ offence in the eyes of Cromwell's Parliament; a committee was accordingly
+ sent to examine him, and he was threatened with imprisonment in the Tower.
+ Though only in his fourteenth year he already possessed both determination
+ and courage, by reason of which he resolved to risk all danger, and make a
+ third effort for freedom. Accordingly he laid his plans with much
+ ingenuity, selecting two men from those around him to aid his undertaking.
+ These were George Howard and Colonel Bamfield. The latter had once served
+ in the king's army, but when the fortunes of war had gone against his
+ royal master, had professed himself friendly to the Republicans. No doubt
+ the young duke saw the gallant colonel was still true at heart to the
+ Royalist cause, and therefore trusted him at this critical juncture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now for a fortnight previous to the night on which he designed to escape,
+ James made it his habit to play at hide-and-seek every evening after
+ supper with his brother and sister, and the children of the officers then
+ located in the palace; and in such secure places did he secrete himself
+ that his companions frequently searched for over half an hour without
+ discovering him. This of course accustomed the household to miss him, and
+ was cunningly practised for the purpose of gaining time on his pursuers
+ when he came to be sought for in good earnest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the eventful night fixed for his escape arrived; and after supper
+ a pleasant group of merry children prepared to divert themselves in the
+ long dark halls and narrow winding passages of the grim old palace. James,
+ as usual, proposed concealing himself, and leaving his companions for the
+ purpose, disappeared behind some arras; but, instead of hiding, he
+ hastened to his sister's chamber, where he locked up a favourite dog that
+ was in the habit of following his footsteps wherever he went, and then
+ noiselessly slipped down a back stairs which led to an inner garden.
+ Having taken care to provide himself with a key fitting the garden door,
+ he quickly slipped into the park. Here he found Colonel Bamfield waiting,
+ who, giving him a cloak and a wig for his better disguise, hurried him
+ into a hackney coach, which drove them as far as Salisbury House in the
+ Strand. From thence they went through Spring Garden, and down Ivy Lane,
+ when, taking boat, they landed close by London Bridge. Here entering the
+ house of a surgeon friendly to their adventure, they found a woman named
+ Murray awaiting them, who immediately provided a suit of woman's wearing
+ apparel for the young duke, in which she helped to attire him. Dressed in
+ this costume he, attended by the faithful Bamfield, hastened to Lion Quay,
+ where they entered a barge hired for their conveyance to a Dutch frigate
+ stationed beyond Gravesend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the children not being able to discover their playfellow in the
+ palace, their elders became suspicious of the duke's escape, and began to
+ aid the search. Before an hour elapsed they were convinced he had fled,
+ and St. James's was thrown into a state of the utmost excitement and
+ confusion. Notice of his flight was at once despatched to General Fairfax
+ at Whitehall, who immediately gave orders have all the roads from London
+ guarded, especially those leading to the north; for it was surmised he
+ would in the first instance seek to escape into Wales. The duke, however,
+ had taken a safer course, but one which was not unattended by danger. He
+ had not sailed far in the barge when its master became suspicious that he
+ was aiding the escape of some persons of consequence, and became
+ frightened lest he should get into trouble by rendering them his services.
+ And presently his surmise was converted into certainty; for looking
+ through a cranny of the barge-room door, he saw the young woman fling her
+ leg on the table and pull up her stocking in a most unmaidenly manner. He
+ therefore at once peremptorily declared to Colonel Bamfield they must land
+ at Gravesend, and procure another boat to carry them to the ship; for it
+ would be impossible for the barge to pass the block-house lower down
+ without being observed, and consequently inspected, as was the custom at
+ this troubled time. On hearing which Colonel Bamfield was filled with
+ dismay; but, knowing that at heart the people were loyal towards the
+ Stuarts, he confided the identity of his passenger, and begged him not to
+ betray them in this hour of peril. To give his appeal further weight, he
+ promised the fellow a considerable sum if they safely reached the frigate;
+ for human nature is weak, and greed of gold is strong. On this, the
+ bargee, who was a loyal man, promised he would help them to the best of
+ his powers; the lights were therefore extinguished, the oars drawn in,
+ and, the tide fortunately answering, the barge glided noiselessly down
+ under cover of night, and passed the block-house unobserved. In good time
+ they reached the frigate, which, the duke and Colonel Bamfield boarding,
+ at once set sail, and in a few days landed them at Middleburgh. James
+ proceeded to the court of his sister, the Princess of Orange, and later on
+ joined his mother in France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the age of twenty he served in the French army, under Turenne, against
+ the Spanish forces in Flanders, and subsequently in several campaigns,
+ where he invariably showed himself so brave and valiant that the Prince de
+ Conde declared that if ever there was a man without fear, it was James,
+ Duke of York. Now it happened that in 1658 the Princess of Orange went to
+ Paris in order to visit the queen mother, as the widow of Charles I. was
+ called. The Duke of York was in the gay capital at this time, and it soon
+ became noticed that he fixed his attention overmuch on one of his sister's
+ maids of honour, Anne Hyde. This gentlewoman, then in her twenty-first
+ year, was the possessor of a comely countenance, excellent shape, and much
+ wit. Anne was daughter of Edward Hyde, a worthy man, who had been bred to
+ the law, and proved himself so faithful a servant to Charles I., that his
+ majesty had made him Privy Councillor and Chancellor of the Exchequer.
+ After the king's execution, in 1649, the chancellor thought it wise for
+ himself and his family to seek refuge in exile, and accordingly joined
+ Charles II., with whom he lived in the closest friendship, and for whose
+ return he subsequently negotiated with General Monk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now James, after his fashion, made love to Mistress Hyde, who encouraged
+ his advances until they reached a certain stage, beyond which the
+ judicious maiden forbade them to proceed unless blessed by the sanction of
+ holy church. The Duke, impatient to secure his happiness, was therefore
+ secretly united to Mistress Hyde in the bonds of matrimony on the 24th of
+ November, in the year of grace 1659, at Breda, to which place the Princess
+ of Orange had returned. In a little while, the restoration being effected,
+ the duke returned to England with the king, leaving his bride behind. And
+ Chancellor Hyde being presently re-established in his offices, and settled
+ in his residence at Worcester House in the Strand, sent for his wife and
+ children; the more speedily as he had received an overture from a noble
+ family, on behalf of "a hopeful, well-bred young gentleman," who expressed
+ himself anxious to wed with Mistress Anne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same young lady had not long returned, when she informed her husband
+ she was about to become a mother; whereon the duke, seeking the king, fell
+ upon his knees before him, laid bare his secret, and besought him to
+ sanction his union, "that he might publicly marry in such a manner as his
+ majesty thought necessary for the consequence thereof;" adding that, if
+ consent were refused, he would "immediately take leave of the kingdom and
+ spend his life in foreign parts." King Charles was astonished and
+ perplexed by this confession. James was heir, and as such it behoved him
+ to wed with one suited, by reason of her lineage, to support the dignity
+ of the crown, and calculated by her relation towards foreign powers to
+ strengthen the influence of the throne. The duke was fully aware of this,
+ and, moreover, knew he could without much difficulty have his marriage
+ annulled; but that he did not adopt this course was an honourable trait in
+ his character; and, indeed, his conduct and that of the king was most
+ creditable throughout the transactions which followed; an account of which
+ is set forth with great minuteness in the "Continuation of Edward Hyde,
+ Lord Clarendon's Life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without the advice of his council, the king could give no satisfactory
+ reply to his brother. He therefore summoned two of his trusty friends, the
+ Marquis of Ormond and the Earl of Southampton, whom he informed of the
+ duke's marriage, requesting them to communicate the same to the
+ chancellor, and return with him for private consultation. The good man's
+ surprise at this news concerning his daughter was, according to his own
+ account, exceeding great, and was only equalled by his vast indignation.
+ His loyalty towards the royal family was so fervent that it overlooked his
+ affection to his child. He therefore fell into a violent passion,
+ protested against her wicked presumption, and advised that the king
+ "should immediately cause the woman to be sent to the Tower, and to be
+ cast into a dungeon, under so strict a guard that no person should be
+ admitted to come to her; and then that an act of parliament should be
+ immediately passed for the cutting off her head, to which he would not
+ only give his consent, but would very willingly be the first man that
+ should propose it." All this he presently repeated to the king, and
+ moreover, assured him an example of the highest severity, in a case so
+ nearly concerning himself, would serve as a warning that others might take
+ heed of offences committed against his regal dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ News of this marriage spread throughout the court with rapidity, and
+ caused the utmost excitement; which in a little while was somewhat abated
+ by the announcement that the king's youngest brother, Henry, Duke of
+ Gloucester, was taken ill of small-pox. This young prince, who is
+ described as "a pretty boy," possessed parts which bade fair to surpass
+ his brothers. He was indeed associated by his family with their tenderest
+ memories, inasmuch as he had been with his father on the sad day previous
+ to his execution. On that melancholy occasion, Charles I. had taken him
+ upon his knee, and said to him very tenderly, "Sweetheart, they will cut
+ off thy father's head," at which the boy shuddered and turned pale. "Mark,
+ child, what I say," continued the unhappy king, "they will cut off my
+ head, and, perhaps, make thee a king; but mark what I say, you must not be
+ made king as long as your brothers Charles and James are alive, for they
+ will cut off thy brothers' heads when they catch them, and cut off thy
+ head at last; and therefore I charge you not to be made a king by them."
+ To which the lad replied very earnestly, "I will be torn in pieces first."
+ Sometime after the death of his father he was allowed to join his family
+ in France, and, like his brother James, entered the army of that country.
+ On the restoration, he had returned with the king, and, three months
+ later, this "prince of very extraordinary hopes" died, grievously lamented
+ by the court, and especially by his majesty, who declared he felt this
+ loss more than any other which had previously fallen upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely had he been laid to rest in the vault containing the dust of Mary
+ Queen of Scots and Lady Arabella Stuart, when the Princess of Orange
+ arrived in England to pay the king a visit of ceremony. No sooner was she
+ settled at court, than rumour of her brother's marriage reached her; on
+ which she became outrageous; but her wrath was far exceeded by that of the
+ queen mother, who, on hearing the news, wrote to the duke expressing her
+ indignation "that he should have such low thoughts as to marry such a
+ woman." The epistle containing this sentence was at once shown by James to
+ his wife, whom he continually saw and spent much time with, unknown to her
+ father, who had given orders she should keep her chamber. Parliament now
+ sat, but no mention was made of the duke's marriage by either House; and,
+ inasmuch as the union so nearly concerned the nation, this silence caused
+ considerable surprise. It was surmised the delay was made in deference to
+ the feelings of the queen mother, who at this juncture set out for
+ England, to prevent what she was pleased to term "so great a stain and
+ dishonour to the crown." The king regarded his brother's alliance in a
+ lenient spirit, and not only spoke of it frequently before the court, but
+ expressed his desire of bringing the indiscretion to a happy conclusion by
+ a public acknowledgment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The queen mother, being an ambitious woman, had cherished certain schemes
+ for extending the power of her family by the respective marriages of her
+ sons, which the duke's union was, of course, calculated to curtail. She
+ therefore regarded his wife with the bitterest disdain. Whenever that
+ woman should be brought into Whitehall by one door, her majesty declared
+ she would leave it by another and never enter it again. The marriage was
+ rendered all the more disagreeable to the queen, because the object of her
+ son's choice was daughter of the lord chancellor, whose influence over
+ Charles II. had frequently opposed her plans in the past, and threatened
+ to prevent their realization in the future. The monarch, however, paid
+ little attention to his mother's indignation. He was resolved no disgrace
+ which he could hinder should fall upon the family of one who had served
+ him with disinterested loyalty; and, by way of proving his friendship
+ towards the chancellor on the present occasion, he, before setting out to
+ meet his mother on her arrival at Dover, presented him with twenty
+ thousand pounds, and left a signed warrant for creating him a baron, which
+ he desired the attorney-general to have ready to pass the seals at his
+ return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the meantime a wicked plot, for the purpose of lessening James's
+ affection for his wife, and ultimately preventing the acknowledgment of
+ his marriage, was promoted by the chancellor's enemies and the duke's
+ friends, principal amongst whom were the Princess of Orange and Sir
+ Charles Berkley, "a fellow of great wickedness," Sir Charles was his royal
+ highness's most trusted friend, and was, moreover, devoted to the service
+ of the princess and her mother. He therefore determined to hinder the duke
+ from taking a step which he was of opinion would injure him irretrievably.
+ Accordingly, when James spoke in confidence concerning his marriage, Sir
+ Charles told him it was wholly invalid, inasmuch as it had taken place
+ without the king's consent; and that a union with the daughter of an
+ insignificant lawyer was not to be thought of by the heir to the crown.
+ Moreover, he hinted he could a tale unfold regarding her behaviour. At
+ this the duke became impatient to hear what his good friend had to say;
+ whereon that valiant gentleman boasted, with an air of bravery and truth,
+ of certain gallantries which had passed between him and the lady. On
+ hearing this, James, being credulous was sorely depressed. He ceased to
+ visit his wife, withdrew from general company; and so well did Sir Charles's
+ scheme succeed, that before the queen's arrival, the duke had decided on
+ denying his marriage with one who had brought him dishonour. The king,
+ however, put no faith in these aspersions; he felt sure "there was a
+ wicked conspiracy set on foot by villains."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It therefore happened the queen was spared the trouble she had anticipated
+ with her son; indeed, he humbly begged her pardon for "having placed his
+ affections so unequally, of which he was sure there was now an end"&mdash;a
+ confession most gratifying to her majesty. The duke's bitter depression
+ continued, and was soon increased by the death of his sister, the Princess
+ of Orange, which was occasioned by smallpox on the 23rd of December, 1660.
+ In her last agonies Lord Clarendon says "she expressed a dislike of the
+ proceedings in that affair, to which she had contributed too much." This
+ fact, together with his royal highness's unhappiness, had due weight on
+ Sir Charles Berkley, who began to repent of the calumnies he had spoken.
+ Accordingly, the "lewd informer" went to the duke, and sought to repair
+ the evil he had wrought. Believing, he said, such a marriage would be the
+ absolute ruin of his royal highness, he had made the accusation which he
+ now confessed to be false, and without the least ground; for he was very
+ confident of the lady's honour and virtue. He then begged pardon on his
+ knees for a fault committed out of pure devotion, and trusted the duke
+ would "not suffer him to be ruined by the power of those whom he had so
+ unworthily provoked, and of which he had so much shame that he had not
+ confidence to look upon them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ James was so much relieved by what he heard that he not only forgave Sir
+ Charles, but embraced him, and promised him protection. Nor did his royal
+ highness longer withhold the reparation due to his wife, who, with the
+ approval of the king and the reluctant consent of the queen, was received
+ at court as Duchess of York. Such was the romance connected with the
+ marriage of her who became mother of two English queens&mdash;Mary, wife
+ of William of Orange, and Anne, of pious memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Morality of the Restoration.&mdash;Puritan piety.&mdash;Conduct of women under
+ the Republic.&mdash;Some notable courtiers.&mdash;The Duke of Ormond and his
+ family.&mdash;Lord St. Albans and Henry Jermyn.&mdash;His Grace of Buckingham
+ and Mistress Fairfax.&mdash;Lord Rochester.&mdash;Beautiful Barbara Palmer.&mdash;The
+ King's Projected marriage.&mdash;Catherine of Braganza.&mdash;His Majesty's
+ speech.&mdash;A Royal love-letter.&mdash;The new Queen sets sail.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A general idea obtains that the libertine example set forth by Charles II.
+ and his courtiers is wholly to blame for the spirit of depravity which
+ marked his reign. That it was in part answerable for the spread of
+ immorality is true, inasmuch as the royalists, considering sufficient
+ aversion could not be shown to the loathsome hypocrisy of the puritans,
+ therefore fell into an opposite extreme of ostentatious profligacy. But
+ that the court was entirely responsible for the vice tainting all classes
+ of society whilst the merry monarch occupied the throne, is false.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other causes had long been tending to produce this unhappy effect. The
+ reign of the Commonwealth had not been, remarkable for its virtue, though
+ it had been notable for its pharisaism. With the puritan, words of piety
+ took place of deeds of grace; the basest passions were often hidden under
+ sanctimonious exteriors. Even Cromwell, "a man of long and dark
+ discourses, sermons, and prayers," was not above reproach. Bishop Burnet,
+ who has no harsh words for him, and few gentle ones for Charles, states
+ the Protector's intrigue with Lady Dysart was "not a little taken notice
+ of;" on which, the godly man "broke it off." He therefore, Heath records,
+ began an amour with a lady of lesser note&mdash;Mrs. Lambert, the wife of
+ a puritan, herself a lady devoted to psalm singing and audible prayer
+ when, not otherwise pleasantly engaged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general character of many news-sheets of the day proves that morality
+ under the Republic was at a low ebb. Anarchy in a kingdom invariably
+ favours dissoluteness in a people, inasmuch as the disturbance of civil
+ order tends to unsettle moral law. Homes being divided amongst themselves
+ by political strife, paternal care was suspended, and filial respect
+ ignored. In the general confusion which obtained, the distinction of
+ social codes was overlooked. Lord Clarendon states that; during this
+ unhappy period, young people of either sex were "educated in all the
+ liberty of vice, without reprehension or restraint." He adds, "The young
+ women conversed without any circumspection or modesty, and frequently met
+ at taverns and common eating-houses." An additional description of the
+ ways and manners of young maidens under the Republic is given in a rare
+ and curious pamphlet entitled "A Character of England as it was lately
+ presented in a Letter to a Nobleman of France"; printed in the year 1659,
+ for Jo. Crooke, and sold at the Ship in St. Paul's Yard. Having spoken of
+ taverns where "fury and intemperance" reign, and where, "that nothing may
+ be wanting to the height of luxury and impiety, organs have been
+ translated out of the churches for the purpose of chanting their
+ dithyrambics and bestiall bacchanalias to the tune of those instruments
+ which were wont to assist them in the celebration of God's praises," the
+ writer continues: "Your lordship will scarce believe me that the ladies of
+ greatest quality suffer themselves to be treated in one of those taverns,
+ where a curtezan in other cities would scarcely vouchsafe to be
+ entertained; but you will be more astonish't when I shall assure you that
+ they drink their crowned cups roundly, strain healths through their
+ smocks, daunce after the fiddle, kiss freely, and tearm it an honourable
+ treat." He furthermore says they were to be found until midnight in
+ company with their lovers at Spring Garden, which seemed to be "contrived
+ to all the advantages of gallantry." From which evidences it may be
+ gathered, that London under the Commonwealth was little less vicious than
+ under the merry monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The court Charles speedily gathered round him on his restoration was the
+ most brilliant the nation had ever witnessed. Those of birth and
+ distinction who had sought refuge abroad during the late troubles, now
+ joyfully returned: whilst the juvenile branches of noble families living
+ in retirement in England, to whom royalty had been a stranger, no less
+ eagerly flocked to the presence of the gay young king. The wit and
+ politeness of the men, the grace and beauty of the women, who surrounded
+ Charles II. have become proverbial; whilst the gallantries of the one, and
+ the frailties of the other, savour more of romance than reality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the condition of the court on its establishment may be realized, it
+ is necessary, at this stage of its history, to introduce briefly some of
+ the chief personages who surrounded his majesty, and occupied prominent
+ attention in the annals of his reign. Notably amongst them were the
+ gallant Duke of Ormond and his family. His grace, now in his fiftieth
+ year, was distinguished for his commanding appearance, gracious manner,
+ and excellent wit. During the troubles of the civil war, he had proved
+ himself a most loyal subject, inasmuch as he had vested his fortune and
+ ventured his person in service of the late king. Subsequently refusing
+ liberal offers made him by Cromwell, on condition of living in peaceful
+ retirement, he, after the execution of Charles I., betook himself to
+ France, and shared exile with the young king until the restoration. In
+ consequence of his proven fealty, honours were then deservingly showered
+ upon him: he was made grand steward of the household, first lord of the
+ bedchamber, and subsequently lord lieutenant of Ireland. The duchess, who
+ had participated in her husband's misfortunes with a courage equal to his
+ own, was a high-minded and most virtuous lady, who had brought up her
+ family with great care. Scarcely less distinguished in mien and manner
+ than the duke, were his two sons, Thomas, Earl of Ossory, and Lord Richard
+ Butler, afterwards Earl of Arran. My lord of Ossory was no less remarkable
+ for his beauty than famous for his accomplishments: he rode and played
+ tennis to perfection, performed upon the lute to entrancement, and danced
+ to the admiration of the court; he was moreover a good historian, and well
+ versed in chronicles of romance. No less was the Earl of Arran proficient
+ in qualifications befitting his birth, and gifted with attributes aiding
+ his gallantry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A third member of this noble family played a more remarkable part in the
+ history of the court during her brief career than either of her brothers.
+ This was the Lady Elizabeth Butler, eldest daughter of the duke, who,
+ unfortunately for her own happiness, married my Lord Chesterfield at the
+ Hague, when, a few months before the restoration, that nobleman fled to
+ the continent to escape the consequences of Francis Woolley's murder. In
+ Lely's picture of the young Countess of Chesterfield, her piquancy
+ attracts at a glance, whilst her beauty charms on examination. Her cousin,
+ Anthony Hamilton, describes her as having large blue eyes, very tempting
+ and alluring, a complexion extremely fair, and a heart "ever open to
+ tender sentiments," by reason of which her troubles arose, as shall be set
+ down in proper sequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry Jermyn, Earl of St. Albans, and his nephew, "the little Jermyn,"
+ were also notable as figuring in court intrigues. The earl was member of
+ the privy council to his majesty, and moreover held a still closer
+ connection to the queen mother; for, according to Sir John Reresby, Madame
+ Buviere, and others, her majesty had privately married his lordship abroad&mdash;an
+ act of condescension he repaid with inhumanity. Madame Buviere says he
+ never gave the queen a good word; and when she spoke to him he used to
+ say, "Que me veut cette femme?" The same authority adds, he treated her
+ majesty in an extremely ill manner, "so that whilst she had not a faggot
+ to warm herself, he had in his apartments a good fire and a sumptuous
+ table." [This testimony concerning the queen's poverty is borne out by
+ Cardinal de Retz. In his interesting Memoirs he tells of a visit he paid
+ the queen mother, then an exile in Paris. He found her with her youngest
+ daughter, Henrietta, in the chamber of the latter. "At my coming in," says
+ the Cardinal, "she (the queen) said, 'You see, I am come to keep Henrietta
+ company; the poor child could not rise to-day for want of a fire.' The
+ truth is, that the Cardinal (Mazarin) for six months together had not
+ ordered her any money towards her pension; that no tradespeople would
+ trust her for anything and there was not at her lodgings a single billet.
+ You will do me the justice to think that the princess of England did not
+ keep her bed the next day for want of a faggot... Posterity will hardly
+ believe that a princess of England, grand-daughter to Henry the Great,
+ hath wanted a faggot in the month of January, in the Louvre, and in the
+ eyes of the French court."] Pepys records that the marriage of her majesty
+ to the earl was commonly talked of at the restoration; and he likewise
+ mentions it was rumoured "that they had a daughter between them in France.
+ How true," says this gossip, "God knows."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The earl's nephew, Henry Jermyn, is described as having a big head and
+ little legs, an affected carriage, and a wit consisting "in expressions
+ learned by rote, which he occasionally employed either in raillery or
+ love." For all that, he being a man of amorous disposition, the number of
+ his intrigues was no less remarkable than the rank of those who shared
+ them. Most notable amongst his conquests was the king's eldest sister,
+ widow of the Prince of Orange&mdash;a lady possessing in no small degree
+ natural affections for which her illustrious family were notorious. During
+ the exile of Charles II., Henry Jermyn had made a considerable figure at
+ her court in Holland by reason of the splendour of his equipage, entirely
+ supported by his uncle's wealth; he had likewise made a forcible
+ impression on her heart by virtue of the ardour of his addresses, wholly
+ sustained by his own effrontery. The effect of his presence on the
+ princess soon became visible to the court. Rumour whispered that as Lord
+ St. Albans had already made an alliance with royalty, his nephew had
+ likewise followed his example; but scandal declared that young Jermyn and
+ the princess had omitted the ceremony which should have sanctioned their
+ happiness. The reputation of such an amour gained him the immediate
+ attention of many women, whose interest in his character increased with
+ the knowledge of his abilities, and helped to associate him in their
+ memories with tenderest emotions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another figure prominent in this gay and goodly assembly was George
+ Villiers, second Duke of Buckingham. The faultless beauty of his face, and
+ graceful symmetry of his figure, would have rendered him distinguished in
+ a court less sensuously impressionable to physical perfection, even if his
+ talents had not dazzled, and his wit amused. On the death of the first
+ Duke of Buckingham, "styled the handsomest bodied man in England," the
+ late king of pious memory undertook the charge of the young duke, and had
+ him educated with his own sons. Subsequently he was sent to Cambridge, and
+ then travelled into France, the better to acquire that polish of manner
+ and grace of bearing for which he became distinguished. But, whilst
+ abroad, word was brought him of the distress of his master, the king; on
+ which the young duke hastened back into England, became a cavalier, and
+ fought his majesty's battles with great gallantry. Soon after Charles I.
+ had been beheaded, his faithful servitor went abroad; but being loyal to
+ the Stuart cause, he journeyed with Charles II. to Scotland, and
+ afterwards fought beside him in the bloody battle of Worcester. Whilst the
+ monarch was hiding in Boscobel Wood, the duke betook himself to London,
+ where, donning a wizard's mask, a jack-pudding coat, a hat adorned with a
+ fox's tail and cock's feathers, he masqueraded as a mountebank, and
+ discoursed diverting nonsense from a stage erected at Charing Cross. After
+ running several risks, he escaped to France. But alas for the duke, who
+ was born as Madame Dunois avows, doubtless from experience&mdash;"for
+ gallantry and magnificence," he was now penniless, his great estates being
+ confiscated by Cromwell. However, conceiving a scheme that might secure
+ him part of his fortune, he hastened to put it into execution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened that my Lord Fairfax, one of Cromwell's great generals, had
+ allotted to him by the Protector a portion of the Buckingham estates that
+ returned five thousand pounds a year. The general was, moreover, placed in
+ possession of York House, which had likewise belonged to his grace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it happened Lord Fairfax, a generous-tempered man and brave soldier,
+ had an only child, a daughter destined to become his heiress; aware of
+ which the duke resolved to marry her, that he might in this manner recover
+ portion of his estate. The fact of the lady never having seen him did not
+ interfere with his plans; that she would reject his suit seemed an
+ impossibility; that she would succumb to the fascination he invariably
+ exercised over woman was a certainty. Nor did it matter that Mistress
+ Fairfax was no beauty; for the duke, being grateful for past favours
+ liberally bestowed by the opposite sex, had no intention of becoming under
+ any circumstances churlish enough to limit his devotion to one lady,
+ though she were his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carefully disguising himself, he journeyed to London, where he was met by
+ a faithful friend, who promised he would aid him in winning Mistress
+ Fairfax, towards which end he promptly introduced the duke to that
+ estimable gentlewoman. Having once obtained speech of her, the remainder
+ of his scheme was comparatively easy of accomplishment. She loved the gay
+ and graceful gallant at first sight, and through years of bitter wrong and
+ cruel neglect continued his faithful and devoted slave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though she had become clandestinely acquainted with him, she was too good
+ a daughter to wed without her father's consent. But this she had not much
+ difficulty in obtaining. Though Lord Fairfax had fought against his king,
+ he was not sufficiently republican to scorn alliance with nobility, nor so
+ thoroughly puritan as to disdain connection with the ungodly. Accordingly
+ he gave his sanction to the union, which was celebrated at his mansion at
+ Nun Appleton, within six miles of York. Now, my Lord Fairfax had not
+ consulted Cromwell's goodwill concerning this alliance, the news of which
+ reaching the Protector in due time, made him exceedingly wroth. For he had
+ daughters to marry, and, that he might strengthen his power, was desirous
+ of wedding them to scions of nobility; Buckingham being one of those whom
+ he had mentally selected to become a member of his family. His anger was
+ therefore at once directed against Fairfax and his grace. The former he
+ could not molest, but the latter he committed to the Tower; and if the
+ great Protector had not been soon after seized by fatal illness, the duke
+ would have made his last journey from thence to Tower Hill. As it fell out
+ he remained a prisoner until within a year of the coming of Charles, whom
+ he welcomed with exceeding joy. Being bred with the merry monarch, he had
+ from boyhood been a favourite of his majesty, with whom he shared a common
+ love for diversion. He was, therefore, from the first a prominent figure
+ at Whitehall; his handsome person and extravagant dress adorned the court;
+ his brilliant wit and poignant satire amused the royal circle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His grace, however, had a rival, the vivacity of whose temper and piquancy
+ of whose humour went far to eclipse Buckingham's talent in these
+ directions. This was the young Earl of Rochester, son of my Lord Wilmot,
+ who had so successfully aided the king's escape after the battle of
+ Worcester, for which service he had been created Earl of Rochester by
+ Charles in Paris. That worthy man dying just a year previous to the
+ restoration, his son succeeded to his titles, and likewise to an estate
+ which had been preserved for him by the prudence of his mother. Even in
+ his young days Lord Rochester gave evidence of possessing a lively wit and
+ remarkable genius, which were cultivated by his studies at Oxford and his
+ travels abroad. So that at the age of eighteen, when he returned to
+ England and presented himself at Whitehall, his sprightly parts won him
+ the admiration of courtiers and secured him the favour of royalty. Nor was
+ the young earl less distinguished by his wit and learning than by his face
+ and figure; the delicate beauty of his features and natural grace of his
+ person won him the love of many women, whom the tenderness of his heart
+ and generosity of his youth did not permit him to leave unrequited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon surfeited by his conquests in the drawing-room, he was anxious to
+ extend his triumphs in another direction; and, selecting the sea as a
+ scene of action, he volunteered to sail under my Lord Sandwich in quest of
+ the Dutch East Indian fleet. At the engagements to which this led he
+ exhibited a dauntless courage that earned him renown abroad, and covered
+ him with honour on his return to court. From that time he, for many years,
+ surrendered himself to a career of dissipation, often abandoning the paths
+ of decency and decorum, pursuing vice in its most daring and eccentric
+ fashion, employing his genius in the composition of lampoons which spared
+ not even the king, and in the writing of ribald verses, the very names of
+ which are not proper to indite. Lord Orford speaks of him as a man "whom
+ the muses were fond to inspire, and ashamed to avow; and who practised,
+ without the least reserve, that secret which can make verses more read for
+ their defects than for their merits." More of my Lord Rochester and his
+ poems anon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas Killigrew, another courtier, was a poet, dramatist, and man of
+ excellent wit. He had been page in the service of his late majesty, and
+ had shared exile with the present monarch, to whose pleasures abroad and
+ at home he was ever ready to pander. At the restoration he was appointed a
+ groom of the bedchamber, and, moreover, was made master of the revels&mdash;an
+ office eminently suited to his tastes, and well fitted to exercise his
+ capacities. His ready wit amused the king so much, that he was
+ occasionally led to freedoms of speech which taxed his majesty's
+ good-nature. His escapades diverted the court to such an extent, that he
+ frequently took the liberty of affording it entertainment at the expense
+ of its reputation. The "beau Sidney," a man "of sweet and caressing
+ temper," handsome appearance, and amorous disposition; Sir George
+ Etherege, a wit and a playwright; and Charles Sackville, Earl of Dorset, a
+ poet and man of sprightly speech, were likewise courtiers of note.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among such congenial companions the merry monarch abandoned himself wholly
+ to the pursuit of pleasure, and openly carried on his intrigue with
+ Barbara Palmer. According to the testimony of her contemporaries, she was
+ a woman of surpassing loveliness and violent passions. Gilbert Burnet,
+ whilst admitting her beauty, proclaims her defects. She was, he relates,
+ "most enormously vicious and ravenous, foolish but imperious, very uneasy
+ to the king, and always carrying on intrigues with other men, while she
+ yet pretended she was jealous of him." Pepys testifies likewise to her
+ physical attractions so long as she reigned paramount in the king's
+ affections; but when another woman, no less fair, came betwixt my lady and
+ his majesty's favour, Mr. Pepys, being a loyal man and a frail, found
+ greater beauty in the new love, whose charms he avowed surpassed the old.
+ To his most interesting diary posterity is indebted for glimpses of the
+ manner in which the merry monarch and his mistress behaved themselves
+ during the first months of the restoration. Now he tells of "great doings
+ of musique," which were going on at Madame Palmer's house, situated in the
+ Strand, next Earl Sandwich's, and of the king and the duke being with that
+ lady: again, in the Chapel Royal, Whitehall, he observed, whilst Dr.
+ Herbert Croft prayed and preached, "how the Duke of York and Mrs. Palmer
+ did talk to one another very wantonly through the hangings that part the
+ king's closet and the closet where the ladies sit." And later on, when he
+ witnessed "The Humorous Lieutenant" performed before the court, he noted
+ the royal favourite was likewise present, "with whom the king do discover
+ a great deal of familiarity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently, in February, 1661, exactly nine months after his majesty's
+ return, Mrs. Palmer gave birth to a daughter. To the vast amusement of the
+ court, no less than three men claimed the privilege of being considered
+ father of this infant. One of these was my Lord Chesterfield, whom the
+ child grew to resemble in face and person; the second was Roger Palmer,
+ who left her his estate; the third was King Charles, who had her baptized
+ Anne Palmer Fitzroy, adopted her as his daughter, and eventually married
+ her to the Earl of Sussex.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the restoration the subject of his majesty's marriage was
+ mooted by his councillors, who trusted a happy union would redeem him from
+ vice, and, by bringing him heirs, help to establish him more firmly in the
+ affections of his people. The king lending a willing ear to this advice,
+ the sole difficulty in carrying it into execution rested in the selection
+ of a bride congenial to his taste and equal to his sovereignty. King Louis
+ of France had no sisters, and his nieces had not commended themselves to
+ the merry monarch's favour during his stay abroad. Spain had two infantas,
+ but one was wedded to the King of France, and the other betrothed to the
+ heir of the royal house of Austria. Germany, of course, had princesses in
+ vast numbers, who awaited disposal; but when they were proposed to King
+ Charles, "he put off the discourse with raillery," as Lord Halifax
+ narrates. "Odd's fish," he would say, shrugging his shoulders and making a
+ grimace, "I could not marry one of them: they are all dull and foggy!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Catherine of Braganza, daughter of Don Juan IV. of Portugal, was unwedded,
+ and to her Charles ultimately addressed himself. Alliance with her
+ commended itself to the nation from the fact that the late king, before
+ the troubled times began, had entered into a negotiation with Portugal
+ concerning the marriage of this same infanta and his present majesty; and
+ such was the esteem in which the memory of Charles I. was now held, that
+ compliance with his desires was regarded as a sacred obligation. The
+ Portuguese ambassador assured the merry monarch that the princess, by
+ reason of her beauty, person, and age, was most suited to him. To convince
+ him of this, he showed his majesty a portrait of the lady, which the king
+ examining, declared "that person could not be unhandsome." The ambassador,
+ who was of a certainty most anxious for this union, then said it was true
+ the princess was a catholic, and would never change her faith; but she was
+ free from "meddling activity;" that she had been reared by a wise mother,
+ and would only look to the freedom of practising her own religion without
+ interfering with that of others. Finally, he added that the princess would
+ have a dowry befitting her high station, of no less a sum than five
+ hundred thousand pounds sterling in ready money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, by way of addition to this already handsome portion, the Queen
+ of Portugal was ready to assign over and annex to the English crown, the
+ Island of Bombay, in the East Indies, and Tangier on the African coast&mdash;a
+ place of strength and importance, which would be of great benefit and
+ security to British commerce. Nor was this all. Portugal was likewise
+ willing to grant England free trade in Brazil and the East Indies, a
+ privilege heretofore denied all other countries. This was indeed a dower
+ which none of the "dull and foggy" German princesses could bring the
+ crown. The prospect of obtaining so much ready money especially commended
+ the alliance to the extravagant taste of his majesty, who had this year
+ complained to Parliament of his poverty, by reason of which he "was so
+ much grieved to see many of his friends come to him at Whitehall, and to
+ think they were obliged to go somewhere else for a dinner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The merry monarch was therefore well pleased at the prospect of his union,
+ as were likewise the chancellor and four or five "competent considerers of
+ such an affair" whom he consulted. These worthy counsellors and men of
+ sage repute, who included in their number the Duke of Ormond and Sir
+ Edward Nicholas, Secretary of State, the Earl of Manchester, and the Earl
+ of Southampton, after regretting it was not agreeable to his majesty to
+ select a queen who professed the protestant religion, gave it as their
+ opinion there was no catholic princess in Europe whom he, with so much
+ reason and advantage, could marry as the infanta of Portugal. They,
+ moreover, added that the sum promised as part of her portion, setting
+ aside the places, "was much greater&mdash;almost double to what any king
+ had ever received in money by any marriage." The council, therefore,
+ without a dissenting voice, advised him to the marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 8th of May, 1661, his majesty, being clad in robes of state, and
+ wearing the crown, rode in great pomp to open Parliament, which he
+ addressed from the throne. In the course of his speech, he announced his
+ approaching marriage in a singularly characteristic address. "I will not
+ conclude without telling you some news," he said, "news that I think will
+ be very acceptable to you, and therefore I should think myself unkind, and
+ ill-natured if I did not impart it to you. I have been put in mind by my
+ friends that it was now time to marry, and I have thought so myself ever
+ since I came into England. But there appeared difficulties enough in the
+ choice, though many overtures have been made to me; and if I should never
+ marry until I could make such a choice against which there could be no
+ foresight of any inconvenience that may ensue, you would live to see me an
+ old bachelor, which I think you do not desire to do. I can now tell you,
+ not only that I am resolved to marry, but with whom I am resolved to
+ marry. If God please, it is with the daughter of Portugal. And I will make
+ all the haste I can to fetch you a queen hither, who, I doubt not, will
+ bring great blessings with her to me and you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day addresses of congratulation were presented to his majesty by both
+ Houses. This gratifying news was made known to the Portuguese ambassador,
+ Count da Ponte, by the lord high chancellor, who visited his excellency
+ for the purpose, attended by state befitting such a great and joyful
+ occasion; two gentlemen preceded him, bearing respectively a gilded mace
+ and a crimson velvet purse embroidered with the arms of Great Britain, and
+ many others following him to the ambassador's residence. A month later,
+ the marriage articles were signed; the new queen being guaranteed the free
+ exercise of her faith, and the sum of thirty thousand a year during life;
+ whilst the king was assured possession of her great dowry, together with
+ the territories already mentioned, one of which, Bombay, ultimately became
+ of such vast importance to the crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles then despatched the Portuguese ambassador to Catherine&mdash;from
+ this time styled queen&mdash;in order to make arrangements for her journey
+ into England. Likewise he wrote a letter, remarkable for the fervour of
+ its sentiments and elegance of its diction, which da Ponte was
+ commissioned to convey her. This courtly epistle, addressed by Charles to
+ "The Queen of Great Britain, my wife and lady, whom God preserve," is
+ dated July 2nd, 1661, and runs as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "MY LADY AND WIFE,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Already, at my request, the good Count da Ponte has set off for Lisbon;
+ for me the signing of the marriage act has been great happiness; and there
+ is about to be despatched at this time after him one of my servants,
+ charged with what would appear necessary, whereby may be declared, on my
+ part, the inexpressible joy of this felicitous conclusion, which, when
+ received, will hasten the coming of your majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am going to make a short progress into some of my provinces; in the
+ meantime, whilst I go from my most sovereign good, yet I do not complain
+ as to whither I go, seeking in vain tranquillity in my restlessness;
+ hoping to see the beloved person of your majesty in these kingdoms already
+ your own, and that with the same anxiety with which, after my long
+ banishment, I desired to see myself within them, and my subjects, desiring
+ also to behold me amongst them, having manifested their most ardent wishes
+ for my return, well known to the world. The presence of your serenity is
+ only wanting to unite us, under the protection of God, in the health and
+ content I desire. I have recommended to the queen, our lady and mother,
+ the business of the Count da Ponte, who, I must here avow, has served me
+ in what I regard as the greatest good in this world, which cannot be mine
+ less than it is that of your majesty; likewise not forgetting the good
+ Richard Russell, who laboured on his part to the same end. [Richard
+ Russell was Bishop of Portalegre, in Portugal, and Almoner to Catherine of
+ Braganza.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The very faithful husband of your majesty, whose hand he kisses,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "CHARLES REX."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ London, 2nd of July, 1661.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During many succeeding months preparations were made in England to receive
+ the young Queen. The "Royal Charles," a stately ship capable of carrying
+ eighty cannon and six hundred men, was suitably fitted to convey her to
+ England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The state room and apartments destined for use of the future bride were
+ furnished and ornamented in most luxuriant manner, being upholstered in
+ crimson velvet, handsomely carpeted, and hung with embroideries and
+ taffeties. Lord Sandwich was made commander of the gallant fleet which in
+ due time accompanied the "Royal Charles." He was likewise appointed
+ ambassador extraordinary, and charged with safely conducting the bride
+ unto her bridegroom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In due time, my lord, in high spirits, set sail with his gallant fleet,
+ and on arriving at Portugal was received with every remark of profound
+ respect, and every sign of extravagant joy. Stately ceremonies at court
+ and brilliant rejoicings in public made time speed with breathless
+ rapidity. But at length there came a day when my Lord Sandwich encountered
+ a difficulty he had not foreseen. According to instructions, he had taken
+ possession of Tangier before proceeding for the queen; and he had likewise
+ been directed to see her dowry put on board one of his ships, before
+ receiving her on the "Royal Charles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the Queen of Portugal, who acted as regent since the death of her
+ husband, being strongly desirous of seeing her daughter the consort of a
+ great sovereign, and of protecting her country from the tyranny of Spain
+ by an alliance with England, had gathered the infanta's marriage portion
+ with infinite trouble; which had necessitated the selling of her majesty's
+ jewels and much of her plate, and the borrowing of both plate and jewels
+ from churches and monasteries all over the land. The sums accumulated in
+ this manner she had carefully stowed away in great sacks; but, alas,
+ between the date on which the marriage treaty had been signed, and arrival
+ of the English ambassador to claim the bride, Spain had made war upon
+ Portugal, and the dowry had to be expended in arming the country for
+ defence. Therefore, when my Lord Sandwich mentioned the dowry, her
+ majesty, with keen regrets and infinite apologies, informed him so great
+ were the straits of poverty to which her kingdom was reduced, that she
+ could pay only half the stipulated sum at present, but promised the
+ remaining portion should be made up the following year. Moreover, the part
+ which she then asked him to accept was made up of jewels, sugars, spices
+ and other commodities which she promised to have converted by arrangement
+ into solid gold in London.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ambassador was therefore sorely perplexed, and knew not whether he
+ should return to England without the bride, or take her and the
+ merchandise which represented half her dowry on board his ship. He decided
+ on the latter course, and the queen, with her court and retinue, set sail
+ for merry England on the 23rd of April, 1662.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The king's intrigue with Barbara Palmer.&mdash;The queen arrives at
+ Portsmouth.&mdash;Visited by the Duke of York.&mdash;The king leaves town,&mdash;First
+ interview with his bride.&mdash;His letter to the lord chancellor.&mdash;Royal
+ marriage and festivities.&mdash;Arrival at Hampton Court Palace.&mdash;Prospects
+ of a happy union.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine gives birth to a second child.&mdash;The
+ king's infatuation.&mdash;Mistress and wife.&mdash;The queen's misery.&mdash;The king's
+ cruelty.&mdash;Lord Clarendon's messages.&mdash;His majesty resolves to break the
+ queen's spirit.&mdash;End of the domestic quarrel.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the king conducted the negotiations of his marriage with Catherine
+ of Braganza, he likewise continued the pursuit of his intrigue with
+ Barbara Palmer. The unhappy fascination which this vile woman exercised
+ over his majesty increased with time; and though his ministers declared a
+ suitable marriage would reform his ways, his courtiers concluded he had no
+ intention of abandoning his mistress in favour of his wife. For Barbara
+ Palmer, dreading the loss of her royal lover and the forfeiture of wealth
+ accruing from this connection, had firmly bound him in her toils.
+ Moreover, in order that he might continually abide under her influence,
+ she conceived a scheme which would of necessity bring her into constant
+ intercourse with him and the young queen. She therefore demanded he would
+ appoint her one of the ladies of the bedchamber to her majesty, to which
+ he, heedless of the insult this would fix upon his wife, readily
+ consented.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to qualify Barbara Palmer for such a position, it was necessary
+ she should be raised to the peerage. This could only be accomplished by
+ ennobling her husband, unless public decency were wholly ignored, and she
+ was created a peeress in her own right, whilst he remained a commoner.
+ After some faint show of hesitation, Roger Palmer accepted the honours
+ thrust upon him by reason of his wife's infamy. On the 11th of December,
+ 1661, he was created Earl of Castlemaine, and Baron Limerick in the
+ peerage of Ireland, when the royal favourite became a countess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now the merry month of May being arrived, the queen was speedily
+ expected; and on the night of the 13th joyful tidings reached London that
+ the "Royal Charles," accompanied by the fleet, was in sight of Portsmouth.
+ At which news there was great rejoicing throughout the town, church bells
+ ringing merrily, and bonfires blazing brightly; but before the Countess of
+ Castlemaine's house, where the king, according to his custom was at
+ supper, there was no fire, though such signs of joy burned "at all the
+ rest of the doors almost in the streets, which was much observed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next day the fleet arrived in the harbour of Portsmouth, about four in the
+ afternoon. Heath says the people gathered to receive the bride with all
+ possible demonstrations of honour, "the nobility and gentry and multitudes
+ of Londoners, in most rich apparel and in great numbers, waiting on the
+ shore for her landing; and the mayor and aldermen and principal persons of
+ that corporation being in their gowns, and with a present and a speech
+ ready to entertain her; the cannon and small shot, both from round that
+ town and the whole fleet echoing to one another the loud proclamations of
+ their joy." These good people were, however, destined to disappointment;
+ for though the bride was impatient to land, because suffering from
+ prostration consequent on a rough voyage and severe illness, she was not,
+ in observance of court etiquette, permitted to leave the ship until the
+ king arrived. This did not take place until six days later, Charles being
+ detained in town by reason of some important bills then passing in
+ Parliament, which it was necessary for him to sign. He had, however,
+ despatched his royal brother of York, then Lord High Admiral of England,
+ to meet her at sea, and give her greeting in his name. Accordingly the
+ duke had encountered the fleet at the Isle of Wight, and gone on board the
+ queen's ship, when she received him in her cabin seated under a canopy on
+ a chair of state. His royal highness expressed his joy at her arrival,
+ presented "his majesty's high respects and his exceeding affection for
+ her," and paid her many compliments. Lord Chesterfield, who had been
+ appointed chamberlain to the queen, tells us: "Although James, in
+ consequence of his near connection with the sovereign, might have saluted
+ the royal bride, he did not avail himself of this privilege, out of a
+ delicate regard to his majesty's feelings, that he might be the first man
+ to offer that compliment to his queen; she coming out of a country where
+ it was not the fashion." The Duke of York presented some noblemen who had
+ accompanied him; after which she introduced the members of her suite. The
+ queen and her brother-in-law then held a conversation in the Spanish
+ language, when James assured her of his affection, and besought her to
+ accept his services. To these compliments she replied in like manner, when
+ he arose to depart. The queen advanced three paces with him, not
+ withstanding that he protested against such courtesy, bidding her remember
+ her rank. At this she smiled, and answered with much sweetness, "She
+ wished to do that out of affection, which she was not obliged to do"&mdash;a
+ reply which made a favourable impression on his mind. Whilst she continued
+ on board, the duke and his suite visited her daily, entering freely into
+ conversation with her, and finding her "a most agreeable lady." Probably
+ at the desire of the king, she left the ship before his arrival, and was
+ conveyed to his majesty's house at Portsmouth, where she was received by
+ the Countess of Suffolk, first lady of the bedchamber, and four other
+ ladies who had been appointed members of her household. One of her first
+ requests to these was&mdash;as may be learned from a letter of Lord
+ Sandwich, preserved in the Bodleian library&mdash;"that they would put her
+ in that habit they thought would be most pleasing to the king." Before
+ leaving the "Royal Charles" she spoke to all the officers of the ship,
+ thanked them for their services, and permitted them to kiss her hand. She
+ then presented a collar of gold to the captain, and gave money to be
+ distributed among the crew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When at length the parliamentary business was concluded, the king found
+ himself in readiness to depart. The last words he addressed to his
+ faithful commons before starting are worth recording: "The mention of my
+ wife's arrival," said he, in the pleasant familiar tone it was his wont to
+ use, "puts me in mind to desire you to put that compliment upon her, that
+ her entrance into this town may be made with more decency than the ways
+ will now suffer it to be; and to that purpose I pray you would quickly
+ pass such laws as are before you, in order to the mending those ways, that
+ she may not find Whitehall surrounded with water."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At nine o'clock on the night of the 19th of May, his majesty left London
+ in Lord Northumberland's carriage, on his way to Portsmouth. Arriving at
+ Kingston an hour later, he entered Lord Chesterfield's coach, which
+ awaited him there by appointment, and drove to Guildford, at which town he
+ slept the night. In the morning he was up betimes, and posted to
+ Portsmouth, where he arrived at noon. The queen, being ill of a slight
+ fever, was yet in bed: but the king, all impatient to see the bride which
+ heaven had sent him, sought admittance to her chamber. The poor princess
+ evidently did not look to advantage; for his majesty told Colonel Legg he
+ thought at first glance "they had brought him a bat instead of a woman."
+ On further acquaintance, however, she seemed to have afforded more
+ pleasure to the king's sight, for the next day he expressed the
+ satisfaction he felt concerning her, in a letter addressed to the lord
+ chancellor, which is preserved in the library of the British Museum, and
+ runs as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "PORTSMOUTH, 21st May (Eight in the Morning).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I arrived here yesterday about two in the afternoon, and, as soon as I
+ had shifted myself, I went into, my wife's chamber, whom I found in bed,
+ by reason of a little cough and some inclination to a fever: but I believe
+ she will find herself very well in the morning when she wakes. I can now
+ only give you an account of what I have seen abed, which, in short, is,
+ her face is not so exact as to be called a beauty, though her eyes are
+ excellent good, and not anything in her face that in the least degree can
+ shock one: on the contrary, she hath as much agreeableness in her looks
+ altogether as ever I saw; and if I have any skill in physiognomy, which I
+ think I have, she must be as good a woman as ever was born. Her
+ conversation, as much as I can perceive, is very good, for she has wit
+ enough, and a most agreeable voice. You would wonder to see how well
+ acquainted we are already. In a word, I think myself very happy; for I am
+ confident our two humours will agree very well together. I have no more to
+ say: my Lord Lieutenant will give you an account of the rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king was attended by Lord Sandwich during this interview, and his
+ lordship, in a letter addressed to the lord chancellor, informed him the
+ meeting between his majesty and the infanta, "hath been with much
+ contentment on both sides, and that we are like to be very happy in their
+ conjunction." Next morning the Countess of Suffolk, and other ladies
+ appointed to wait upon the bride, dressed her according to the English
+ fashion, in "a habit they thought would be most pleasing to the king," in
+ which she was married. The ceremony was first performed according to the
+ rites of the Catholic Church, by the Rev. Lord Aubigny, brother to the
+ Duke of Richmond, in the queen's bedchamber; that apartment being selected
+ for the purpose, as affording a privacy necessary to be maintained, by
+ reason of the prejudice then existing towards Catholicism. There were
+ present the Duke of York, Philip, afterwards Cardinal Howard, and five
+ Portuguese, all of whom were bound over to keep the strictest secrecy
+ concerning what they witnessed. Later in the day, Dr. Sheldon, Bishop of
+ London, married their majesties according to the form prescribed by the
+ Church of England. The latter ceremony took place in the presence chamber.
+ A rail divided the apartment, at the upper part of which the king and
+ queen, the bishops, the Spanish Ambassador, and Sir Richard Fanshaw stood;
+ the lower portion being crowded by the court. When Dr. Sheldon had
+ declared their majesties married, the Countess of Suffolk, according to a
+ custom of the time, detached the ribbons from the bride's dress, and,
+ cutting them in pieces, distributed them amongst those present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Feasting, balls, and diversions of all kinds followed the celebration of
+ the royal nuptials, and for a time the king was delighted with his bride.
+ Four days after the marriage he writes again to the lord chancellor in
+ most cheerful tone:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My brother will tell you of all that passes here, which I hope will be to
+ your satisfaction. I am sure 'tis so much to mine that I cannot easily
+ tell you how happy I think myself, and must be the worst man living (which
+ I hope I am not) if I be not a good husband. I am confident never two
+ humours were better fitted together than ours are. We cannot stir from
+ hence till Tuesday, by reason that there is not carts to be had to-morrow
+ to transport all our GUARDE INFANTAS, without which there is no stirring:
+ so you are not to expect me till Thursday night at Hampton Court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They did not reach the palace until the 29th of May, that being the king's
+ birthday, and, moreover, the anniversary of his entrance into London; a
+ date which the Queen's arrival now caused to be celebrated with triple
+ magnificence and joy. When the coach that conveyed their majesties drew
+ near, the whole palace seemed astir with happy excitement. Double lines of
+ soldiers, both horse and foot, lined the way from the gates to the
+ entrance. In the great hall the lord chancellor, foreign ambassadors,
+ judges, and councillors of state awaited to pay homage to their majesties;
+ whilst in various apartments were the nobility and men of quality, with
+ their ladies, ranged according to their rank, being all eager to kiss the
+ new queen's hand. Sure never was such show of gladness. Bells rang people
+ cheered, bonfires blazed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the evening news was brought that the Duchess of York was being rowed
+ to Hampton from town; hearing which, the king, with a blithe heart, betook
+ his way to meet her through the garden, now bright with spring flowers and
+ fragrant with sweet scents, till he arrived at the gate by which the
+ silver streak of the pleasant Thames flowed past. And presently on this
+ calm May eve the sound of oars splashing in the tide was heard, and anon a
+ barge came in sight, hung with silken curtains and emblazoned with the
+ arms of royalty. From this the Duchess of York disembarked, aided by the
+ king. When she had offered her congratulations to him, he, taking her
+ hand, led her to his bride, that such fair speeches might be repeated to
+ her majesty. And coming into the queen's presence the duchess would have
+ gone upon her knees and kissed her majesty's hand; but Catherine raised
+ her in her arms, and kissed her on the cheek. Then amidst much joy the
+ happy evening waned to night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The royal palace of Hampton Court, in which Charles had decided on
+ spending his honeymoon, had been raised by the magnificent Wolsey in the
+ plenitude of his power as a place of recreation. Since his downfall it had
+ been used by royalty as a summer residence, it being in truth a stately
+ pleasure house. The great pile contained upwards of four hundred rooms.
+ The principal apartments had cedar or gilded and frescoed ceilings, and
+ walls hung with rare tapestries and curtains heavy with gold. Moreover,
+ these rooms contained furniture of most skilful design and costly
+ manufacture, and were adorned by the choice works of such masters of their
+ art as Holbein, Bellini, Vansomer, Rubens, and Raphael; and withal
+ enriched with Indian cabinets, such as never were seen in England before,
+ which the queen had brought with her from Portugal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great hall had been the scene of many sumptuous banquets. The chapel
+ was rich in carved designs. Her majesty's bedroom, with its curtains of
+ crimson silk, its vast mirror and toilet of beaten and massive gold, was a
+ splendid apartment&mdash;the more so from its state bed, which Evelyn says
+ was "an embroidery of silver on crimson velvet, and cost L8,000, being a
+ present made by the States of Holland, when his majesty returned, and had
+ formerly been given by them to our king's sister, ye Princess of Orange,
+ and being bought of her againe, was now presented to ye king." Around this
+ noble residence, where the court was wont to tarry in summer months,
+ stretched broad and flowerful gardens, with wide parterres, noble statues,
+ sparkling fountains, and marble vases; and beyond lay the park, planted
+ "with swete rows of lime-trees."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here all day long, in the fair summer time of this year, pleasure held
+ boundless sway. Sauntering in balmy gardens, or seeking shelter from
+ sun-rays in green glades and leafy groves, their majesties, surrounded by
+ their brilliant court, chased bright hours away in frolic and pleasantry
+ from noon till night. Then revelry, gaining new life, began once more,
+ when courtly figures danced graceful measures to sounds of mirthful
+ strains, under the lustre of innumerable lights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a while it seemed as if a brave prospect of happiness was in store for
+ the young queen. Her love for her husband, her delight in his affection,
+ her pride in his accomplishments, together with her simplicity, innocence,
+ and naivete, completely won his heart. These claims to his affection were,
+ moreover, strengthened by the charms of her person. Lord Chesterfield, a
+ man whom experience of the sex had made critical, writes that she "was
+ exactly shaped, has lovely hands, excellent eyes, a good countenance, a
+ pleasing voice, fine hair, and, in a word, what an understanding man would
+ wish for in a wife." Notwithstanding the attractions of her majesty's
+ person which he enumerates, he adds his fears that "all these will hardly
+ make things run in the right channel; but, if it should, our court will
+ require a new modelling." In this note of alarm he forebodes danger to
+ come. A man of his majesty's character, witty and careless, weak and
+ voluptuous, was not likely to reconstruct his court, or reclaim it from
+ ways he loved. Nor was his union calculated to exercise a lasting
+ impression on him. The affection he bore his wife in the first weeks of
+ their married life was due to the novelty he found in her society,
+ together with the absence of temptation in the shape of his mistress.
+ Constancy to the marriage vow was scarcely to be expected from a man whose
+ morals had never been shackled by restraint; yet faithlessness to a bride
+ was scarcely to be anticipated ere the honeymoon had waned. This was,
+ however, the unhappy fate which awaited Catherine of Braganza.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened early in the month of June, whilst the court was at Hampton,
+ my Lady Castlemaine, who had remained in town through illness, gave birth
+ to a second child. The infant was baptized Charles Palmer, adopted by the
+ king as his own, and as such subsequently created Duke of Southampton.
+ This event seemed to renew all his majesty's tenderness towards her.
+ Wearied by the charm of innocence in the person of his wife, his weak
+ nature yielded to the attraction of vice in that of his mistress. He,
+ therefore, frequently left Hampton Court that he might ride to London,
+ visit the countess, and fritter away some hours in her presence; being
+ heedless alike of the insult he dealt the queen, and the scandal he gave
+ the nation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The while my Lord Castlemaine lived with the lady who shared his title,
+ and whom he called his wife; but their continuance to abide in harmony and
+ goodwill was, soon after the birth of this child, interrupted for ever. My
+ lord was certainly a loyal subject, but he was likewise a religious man,
+ as may be judged, not by that which has been recorded, but from the
+ narration which follows. Having been bred a Catholic, he was anxious his
+ wife's son should be enrolled a member of the same community. To this end
+ he had him baptized by a priest, a proceeding of which the king wholly
+ disapproved; not because his majesty was attached to any religion in
+ particular, but rather that he resented interference with the infant whom
+ he rested satisfied was his own child. Accordingly, by the king's command,
+ Lady Castlemaine's son was rebaptized by the rector of St. Margaret's,
+ Westminster, in the presence of his majesty, the Earl of Oxford, and the
+ Countess of Suffolk, first lady of the bedchamber to the queen and aunt to
+ the king's mistress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This exasperated my Lord Castlemaine to such a degree that high words
+ passed between him and his lady: on which he resolved to part from her for
+ ever. However, she was more prompt to act in the matter than he; for,
+ taking advantage of his absence one day, she packed up her jewels, plate,
+ and household treasures, and departed to the residence of her uncle,
+ Colonel Edward Villiers, at Richmond. This step was probably taken, if not
+ by his majesty's suggestion, at least with his full approval; for the
+ house she selected brought her within an easy distance of Hampton Court,
+ into which the king designed promptly to introduce her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now rumour of the king's liason had spread beyond the English nation, and
+ had been whispered even at the secluded court of Portugal, into the ears
+ of the bride elect. And the queen regent, dreading the trouble this might
+ draw upon her daughter, had counselled her never to admit his majesty's
+ mistress into her presence. This advice the young queen determined to act
+ upon; and accordingly when Charles, a couple of days after their marriage,
+ presented her with a list of those appointed to her household&mdash;amongst
+ whom was my Lady Castlemaine&mdash;her majesty drew a pen across the name
+ of the dreaded favourite. The king, if surprised or indignant, made no
+ remark at the time, but none the less held to the resolution he had taken
+ of appointing the countess a lady of the bedchamber. No further attempt of
+ intruding his mistress's presence upon his wife was made until Lady
+ Castlemaine came to Richmond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened on the afternoon of the day on which the favourite arrived her
+ majesty sat in the great drawing-room, surrounded by a brilliant throng of
+ noble and beautiful women and gay and gallant men. The windows of the
+ apartment stood open; outside fountains splashed in the sun; music played
+ in a distant glade: and all the world seemed glad. And as the queen
+ listened to pleasant sounds of wit and gossip, murmuring around her, the
+ courtiers, at sound of a well-known footstep, suddenly ceasing their
+ discourse, fell back on either side adown the room. At that moment the
+ king entered, leading a lady apparelled in magnificent attire, the contour
+ of whose face and outline of whose figure distinguished her as a woman of
+ supreme and sensuous loveliness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His majesty, suceedingly rich in waving feathers, glittering satins, and
+ fluttering ribbons, returned the gracious bows of his courtiers to right
+ and left; and, unconscious of the curious and perplexed looks they
+ interchanged, advanced to where his wife sat, and introduced my Lady
+ Castlemaine. Her majesty bowed and extended her hand, which the countess,
+ having first courtesyed profoundly, raised to her lips. The queen either
+ had not caught the name, or had disassociated it from that of her
+ husband's mistress; but in an instant the character of the woman
+ presented, and the insult the king had inflicted, flashed upon her mind.
+ Coming so suddenly, it was more than she could bear; all colour fled from
+ her face, tears rushed to her eyes, blood gushed from her nostrils, and
+ she fell senseless to the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such strong evidence of the degree in which his young wife felt the
+ indignity forced upon her, by no means softened his majesty's heart
+ towards her, but rather roused his indignation at what he considered
+ public defiance of his authority. But as his nature was remote from
+ roughness, and his disposition inclined to ease, he at first tried to gain
+ his desire by persuasion, and therefore besought the queen she would
+ suffer his mistress to become a lady of the bedchamber. But whenever the
+ subject was mentioned to her majesty, she burst into tears, and would not
+ give heed to his words. Charles therefore, incensed on his side, deserted
+ her company, and sought the society of those ever ready to entertain him.
+ And as the greater number of his courtiers were fully as licentious as
+ himself, they had no desire he should become subject to his wife, or alter
+ the evil tenor of his ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore in their conversation they cited to him the example of his
+ grandfather, King James I., of glorious memory, who had not dissembled his
+ passions, nor suffered the same to become a reproach to those who returned
+ his love; but had obliged his queen to bear with their company, and treat
+ them with grace and favour; and had, moreover, raised his natural children
+ to the degree of princes of the blood. They told Charles he had inherited
+ the disposition of his grandsire, and they were sure he would treat the
+ objects of his affection in like manner as that king had done. Lady
+ Castlemaine, her friends moreover argued, had, by reason of her love for
+ his majesty, parted from her husband; and now that she had been so
+ publicly made an object of the queen's indignation, she would, if
+ abandoned by him, meet with rude contempt from the world. To such
+ discourses as these the king lent a willing ear, the more as they
+ encouraged him to act according to his desires. He was therefore fully
+ determined to support his mistress; and firmly resolved to subdue his
+ wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, all joyousness vanished from the court; the queen seemed
+ thoroughly dejected, the king bitterly disappointed, and the courtiers
+ grievously disturbed. Moreover, rumours of the trouble which had risen
+ between their majesties became noised abroad, and gave the people occasion
+ of speaking indifferently of their lord the king. Now Charles in his
+ unhappiness betook himself to the chancellor, who was not only his sage
+ adviser and trusted friend, but who had already gained the esteem and
+ confidence of the queen. My lord, by reason of his services to the late
+ king, and his friendship towards his present majesty, took to himself the
+ privilege of speaking with freedom and boldness whenever his advice was
+ asked by the monarch. As Burnet tells us, the worthy chancellor would
+ never make any application to the king's mistress, nor allow anything to
+ pass the seal in which she was named; nor would he ever consent to visit
+ her, which the bishop considered "was maintaining the decencies of virtue
+ in a very solemn manner." The king knowing my lord was the only one of all
+ the strangers surrounding the queen whom she believed devoted to her
+ service, and to whose advice she would hearken with trust, therefore bade
+ him represent to her the advisability of obedience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereon the chancellor boldly pointed out to him "the hard-heartedness and
+ cruelty of laying such a command upon the queen, which flesh and blood
+ could not comply with." He also begged to remind the monarch of what he
+ had heard him say upon the occasion of a like indignity being offered by a
+ neighbouring king to his queen, inasmuch as he had compelled her to endure
+ the presence of his mistress at court. On hearing which King Charles
+ avowed it was "a piece of ill-nature that he could never be guilty of; and
+ if ever he should be guilty of having a mistress after he had a wife,
+ which he hoped he should never be, she should never come where his wife
+ was; he would never add that to the vexation, of which she would have
+ enough without it." Finally my lord added that pursuit of the course his
+ majesty had resolved on, was a most certain way to lose the respect and
+ affections of his people; that the excesses he had already fallen into had
+ in some degree lost him ground in their good esteem, but that his
+ continuance of them would "break the hearts of all his friends, and be
+ grateful only to those who desired the destruction of monarchy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles heard him with some impatience, but in his reply betrayed that
+ graciousness of manner which, never forsaking him, went far in securing
+ the favour of those with whom he conversed. He commenced by telling the
+ chancellor he felt assured his words were prompted by the affection in
+ which he held him; and then having by a pathway of courteous speeches
+ found his way to the old man's heart, his majesty broached the subject
+ uppermost in his mind. His conscience and his honour, he said, for he laid
+ claim to both, led him to repair the ruin he had caused Lady Castlemaine's
+ reputation by promoting her to the position of a lady of the bedchamber;
+ and his gratitude prompted him to avow a friendship for her, "which he
+ owed as well to the memory of her father as to her own person," and
+ therefore he would not be restrained from her company and her
+ conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, he had proceeded so far in the business, that if not successful
+ Lady Castlemaine would be subjected to all imaginable contempt, and be
+ exposed to universal ridicule. If, he added, the queen conformed to his
+ wishes in this regard, it would be the only hard thing he should ever
+ require of her; and, indeed, she might make it very easy, for my lady must
+ behave with all possible respect in her presence, otherwise she should
+ never see his face again. Then he begged the chancellor to wait upon her
+ majesty, lay bare his arguments, and urge her to receive the countess with
+ some show of favour. The chancellor, though not pleased with his mission,
+ yet in hope of healing private discord and averting public scandal,
+ undertook to counsel the queen to obedience, and accordingly waited on her
+ in her private apartments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now her majesty's education had been such as kept her in complete
+ ignorance of the world's ways. The greater part of her life had been spent
+ in the peaceful retirement of a convent, which she left for her mother's
+ country palace, a home scarcely less secluded. Maynard, in a letter
+ preserved in the State Paper Office, written from Lisbon when the royal
+ marriage was proposed, says the infanta, "as sweete a disposition princess
+ as everr was borne," was "bred hugely retired. She hath," he continues,
+ "hardly been tenn tymes out of the palace in her life. In five years tyme
+ she was not out of doores, untill she hurde of his majestie's intentions
+ to make her queen of Ingland, since which she hath been to visit two
+ saintes in the city; and very shortly shee intends to pay her devotion to
+ some saintes in the country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a life of innocence she was brought for the first time face to face
+ with vice, by one who should have been foremost in shielding her from its
+ contact. All her training taught her to avoid the contamination sought to
+ be forced upon her; all her new-born love for her husband prompted her to
+ loathe the mistress who shared his affections. A stranger in a strange
+ land, a slighted queen, a neglected wife, an outraged woman, her
+ sufferings were bitter, Her wrongs were hard to bear. Therefore when my
+ lord chancellor came and made known the object of his visit, she broke
+ into a passion of tears, and could not speak from force of sobs that
+ seemed to rend her heart, and wholly choked her utterance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chancellor then retired with some dismay, but waited on her again next
+ day, when he found her more calm. She begged he would excuse the outburst
+ of feeling he had witnessed, but added very pitifully that when she
+ thought of her misfortunes "she sometimes gave vent to that passion which
+ was ready to break her heart." The advice, or, as he terms it, "the
+ evidence of his devotion," which the chancellor gave was worthy of a
+ courtier and a philosopher. He told the young queen he doubted "she was
+ little beholden to her education, that had given her no better information
+ of the follies and iniquities of mankind; of which he presumed the climate
+ from whence she came could have given more instances than this cold region
+ would afford." Had she been properly instructed, he furthermore hinted,
+ she would never have thought herself so miserable, or her condition so
+ insupportable; and indeed he could not comprehend the reason of her loud
+ complaint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this she could no longer suppress the tears which came into her dark
+ eyes, and cried out she did not expect to find her husband in love with
+ another woman. Then my lord besought her submission to the king; but she
+ remained unshaken in the resolution she had formed. She was ready to ask
+ his majesty's pardon for tiny passion or peevishness she had been guilty
+ of, but added, "the fire appearing in her eyes where the water was," she
+ would never endure the presence of his mistress; and rather than submit to
+ such insult she would "put herself on board any little vessel" and return
+ to Lisbon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Back went the chancellor, with a heavy heart and a troubled face, to the
+ king. He softened the queen's words as much as possible, and assured his
+ majesty her resistance to his will proceeded "from the great passion of
+ love she had for him, which transported her beyond the limits of reason."
+ But this excuse, which should have rejoiced a husband's heart, only
+ irritated his majesty's temper. That night a violent quarrel took place
+ between the husband and wife, yet scarce more than bride and bridegroom.
+ When they had retired, the king&mdash;being inflamed with the words of his
+ courtiers, who assured him the dispute had now resolved itself into a
+ question of who should govern&mdash;reproached the queen with stubbornness
+ and want of duty; upon which she answered by charging him with tyranny and
+ lack of affection. One word borrowed another, till, in his anger, he used
+ threats when she declared she would leave the kingdom. "The passion and
+ noise of the night reached too many ears to be a secret the next day,"
+ says the chancellor, "and the whole court was full of that which ought to
+ have been known to nobody."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the royal pair met next morning, they neither looked at nor spoke to
+ each other. Days passed full of depression and gloom for the young wife,
+ who spent most of her time in seclusion, whilst the king sought
+ distraction in the society of his courtiers. The chancellor, after his
+ second interview with the queen, absented himself from court, not wishing
+ to be furthermore drawn into a quarrel which he saw himself powerless to
+ heal. During his absence the king wrote him a letter which evinced
+ determination to carry out his design. This epistle, preserved in the
+ library of the British Museum, runs as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "HAMPTON COURT, THURSDAY MORNING.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I forgot when you were here last to desire you to give Broderich good
+ council not to meddle any more with what concerns my Lady Castlemaine, and
+ to let him have a care how he is the author of any scandalous reports; for
+ if I find him guilty of any such thing, I will make him repent it to the
+ last moment of his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And now I am entered on this matter, I think it very necessary to give
+ you a little good council in it, lest you may think that by making a
+ farther stir in the business you may divert me from my resolution, which
+ all the world shall never do; and I wish I may be unhappy in this world
+ and in the world to come, if I fail in the least degree of what I have
+ resolved, which is of making my Lady Castlemaine of my wife's bedchamber.
+ And whosoever I find in any endeavours to hinder this resolution of mine
+ (except it be only to myself), I will be his enemy to the last moment of
+ my life. You know how true a friend I have been to you; if you will oblige
+ me eternally, make this business as easy to me as you can, of what opinion
+ soever you are of; for I am resolved to go through with this matter, let
+ what will come on it, which again I solemnly swear before Almighty God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Therefore, if you desire to have the continuance of my friendship, meddle
+ no more with this business except it be to bear down all false and
+ scandalous reports, and to facilitate what I am sure my honour is so much
+ concerned in. And whosoever I find is to be my Lady Castlemaine's enemy in
+ this matter, I do promise, upon my word, to be his enemy as long as I
+ live. You may show this letter to my lord lieutenant, and if you have both
+ a mind to oblige me, carry yourselves like friends to me in this matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chancellor was, soon after the receipt of this letter, summoned to
+ Hampton Court, when his majesty, with some passion, declared the quarrel
+ was spoken of everywhere, and wholly to his disadvantage. He was therefore
+ anxious to end it at once, and commanded my lord to wait again upon the
+ queen, and persuade her to his wishes. The chancellor informed the king he
+ "had much rather spend his pains in endeavouring to convert his majesty
+ from pursuing his resolution, which he did in his conscience believe to be
+ unjust, than in persuading her majesty to comply with it, which yet he
+ would very heartily do." Saying which, he departed on his errand; to which
+ the queen answered, her conscience would not allow her to consent that the
+ king's mistress should be one of her attendants. Then the chancellor
+ besought his royal master, saying he hoped he might be no more consulted
+ with, nor employed concerning an affair, in which he had been so
+ unsuccessful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By reason of this opposition the king was now more resolved than ever to
+ honour his mistress and humble his wife; and, with a cruelty unusual to
+ his nature, determined to break her majesty's spirit, and force her into
+ obedience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On coming to England the young bride had brought in her train some
+ Portuguese gentlewomen and nobles, whom she was anxious to employ in
+ various offices about her person, that she might not feel quite in the
+ midst of strangers. These his majesty believed were in some measure
+ answerable for the queen's resistance to his desires, and therefore
+ decided on sending them back to their own country; knowing moreover, this
+ was an act which would sorely grieve her majesty. Therefore, without first
+ deigning to inform, the Queen of Portugal, he named a day for them to
+ embark. This was a sad blow to the hopes of the Portuguese, who had
+ entertained high expectations of being placed in advantageous
+ circumstances about the court; nor did the king by any show of liberality
+ help to lessen their disappointment. The queen was indeed afflicted at the
+ prospect of their loss; and her mortification was the greater because,
+ having received no money since she came into the kingdom, it was out of
+ her power to make them compensation for their services.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thought of being deprived of her people in her present unhappy
+ condition rendered her so miserable, that she besought the king to allow
+ some of them to remain; and, likewise, she employed others to make the
+ same petition on her behalf. Therefore one of her ladies, the Countess of
+ Penalva, who had been her attendant since childhood, and who now, because
+ of weakness of sight and other infirmities, scarce ever left her
+ apartments, was allowed to stay, as were likewise "those necessary to her
+ religion," and some servants employed in her kitchen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But these were not the only means the king took to thwart her majesty and
+ all connected with her. He upbraided the Portuguese ambassador for not
+ having instructed the queen "enough to make her unconcerned in what had
+ been before her time, and in which she could not reasonably be concerned."
+ Moreover he reproached him with the fact of the queen regent having sent
+ only half the marriage portion; and so harassed was the ambassador by
+ royal wrath, that he took to his bed, "and sustained such a fever as
+ brought him to the brink of the grave." Regarding that part of the dowry
+ which had arrived, Charles behaved in an equally ungracious and
+ undignified manner. He instructed the officers of the revenue to use all
+ strictness in its valuation, and not make any allowances. And because
+ Diego de Silva&mdash;whom the queen had designed for her treasurer, and
+ who on that account had undertaken to see the money paid in London&mdash;did
+ not make sufficient haste in the settlement of his accounts, he was by the
+ king's command cast into prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These various affronts grievously afflicted her majesty, but the insults
+ she had to endure before the whole court wounded her far more. For
+ meanwhile the king lodged his mistress in the royal household, and every
+ day she was present in the drawing-room, when his majesty entered into
+ pleasant conversation with her, while his wife sat patiently by, as wholly
+ unheeded as if unseen. When the queen occasionally rose and indignantly
+ left the apartment to relieve her anguish by a storm of tears, it may be
+ one or two of the courtiers followed her, but the vast number of the
+ brilliant throng remained; and Lord Clarendon adds, "they, too, often said
+ those things aloud which nobody ought to have whispered."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles no longer appeared with the grave and troubled expression his face
+ had worn at the commencement of the quarrel, but seemed full of pleasantry
+ and eager for enjoyment. Those surrounding him took their tone from the
+ monarch, and followed his example the more because he "did shew no
+ countenance to any that belong to the queen." Her majesty, on the
+ contrary, took her misery to heart, and showed dejection by the sadness of
+ her face and listlessness of her gait. There was universal diversion in
+ all company but hers; sounds of laughter rang all day and far into the
+ night in every apartment of the palace but those appropriated to her use.
+ Charles steadily avoided her, and the attendants who replaced her
+ countrywomen showed more deference to the king's mistress than to his
+ queen. The solitary condition to which the helpless foreigner and forsaken
+ wife was reduced increased day by day, her gloom deepened hour by hour,
+ until, worn out by the unequal conflict, her spirit broke. "At last," says
+ Lord Clarendon, "when it was least expected or suspected, the queen on a
+ sudden let herself fall, first to conversation, and then to familiarity,
+ and even, in the same instant, to a confidence with the lady; was merry
+ with her in public, talked kindly of her, and in private used no lady more
+ friendly."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that hour her majesty never interfered with the king's amours, and
+ never again did a quarrel rise between them even to the day of his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Their majesties arrive at Whitehall.&mdash;My Lady Castlemaine a
+ spectator.&mdash;Young Mr. Crofts.&mdash;New arrivals at court.&mdash;The Hamilton
+ family.&mdash;The Chevalier de Grammont.&mdash;Mrs. Middleton and Miss Kirke.&mdash;At
+ the queen's ball&mdash;La belle Hamilton.&mdash;The queen mother at Somerset
+ House.&mdash;The Duke of Monmouth's marriage.&mdash;Fair Frances Stuart.&mdash;Those
+ who court her favour.&mdash;The king's passion.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the 23rd of August, 1662, their majesties journeyed from Hampton Court
+ to the palace of Whitehall by water. The gay and goodly procession formed
+ on that occasion has been described as "the most magnificent triumph that
+ ever floated on, the Thames." First came barges belonging to city
+ companies, beginning with the mercers and grocers, most of them being
+ attended with a pageant, and all of them richly adorned as became their
+ affection and loyalty. Then followed barges of statesmen, nobility, and
+ courtiers, with their retinues, brave in numbers, gay in colours, and
+ attended by bands of music. And finally came the king and queen, seated
+ side by side in a galley of antique shape, all draped with crimson damask,
+ bearing a canopy of cloth of gold, supported by Corinthian pillars,
+ wreathed with ribbons, and festooned with garlands of fragrant flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole city was abroad, watchful of their approach; the Thames was
+ covered with boats to the number of ten thousand; and the banks were
+ crowded with spectators beyond reckoning. On this fair August day the sky
+ had not a single cloud to mar its universal blue; the sun shone gloriously
+ bright, turning the river to sheets of gleaming gold: whilst the air was
+ filled with roaring of cannon, strains of music, and hearty shouts of a
+ loyal multitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Samuel Pepys, though he offered as much as eight shillings for a boat
+ to attend him that day, could not obtain one, and was therefore obliged to
+ view this gallant procession from the roof of the royal banqueting hall,
+ which commanded a glorious view of the Thames. But what pleased his
+ erratic fancy best on this occasion was, not the great spectacle he had
+ taken such trouble to survey, but a sight of my Lady Castlemaine, who
+ stood over against him "upon a piece of Whitehall." The worthy clerk of
+ the Admiralty "glutted" himself with looking on her; "but methought it was
+ strange," says he, "to see her lord and her upon the same place walking up
+ and down without taking notice of one another, only at first entry he put
+ off his hat, and she made him a very civil salute, but afterwards took no
+ notice of one another; but both of them now and then would take their
+ child, which the nurse held in her arms, and dandle it. One thing more:
+ there happened a scaffold below to fall, and we feared some hurt, but
+ there was none; but she of all the great ladies only ran down among the
+ common rabble to see what hurt was done, and did take care of a child that
+ received some little hurt, which methought was so noble. Anon there came
+ one there booted and spurred, that she talked long with. And by-and-by,
+ she being in her haire, she put on her hat, which was but an ordinary one,
+ to keep the wind off. But methinks it became her mightily, as everything
+ else do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was notable the countess did not accompany her majesty in the
+ procession to Whitehall, as one of her attendants; but in fact she had not
+ obtained the position sought for, though she enjoyed all the privileges
+ pertaining to such an appointment. "Everybody takes her to be of the
+ bedchamber," the lord chancellor writes to the Duke of Ormond, "for she is
+ always there, and goes abrode in the coach. But the queen tells me that
+ the king promised her, on condition she would use her as she doth others,
+ that she should never live in court; yet lodgings I hear she hath."
+ Lodgings the countess certainly had provided for her in that block of the
+ palace of Whitehall, separated from the main buildings by the old roadway
+ running between Westminster and the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days after their majesties' arrival at Whitehall, the queen mother
+ returned to town, and established her court at Somerset House, which had
+ been prepared for her future abode. She had arrived in England before the
+ king and queen left Hampton Court, and had taken up her residence at
+ Greenwich Palace. The avowed object of her visit was to congratulate them
+ upon their marriage. Charles and his bride therefore took barge to
+ Greenwich, one bright July day, followed by a brilliant and illustrious
+ train, that they might wait upon her majesty. And she, being made aware of
+ their approach, met them at the portal of the palace. There Catherine
+ would have gone down upon her knees to this gracious lady&mdash;the
+ survivor of great sorrows&mdash;but she took the young queen in her arms,
+ and calling her beloved daughter, kissed her many times. Then she greeted
+ her sons Charles and James, likewise the Duchess of York, and led them to
+ the presence-chamber, followed by the whole court. And presently when
+ Catherine would, through her interpreter, have expressed her gratitude and
+ affection, the elder queen besought her to lay aside all ceremony, for she
+ "should never have come to England again except for the pleasure of seeing
+ her, to love her as her daughter, and serve her as her queen." At these
+ sweet words the young wife, now in the first days of her grief, was almost
+ overcome by a sense of thankfulness, and could scarce restrain her tears;
+ but she answered bravely, "Believe me, madam, that in love and obedience
+ neither the king nor any of your children shall exceed me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The court of the merry monarch and that of the queen mother being now
+ settled in town, a period of vast brilliancy ensued, during which great
+ festivity and much scandal obtained, by reason of intrigues in which the
+ king and his friends indulged. Whitehall, the scene of so much gaiety and
+ gallantry, was a palace by no means befitting the luxurious Charles. It
+ consisted of a series of irregular houses built for different purposes at
+ various periods; these contained upwards of two thousand rooms, most of
+ which were small, and many of which were without doors. The buildings were
+ intersected by grassy squares, where fountains played, statues were
+ grouped, and dials shadowed the passing hour. At hand stood St. James's
+ Park, with its fair meadows and leafy trees; close by flowed the placid
+ Thames, bearing heavily laden lighters and innumerable barges. Attached to
+ these dwellings, and forming part of the palace, stood the great banquet
+ hall, erected from designs by Inigo Jones for James I. Here audiences to
+ ambassadors, state balls, and great banquets were held. The ceiling was
+ painted by Rubens, and was, moreover, handsomely moulded and richly gilt.
+ Above the entrance-door stood a statue of Charles I., "whose majestic mien
+ delighted the spectator;" Whilst close by one of the windows were the
+ ineradicable stains of blood, marking the spot near which he had been
+ beheaded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now in the train of the queen mother there had travelled from France "a
+ most pretty sparke of about fourteen years," whom Mr. Pepys plainly terms
+ "the king's bastard," but who was known to the court as young Mr. Crofts.
+ This little gentleman was son of Lucy Walters, "a brown, beautiful, bold
+ creature," who had the distinction of being first mistress to the merry
+ monarch. That he was his offspring the king entertained no doubt, though
+ others did; inasmuch as young Mr. Crofts grew to resemble, "even to the
+ wart on his face," Colonel Robert Sidney, whose paramour Lucy Walters had
+ been a brief while before his majesty began an intrigue with her. Soon
+ after the boy's birth that beautiful woman abandoned herself to pleasures,
+ in which the king had no participation. He therefore parted from her; had
+ her son placed under the guardianship of Lord Crofts, whose name he bore,
+ and educated by the Peres de l'Oratoire at Paris. The while he was
+ continually at the court of the queen mother, who regarded him as her
+ grandson, and who, by the king's command, now brought him into England.
+ The beauty of his face and grace of his figure could not be exceeded,
+ whilst his manner was as winning as his air was noble. Moreover, his
+ accomplishments were numerous; he danced to perfection, sang with
+ sweetness, rode with skill; and so gallant was his nature that he became
+ at this early age, as Hamilton affirms, "the universal terror of husbands
+ and lovers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king betrayed the greatest affection for him, and took exceeding pride
+ in being father of such a brave and comely youth, at which my Lady
+ Castlemaine was both wrathful and jealous, fearing he would avert the
+ royal favour from her own offspring; but these feelings she afterwards
+ overcame, as will be duly shown. His majesty speedily showered honours
+ upon him, allotted him a suite of apartments in the royal palace of
+ Whitehall, appointed him a retinue befitting the heir apparent, created
+ him Duke of Orkney and of Monmouth, and installed him a knight of the
+ garter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, before this had been accomplished, there arrived in town some
+ personages whose names it will be necessary to mention here, the figure
+ they made at court being considerable. These were Sir George Hamilton and
+ his family, and Philibert, Chevalier de Grammont. Sir George was fourth
+ son of James, Earl of Abercorn, and of Mary, sister to James, first Duke
+ of Ormond. Sir George had proved himself a loyal man and a brave during
+ the late civil war, and had on the murder of his royal master sought
+ safety in France, from which country he, in the second year of the
+ restoration, returned, accompanied by a large family; the women of which
+ were fair, the men fearless. The Hamiltons being close kin to the Ormond
+ great intimacy existed between them; to facilitate which they lived not
+ far apart&mdash;the duke residing in Ormond Yard, St. James's Square, and
+ the Hamiltons occupying a spacious residence in King Street. James
+ Hamilton, Sir George's eldest son, was remarkable for the symmetry of his
+ figure, elegance of his manner, and costliness of his dress. Moreover, he
+ possessed a taste shaped to pleasure, and a disposition inclined to
+ gallantry, which commended him so strongly to the king's favour, that he
+ was made groom of the bedchamber and colonel of a regiment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His brother George was scarcely less handsome in appearance or less
+ agreeable in manner. Another brother, Anthony, best remembered as the
+ writer of Grammont's memoirs, was likewise liberally endowed by nature.
+ Elizabeth, commonly called "la belle Hamilton," shared in the largest
+ degree the hereditary gifts of grace and beauty pertaining to this
+ distinguished family. At her introduction to the court of Charles II. she
+ was in the bloom of youth and zenith of loveliness. The portrait of her
+ which her brother Anthony has set before the world for its admiration is
+ delicate in its colours, and finished in its details. "Her forehead," he
+ writes, "was open, white, and smooth; her hair was well set, and fell with
+ ease into that natural order which it is so difficult to imitate. Her
+ complexion was possessed of a certain freshness, not to be equalled by
+ borrowed colours; her eyes were not large, but they were lovely, and
+ capable of expressing whatever she pleased; her mouth was full of graces,
+ and her contour uncommonly perfect; nor was her nose, which was small,
+ delicate, and turned up, the least ornament of so lovely a face. She had
+ the finest shape, the loveliest neck, and most beautiful arms in the
+ world; she was majestic and graceful in all her movements; and she was the
+ original after which all the ladies copied in their taste and air of
+ dress."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, about the same time the Hamiltons arrived at court, there likewise
+ appeared at Whitehall one whose fame as a wit, and whose reputation as a
+ gallant, had preceded him. This was the celebrated Chevalier de Grammont,
+ whose father was supposed to be son of Henry the Great of France. The
+ chevalier had been destined by his mother for the church, the good soul
+ being anxious he should lead the life of a saint; but the youth was
+ desirous of joining the army, and following the career of a soldier. Being
+ remarkable for ingenuity, he conceived a plan by which he might gratify
+ his mother's wishes and satisfy his own desires at the same time. He
+ therefore accepted the abbacy his brother procured for him; but on
+ appearing at court to return thanks for his preferment, comported himself
+ with a military air. Furthermore, his dress was combined of the habit and
+ bands pertaining to an ecclesiastic, and the buskins and spurs belonging
+ to a soldier. Such an amalgamation had never before been witnessed, and
+ caused general attention; the court was amazed at his daring, but
+ Richelieu was amused by his boldness. His brother regarded his appearance
+ in the dual character of priest and soldier as a freak, and on his return
+ home asked him gravely to which profession he meant to attach himself. The
+ youth answered he was resolved "to renounce the church for the salvation
+ of his soul," upon condition that he retained his beneficed abbacy. It may
+ be added, he kept this resolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A soldier he therefore became, and subsequently a courtier. His valour in
+ war and luck in gambling won him the admiration of the camp; whilst his
+ ardour in love and genius for intrigue gained him the esteem of the court,
+ but finally lost him the favour of his king. For attaching himself to one
+ of the maids of honour, Mademoiselle La Motte Houdancourt, whom his most
+ Christian Majesty Louis XIV. had already honoured with his regard,
+ Grammont was banished from the French court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, in the second year of the merry monarch's reign he presented
+ himself at Whitehall, and was received by Charles with a graciousness that
+ served to obliterate the memory of his late misfortune. Nor were the
+ courtiers less warm in their greetings than his majesty. The men hailed
+ him as an agreeable companion; the ladies intimated he need not wholly
+ abandon those tender diversions for which he had shown such natural talent
+ and received such high reputation at the court of Louis XIV. He therefore
+ promptly attached himself to the king, whose parties he invariably
+ attended, and whose pleasures he continually devised; made friends with
+ the most distinguished nobles, whom he charmed by the grace of his manner
+ and extravagance of his entertainments; and took early opportunities of
+ proving to the satisfaction of many of the fairer sex that his character
+ as a gallant had by no means been exaggerated by report.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst those to whom he paid especial attention were Mrs. Middleton, a
+ woman of fashion, and Miss Kirk, a maid of honour, to whom Hamilton, in
+ his memoirs of Grammont, gives the fictitious name of Warmestre. The
+ former was at this time in her seventeenth summer, and had been two years
+ a wife. Her exquisitely fair complexion, light auburn hair, and dark hazel
+ eyes constituted her a remarkably beautiful woman. Miss Kirk was of a
+ different type of loveliness, inasmuch as her skin was brown, her eyes
+ dark, and her complexion brilliant. As Mrs. Middleton was at this time but
+ little known at court, Grammont found some difficulty in obtaining an
+ introduction to her as promptly as he desired; but feeling anxious to make
+ her acquaintance, and being no laggard in love, he without hesitation
+ applied to her porter for admittance, and took one of her lovers into his
+ confidence. This latter gallant rejoiced in the name of Jones, and
+ subsequently became Earl of Ranelagh. In the fulness of his heart towards
+ one who experienced a fellow feeling, he resolved to aid Grammont in
+ gaining the lady's favours. This generosity being prompted by the fact
+ that the chevalier would rid him of a rival whom he feared, and at the
+ same time relieve him of an expense he could ill afford, the lady having
+ certain notions of magnificence which her husband's income was unable to
+ sustain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Middleton received the chevalier with good grace; but he found her
+ more ready to receive the presents he offered, than to grant the
+ privileges he required. Miss Kirk, on the other hand, was not only
+ flattered by his attentions, but was willing to use every means in her
+ power to preserve a continuance of his friendship; Therefore out of
+ gratitude for graces received from one of the ladies, and in expectation
+ of favours desired from the other, Grammont made them the handsomest
+ presents. Perfumed gloves, pocket looking-glasses, apricot paste, came
+ every week from Paris for their benefit; whilst more substantial offerings
+ in the shape of jewellery, diamonds, and guineas were procured for them in
+ London, all of which they made no hesitation to accept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened one night, whilst Grammont was yet in pursuit of Mrs.
+ Middleton, that the queen gave a ball. In hope of winning her husband's
+ affection, by studying his pleasures and suiting herself to his ways, her
+ majesty had become a changed woman. She now professed a passion for
+ dancing, wore decollete costumes, and strove to surpass those surrounding
+ her in her desire for gaiety. Accordingly her balls were the most
+ brilliant spectacles the court had yet witnessed; she taking care to
+ assemble the fairest women of the day, and the most distinguished men. Now
+ amongst the latter was the Chevalier de Grammont; and amidst the former,
+ Mrs. Middleton and Miss Hamilton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of all the court beauties, "la belle Hamilton" was one of whom Grammont
+ had seen least and heard most; but that which had been told him of her
+ charms seemed, now that he beheld her, wholly inadequate to express her
+ loveliness. Therefore, his eyes followed her alone, as her graceful figure
+ glided in the dance adown the ball-room, lighted with a thousand tapers,
+ and brilliant with every type of beauty. And when presently she rested, it
+ was with an unusual flutter at his heart that this gallant, heretofore so
+ daring in love, sought her company, addressed her, and listened with
+ strange pleasure to the music of her voice. From that night he courted
+ Mrs. Middleton no more, but devoted himself to "la belle Hamilton," who
+ subsequently became his wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the merry monarch behaved as if he had no higher purpose in
+ life than that of following his pleasures. "The king is as decomposed
+ [dissipated] as ever," the lord chancellor writes to the Duke of Ormond,
+ in a letter preserved in the Bodleian library, "and looks as little after
+ his business; which breaks my heart, and makes me and other of your
+ friends weary of our lives. He seeks for his satisfaction and delight in
+ other company, which do not love him so well as you and I do." His days
+ were spent in pursuing love, feasting sumptuously, interchanging wit, and
+ enjoying all that seemed good to the senses. Pepys, who never fails to
+ make mention of the court when actual experience or friendly gossip
+ enables him, throws many pleasant lights upon the ways of the monarch and
+ his courtiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For instance, he tells us that one Lord's day&mdash;the same on which this
+ excellent man had been to Whitehall chapel, and heard a sermon by the Dean
+ of Ely on returning to the old ways, and, moreover, a most tuneful anthem
+ sung by Captain Cooke, with symphonies between&mdash;whom should he meet
+ but the great chirurgeon, Mr. Pierce, who carried him to Somerset House,
+ and into the queen mother's presence-chamber. And there, on the left hand
+ of Henrietta Maria, sat the young queen, whom Mr. Pepys had never seen
+ before, and now thought that "though she be not very charming, yet she
+ hath a good, modest, and innocent look, which is pleasing." Here,
+ likewise, he saw the king's mistress, and the young Duke of Monmouth,
+ "who, I perceive," Pepys continues, "do hang much upon my Lady
+ Castlemaine, and is always with her; and I hear the queenes, both of them,
+ are mighty kind to him. By-and-by in comes the king, and anon the duke and
+ his duchesse; so that, they being all together, was such a sight as I
+ never could almost have happened to see with so much ease and leisure.
+ They staid till it was dark, and then went away; the king and his queene,
+ and my Lady Castlemaine and young Crofts, in one coach, and the rest in
+ other coaches. Here were great stores of great ladies. The king and queen
+ were very merry; and he would have made the queene mother believe that the
+ queene was with child, and said that she said so. And the young queene
+ answered, 'You lye,' which was the first English word that I ever heard
+ her say, which made the king good sport."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others besides Mr. Pepys had begun to notice that the young Duke of
+ Monmouth hung much upon the Countess of Castlemaine, and that her ladyship
+ lavished caresses upon him. Whether this was to provoke the uneasiness of
+ his majesty, who she hoped might find employment for the lad elsewhere, or
+ to express her genuine affection for him, it is impossible to say.
+ However, the duke being come to an age when the endearments of such a
+ woman might have undesired effects upon him, the king resolved to remove
+ him from her influence, and at the same time secure his fortune by
+ marriage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He therefore selected a bride for him, in the person of Lady Anne Scott, a
+ young gentlewoman of virtue and excellence, who was only child of Francis,
+ Earl of Buccleugh, and the greatest heiress in Great Britain. Their
+ nuptials were celebrated on the 20th of April, 1663, the bridegroom at
+ this time not having reached his fifteenth birthday, whilst the bride was
+ younger by a year. The duke on his marriage assumed his wife's family
+ name, Scott; and some years later&mdash;in 1673&mdash;both were created
+ Duke and Duchess of Buccleugh. From this union the family now bearing that
+ title has descended. A great supper was given at Whitehall on the
+ marriage-night, and for many days there were stately festivities held to
+ celebrate the event with becoming magnificence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now at one of the court balls held at this time, the woman of all others
+ who attracted most attention and gained universal admiration was Frances
+ Stuart, maid of honour to Queen Catherine. She was only daughter of a
+ gallant gentleman, one Walter Stuart, and grand-daughter of Lord Blantyre.
+ Her family had suffered sore loss in the cause of Charles I., by reason of
+ which, like many others, it sought refuge in France. This young
+ gentlewoman was therefore bred in that country, and was, moreover,
+ attached to the court of the queen mother, in whose suite she travelled
+ into England. Her beauty was sufficient to attract the attention of Louis
+ XIV., who, loath to lose so fair an ornament from his court, requested her
+ mother would permit her to remain, saying, he "loved her not as a
+ mistress, but as one that would marry as well as any lady in France."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt Mrs. Stuart understood the motives of his majesty's interested
+ kindness, of which, however, she declined availing herself, and therefore
+ departed with her daughter for England. At the time of her appearance at
+ Whitehall, Frances Stuart was in her fifteenth year. Even in a court
+ distinguished by the beauty of women, her loveliness was declared
+ unsurpassed. Her features were regular and refined, her complexion fair as
+ alabaster, her hair bright and luxuriant, her eyes of violet hue;
+ moreover, her figure being tall, straight, and shapely, her movements
+ possessed an air of exquisite grace. An exact idea of her lineaments may
+ be gained unto this day, from the fact that Philip Rotier, the medallist,
+ who loved her true, represented her likeness in the face of Britannia on
+ the reverse of coins; and so faithful was the likeness, we are assured,
+ that no one who had ever seen her could mistake who had sat as model of
+ the figure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after her arrival in England, she was appointed one of the maids of
+ honour to Queen Catherine, and as such was present at all festivities of
+ the court. Now, at one of the great balls given in honour of the Duke of
+ Monmouth's nuptials, the fair Frances Stuart appeared in the full lustre
+ of her charms. Her beauty, her grace, and her youth completely eclipsed
+ the more showy gifts of my Lady Castlemaine, who on this occasion looked
+ pale and thin, she being in the commencement of another pregnancy, "which
+ the king was pleased to place to his own account." The merry monarch had
+ before this time been attracted by the fair maid of honour, but now it was
+ evident his heart had found a new object of admiration in her surpassing
+ beauty. Henceforth he boldly made love to her. The countess was not much
+ disturbed by this, for she possessed great faith in her own charms and
+ implicit belief in her power over the king. Besides, she had sufficient
+ knowledge of mankind to comprehend that to offer opposition in pursuit of
+ love is the most certain method to foster its growth. She therefore
+ resolved to seek Miss Stuart's society, cultivate her friendship, and
+ constantly bring her into contact with his majesty. This would not only
+ prove to the satisfaction of the court she had no fear of losing her
+ sovereignty over the monarch, but, by keeping him engaged with the maid of
+ honour, would likewise divert his attention from an intrigue the countess
+ was then carrying on with Henry Jermyn. Accordingly, she made overtures of
+ friendship to Miss Stuart, invited her to private parties, and appeared
+ continually with her in public.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Concerning these ladies and the merry monarch, Pepys narrates a strange
+ story which Captain Ferrers told him as they "walked finely" in the park.
+ This was, that at an entertainment given by my Lady Castlemaine, towards
+ the end of which his majesty played at being married with fair Frances
+ Stuart, "with ring and all other ceremonies of Church service, and
+ ribbands, and a sack posset [A drink composed of milk, wine, and spices.]
+ in bed, and flinging the stocking. My Lady Castlemaine looked on the
+ while, evincing neither anger nor jealousy, but entering into the
+ diversion with great spirit." Nor was this the only indiscretion of which
+ she was culpable, for, in the full confidence of her charms, she
+ frequently kept Miss Stuart to stay with her. "The king," says Hamilton,
+ "who seldom neglected to visit the countess before she rose, seldom failed
+ likewise to find Miss Stuart with her. The most indifferent objects have
+ charms in a new attachment; however, the imprudent countess was not
+ jealous of this rival's appearing with her, in such a situation, being
+ confident that, whenever she thought fit, she could triumph over all the
+ advantages which these opportunities could afford Miss Stuart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt Lady Castlemaine's imprudences arose from knowledge that Miss
+ Stuart was devoid of tact, and incapable of turning opportunities to her
+ own advantage in the king's regard. For though the maid of honour was
+ richly endowed with beauty, she was wholly devoid of wit. She was not only
+ a child in years, but likewise in behaviour. She laughed at every remark
+ made her, delighted in playing blind man's buff, and was never more happy
+ than when building castles of cards. At this latter amusement she
+ continually employed herself whilst the deepest play was taking place in
+ her apartments; being always attended by groups of courtiers, who were
+ either attracted by the charm of her beauty, or were eager to make court
+ through her favour. As she sat upon the floor, intent on her favourite
+ occupation, they on their knees handed her cards, traced out designs for
+ her, or built elaborate structures rivalling her own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst those who attended her in this manner was the gay, graceful, and
+ profligate Duke of Buckingham, who became enamoured of her loveliness. Not
+ only did he raise the most wonderful of card mansions for her delight, but
+ having a good voice, and she possessing a passion for music, he invented
+ songs and sung them to pleasure her. Moreover, he told her the wittiest
+ stories, turned the courtiers into the greatest ridicule for her
+ entertainment, and made her acquainted with the most diverting scandals.
+ Finally, he professed his ardent love for her; but at this the fair Stuart
+ either felt, or feigned, intense astonishment, and so repulsed him that he
+ abandoned the pursuit of an amour over which he had wasted so much time,
+ and thenceforth deprived himself of her company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His attentions were, however, soon replaced by those of the Earl of
+ Arlington, a lord of the bedchamber, and a man of grave address and great
+ ambition. Owing to this latter trait his lordship was desirous of winning
+ the good graces of Miss Stuart in the present, in hopes of governing his
+ majesty in the future, when she became the king's mistress. But these sage
+ and provident intentions of his were speedily overturned, for early in the
+ course of their acquaintance, when he had commenced to tell her a story,
+ his manner so forcibly reminded her of Buckingham's mimicry of him, that
+ she burst out laughing in the earl's face. This being utterly uncalled for
+ by the circumstances of his tale, and still less by the manner of its
+ narration, Lord Arlington, who was serious, punctilious, and proud, became
+ enraged, abruptly left her presence, and abandoned his schemes of
+ governing the king through so frivolous a medium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man who had better chances of success in winning this beautiful girl was
+ George Hamilton, whose name has been already mentioned. It was not,
+ however, his graceful person, or elegant manner, but his performance of a
+ trick which gained her attention. It happened one night that an Irish
+ peer, old Lord Carlingford, was diverting her by showing how she might
+ hold a burning candle in her mouth a considerable time without its being
+ extinguished. This was a source of uncommon delight to her; seeing which,
+ George Hamilton thought he would give her still further entertainment. For
+ being furnished by nature with a wide mouth, he placed within it two
+ lighted candles, and walked three times round the room without
+ extinguishing them, whilst the fair Stuart clapped her pretty hands in
+ delight, and shouted aloud with laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man who could accomplish such a feat was worthy of becoming a favourite.
+ She at once admitted him to terms of familiarity; and he had a hundred
+ chances of paying her the attentions he greatly desired, and which she
+ freely accepted. Grammont, foreseeing that Hamilton would incur the royal
+ displeasure if his love for Miss Stuart became known to the king, besought
+ him to abandon his addresses; but this advice did not at first sound
+ pleasant to the lover's ears. "Since the court has been in the country,"
+ said he, "I have had a hundred opportunities of seeing her, which I had
+ not before. You know that the dishabille of the bath is a great
+ convenience for those ladies, who, strictly adhering to all the rules of
+ decorum, are yet desirous to display all their charms and attractions.
+ Miss Stuart is so fully acquainted with the advantages she possesses over
+ all other women, that it is hardly possible to praise any lady at court
+ for a well-turned arm, and a fine leg but she is ever ready to dispute the
+ point by demonstration; and I really believe that, with a little address,
+ it would not be difficult to induce her to strip naked, without ever
+ reflecting upon what she was doing. After all, a man must be very
+ insensible to remain unconcerned and unmoved on such happy occasions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hamilton was therefore not willing to renounce Miss Stuart, but upon
+ Grammont showing that attentions paid the lady would certainly provoke the
+ king's anger, he resolved on sacrificing love to interest, and abandoning
+ the company of the fair maid of honour for evermore. The truth was, his
+ majesty loved her exceedingly, as was indeed evident, for he constantly
+ sought her presence, talked to her at the drawing-rooms as if no one else
+ were by, and kissed her "to the observation of all the world." But though
+ she allowed Charles such liberties, she refused to become his mistress,
+ notwithstanding the splendid settlements and high titles with which the
+ monarch engaged to reward the sacrifice of her virtue. And so, though a
+ king, it was not given him to be obeyed in all. And though generally loved
+ for his easy ways and gracious manners, he was continually harassed by his
+ mistresses, reproved by his chancellor, and ridiculed by his courtiers.
+ Indeed, they now spoke of him in his absence as "Old Rowley;" the reason
+ of which is given by Richardson. "There was an old goat," writes he, "in
+ the privy garden, that they had given this name to; a rank lecherous
+ devil, that everybody knew and used to stroke, because he was
+ good-humoured and familiar; and so they applied this name to the king."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Duke of York's intrigues.&mdash;My Lady Chesterfield and his royal
+ highness&mdash;The story of Lady Southesk's love.&mdash;Lord Arran plays the
+ guitar.&mdash;Lord Chesterfield is jealous.&mdash;The countess is taken from
+ court.&mdash;Mistress Margaret Brooke and the king.&mdash;Lady Denham and the
+ duke.&mdash;Sir John goes mad.&mdash;My lady is poisoned.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The while his majesty devoted himself to pleasure and intrigue, neglectful
+ of affairs of state, and heedless of public scandal, his brother of York,
+ whose disposition was not less amorous, likewise followed the bent of his
+ inclinations. Soon after her appearance at court he professed himself in
+ love with the beautiful Elizabeth Hamilton, whom to behold was to admire.
+ But the duke being a married man, and she a virtuous woman, he dared not
+ address her on the subject of his affection, and was therefore obliged to
+ confine the expression of his feelings to glances. These she refused to
+ interpret; and he, becoming weary of a pursuit which promised no happy
+ results, turned his attentions to the Countess of Chesterfield, who seemed
+ in no way loath to receive them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This charming woman had married my Lord Chesterfield in compliance with a
+ family arrangement; and discovered too soon she had no place in the heart
+ of him whose life she shared. His coldness to her was only equalled by his
+ ardour for Lady Castlemaine, whose lover he continued to remain after his
+ marriage. The affection his wife had offered and he had repulsed, in the
+ dawn of their wedded life, changed by degrees to disdain and hatred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now as chamberlain to the queen my Lord Chesterfield had, apartments in
+ the palace, by reason of which the countess became an habituee of the
+ court. The moral atmosphere of Whitehall was not calculated to strengthen
+ her conjugal virtue, but its perpetual gaiety was destined to dissipate
+ her sense of neglect. It was not possible for a woman endowed with so much
+ beauty, and possessed of such engaging manners, to be disregarded, in a
+ court entirely devoted to love and gallantry; and accordingly she soon
+ became an object of general admiration. This was by no means pleasing to
+ my Lord Chesterfield, who, though he had wilfully repulsed her affections,
+ was selfishly opposed to their bestowal upon others. Accordingly he became
+ watchful of her conduct, and jealous of her admirers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prominent amongst these were James Hamilton and the Duke of York. The
+ former was her cousin, and her husband's confidant, in consequence of
+ which my lord failed to associate him with the suspicion he entertained
+ towards all other men who approached her: the latter he regarded with the
+ uttermost distrust. His royal highness had before now disturbed the happy
+ confidence which husbands had placed in their wives, as my Lord Carnegy
+ could testify.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story which hangs thereby had, a little while before the duke fell in
+ love with Lady Chesterfield, afforded vast amusement to the court, and was
+ yet fresh in the recollection of many. It happened that his royal highness
+ became enamoured of my Lady Carnegy, daughter of the gallant Duke of
+ Hamilton, and friend of the gay Lady Castlemaine. Lady Carnegy loved
+ pleasure mightily, painted her face "devilishly," and drove in the park
+ flauntingly. She was endowed with considerable beauty of form and great
+ tenderness of heart, as many gallants acknowledged with gratitude. Now
+ when the Duke of York made advances to her, she received them with all the
+ satisfaction he could desire; an intimacy therefore followed, which she
+ was the better able to entertain on account of her husband's absence in
+ Scotland. Whilst my Lord Carnegy was in that country, his father, the Earl
+ of Southesk, died, and he succeeded to the title and estates. In due time
+ the new earl returned to London and his wife, and was greeted by rumours
+ of the friendship which in his absence had sprung up between my lady and
+ the duke. These, as became a good husband, he refused to believe, until
+ such time as he was enabled to prove their veracity. Now, though his royal
+ highness did not cease to honour my lady with his visits on her husband's
+ return, yet out of respect to decorum, and in order to silence scandalous
+ tongues, he from that time invariably called on her accompanied by a
+ friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It therefore came to pass that one day he requested an honest, foolish
+ Irishman, Dick Talbot, afterwards Duke of Tyrconnel, to attend him in his
+ visit to the lady. He could scarcely have selected a man more unfitted to
+ the occasion, inasmuch as Talbot was wholly devoid of tact, and possessed
+ a mind apt to wander at large at critical moments. He had but recently
+ returned from Portugal, and was not aware my Lord Carnegy had in the
+ meantime become Earl of Southesk, nor had he ever met the lady who shared
+ that title until introduced to her by the duke. When that ceremony had
+ been duly performed and a few sentences interchanged between them, Talbot,
+ acting on instructions previously received, retired into an ante-room and
+ took his post at a window that he might divert himself by viewing the
+ street, and observing those who approached the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he remained for some time, but the study of mankind which the view
+ admitted did not afford sufficient interest to prevent him becoming
+ absorbed in his own thoughts, and indifferent to all objects surrounding
+ him. From this mental condition he was presently aroused by seeing a
+ carriage draw up to the door, and its occupant descend and quickly enter
+ the house. Talbot was so forgetful of his duty that he omitted apprising
+ the duke of this fact or making any movement until the door of the
+ ante-room opened, when he turned round to face the intruder. Then he
+ started forward and cried out, "Welcome, Carnegy!" for it was no other
+ than he. "Welcome my good fellow! Where the devil have you been, that I
+ have never been able to set eyes on you since we were at Brussels! What
+ business brought you here?" he continued in the same breath; and then
+ added in a tone of banter, "Do you likewise wish to see Lady Southesk; if
+ this is your intention, my poor friend, you may go away again; for I must
+ inform you the Duke of York is in love with her, and I will tell you in
+ confidence that at this very time he is in her chamber."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My Lord Southesk was overwhelmed with shame and confusion, and not knowing
+ how to act, immediately returned to his coach, Talbot attending him to the
+ door as his friend, and advising him to seek a mistress elsewhere. He then
+ went back to his post, and with some impatience awaited the Duke's return,
+ that he might tell him what had happened. And in due time, when he had
+ narrated the story, he was much surprised that neither his royal highness
+ nor the countess saw any humour in the fact of Lord Carnegy's
+ discomfiture. It served, however, to make the duke break off his
+ connection with the lady, and likewise to amuse the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Remembering this incident, my Lord Chesterfield kept a watchful eye upon
+ the duke, who he observed made advances towards the countess, which she,
+ in her generosity, had not the heart to repulse. But, as his royal
+ highness could see her only in presence of the court, my lord derived some
+ satisfaction from knowing he was witness to such civilities as had yet
+ passed between them. The duke was, however, anxious to have a more
+ particular occasion of conversing with my lady, and in accomplishing this
+ desire her brother Lord Arran was willing to aid him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened about this time an Italian, named Francisco Corbeta, who
+ played with great perfection on the guitar, arrived at court. His
+ performances excited the wonder and delight of all who heard him, and the
+ instrument which produced such melody speedily became fashionable at
+ court, to such an extent, that a universal strumming was heard by day and
+ by night: throughout the palace of Whitehall. The Duke of York, being
+ devoted to music, was amongst those who strove to rival Signor Francisco's
+ performance; whilst my Lord Arran, by the delicacy of his execution,
+ almost equalled the great musician. The while Francisco's popularity
+ increased, his fame reaching its zenith when he composed a saraband, to
+ learn which became the ambition of all delighting in the guitar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now one day the duke, not thinking himself perfect in this piece,
+ requested Lord Arran to play it over for him. My lord being a courteous
+ man, was anxious to oblige his royal highness, and in order that the
+ saraband might be heard to greatest advantage, was desirous of performing
+ it upon the best instrument at court, which it was unhesitatingly
+ acknowledged belonged to my Lady Chesterfield. Accordingly, Lord Arran led
+ the duke to his sister's apartments. Here they found not only the guitar
+ and my lady, but likewise my lord, who was no less astonished than
+ disturbed by their visit. Then my Lord Arran commenced the famous
+ saraband, whilst the duke commenced to ogle my lady, and she to return his
+ glances in kind, as if both were unconscious of her husband's presence. So
+ delightful did they find the saraband, that Lord Arran was obliged to
+ repeat it at least twenty times, to the great mortification of the earl,
+ who could scarcely contain his violent rage and jealousy. His torture was
+ presently increased to an immeasurable degree, by a summons he received
+ from the queen to attend her in his capacity of lord chamberlain, during
+ an audience she was about, to give the Muscovite ambassador.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had from the first suspected the visit, with which he was honoured, to
+ have been preconcerted by his wife and the duke; and he now began to think
+ her majesty was likewise connected with a plot destined to rob him of his
+ peace and blight his honour. However, he was obliged to obey the queen's
+ summons and depart. Nor had he been many minutes absent when Lord Arran
+ entered the presence-chamber where the audience was being held,
+ unaccompanied by the duke, at which Lord Chesterfield's jealous fears were
+ strengthened a thousandfold. Before night came he was satisfied he held
+ sufficient proof of his wife's infidelity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This conviction caused him intense anxiety and pain; he walked about his
+ apartments abstracted and brooding on the wrongs from which he suffered;
+ avoided all who came in his way; and maintained strict silence as to that
+ which disturbed his peace, until next day, when he met James Hamilton. To
+ him he confided an account of the troubles which beset him. After speaking
+ of the visit paid by his royal highness, and the part enacted by my Lord
+ Arran, whom he described as "one of the silliest creatures in England,
+ with his guitar, and his other whims and follies," he went on to say that
+ when Hamilton had heard him out, he would be enabled to judge whether the
+ visit ended in perfect innocence or not. "Lady Chesterfield is amiable, it
+ must be acknowledged," said he, "but she is far from being such a miracle
+ of beauty as she supposes herself: you know she has ugly feet; but perhaps
+ you are not acquainted that she has still worse legs. They are short and
+ thick, and to remedy these defects as much as possible, she seldom wears
+ any other than green stockings. I went yesterday to Miss Stuart's after
+ the audience of those damned Muscovites: the king arrived there just
+ before me; and as if the duke had sworn to pursue me wherever I went that
+ day, he came in just after me. The conversation turned upon the
+ extraordinary appearance of the ambassadors. I know not where that fool
+ Crofts had heard that all these Muscovites had handsome wives; and that
+ all their wives had handsome legs. Upon this the king maintained, that no
+ woman ever had such handsome legs as Miss Stuart; and she to prove the
+ truth of his majesty's assertion, with the greatest imaginable ease,
+ immediately showed her leg above the knee. Some were ready to prostrate
+ themselves in order to adore its beauty, for indeed none can be handsomer;
+ but the duke alone began to criticize upon it. He contended that it was
+ too slender, and that as for himself he would give nothing for a leg that
+ was not thicker and shorter, and concluded by saying that no leg was worth
+ anything without green stockings; now this in my opinion was a sufficient
+ demonstration that he had just seen green stockings, and had them fresh in
+ his remembrance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At hearing this story, Hamilton, being deeply in love with Lady
+ Chesterfield, was scarcely less agitated or less jealous than her lord;
+ but he was obliged to conceal his feelings. Therefore, assuming the tone
+ of an impartial hearer, he shrugged his shoulders, declared appearances
+ were often deceitful, and maintained that even if she had given herself
+ airs to encourage the duke, there were no grounds to show she had been
+ culpable of improprieties. My lord expressed himself much obliged to his
+ friend for the interest he had shown in his troubles, and after exchanging
+ a few compliments they parted. Hamilton, full of wrath, returned home, and
+ wrote a letter replete with violent expostulations and tender reproaches
+ to the woman he loved. This he delivered to her secretly at the next
+ opportunity. She received it from him with a smile, which scared all
+ doubts of her frailty from his mind, and with a pressure of his hand which
+ awoke the tenderest feelings in his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was now convinced her husband had allowed jealousy to blind him, and
+ had magnified his unworthy suspicions to assurances of guilt. Is this view
+ Hamilton was fully confirmed by a letter he received from her the
+ following day in answer to his own. "Are you not," said she, "ashamed to
+ give any credit to the visions of a jealous fellow, who brought nothing
+ else with him from Italy? Is it possible that the story of the green
+ stockings, upon which he has founded his suspicions, should have imposed
+ upon you, accompanied as it is with such pitiful circumstances? Since he
+ has made you his confidant, why did not he boast of breaking in pieces my
+ poor harmless guitar? This exploit, perhaps, might have convinced you more
+ than all the rest; recollect yourself, and if you are really in love with
+ me, thank fortune for a groundless jealousy, which diverts to another
+ quarter the attention he might pay to my attachment for the most amiable
+ and the most dangerous man at court."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anointed by this flattering unction, such wounds as Hamilton had
+ experienced were quickly healed; alas, only to bleed afresh at the certain
+ knowledge that this charming woman had been making him her dupe! For soon
+ after, in a moment of indiscretion, and whilst the whole court, including
+ her majesty, was assembled in the card-room, my lady there permitted the
+ duke a liberty which confirmed her husband in his suspicions of their
+ intimacy. Hamilton at hearing this was wild with fury, and advised Lord
+ Chesterfield to carry her away from the allurements of the court, and
+ seclude her in one of his country mansions. This was an advice to which
+ the earl listened with complaisance, and carried out with despatch, to her
+ intense mortification.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole court was amused by the story, but dismayed at the punishment my
+ lord inflicted upon his lady. Anthony Hamilton declares that in England
+ "they looked with astonishment upon a man who could be so uncivil as to be
+ jealous of his wife; and in the city of London it was a prodigy, till that
+ time unknown, to see a husband have recourse to violent means to prevent
+ what jealousy fears, and what it always deserves." He adds, they
+ endeavoured to excuse my lord by laying all the blame on his bad
+ education, which made "all the mothers vow to God that none of their sons
+ should ever set a foot in Italy, lest they should bring back with them
+ that infamous custom of laying restraint upon their wives."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the departure of Lady Chesterfield the court lost one of its most
+ brilliant ornaments forever, for the unhappy countess never again returned
+ to the gay scene of her adventures. For three long years she endured
+ banishment at Bretby in Derbyshire, and then died, it was believed, from
+ the effects of poison. For my lord, never having his suspicions of her
+ intrigue cleared, insisted on her taking the sacrament by way of pledging
+ her innocence; on which occasion he, in league with his chaplain, mixed
+ poison in the sacred wine, as result of which she died. This shocking
+ story gained credence not only with the public, but with members of his
+ own family; inasmuch as his daughter-in-law, Lady Gertrude Stanhope, after
+ she had quarrelled with him, would, when she sat at his table, drink only
+ of such wine and water as a trusty servant of hers procured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This intrigue of the duke had given much uneasiness to his duchess, who
+ had complained to the king and to her father, and had, moreover, set a
+ watch upon the movements of his royal highness. But such measures did not
+ avail to make him a faithful husband, and no sooner was Lady Chesterfield
+ removed from his sight, than Lady Denham took her place in his affections.
+ This latter mentioned gentlewoman was daughter of a valiant baronet, Sir
+ William Brooke, and niece to a worthless peer, the Earl of Bristol. The
+ earl had, on the king's restoration, cherished ambitious schemes to obtain
+ the merry monarch's favour; for which purpose he sought to commend himself
+ by ministering to the royal pleasures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly he entertained the king as became a loyal gentleman, giving
+ him luxurious banquets and agreeable suppers, to which, by way of adding
+ to his majesty's greater satisfaction, the noble host invited his nieces,
+ Mistress Brooke and her sister. The wily earl had, indeed, conceived a
+ plan the better to forward his interests with the king, and was desirous
+ one of these gentlewomen should subdue his majesty's heart, and become his
+ mistress. Margaret Brooke, the elder of the maidens, was at this time in
+ her eighteenth year, and was in the full flower of such loveliness as was
+ presented by a fair complexion, light brown hair, and dark grey eyes. The
+ merry monarch's susceptible heart was soon won by her beauty; the charming
+ lady's amorous disposition was speedily conquered by his gallantry, and
+ nothing prevented her becoming his mistress save Lady Castlemaine's
+ jealousy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, however, proved an insurmountable obstacle; for the countess,
+ hearing rumours of the pleasures which were enjoyed at my Lord Bristol's
+ table, insisted on attending the king thither, and soon gave his gracious
+ majesty an intimation he dared not disregard&mdash;that she would not
+ suffer Miss Brooke as a rival. Margaret Brooke was grievously
+ disappointed; but the Duke of York beginning his attentions at the point
+ where his majesty discontinued them, she was soon consoled for loss of the
+ monarch's affection by the ardour of his brother's love. But a short time
+ after, probably foreseeing the ambiguous position in which she stood, she
+ forsook her lover, and accepted a husband in the person of Sir John
+ Denham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This worthy knight was a man of parts; inasmuch as he was a soldier, a
+ poet, and a gamester. At the time of his marriage he had passed his
+ fiftieth year; moreover, he limped painfully and carried a crutch. His
+ appearance, indeed, was far from imposing. According to Aubrey, he was
+ tall, had long legs, and was "incurvelting at his shoulders; his hair was
+ but thin and flaxen, with a moist curl; his gait slow and rather
+ astalking; his eye was a kind of light goose-grey, not big, but it had a
+ strange piercingness, not as to shining and glory, but when he conversed
+ he looked into your very thoughts." His personal defects, however, were to
+ a great degree compensated for by his great wealth. Moreover he was
+ surveyor-general of his majesty's works, had a town house in Scotland
+ Yard, and a country residence at Waltham Cross in Essex. But there are
+ some deficiencies for which wealth does not atone, as no doubt Lady Denham
+ promptly discovered; for, before a year of her married life had passed,
+ she renewed her intrigue with the Duke of York. His love for her seemed to
+ have increased a thousandfold since fate had given her to the possession
+ of another. At royal drawing-rooms he took her aside and talked to her "in
+ the sight of all the world," and whenever she moved away from him he
+ followed her like a dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, he made no effort to screen his passion, for not only did he make
+ love to her in presence of the court, but he visited her at noonday,
+ attended by his gentlemen, before all the town. Nor did Lady Denham desire
+ to conceal the honour with which, she considered, this amour covered her,
+ but openly declared she would "not be his mistress, as Mrs. Price, to go
+ up and down the privy stairs, but will be owned publicly;" and in this
+ respect she obtained her desire. Meanwhile Sir John was rendered
+ miserable; and, indeed, his desperation soon overthrew his reason, and
+ rendered him a lunatic. This affection first appeared during a journey he
+ made to the famous free-stone quarries near Portland in Dorset. When he
+ came within a mile of his destination, he suddenly turned back, and
+ proceeded to Hounslow, where he demanded rents for lands he had disposed
+ of years before; and then hastening to town sought out the king and
+ informed him he was the Holy Ghost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This madness lasted but a short time; and the first use he made of his
+ recovered senses was to plot vengeance on his wife. Now there was one
+ honour which she coveted above all others, that of being appointed a lady
+ of the bedchamber to the Duchess of York. This her royal lover, following
+ the example of his majesty, sought to obtain for her; but the duchess, who
+ had already suffered many indignities by reason of her husband's
+ improprieties, refused him this request, which would render her liable to
+ continual insult in her own court. The duke, however, had a strong will,
+ and the duchess was on the point of yielding to his demand, when rumour
+ announced that Lady Denham had been taken suddenly ill, and scandal
+ declared she had been poisoned. The wildest sensation followed. His royal
+ highness, stricken with remorse and terror, hastened to Scotland Yard and
+ sought his beloved mistress, who told him she believed herself poisoned,
+ and felt she was now dying. The most eminent physicians were speedily
+ summoned, but their skill proved of no avail, for she gradually became
+ worse, and finally died, leaving instructions that her body should be
+ opened after death, in order that search might be made for the fatal drug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The surgeons followed these directions, as we learn from the Orrery state
+ papers, but no trace of poison was discovered. For all that the public had
+ no doubt her husband had destroyed her life, and Hamilton tells us the
+ populace "had a design of tearing Sir John in pieces as soon as he should
+ come abroad; but he shut himself up to bewail her death, until their fury
+ was appeased by a magnificent funeral, at which he distributed four times
+ more burnt wine than had ever been drunk at any burial in England."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the duke, he was sorely troubled for her loss, and declared he
+ should never have a public mistress again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Court life under the merry monarch.&mdash;Riding in Hyde Park.&mdash;Sailing on
+ the Thames.&mdash;Ball at Whitehall.&mdash;Petit soupers.&mdash;What happened at
+ Lady Gerrard's.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine quarrels with the king.&mdash;Flight to
+ Richmond.&mdash;The queen falls ill.&mdash;The king's grief and remorse.&mdash;Her
+ majesty speaks.&mdash;Her secret sorrow finds voice in delirium.&mdash;Frances
+ Stuart has hopes.&mdash;The queen recovers.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Views of court life during the first years of the merry monarch's reign,
+ obtainable from works of his contemporaries, present a series of
+ brilliant, changeful, and interesting pictures. Scarce a day passed that
+ their majesties, attended by a goodly throng of courtiers, went not
+ abroad, to the vast delight of the town: and rarely a night sped by
+ unmarked by some magnificent entertainment, to the great satisfaction of
+ the court. At noon it was a custom of the king and queen, surrounded by
+ maids of honour and gentlemen in waiting, the whole forming a gladsome and
+ gallant crowd, to ride in coaches or on horseback in Hyde Park: which
+ place has been described as "a field near the town, used by the king and
+ nobility for the freshness of the air, and goodly prospect."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here in a railed-off circle, known as the ring, and situated in the
+ northern half of the park, the whole world of fashion and beauty diverted
+ itself. Noble gallants wearing broad-brimmed hats and waving plumes,
+ doublets of velvet, and ruffles of rich lace; and fair women with flowing
+ locks and dainty patches, attired in satin gowns, and cloaks wrought with
+ embroidery, drove round and round, exchanging salutations and smiles as
+ they passed. Here it was good Mr. Pepys saw the Countess of Castlemaine,
+ among many fine ladies, lying "impudently upon her back in her coach
+ asleep, with her mouth wide open." And on another occasion the same
+ ingenious gentleman observed the king and my lady pass and repass in their
+ respective coaches, they greeting one another at every turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mr. Pepys gives us another picture, in which he shows us the king
+ riding right gallantly beside his queen, and therefore presents him to
+ better advantage. This excellent gossip, sauntering down Pall Mall one
+ bright summer day, it being the middle of July, in the year 1663, met the
+ queen mother walking there, led by her supposed husband, the Earl of St.
+ Albans. And, hearing the king and queen rode abroad with the ladies of
+ honour to the park, and seeing a great crowd of gallants awaiting their
+ return, he also stayed, walking up and down the while. "By-and-by," says
+ he, "the king and queene, who looked in this dress (a white laced
+ waistcoate and a crimson short pettycoate, and her hair dressed A LA
+ NEGLIGENCE) mighty pretty; and the king rode hand in hand with her. Here
+ was also my Lady Castlemaine riding amongst the rest of the ladies; but
+ the king took, methought, no notice of her; nor when they light did
+ anybody press (as she seemed to expect, and staid for it) to take her
+ down, but was taken down by her own gentlemen. She looked mighty out of
+ humour, and had a yellow plume in her hat (which all took notice of), and
+ yet is very handsome. I followed them up into Whitehall, and into the
+ queene's presence, where all the ladies walked, talking and fiddling with
+ their hats and feathers, and changing and trying one another's by one
+ another's heads, and laughing. But it was the finest sight to me,
+ considering their great beautys and dress, that ever I did see in my life.
+ But, above all, Mrs. Stuart in this dresse with her hat cocked and a red
+ plume, with her sweet eye, little Roman nose, and excellent taille, is now
+ the greatest beauty I ever saw, I think, in my life; and, if ever woman
+ can, do exceed my Lady Castlemaine, at least in this dresse: nor do I
+ wonder if the king changes, which I verily believe is the reason of his
+ coldness to my Lady Castlemaine."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having returned from the park, dined at noon, walked in the palace
+ gardens, or played cards till evening came, their majesties, surrounded by
+ a brilliant and joyous court, would in summer time descend the broad steps
+ leading from Whitehall to the Thames, and embark upon the water for
+ greater diversion. Never was there so goodly a sight, seldom so merry a
+ company. The barges in which they sailed were draped to the water's edge
+ with bright fabrics, hung with curtains of rich silk, and further adorned
+ with gay pennants. And, as the long procession of boats, filled with fair
+ women and gallant men, followed their majesties adown the placid Thames
+ towards pleasant Richmond, my Lord Arran would delight the ears of all by
+ his performance on the guitar; the fair Stuart would sing French songs in
+ her sweet childlike voice; or a concert of music would suddenly resound
+ from the banks, being placed there to surprise by some ingenious courtier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And presently landing on grassy meads, delightful to sight by freshness of
+ their colour, and sweet to scent from odour of their herbs, the court
+ would sup right heartily; laugh, drink, and make love most merrily, until
+ early shadows stole across the summer sky, and night-dews fell upon the
+ thirsty earth. Then king, queen, and courtiers once more embarking, would
+ sail slowly back, whilst the moon rose betimes in the heavens, and the
+ barges streaked the waters with silver lines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At other times magnificent entertainments filled the nights with light and
+ revelry. Pepys tells us of a great ball he witnessed in the last month of
+ the year 1662 at the palace of Whitehall. He was carried thither by Mr.
+ Povy, a member of the Tangier Commission, and taken at first to the Duke
+ of York's chambers, where his royal highness and the duchess were at
+ supper; and from thence "into a room where the ball was to be, crammed
+ with fine ladies, the greatest of the court. By-and-by comes the king and
+ queene, the duke and duchess, and all the great ones; and, after seating
+ themselves, the king takes out the Duchess of York; and the duke the
+ Duchess of Buckingham; the Duke of Monmouth my Lady Castlemaine; and so
+ other lords other ladies; and they danced the bransle. After that, the
+ king led a lady a single coranto; and then the rest of the lords, one
+ after another, other ladies: very noble it was, and great pleasure to see.
+ Then to country dances: the king leading the first. Of the ladies that
+ danced, the Duke of Monmouth's lady, and my Lady Castlemaine, and a
+ daughter of Sir Harry de Vicke's were the best. The manner was, when the
+ king dances, all the ladies in the room, and his queene herself, stand up:
+ and indeed he dances rarely, and much better than the Duke of York."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ PETIT SOUPERS were another form of entertainments, greatly enjoyed by
+ Charles, and accordingly much in vogue with his courtiers. The Chevalier
+ de Grammont had principally helped to make them fashionable, his suppers
+ being served With the greatest elegance, attended by the choicest wits,
+ and occasionally favoured with the presence of majesty itself. Nor were
+ Lady Gerrard's PETIT SOUPERS less brilliant, or her company less
+ distinguished. Her ladyship boasted of French parentage and understood the
+ art of pleasing to perfection; and accordingly at her board wine flowed,
+ wit sparkled, and love obtained in the happiest manner. Now it happened
+ one of her delightful entertainments was destined to gain a notoriety she
+ by no means coveted, and concerning which the French ambassador, Count de
+ Comminges, wrote pleasantly enough to the Marquis de Lionne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It came to pass that Lady Gerrard, who loved the queen, requested the
+ honour of their majesties to sup with her. She, moreover, invited some of
+ the courtiers, amongst whom she did not include my Lady Castlemaine. On
+ the appointed night the king and queen duly arrived; the other guests had
+ already assembled; and the hour gave fair promise of entertainment. But
+ presently, when supper was announced, his majesty was missing, and on
+ inquiry it was discovered he had left the house for Lady Castlemaine's
+ lodgings, where he spent the evening. Such an insult as this so openly
+ dealt the queen, and such an indignity put upon the hostess, caused the
+ greatest agitation to all present; and subsequently afforded subject for
+ scandalous gossip to the town. It moreover showed that the monarch was yet
+ an abject slave of his mistress, whose charms entangled him irresistibly.
+ At least four times a week he supped with her, returning at early morning
+ from her lodgings, in a stealthy way, through the privy gardens, a
+ proceeding of which the sentries took much notice, joked unbecomingly, and
+ gossiped freely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now in order to avoid further observation at such times, and silence
+ rumours which consequently obtained, his majesty removed the countess from
+ her lodgings in that part of the palace divided by the road leading to
+ Westminster from the chief block, and furnished her with apartments next
+ his own chamber. The poor queen, who had sought by every means in her
+ power to win his affection, was sorely grieved at this action, and
+ moreover depressed by the neglect to which she was continually subjected.
+ Sometimes four months were allowed to pass without his deigning to sup
+ with her, though the whole court was aware he constantly paid that honour
+ to her infamous rival. But knowing how unavailing reproach would be, she
+ held her peace; and feeling how obtrusive her sorrow would seem, she hid
+ her tears. Now and again, however, a look would flash in her eyes, and an
+ answer rise to her lips, which showed how deeply she felt her bitter
+ wrongs. "I wonder your majesty has the patience to sit so long adressing,"
+ said my Lady Castlemaine to her one morning when she found her yet in the
+ dresser's hands. "I have so much reason to use patience," answered the
+ neglected wife, "that I can very well bear with it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the countess continued to reign paramount in his majesty's favour
+ until the middle of July, 1663, when a rumour spread through the town that
+ she had quarrelled with the king, and had consequently fallen from her
+ high estate. The cause of disagreement between the monarch and his
+ mistress is narrated by the French ambassador in a letter to Louis XIV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the fair Stuart had so increased in his majesty's favour,
+ that my Lady Castlemaine began to see the indiscretion of which she had
+ been guilty in bringing her so constantly into his presence, and moreover
+ to fear her influence over his fickle heart. Accordingly she refused to
+ invite the maid of honour to her apartments, or entertain her at her
+ assemblies. At this the king became exceedingly wrathful, and told my lady
+ he would not enter her rooms again unless Miss Stuart was there. Thereon
+ the charming countess flew into a violent passion, roundly abused his
+ majesty, called her carriage, and protesting she would never again enter
+ the palace of Whitehall, drove off in a rage to the residence of her uncle
+ at Richmond. The monarch had not expected his words would cause such fury,
+ nor did he desire her departure; and no sooner had she gone than he began
+ to regret her absence and long for her return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore next morning he made pretence of hunting, and turning his
+ horse's head in the direction of Richmond, called on his mistress, when he
+ apologized to and made friends with her. She therefore returned and
+ exercised her old ascendancy over him once more. It is probable his
+ majesty was the more anxious to pacify her, from the fact that she was now
+ far advanced in her third pregnancy; for two months later she gave birth
+ to her second son, who was baptized Henry Fitzroy, and subsequently
+ created Duke of Grafton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it happened about this time, that the queen, falling ill, drew near
+ unto death. On Friday, the 14th October, 1663, a fever took possession of
+ her, when the doctors were summoned, her head shaven, and pigeons put to
+ her feet. Her illness, however, rapidly increased, and believing she was
+ about to leave a world in which her young life had known so much sorrow,
+ she made her will, put her affairs in order, and received extreme unction.
+ Upon this the king, mindful of grievous injuries he had done her, was
+ sorely troubled in his heart, and going to her chamber, flung himself at
+ the foot of her bed and burst into tears; as the French ambassador
+ narrates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is said women love best men who treat them worst. If this be so, God,
+ alone who made them knows wherefore; for it is given no man to understand
+ them in all. Now her majesty proved no exception to this rule regarding
+ the unreasonableness of her sex in placing their affections most on those
+ who regard them least; for she was devoted to the king. Therefore the
+ evidence of his grief at prospect of her loss touched her deeper than all
+ words can say, and with much sweetness she sought to soothe and console
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She told him she had no desire to live, and no sorrow to die, save,
+ indeed, that caused by parting from him. She hoped he would soon wed a
+ consort more worthy of his love than she had been; one who would
+ contribute more to his happiness and the satisfaction of the nation than
+ she had. And now they were about to part, she had two requests to make:
+ that he would never separate his interests from those of the king her
+ brother, or cease to protect her distressed nation; and that her body
+ might be sent back to Portugal and laid in the tomb of her ancestors. At
+ this the king, yet on his knees beside her, interrupted her only by his
+ sobs, hearing which she wept likewise; and so overcome was he by grief
+ that he was obliged to be led from her room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The court was saddened by her majesty's illness, for she had won the
+ goodwill of all by the kindness of her disposition and gentleness of her
+ manner; the city was likewise afflicted, for the people thought so good a
+ queen could not fail in time to reclaim even so erratic a husband; and
+ trade became suddenly depressed. Crowds gathered by night and by day
+ outside the palace to learn the most recent change in her majesty's
+ condition many thinking her death inevitable, because the doctors had
+ pronounced her recovery impossible. And for days her soul hovered betwixt
+ two worlds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the night of the 19th, a fierce storm raged over England; and Mr.
+ Pepys, being waked by the roaring of mighty winds, turned to his wife and
+ said: "I pray God I hear not of the death of any great person, this wind
+ is so high." And fearing the queen might have departed, he rose betimes,
+ and took coach to the palace that he might make inquiries concerning her,
+ but found her majesty was still living. She was now, however, unconscious;
+ and gave free voice to the secret sorrow which underlay her life, because
+ she had not borne children to the king. Had she given him heirs, she felt
+ assured he would certainly love her as well as he loved his mistresses;
+ and would feel as proud of her offspring as of those borne him by other
+ women. But though she had proved capable of becoming a mother on more than
+ one occasion, it pleased heaven to leave her childless, to her great
+ grief. Therefore in her delirium, desires shaped themselves to realities,
+ and she believed she had given birth to three children, two boys and a
+ girl. The latter she fancied much resembled the king, but she was troubled
+ that one of the boys was plain featured. And seeing her grief at this, his
+ majesty, who stood by, sought in pity to console her, saying the boy was
+ indeed pretty; at which she brightened visibly, and answering him said:
+ "Nay, if it be like you, it is a fine boy indeed, and I would be very well
+ pleased with it." This delusion continued through her illness, and so
+ strongly did it force itself upon her mind, that one morning when she was
+ on her way to recovery, on waking suddenly and seeing the doctor bending
+ over her, she exclaimed, "How do the children?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now all this time, whilst the shadow of death lay upon the palace, and
+ laughter and music were no longer heard within its walls, there was one of
+ its inmates who pondered much upon the great fortune which the future
+ might have in keeping for her. This was fair Frances Stuart, who, not
+ having yielded to the king's request by becoming his mistress, now
+ entertained high hopes of being made his wife. In this dream she was,
+ moreover, flattered by an unusual deference and high respect paid her by
+ the court since the beginning of her majesty's illness. The king continued
+ his attentions to her; for though he had proved himself "fondly
+ disconsolate" and wept sorely for her majesty, he never during her
+ sickness omitted an opportunity of conversing with Miss Stuart, or
+ neglected supping with Lady Castlemaine. But the hopes entertained by the
+ maid of honour were speedily overthrown, for contrary to all expectation
+ the queen recovered, and was so well on the 10th November as to "bespeak
+ herself a new gowne"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the court remained unchanged, and life went on as before; the queen
+ growing gradually stronger, the king making love to Miss Stuart by day,
+ and visiting Lady Castlemaine by night. And it happened one evening when
+ he went to sup with the latter there was a chine of beef to roast, and no
+ fire to cook it because the Thames had flooded the kitchen. Hearing which,
+ the countess called out to the cook, "Zounds, you must set the house on
+ fire but it shall be roasted!" And roasted it was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Notorious courtiers.&mdash;My Lord Rochester's satires.&mdash;Places a watch on
+ certain ladies of quality.&mdash;His majesty becomes indignant.&mdash;Rochester
+ retires to the country.&mdash;Dons a disguise and returns to town.&mdash;Practises
+ astrology.&mdash;Two maids of honour seek adventure.&mdash;Mishaps which befell
+ them.&mdash;Rochester forgiven.&mdash;The Duke of Buckingham.&mdash;Lady Shrewsbury
+ and her victims.&mdash;Captain Howard's duel.&mdash;Lord Shrewsbury avenges
+ his honour.&mdash;A strange story.&mdash;Colonel Blood attempts an
+ abduction.&mdash;Endeavours to steal the regalia.&mdash;The king converses with
+ him.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Prominent among the courtiers, and foremost amid the friends of his
+ majesty, were two noblemen distinguished alike for their physical grace,
+ exceeding wit, and notable eccentricity. These were the Earl of Rochester,
+ and his Grace of Buckingham; gallants both, whose respective careers were
+ so intimately connected with the court as to make further chronicle of
+ them necessary in these pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My Lord Rochester, though younger in years than the duke, was superior to
+ him in wit, comeliness, and attraction. Nor was there a more conspicuous
+ figure observable in the palace of Whitehall than this same earl, who was
+ ever foremost in pursuit of such pleasures as wine begets and love
+ appeases. His mirth was the most buoyant, his conversation the most
+ agreeable, his manner the most engaging in the world; whence he became
+ "the delight and wonder of men, the love and dotage of women." A courtier
+ possessed of so happy a disposition, and endowed with such brilliant
+ talents, could not fail in pleasing the king; who vastly enjoyed his
+ society, but was occasionally obliged to banish his person from court,
+ when his eccentric conduct rendered him intolerable, or his bitter satire
+ aimed at royalty. For it was given no other man in his age to blend merry
+ wit and caustic ridicule so happily together; therefore those who read his
+ lines were forced to laugh at his fancy, even whilst hurt by his irony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now in order to keep this talent in constant practice, he was wont to
+ celebrate in inimitable verse such events, be they private or public, as
+ happened at court, or befell the courtiers; and inasmuch as his subjects
+ were frequently of a licentious nature, his lines were generally of a
+ scandalous character. He therefore became the public censor of court
+ folly; and so unerringly did his barbed shafts hit the weaknesses at which
+ they aimed, that his productions were equally the terror of those he
+ victimized, and the delight of those he spared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This liberal use of satire he was wont to excuse on the plea there were
+ some who could not be kept in order, or admonished, by other means.
+ Therefore, having the virtue of his friends keenly at heart, an ingenious
+ plan occurred to him by which he might secretly discover their vices, and
+ publicly reprove them. In order that he might fulfil this purpose to his
+ greater satisfaction, he promptly sought and found a footman, who, by
+ virtue of his employment, was well acquainted with the courtiers. This man
+ the "noble and beautiful earl" furnished with a red coat and a musket,
+ that he might pass as a sentinel, and then placed him every night
+ throughout one winter at the doors of certain ladies of quality whom he
+ suspected of carrying on intrigues.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this disguise the footman readily passed as a soldier stationed at his
+ post by command of his officer, and was thus enabled to note what
+ gentlemen called on the suspected ladies at unreasonable but not
+ unfashionable hours. Accordingly, my lord made many surprising
+ discoveries, and when he had gained sufficient information on such
+ delicate points, he quietly retired into the country, that he might with
+ greater ease devote himself to the composition of those lively verses
+ which he subsequently circulated through the court, to the wonder and
+ dismay of many, and the delight and profit of few.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To these lampoons no name was attached, and my lord took precautions that
+ their authorship should not be satisfactorily proved, no matter how sagely
+ suspected. Moreover, in his conversation he was judicious enough to keep
+ the weapon of his satire in reserve; sheathing its fatal keenness in a
+ bewitching softness of civility until occasion required its use; when
+ forth it flashed all the brighter for its covering, all the sharper for
+ its rest. And satire being absent from his speech, humour ever waited on
+ his words; and never was he more extravagantly gay than when assisting at
+ the pleasant suppers given by the merry monarch to his choicest friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, whilst drinking deep of ruddy wine from goblets of old gold, he
+ narrated his strange experiences, and illustrated them with flashes of his
+ wit. For it was the habit of this eccentric earl, when refinements of the
+ court began to pall upon him, or his absence from Whitehall became a
+ necessity, to seek fresh adventure and intrigue disguised as a porter, a
+ beggar, or a ballad-monger. And so carefully did he hide his identity in
+ the character he assumed, that his most intimate friends failed to
+ recognise his personality.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No doubt the follies in which he indulged were in some measure due to the
+ eccentricity ever attendant upon genius; but they were probably likewise
+ occasioned by craving for excitement begotten of drink. For my lord loved
+ wine exceedingly; and when he drew near unto death in the dawn of his
+ manhood, confessed to Bishop Burnet that for five years he was continually
+ drunk: "Not that he was all the while under the visible effects of it, but
+ his blood was so inflamed, that he was not in all that time cool enough to
+ be perfectly master of himself." Charles delighted in the society of this
+ gay courtier, because of his erratic adventures, and his love of wine.
+ Moreover, the licentious verses which it was the earl's good pleasure to
+ compose, the names of some of which no decent lips would whisper in this
+ age of happy innocence, afforded the monarch extravagant enjoyment. Withal
+ his majesty's satisfaction in Lord Rochester's wit was not always to be
+ counted upon, as it proved. For it came to pass one night at the close of
+ a royal supper, during which the earl had drunk deep, that with great
+ goodwill to afford the king diversion, he handed his majesty what he
+ believed was a satire on a courtier, more remarkable for its humour than
+ its decency. Whereon Charles, with anticipation of much delight, opened
+ the folded page, when he was surprised to see, not a copy of verses, but
+ an unflattering description of himself, which ran as follows:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Here lies our mutton-eating king,
+ Whose word no man relies on;
+ Who never said a foolish thing,
+ And never did a wise one."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Now the king, though the best tempered of men and most lenient of masters,
+ was naturally wrathful at this verbal character: the more so because
+ recognising its faithfulness at a glance. He therefore upbraided Rochester
+ with ingratitude, and banished him from the court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing dismayed, my lord retired into the country; but in a short time,
+ growing weary of pastoral solitude which gave him an appetite for
+ adventure it could not wholly supply, he returned privately to town, and
+ assuming a disguise, took up his residence in the city. Here exercising
+ his characteristic tact, and great capacity for pleasing, he speedily made
+ friends with wealthy merchants and worthy aldermen, who subsequently
+ invited him to their hospitable tables, and introduced him to their
+ gracious ladies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as his conversation had not failed to delight the husbands, neither
+ were his charms unsuccessful in affording satisfaction to their wives. To
+ the one he railed against the impotence of the king's ministers, to the
+ other he declaimed upon the wickedness of his majesty's mistresses; and to
+ both his denunciations were equally sincere and acceptable. But his
+ bitterest words were reserved for such courtiers as Rochester, Buckingham,
+ and Killigrew, whose dissipated lives were the scandal of all honest men,
+ the terror of all virtuous women: insolent fellows, moreover, who had the
+ impudence to boast that city ladies were not so faithful to their husbands
+ as was generally supposed, and, moreover, the boldness to assert that they
+ painted. Indeed, he marvelled much, that since such men were frequenters
+ of Whitehall, sacred fire from heaven had not long since descended and
+ consumed the royal palace to ashes. Such virtuous sentiments as these,
+ expressed by so gallant a man, made him acceptable in many homes: and the
+ result was he speedily became surfeited by banquets, suppers, and other
+ hospitalities, to which the excellent but credulous citizens bade him
+ heartily welcome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He therefore disappeared from their midst one day as suddenly and
+ unaccountably as he had come amongst them. He did not, however, take
+ himself afar, but donning a new disguise, retreated to a more distant part
+ of the city: for an idea had occurred to him which he determined speedily
+ to put in practice. This was to assume the character and bearing of a sage
+ astrologer and learned physician, at once capable of reading the past, and
+ laying bare the future of all who consulted him; also of healing diseases
+ of and preventing mishaps to such as visited him. Accordingly, having
+ taken lodgings in Tower Street, at a goldsmith's house, situated next the
+ Black Swan, he prepared himself for practice, adopted the title of doctor,
+ the name of Alexander Bendo, and issued bills headed by the royal arms,
+ containing the most remarkable and impudent manifesto perhaps ever set
+ forth by any impostor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Copies of this may yet be seen in early editions of his works. It was
+ addressed to all gentlemen, ladies, and others, whether of the city, town,
+ or country, to whom Alexander Bendo wished health and prosperity. He had
+ come amongst them because the great metropolis of England had ever been
+ infested by numerous quacks, whose arrogant confidence, backed by their
+ ignorance, had enabled them to impose on the public; either by
+ premeditated cheats in physic, chymical and galenic, in astrology,
+ physiognomy, palmistry, mathematics, alchymy, and even government itself.
+ Of which latter he did not propose to discourse, or meddle with, since it
+ in no way belonged to his trade or vocation, which he thanked God he found
+ much more safe, equally honest, and more profitable. But he, Alexander
+ Bendo, had with unswerving faithfulness and untiring assiduity for years
+ courted the arts and sciences, and had learned dark secrets and received
+ signal favours from them. He was therefore prepared to take part against
+ unlearned wretches, and arrant quacks, whose impudent addresses and saucy
+ pretences had brought scandal upon sage and learned men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, in a wicked world like this, where virtue was so exactly
+ counterfeited, and hypocrisy was generally successful, it would be hard
+ for him, a stranger, to escape censure. But indeed he would submit to be
+ considered a mountebank if he were discovered to be one. Having made which
+ statement, he proceeded to draw an ingenious comparison between a
+ mountebank and a politician, suitable to all ages and dimes, but
+ especially to this century and country. Both, he intimated, are fain to
+ supply the lack of higher abilities to which they pretend, with craft; and
+ attract attention by undertaking strange things which can never be
+ performed. By both the people are pleased and deluded; the expectation of
+ good in the future drawing their eyes from the certainty of evil in the
+ present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sage Alexander Bendo then discoursed of miraculous cures which he
+ could effect, but he would set down no word in his bill which bore an
+ unclean sound. It was enough that he made himself understood, but indeed
+ he had seen physicians' bills containing things of which no man who walked
+ warily before God could approve. Concerning astrological predictions,
+ physiognomy, divination by dreams, and otherwise, he would say, if it did
+ not look like ostentation, he had seldom failed, but had often been of
+ service; and to those who came to him he would guarantee satisfaction. Nor
+ would he be ashamed to avow his willingness to practise rare secrets, for
+ the help, conservation, and augmentation of beauty and comeliness; an
+ endowment granted for the better establishment of mutual love between man
+ and woman, and as such highly valuable to both. The knowledge of secrets
+ like this he had gathered during journeys through France and Italy, in
+ which countries he had spent his life since he was fifteen years old.
+ Those who had travelled in the latter country knew what a miracle art
+ there performs in behalf of beauty; how women of forty bear the same
+ countenance as those of fifteen, ages being in no way distinguished by
+ appearances; whereas in England, by looking at a horse in the mouth and a
+ woman in the face, it was possible to tell the number of their years. He
+ could, therefore, give such remedies as would render those who came to him
+ perfectly fair; clearing and preserving them from all spots, freckles,
+ pimples, marks of small-pox, or traces of accidents. He would, moreover,
+ cure the teeth, clear the breath, take away fatness, and add flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A man who vouched to perform such wonders was not long without patients.
+ At first these were drawn from his immediate neighbourhood, but soon his
+ fame reached the heart of the city. Accordingly, many ladies of whose
+ hospitality he had partaken, and of whose secrets he had become possessed,
+ hurried to consult him; and the marvellous insight he betrayed regarding
+ their past, and strange predictions he pronounced concerning their future,
+ filled them with amazement, and occasionally with alarm. And they,
+ proclaiming the marvels of his wisdom, widened the circle of his
+ reputation, until his name was spoken within the precincts of Whitehall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Curiosity concerning so remarkable a man at once beset the minds of
+ certain ladies at court, who either feared or expected much from the
+ future, and were anxious to peer into such secrets as it held concerning
+ themselves. But dreading the notoriety their presence would naturally
+ cause in the vicinity of Tower Street, a spot to them unknown, they,
+ acting with a prudence not invariably characteristic of their conduct,
+ sent their maids to ascertain from personal experience if the astrologer's
+ wisdom was in truth as marvellous as reported. Now, when these appeared in
+ fear and trembling before the great Alexander Bendo, the knowledge he
+ revealed concerning themselves, and their mistresses likewise, was so
+ wonderful that it exceeded all expectation. Accordingly, the maids
+ returned to court with such testimonies concerning the lore of this
+ star-reader, as fired afresh their mistresses' desires to see and converse
+ with him in their proper persons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It therefore came to pass that Miss Price and Miss Jennings, maids of
+ honour both&mdash;the one to the queen, the other to the Duchess of York&mdash;boldly
+ resolved to visit Doctor Bendo, and learn what the future held for them.
+ Miss Price was a lady who delighted in adventure; Miss Jennings was a
+ gentlewoman of spirit; both looked forward to their visit with excitement
+ and interest. It happened one night, when the court had gone to the
+ playhouse, these ladies, who had excused themselves from attending the
+ queen and the duchess, dressed as orange girls, and taking baskets of
+ fruit under their arms, quickly crossed the park, and entered a
+ hackney-coach at Whitehall Gate. Bidding the driver convey them to Tower
+ Street, they rattled merrily enough over the uneven streets until they
+ came close to the theatre, when, being in high spirits and feeling anxious
+ to test the value of their disguise, they resolved to alight from their
+ conveyance, enter the playhouse, and offer their wares for sale in
+ presence of the court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, paying the driver, they descended from the coach, and running
+ between the lines of chairs gathered round the theatre, gained the door.
+ Now, who should arrive at that moment but the beau Sidney, attired in the
+ bravery of waving feathers, fluttering ribbons, and rich-hued velvets. And
+ as he paused to adjust his curls to his greater satisfaction before
+ entering the playhouse, Miss Price went boldly forward and asked him to
+ buy her fine oranges; but so engaged was he in his occupation, that he did
+ not deign to make reply, but passed into the theatre without turning his
+ glance upon her. Miss Jennings, however, fared somewhat differently; and
+ with less satisfaction to herself; for, perceiving another courtier, none
+ other than Tom Killigrew, a rare wit and lover of pleasure, she went up to
+ him and offered her fruit for sale. These he declined to buy; but chucking
+ her under the chin, and glancing at her with an air of familiarity,
+ invited her to bring her oranges to his lodgings next morning. On this
+ Miss Jennings, who was as virtuous as lovely, pushed him away with
+ violence, and forgetting the character she assumed, commenced rebuking his
+ insolence, much to the amusement and surprise of the bystanders. Fearing
+ detection of their identity, Miss Price pulled her forcibly away from the
+ crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Jennings was after this incident anxious to forego her visit to the
+ astrologer, and return to Whitehall, but her companion declaring this
+ would be a shameful want of spirit, they once more entered a
+ hackney-coach, and requested they might be driven to the lodgings of the
+ learned Doctor Bendo. Their adventures for the evening were unfortunately
+ not yet at an end; for just as they entered Tower Street they saw Henry
+ Brinker, one of the gentlemen of the bedchamber to the Duke of York. Now
+ it happened this courtier had been dining with a citizen of worth and
+ wealth, whose house he was about to leave the moment the maids of honour
+ drove by. They, knowing him to be a man remarkable for his gallantries,
+ were anxious to avoid his observation, and therefore directed the driver
+ to proceed a few doors beyond their destination; but he, having caught
+ sight of two pretty orange wenches, followed the coach and promptly
+ stepping up as they alighted, made some bold observations to them. On this
+ both turned away their heads that they might avoid his gaze, a proceeding
+ which caused him to observe them with closer scrutiny, when he immediately
+ recognised them, without however intimating his knowledge. He therefore
+ fell to teasing them, and finally left them with no very pleasant remarks
+ ringing in their ears, concerning the virtue which obtained among maids of
+ honour, for he did not doubt their disguise was assumed for purposes of
+ intrigue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Overwhelmed with confusion, they walked towards the goldsmith's shop, over
+ which the oracle delivered wisdom; but being no longer in a humour to heed
+ his words, they presently resolved on driving back to Whitehall with all
+ possible speed. But alas! on turning round they beheld their driver waging
+ war with a crowd which had gathered about his vehicle; for having left
+ their oranges in the coach, some boys had essayed to help themselves,
+ whereon the man fell foul of them. But he, being one against many, was
+ like to fare badly at their hands; seeing which, the maids of honour
+ persuaded him to let the crowd take the fruit and drive them back at once.
+ This conduct had not the effect of appeasing those who profited by its
+ generosity; for the gentlewomen were greeted with most foul abuse, and
+ many unworthy charges were laid to their account in language more vigorous
+ than polished. And having at last arrived in safety at Whitehall, they
+ resolved never to sally forth in search of adventure again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After various strange experiences in his character as doctor of medicine
+ and teller of fortunes, of the weakness of human nature and strength of
+ common credulity, the learned Alexander Bendo vanished from the city; and
+ about the same time the gallant Earl of Rochester appeared at court, where
+ he sought for and obtained the merry monarch's pardon. The wonderful
+ stories he was enabled to relate, piquant in detail, and sparkling with
+ wit, rendered it delightful to the king, in whose favour he soon regained
+ his former supremacy. Nay, Charles even determined to enrich and reward
+ him, not indeed from the resources of his privy purse, his majesty's
+ income being all too little for his mistresses' rapacity, but by uniting
+ him to a charming woman and an heiress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady whom his majesty selected for this purpose was Elizabeth Mallett,
+ daughter of Lord Hawley of Donamore. Now this gentlewoman had a fortune of
+ two thousand five hundred a year, a considerable sum in those days, and
+ one which gained her many suitors; amongst whom Lord Hinchingbrook was
+ commended by her family, and Lord Rochester by the king. Now the latter
+ nobleman, having but a poor estate, was anxious to obtain her wealth, and
+ fearful of losing his suit: and being uncertain as to whether he could
+ gain her consent to marry him by fair means, he resolved to obtain it by
+ execution of a daring scheme.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was to carry her off by force, an action which highly commended
+ itself to his adventurous spirit. Accordingly he selected a night on which
+ the heiress supped at Whitehall with her friend Miss Stuart, for
+ conducting his enterprise. It therefore happened that as Elizabeth Mallett
+ was returning home from the palace in company with her grandfather, their
+ coach was suddenly stopped at Charing Cross. Apprehending some danger,
+ Lord Hawley looked out, and by the red light of a score of torches
+ flashing through darkness, saw he was surrounded by a band of armed men,
+ both afoot and on horse. Their action was prompt and decisive, for before
+ either my lord or his granddaughter was aware of their intention, the
+ latter was seized, forcibly lifted from the coach, and transferred to
+ another which awaited close at hand. This was driven by six horses, and
+ occupied by two women, who received the heiress with all possible respect.
+ No sooner had she been placed in the coach than the horses were set to a
+ gallop, and away she sped, surrounded by a company of horsemen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Hawley was cast into the uttermost grief and passion by this outrage;
+ but his condition did not prevent him speedily gathering a number of
+ friends and retainers, in company with whom he gave chase to those who had
+ abducted his granddaughter; and so fast did they ride that Mistress
+ Mallett was overtaken at Uxbridge, and carried back in safety to town. For
+ this outrageous attempt, my Lord Rochester was by the king's command
+ committed to the Tower, there to await his majesty's good pleasure. It
+ seemed now as if the earl's chance of gaining the heiress had passed away
+ for ever; inasmuch as Charles regarded the attempted abduction with vast
+ displeasure, and my Lord Hawley with terrible indignation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the ways of women being inexplicable, it happened in a brief while
+ Mistress Mallett was inclined to regret my Lord Rochester's imprisonment,
+ and therefore moved to have him released; and, moreover, she was
+ subsequently pleased to regard his suit and accept him as her wedded lord.
+ It speaks favourably for his character that with all his faults she loved
+ him well: nor did Rochester, though occasionally unfaithful, ever treat
+ her with unkindness. At times the old spirit of restlessness and passion
+ for adventure would master him, when he would withdraw himself from her
+ society for weeks and months. But she, though sadly afflicted by such
+ conduct, did not resent it. "If I could have been troubled at anything,
+ when I had the happiness of receiving a letter from you," she writes to
+ him on one occasion when he had absented himself from her for long, "I
+ should be so because you did not name a time when I might hope to see you,
+ the uncertainty of which very much afflicts me." And again the poor
+ patient wife tells him, "Lay your commands upon me, what I am to do, and
+ though it be to forget my children, and the long hope I have lived in of
+ seeing you, yet I will endeavour to obey you; or in memory only torment
+ myself, without giving you the trouble of putting you in mind that there
+ lives such a creature as your faithful humble servant." At length
+ dissipation undermined his naturally strong constitution; and for months
+ this once most gay and gallant man, this "noble and beautiful earl," lay
+ dying of that cruel disease consumption. The while such thoughts as come
+ to those who reason of life's vanities beset him; and as he descended into
+ the valley of shadows, the folly of this world's ways was made clear to
+ him. And repenting of his sins, he died in peace with God and man at the
+ age of three-and-thirty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George Villiers second Duke of Buckingham, was not less notable than my
+ Lord Rochester. By turns he played such diverse parts in life's strange
+ comedy as that of a spendthrift and a miser, a profligate and a
+ philosopher, a statesman who sought the ruin of his country, and a
+ courtier who pandered to the pleasures of his king. But inasmuch as this
+ history is concerned with the social rather than the political life of
+ those mentioned in its pages, place must be given to such adventures as
+ were connected with the court and courtiers. Buckingham's were chiefly
+ concerned with his intrigues, which, alas! were many and strange; for
+ though his wife was loving and virtuous, she was likewise lean and brown,
+ and wholly incapable of controlling his erring fancies. Perhaps it was
+ knowledge of her lack of comeliness which helped her to bear the burden of
+ his follies; for according to Madame Dunois, though the duchess knew he
+ was continually engaged in amours, she, by virtue of a patience uncommon
+ to her sex, forbore mentioning the subject to him, and "had complaisance
+ enough to entertain his mistresses, and even lodge them in her house, all
+ which she suffered because she loved him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The most remarkable of his intrigues was that which connected his name
+ with the Countess of Shrewsbury. Her ladyship, was daughter of the second
+ Earl of Cardigan, and wife of the eleventh Earl of Shrewsbury. She was
+ married a year previous to the restoration, and upon the establishment of
+ the court at Whitehall had become one of its most distinguished beauties.
+ Nor was she less famed for the loveliness of her person than for the
+ generosity of her disposition; inasmuch as none who professed themselves
+ desirous of her affection were ever allowed to languish in despair. She
+ therefore had many admirers, some of whom were destined to suffer for the
+ distinction her friendship conferred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now one of the first to gain her attachment was the young Earl of Arran,
+ the grace of whose bearing and ardour of whose character were alike
+ notable to the court. The verses he sung her to an accompaniment of his
+ guitar, and the glances he gave her indicative of his passion, might have
+ melted a heart less cold than hers. Accordingly they gained him a
+ friendship which, by reason of her vast benevolence, many were
+ subsequently destined to share. Now it chanced that the little Jermyn, who
+ had already succeeded in winning the affections of such notable women as
+ the poor Princess of Orange and my Lady Castlemaine, and had besides
+ conducted a series of minor intrigues with various ladies connected with
+ the court, was somewhat piqued that Lady Shrewsbury had accepted my Lord
+ Arran's attentions without encouraging his. For Henry Jermyn, by virtue of
+ the fascinations he exercised and the consequent reputation he enjoyed,
+ expected to be wooed by such women as desired his love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when, later on, Lord Arran's devotion to the lady was succeeded by
+ that of Thomas Howard, brother to the Earl of Carlisle, and captain of the
+ guards, Jermyn was thoroughly incensed, and resolved to make an exception
+ in favour of the countess by beginning those civilities which act as
+ preludes to intrigue. My lady, who was not judicious enough to be off with
+ the old love before she was on with the new, accepted Jermyn's advances
+ with an eagerness that gave promise of further favours. This was highly
+ displeasing to Howard, a brave and generous man, who under an exterior of
+ passive calmness concealed a spirit of fearless courage. Though not
+ desirous of picking a quarrel with his rival, he was unwilling to suffer
+ his impertinent interference. Jermyn, on the other hand, not being aware
+ of Howard's real character, sought an early opportunity of insulting him.
+ Such being their dispositions, a quarrel speedily ensued, which happened
+ in this manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One fair summer day Captain Howard gave an entertainment at Spring
+ Gardens, in honour of the countess. These gardens were situated close by
+ Charing Cross, and opened into the spacious walks of St. James's Park.
+ Bounded on one side by a grove, and containing leafy arbours and numerous
+ thickets, the gardens were "contrived to all the advantages of gallantry."
+ The scene of many an intrigue, they were constantly frequented by denizens
+ of the court and dwellers in the city, to whom they afforded recreation
+ and pleasure. In the centre of these fair gardens stood a cabaret, or
+ house of entertainment, where repasts were served at exceeding high
+ prices, and much good wine was drunk. Here it was Captain Howard received
+ my Lady Shrewsbury and a goodly company, spread a delicate banquet for
+ them, and for their better diversion provided some excellent music played
+ upon the bagpipes, by a soldier noted for his execution on that
+ instrument.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jermyn hearing of the great preparations Captain Howard made, resolved to
+ be present on the occasion; and accordingly, before the hour appointed for
+ dinner, betook himself to the garden, and as if he had arrived there by
+ accident, strolled leisurely down the broad pleasant paths, bordered by
+ pinks and fragrant roses clustering in the hedgerows. And presently
+ drawing nigh the cabaret, he tarried there until the countess, rich in
+ physical graces, with sunny smiles upon her lips, and amorous light in her
+ eyes, stepped forth upon the balcony and greeted him. Whereon his heart
+ took fire: and entering the house, he joined her where she stood, and held
+ pleasant converse with her. Inflated by his success, he resolved on making
+ himself disagreeable to the host, and therefore ventured to criticize the
+ entertainment, and ridicule the music, which he voted barbarous to
+ civilized ears. And to such an extent did he outrage Thomas Howard, that
+ the gallant captain, being more of a soldier than a courtier, and
+ therefore preferring passages at arms to those of wit, could scarce
+ refrain from drawing his sword and demanding the satisfaction due to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, he subdued his wrath till the day was spent, and early next
+ morning sent a challenge to his rival. Accordingly they met with fierce
+ intent, and the duel which followed ended almost fatally for Jermyn, who
+ was carried from the scene of encounter bleeding from three wounds caused
+ by his antagonist's sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The unfortunate issue of this fight deprived Lady Shrewsbury of two
+ lovers; for Howard, having rendered Jermyn unable to perform the part of a
+ gallant, was obliged to fly from the country and remain abroad some time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In their stead the countess sought consolation in the companionship of
+ Thomas Killigrew, a handsome man and a notable courtier. She therefore had
+ no regrets for the past: and he was entirely happy in the present, so that
+ he boasted of his felicities to all acquaintance, in general, and to his
+ friend the Duke of Buckingham in particular. It was Killigrew's constant
+ habit to sup with his grace, on which occasions his conversation
+ invariably turned on her ladyship, when, his imagination being heated by
+ wine, he freely endowed her with the perfections of a goddess. To such
+ descriptions the duke could not listen unmoved; and therefore resolved to
+ judge for himself if indeed the countess was such a model of loveliness as
+ Killigrew represented. Accordingly, at the first opportunity which
+ presented itself, the duke made love to her, and she, nothing averse to
+ his attentions, encouraged his affections. Killigrew was much aggrieved at
+ this unexpected turn of affairs, and bitterly reproached the countess; but
+ she, being mistress of the situation, boldly denied all knowledge of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was more than he expected or could endure, and he consequently abused
+ her roundly in all companies, characterizing the charms of which he once
+ boasted as faults he could not endure; ridiculing her airs, and denouncing
+ her conduct. Reports of his comments and discourses speedily reached Lady
+ Shrewsbury's ears; and he was privately warned that if he did not desist
+ means would be taken to silence him effectually. Not being wise enough to
+ accept this hint he continued to vilify her. The result was, one night
+ when returning from the Duke of York's apartments he was suddenly waylaid
+ in St. James's Park, and three passes of a sword made at him through his
+ chair, one of which pierced his arm. Not doubting they had despatched him
+ to a better world, His assailants made their escape; and my Lady
+ Shrewsbury, who singularly enough happened to be passing at the time in
+ her coach, and had stopped to witness the proceedings, drove off as
+ speedily as six horses could carry her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Knowing it would be impossible to trace the villainy which had prompted
+ this deed to its source, Killigrew said not a word concerning the
+ murderous attempt, and henceforth held his peace regarding his late
+ mistress's imperfections. For some time she continued her intrigue with
+ the Duke of Buckingham without interference. But in an evil hour it
+ happened the Earl of Shrewsbury, who had long entertained a philosophical
+ indifference towards her previous amours, now undertook to defend his
+ honour, which it was clear his Grace of Buckingham had sadly injured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly he challenged the duke to combat, and in due time they met
+ face to face in a field by Barnes Elms. His grace had as seconds Sir
+ Robert Holmes and Captain William Jenkins; the earl being supported by Sir
+ John Talbot and Bernard Howard, son of my Lord Arundel. The fight was
+ brief and bloody; Lord Shrewsbury, being run through the body, was carried
+ from the field in an insensible condition. The duke received but a slight
+ wound, but his friend Captain Jenkins was killed upon the spot. The while
+ swords clashed, blood flowed, and lives hung in a balance, the woman who
+ wrought this evil stood close by, disguised as a page, holding the bridle
+ of her lover's horse, as Lord Orford mentions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In consequence of this duel the Duke of Buckingham absented himself from
+ the capital; but two months after its occurrence King Charles was pleased,
+ "in contemplation of the services heretofore done to his majesty by most
+ of the persons engaged in the late duel or rencontre, to graciously pardon
+ the said offence." Three months after the day on which he fought, Lord
+ Shrewsbury died from effects of his wounds, when the duke boldly carried
+ the widow to his home. The poor duchess, who had patiently borne many
+ wrongs, could not stand this grievous and public insult, and declared she
+ would not live under the same roof with so shameless a woman. "So I
+ thought, madam," rejoined her profligate lord, "and have therefore ordered
+ your coach to convey you to your father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The countess continued to live with her paramour; nor was the court
+ scandalized. The queen, it is true, openly espoused the cause of the
+ outraged duchess, and sought to enlist sympathy on her behalf; but so low
+ was the tone of public morality that her words were unheeded, and no voice
+ was raised in protest against this glaring infamy. Nay, the duke went
+ further still in his efforts towards injuring the wife to whom he owed so
+ much, and who loved him over-well; as he caused his chaplain, the Rev.
+ Thomas Sprat, to marry him to my Lady Shrewsbury; and subsequently
+ conferred on the son to which she gave birth, and for whom the king stood
+ godfather, his second title of Earl of Coventry. His wife was henceforth
+ styled by the courtiers Dowager Duchess of Buckingham. It is worthy of
+ mention that the Rev. Thomas Sprat in good time became Bishop of
+ Rochester, and, it is written, "an ornament to the church among those of
+ the highest order."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the most extraordinary characters which figured in this reign was
+ Thomas Blood, sometimes styled colonel. He was remarkable for his great
+ strength, high courage, and love of adventure. The son of an Irish
+ blacksmith, he had, on the outbreak of civil warfare in his native
+ country, joined Cromwell's army; and for the bravery he evinced was raised
+ to the rank of lieutenant, rewarded by a substantial grant of land, and
+ finally made a justice of the peace. At the restoration he was deprived of
+ this honour, as he was likewise of the property he called his, which was
+ returned to its rightful owner, an honest royalist. Wholly dissatisfied
+ with a government which dealt him such hardships, he organised a plot to
+ raise an insurrection in Ireland, storm Dublin Castle, and seize the Duke
+ of Ormond, then lord lieutenant. This dark scheme was discovered by his
+ grace; the chief conspirators were accordingly seized, with the exception
+ of Blood, who succeeded in making his escape to Holland. His fellow
+ traitors were tried and duly executed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Holland, Blood journeyed into England, where, becoming acquainted
+ with some republicans, he entered into projects with them calculated to
+ disturb the nation's peace; which fact becoming known, he was obliged to
+ seek refuge in Scotland. Here he found fresh employment for his restless
+ energies, and in the year 1666 succeeded in stirring up some malcontents
+ to rebellion. The revolt being quelled, he escaped to Ireland; and after a
+ short stay in that country returned once more to England, where he sought
+ security in disguise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lived here in peace until 1670, when he made an attempt no less
+ remarkable for its ingenuity than notable for its villainy. Towards the
+ end of that year the Prince of Orange, being in London, was invited by the
+ lord mayor to a civic banquet. Thither the Duke of Ormond attended him,
+ and subsequently accompanied him to St. James's, where the prince then
+ stayed. A short distance from the palace gates stood Clarendon House,
+ where the duke then resided, and towards which he immediately drove, on
+ taking leave of his royal highness. Scarce had he proceeded a dozen yards
+ up St. James's Street, when his coach was suddenly stopped by a band of
+ armed and mounted men, who, hurriedly surrounding his grace, dragged him
+ from the carriage and mounted him on a horse behind a stalwart rider. Word
+ of command being then given, the gang started at a brisk pace down
+ Piccadilly. Prompted by enemies of the duke, as well as urged by his own
+ desires to avenge his loss of property and the death of his
+ fellow-conspirators, Blood resolved to hang him upon the gallows at
+ Tyburn. That he might accomplish this end with greater speed and security,
+ he, leaving his victim securely buckled and tied to the fellow behind whom
+ he had been mounted, galloped forward in advance to adjust the rope to the
+ gallows, and make other necessary preparations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner did the echo of his horse's hoofs die away, than the duke,
+ recovering the stupor this sudden attack had caused, became aware that now
+ was his opportunity to effect escape, if, indeed, such were possible. He
+ to whom his grace was secured was a burly man possessed of great strength;
+ the which Lord Ormond, being now past his sixtieth year, had not. However,
+ life was dear to him, and therefore he began struggling with the fellow;
+ and finally getting his foot under the villain's, he unhorsed him, when
+ both fell heavily to the ground. Meanwhile his grace's coach having driven
+ to Clarendon House, the footmen had given an account of the daring manner
+ in which his abduction had been effected. On this an alarm was immediately
+ raised, and the porter, servants, and others hastened down Piccadilly in
+ search of their master, fast as good horses could carry them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had proceeded as far as the village of Knightsbridge, when reports of
+ muskets, cries for help, and sounds of a scuffle they could not see for
+ darkness, fell upon their ears, and filled them with alarm. The whole
+ neighbourhood seemed startled, lights flashed, dogs barked, and many
+ persons rushed towards the scene of encounter. Aware of this, the
+ miscreants who had carried off the duke discharged their pistols at him,
+ and leaving him, as they supposed, for dead, fled to avoid capture, and
+ were seen or heard of no more. His grace was carried in an insensible
+ condition to a neighbouring house, but not having received serious hurt,
+ recovered in a few days. The court and town were strangely alarmed by this
+ outrage; nor as time passed was there any clue obtained to its
+ perpetrators, though the king offered a thousand pounds reward for their
+ discovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The duke and his family, however, had little doubt his grace of Buckingham
+ was instigator of the deed; and Lord Ossory was resolved the latter should
+ be made aware of their conviction. Therefore, entering the royal
+ drawing-room one day, he saw the duke standing beside his majesty, and
+ going forward addressed him. "My lord," said he in a bold tone, whilst he
+ looked him full in the face, "I know well that you are at the bottom of
+ this late attempt upon my father; and I give you fair warning, if my
+ father comes to a violent end by sword or pistol, or if he dies by the
+ hand of a ruffian, or by the more secret way of poison, I shall not be at
+ a loss to know the first author of it: I shall consider you as the
+ assassin; I shall treat you as such; and wherever I meet you I shall
+ pistol you, though you stood behind the king's chair; and I tell you it in
+ his majesty's presence, that you may be sure I shall keep my word." No
+ further attempt was made upon the Duke of Ormond's life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarce six months elapsed from date of the essayed abduction, before Blood
+ endeavoured to steal the regalia and royal jewels preserved in the Tower.
+ The courage which prompted the design is not more remarkable than the
+ skill which sought to effect it; both were worthy a man of genius. In the
+ month of April, 1671, Blood, attired in the cassock, cloak, and canonical
+ girdle of a clergyman, together with a lady, whom he represented as his
+ wife, visited the Tower on purpose to see the crown. With their desire Mr.
+ Edwards, the keeper, an elderly man and a worthy, readily complied. It
+ chanced they were no sooner in the room where the regalia was kept, than
+ the lady found herself taken suddenly and unaccountably ill, and indeed
+ feared she must die; before bidding adieu to life, she begged for a little
+ whisky. This was promptly brought her, and Mrs. Edwards, who now appeared
+ upon the scene, invited the poor gentlewoman to rest upon her bed. Whilst
+ she complied with this kind request, the clergyman and Edwards had time to
+ improve their acquaintance, which indeed bade fair towards speedily
+ ripening into friendship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And presently the lady recovering, she and her spouse took their leave
+ with many expressions of gratitude and respect. Four days later, the good
+ parson called on Mrs. Edwards, in order to present her with four pairs of
+ fine new gloves, which she was pleased to receive. This gracious act paved
+ the way to further friendship, which at last found its climax in a
+ proposal of marriage made by the parson on behalf of his nephew, for the
+ hand of young Mistress Edwards. "You have a pretty gentlewoman for your
+ daughter," said the clergyman, "and I have a young nephew, who has two or
+ three hundred pounds a year in land, and is at my disposal; if your
+ daughter be free, and you approve of it, I will bring him hither to see
+ her, and we will endeavour to make a match of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To this project Edwards readily consented, and invited the clergyman and
+ the young man to spend a day with him when they could discourse on the
+ subject with greater leisure and more satisfaction. This was cordially
+ agreed to by the parson, who, with the bridegroom elect and two of his
+ friends, presented themselves on the appointed date, as early as seven of
+ the clock in the morning. Edwards was up betimes; but the good clergyman,
+ apologizing for the untimely hour of their arrival, which he attributed to
+ his nephew's eagerness for sight of his mistress, declared he would not
+ enter the keeper's apartments until Mrs. Edwards was ready to receive
+ them. However, in order to pass the time, he begged his host might show
+ the jewels to their young friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this petition Edwards complied readily enough. One of the men,
+ protesting he did not care to see the treasures, waited at the door; the
+ other three entered with the keeper, who was no sooner inside the room
+ than a cloak was thrown over his head, a gag, constructed of wood with a
+ hole in it by which he might breathe, clapped into his mouth, and the more
+ effectually to prevent him making a noise, an iron ring was fastened to
+ his nose. He was told if he attempted an alarm he would be instantly
+ killed, but if he remained quiet his life should be spared. Blood and his
+ two accomplices then seized upon the crown, orb, and sceptre, seeing
+ which, Edwards made as much noise as he possibly could by stamping on the
+ floor, whereon the robbers struck him with a mallet on the head, stabbed
+ him with a short sword in the side, and left him, as they thought, for
+ dead. Blood then secured the regalia under his cloak, one of his
+ companions put the orb into his breeches pocket, whilst the other
+ proceeded to file the sceptre that it might be more conveniently carried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, at this moment it happened the keeper's son, who had been absent in
+ Flanders, returned to his father's home. He who stood sentinel asked him
+ with whom he would speak, whereon young Edwards said he belonged to the
+ house, and so passed to the apartments where his family resided. The other
+ giving notice of his arrival, the robbers hastened to depart, leaving the
+ sceptre behind them. No sooner had they gone, than the old man struggled
+ to his feet, dragged the gag from his mouth, and cried out in fright:
+ "Treason&mdash;murder&mdash;murder&mdash;treason!" On this his daughter
+ rushed down, and seeing the condition of her father, and noting the
+ absence of the regalia, continued his cry, adding, "The crown is stolen&mdash;thieves&mdash;thieves!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Edwards and another who heard her, Captain Beekman, now gave pursuit
+ to the robbers, who had already got beyond the main guard. Word was
+ instantly shouted to the warder of the drawbridge to stop the villains,
+ but Blood was equal to this emergency; coolly advancing, he discharged his
+ pistol at the man, who instantly fell. The thieves then crossed the
+ bridge, passed through the outward gate, and made for the street close by,
+ where their horses awaited them, crying the while, "Stop thief! stop
+ thief!" Before they advanced far, Captain Beekman came up with Blood, who,
+ turning quickly round, fired his second pistol at the head of his pursuer;
+ but Beekman, suddenly stooping, escaped injury, and sprang at the throat
+ of his intended assassin. A struggle then ensued. Blood was a man of
+ powerful physique, but Beekman was lithe and vigorous, and succeeded in
+ holding the rogue until help arrived. In the contest, the regalia fell to
+ the ground, when a fair diamond and a priceless pearl were lost; they
+ were, however, eventually recovered. The other thieves were likewise
+ captured, and all of them secured in the Tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certain death now faced Blood; but the wonderful luck which had befriended
+ him during life did not desert him now. At this time the Duke of
+ Buckingham was high in favour with the king, and desirous of saving one
+ who had secretly served him; or fearing exposure if Blood made a full
+ confession, his grace impressed Charles with a desire to see the man who
+ had perpetrated so daring a deed, saying he must be one possessed of
+ extraordinary spirit. Giving ready ear to his words, the monarch consented
+ to have an interview with the robber, for which purpose he gave orders
+ Blood should be brought to Whitehall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who heard of the king's resolution felt satisfied Blood need not
+ despair of life; "for surely," said Sir Robert Southwell, on becoming
+ aware of his majesty's design, "no king should wish to see a malefactor
+ but with intentions to pardon him." Now Blood, being a man of genius,
+ resolved to play his part during the audience in a manner which would
+ favourably impress the king. Therefore when Charles asked him how he had
+ dared attempt so bold a robbery, Blood made answer he had lost a fine
+ property by the crown, and was resolved to recover it with the crown.
+ Diverted by his audacity his majesty questioned him further, when Blood
+ confessed to his attempted abduction of the Duke of Ormond, but refused to
+ name his accomplices. Nay, he narrated various other adventures, showing
+ them in a romantic light; and finally concluded by telling the king he had
+ once entered into a design to take his sacred life by rushing upon him
+ with a carbine from out of the reeds by the Thames side, above Battersea,
+ when he went to swim there; but he was so awed by majesty his heart
+ misgave him, and he not only relented, but persuaded the remainder of his
+ associates from such an intention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This strange interview resulted in Charles pardoning Blood his many
+ crimes. The Duke of Ormond, at his majesty's request, likewise forgave
+ him. Nor did the king's interest in the villain end here; for he gave him
+ a pension of five hundred pounds a year, and admitted him to his private
+ friendship. Blood was therefore constantly at court, and made one of that
+ strange assembly of wits and profligates which surrounded the throne. "No
+ man," says Carte the historian, "was more assiduous than he. If anyone had
+ a business at court that stuck, he made his application to Blood as the
+ most industrious and successful solicitor; and many gentlemen courted his
+ acquaintance, as the Indians pray to the devil, that he may not hurt them.
+ He was perpetually in the royal apartments, and affected particularly to
+ be in the same room where the Duke of Ormond was, to the indignation of
+ all others, though neglected and overlooked by his grace."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Terror falls upon the people.&mdash;Rumours of a plague.&mdash;A sign in the
+ heavens.&mdash;Flight from the capital.&mdash;Preparations against the dreaded
+ enemy.&mdash;Dr. Boghurst's testimony.&mdash;God's terrible voice in the
+ city.&mdash;Rules made by the lord mayor.&mdash;Massacre of animals.&mdash;O, dire
+ death!&mdash;Spread of the distemper.&mdash;Horrible sights.&mdash;State of the
+ deserted capital.&mdash;"Bring out your dead."&mdash;ashes to ashes.&mdash;Fires are
+ lighted.&mdash;Relief of the poor.&mdash;The mortality bills.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It came to pass during the fifth month of the year 1665, that a great
+ terror fell upon the city of London; even as a sombre cloud darkens the
+ midday sky. For it was whispered abroad a plague had come amongst the
+ people, fears of which had been entertained, and signs of which had been
+ obvious for some time. During the previous November a few persons had
+ fallen victims to this dreaded pestilence, but the weather being cold and
+ the atmosphere clear, it had made no progress till April. In that month
+ two men had died of this most foul disease; and in the first week of May
+ its victims numbered nine; and yet another fortnight and it had hurried
+ seventeen citizens to the grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the memory of their wickedness rising before them, dread took up its
+ abode in all men's hearts; for none knew but his day of reckoning was at
+ hand. And their consternation was greater when it was remembered that in
+ the third year of this century thirty-six thousand citizens of London had
+ died of the plague, while twenty-five years later it had swept away
+ thirty-five thousand; and eleven years after full ten thousand persons
+ perished of this same pestilence. Moreover, but two years previous, a like
+ scourge had been rife in Holland; and in Amsterdam alone twenty-four
+ thousand citizens had died from its effects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the terror of the citizens of London was yet more forcibly increased
+ by the appearance in April of a blazing star or comet, bearing a tail
+ apparently six yards in length, which rose betimes in a lurid sky, and
+ passed with ominous movement from west to east. [It is worthy of notice
+ that Lilly in his "Astrological Predictions," published in 1648, declared
+ the year 1656 would be "ominous to London, unto her merchants at sea, to
+ her traffique at land, to her poor, to her rich, to all sorts of people
+ inhabiting in her or her Liberties, by reason of sundry fires and a
+ consuming plague."] The king with his queen and court, prompted by
+ curiosity, stayed up one night to watch this blazing star pass above the
+ silent city; the Royal Society in behalf of science embodied many learned
+ comments regarding it in their "Philosophical Transactions;" but the great
+ body of the people regarded it as a visible signal of God's certain wrath.
+ They were more confirmed in this opinion, as some amongst them, whose
+ judgments were distorted by fears, declared the comet had at times before
+ their eyes assumed the appearance of a fiery sword threatening the sinful
+ city. It was also noted in the spring of this year that birds and wild
+ fowls had left their accustomed places, and few swallows were seen. But in
+ the previous summer there had been "such a multitude of flies that they
+ lined the insides of houses; and if any threads of strings did hang down
+ in any place, they were presently thick-set with flies like ropes of
+ onions; and swarms of ants covered the highways that you might have taken
+ up a handful at a time, both winged and creeping ants; and such a
+ multitude of croaking frogs in ditches that you might have heard them
+ before you saw them," as is set down by one William Boghurst, apothecary
+ at the White Hart in St. Giles-in-the-Fields, who wrote a learned "Treatis
+ on the Plague" in 1666, he being the only man who up to that time had done
+ so from experience and observation. [This quaint and curious production,
+ which has never been printed, and which furnishes the following pages with
+ some strange details, is preserved in the Sloane Collection of Manuscripts
+ in the British Museum.] And from such signs, as likewise from knowledge
+ that the pestilence daily increased, all felt a season of bitter
+ tribulation was at hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to "Some Observations of the Plague," written by Dr. Hedges for
+ use of a peer of the realm, the dread malady was communicated to London
+ from the Netherlands "by way of contagion." It first made its appearance
+ in the parishes of St. Giles and St. Martin's, Westminster, from which
+ directions it gradually spread to Holborn, Fleet Street, the Strand, and
+ the city, finally reaching to the east, bringing death invariably in its
+ train.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The distemper was not only fatal in its termination, but loathsome in its
+ progress; for the blood of those affected being poisoned by atmospheric
+ contagion, bred venom in the body, which burst forth into nauseous sores
+ and uncleanness; or otherwise preyed with more rapid fatality internally,
+ in some cases causing death before its victims were assured of disease.
+ Nor did it spare the young and robust any more than those weak of frame or
+ ripe with years, but attacking stealthily, killed speedily. It was indeed
+ the "pestilence that walketh in darkness, and the destruction that wasteth
+ in the noonday." In the month of May, when it was yet uncertain if the
+ city would be spared even in part, persons of position and wealth, and
+ indeed those endowed with sufficient means to support themselves
+ elsewhere, resolved to fly from the capital; whilst such as had neither
+ home, friends, nor expectation of employment in other places, remained
+ behind. Accordingly great preparations were made by those who determined
+ on flight; and all day long vast crowds gathered round my lord mayor's
+ house in St. Helen's, Bishopsgate, seeking certificates of health, so that
+ for some weeks it was difficult to reach his door for the throng that
+ gathered there, as is stated by John Noorthouck. Such official testimonies
+ to the good health of those leaving London had now become necessary; for
+ the inhabitants of provincial towns, catching the general alarm, refused
+ to shelter in their houses, or even let pass through their streets, the
+ residents of the plague-stricken city, unless officially assured they were
+ free from the dreaded distemper. Nay, even with such certificates in their
+ possession, many were refused admittance to inns, or houses of
+ entertainment, and were therefore obliged to sleep in fields by night, and
+ beg food by day, and not a few deaths were caused by want and exposure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now were the thoroughfares of the capital crowded all day long with
+ coaches conveying those who sought safety in flight, and with waggons and
+ carts containing their household goods and belongings, until it seemed as
+ if the city mould be left without a soul. Many merchants and shipowners
+ together with their families betook themselves to vessels, which they
+ caused to be towed down the river towards Greenwich, and in which they
+ resided for months; whilst others sought refuge in smacks and
+ fishing-boats, using them as shelters by day, and lodging on the banks by
+ night. Some few families remaining in the capital laid in stores of
+ provisions, and shutting themselves up securely in their houses, permitted
+ none to enter or leave, by which means some of them escaped contagion and
+ death. The court tarried until the 29th of June, and then left for
+ Hampton, none too soon, for the pestilence had reached almost to the
+ palace gates. The queen mother likewise departed, retiring into France;
+ from which country she never returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All through the latter part of May, and the whole of the following month,
+ this flight from the dread enemy of mankind continued; presenting a
+ melancholy spectacle to those who remained, until at last the capital
+ seemed veritably a city of the dead. But for the credit of humanity be it
+ stated, that not all possessed of health and wealth abandoned the town.
+ Prominent amongst those who remained were the Duke of Albemarle, Lord
+ Craven, the lord mayor, Sir John Laurence, some of his aldermen, and a
+ goodly number of physicians, chirurgeons, and apothecaries, all of whom by
+ their skill or exertions sought to check the hungry ravages of death. The
+ offices which medical men voluntarily performed during this period of dire
+ affliction were loathsome to a terrible degree. "I commonly dressed forty
+ sores in a day," says Dr. Boghurst, whose simple words convey a forcible
+ idea of his nobility; "held the pulse of patients sweating in their beds
+ half a quarter of an hour together; let blood; administered clysters to
+ the sick; held them up in their beds to keep them from strangling and
+ choking, half an hour together commonly, and suffered their breathing in
+ my face several times when they were dying; eat and drank with them,
+ especially those that had sores; sat down by their bedsides and upon their
+ beds, discoursing with them an hour together. If I had time I stayed by
+ them to see them die. Then if people had nobody to help them (for help was
+ scarce at such time and place) I helped to lay them forth out of the bed,
+ and afterwards into the coffin; and last of all, accompanied them to the
+ ground."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of the physicians remaining in the city, nine fell a sacrifice to duty.
+ Amongst those who survived was the learned Dr. Nathaniel Hodges, who was
+ spared to meet a philanthropist's fate in penury and neglect. [Dr. Hodges
+ subsequently wrote a work entitled "Loimologia; or, an Historical Account
+ of the Plague of London," first published in 1672; of which, together with
+ a collection of the bills of mortality for 1665, entitled "London's
+ Dreadful Visitation," and a pamphlet by the Rev. Thomas Vincent, "God's
+ Terrible Voice in the City," printed in 1667, De Foe largely availed
+ himself in writing his vivid but unreliable "Journal of the Plague Year,"
+ which first saw the light in 1722.] The king had, on outbreak of the
+ distemper, shown solicitude for his citizens by summoning a privy council,
+ when a committee of peers was formed for "Prevention and Spreading of the
+ Infection." Under their orders the College of Physicians drew up "Certain
+ necessary Directions for the Prevention and Cure of the Plague, with
+ Divers remedies for small Change," which were printed in pamphlet form,
+ and widely distributed amongst the people. [We learn that at this time the
+ College was stored with "men of learning, virtue, and probity, nothing
+ acquainted with the little arts of getting a name by plotting against the
+ honesty and credulity of the people." The prescriptions given by this
+ worthy body were consequently received with a simple faith which later and
+ more sceptical generations might deny them. Perhaps the most remarkable of
+ these directions, given under the heading of "Medicines External," was the
+ following: "Pull off the feathers from the tails of living cocks, hens,
+ pigeons, or chickens, and holding their bills, hold them hard to the botch
+ or swelling, and so keep them at that part until they die, and by that
+ means draw out the poison. It is good to apply a cupping glass, or embers
+ in a dish, with a handful of sorrel upon the embers."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lord mayor, having likewise the welfare of the people at heart,
+ "conceived and published" rules to be observed, and orders to be obeyed,
+ by them during this visitation. These directed the appointment of two
+ examiners for every parish, who were bound to discover those who were
+ sick, and inquire into the nature of their illness: and finding persons
+ afflicted by plague, they, with the members of their family and domestics,
+ were to be confined in their houses. These were to be securely locked
+ outside, and guarded day and night by watchmen, whose duty it should be to
+ prevent persons entering or leaving those habitations; as likewise to
+ perform such offices as were required, such as conveying medicines and
+ food. And all houses visited by the distemper were to be forthwith marked
+ on the door by a red cross a foot long, with the words LORD HAVE MERCY
+ UPON US set close over the same sacred sign. Female searchers, "such as
+ are of honest reputation, and of the best sort as can be got of the kind,"
+ were selected that they might report of what disease people died; such
+ women not being permitted during this visitation to use any public work or
+ employment, or keep shop or stall, or wash linen for the people. Nurses to
+ attend the afflicted deserted by their friends were also appointed. And
+ inasmuch as multitudes of idle rogues and wandering beggars swarming the
+ city were a great means of spreading disease, the constables had orders
+ not to suffer their presence in the streets. And dogs and cats, being
+ domestic animals, apt to run from house to house, and carry infection in
+ their fur and hair, an order was made that they should be killed, and an
+ officer nominated to see it carried into execution. It was computed that,
+ in accordance with this edict, forty thousand dogs, and five times that
+ number of cats, were massacred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All plays bear-baitings, exhibitions, and games were forbidden; as were
+ likewise "all public feasting, and particularly by the companies of the
+ city, and dinners at taverns, alehouses, and other places of common
+ entertainment; and the money thereby spared, be employed for the benefit
+ and relief of the poor visited with the infection." Pest-houses were
+ opened at Tothill Fields, Westminster, and at Bunhill Fields, near Old
+ Street, for reception of the sick: and indeed every possible remedy
+ calculated to check the disease was adopted. Some of these, though
+ considered necessary to the well-being of the community, were by many
+ citizens regarded as hardships, more especially the rule which related to
+ closing of infected houses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The misery endured by those in health suffering such confinement, was
+ scarcely less than that realized by the afflicted. And fear making way for
+ disease, it frequently occurred a whole family, when confined with one
+ infected member, speedily became stricken by plague, and consequently
+ overtaken by death. It therefore happened that many attempts were made by
+ those in health to escape incarceration. In some cases they bribed, and in
+ others ill-treated the watchmen: one of whom was actually blown up by
+ gunpowder in Coleman Street, that those he guarded might flee unmolested.
+ Again, it chanced that strong men, rendered desperate when brought face to
+ face with loathsome death, lowered themselves from windows of their houses
+ in sight of the watch, whom they threatened with instant death if they
+ cried out or stirred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The apprehension of the sick, who were in most cases deserted by their
+ friends, was increased tenfold by the practices of public nurses: for
+ being hardened to affliction by nature of their employment, and incapable
+ of remorse for crime by reason of their vileness, they were guilty of many
+ barbarous usages. "These wretches," says Dr. Hodges, "out of greediness to
+ plunder the dead, would strangle their patients, and charge it to the
+ distemper in their throats. Others would secretly convey the pestilential
+ taint from sores of the infected to those who were well; and nothing
+ indeed deterred these abandoned miscreants from prosecuting their
+ avaricious purposes by all methods their wickedness could invent; who,
+ although they were without witnesses to accuse them, yet it is not doubted
+ but divine vengeance will overtake such wicked barbarities with due
+ punishment. Nay, some were remarkably struck from heaven in the
+ perpetration of their crimes; and one particularly amongst many, as she
+ was leaving the house of a family, all dead, loaded with her robberies,
+ fell down lifeless under her burden in the street. And the case of a
+ worthy citizen was very remarkable, who, being suspected dying by his
+ nurse, was beforehand stripped by her; but recovering again, he came a
+ second time into the world naked."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But notwithstanding all precautions and care taken by the Duke of
+ Albemarle and the worthy lord mayor, the dreadful pestilence spread with
+ alarming rapidity; as may be judged from the fact that the number who died
+ in the first week of June amounted to forty-three, whilst during the last
+ week of that month two hundred and sixty-seven persons were carried to
+ their graves. From the 4th of July to the 11th, seven hundred and
+ fifty-five deaths were chronicled; the following eight days the death rate
+ rose to one thousand and eighty-two; whilst the ensuing week this high
+ figure was increased by over eight hundred. For the month of August, the
+ mortality bill recorded seventeen thousand and thirty-six deaths; and
+ during September, twenty-six thousand two hundred and thirty persons
+ perished in the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole British nation was stricken with consternation at the fate of
+ the capital. "In some houses," says Dr. Hodges, speaking from personal
+ experience, "carcases lay waiting for burial, and in others were persons
+ in their last agonies. In one room might be heard dying groans, in an
+ other the ravings of delirium, and not far off relations and friends
+ bewailing both their loss and the dismal prospect of their own sudden
+ departure. Death was the sure midwife to all children, and infants passed
+ immediately from the womb to the grave. Some of the infected run about
+ staggering like drunken men, and fall and expire in the streets; whilst
+ others lie half dead and comatose, but never to be waked but by the last
+ trumpet." The plague had indeed encompassed the walls of the city, and
+ poured in upon it without mercy. A heavy stifling atmosphere, vapours by
+ day and blotting out all traces of stars and sky by night, hovered like a
+ palpable shape of dire vengeance above the doomed city. During many weeks
+ "there was a general calm and serenity, as if both wind and rain had been
+ expelled the kingdom, so that there was not so much as to move a flame."
+ The oppressive silence of brooding death, unbroken now even by the passing
+ bell, weighed stupor-like upon the wretched survivors. The thoroughfares
+ were deserted, grass sprang green upon side-paths and steps of dwellings;
+ and the broad street in Whitechapel became like unto a field. Most houses
+ bore upon their doors the dread sign of the red cross, with the
+ supplication for mercy written above. Some of the streets were barricaded
+ at both ends, the inhabitants either having fled into the country or been
+ carried to their graves; and it was estimated in all that over seven
+ thousand dwellings were deserted. All commerce, save that dealing with the
+ necessaries of life, was abandoned; the parks forsaken and locked, the
+ Inns of Court closed, and the public marts abandoned. A few of the church
+ doors were opened, and some gathered within that they might humbly beseech
+ pardon for the past, and ask mercy in the present. But as the violence of
+ the distemper increased, even the houses of God were forsaken; and those
+ who ventured abroad walked in the centre of the street, avoiding contact
+ or conversation with friend or neighbour; each man dreading and avoiding
+ his fellow, lest he should be to him the harbinger of death. And all
+ carried rue and wormwood in their hands, and myrrh and zedoary in their
+ mouths, as protection against infection. Now were the faces of all pale
+ with apprehension, none knowing when the fatal malady might carry them
+ hence; and moreover sad, as became those who stand in the presence of
+ death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And such sights were to be witnessed day after day as made the heart sick.
+ "It would be endless," says the Rev. Thomas Vincent, "to speak what we
+ have seen and heard; of some, in their frenzy, rising out of their beds
+ and leaping about their rooms; others crying and roaring at their windows;
+ some coming forth almost naked and running into the streets; strange
+ things have others spoken and done when the disease was upon them: but it
+ was very sad to hear of one, who being sick alone, and it is like frantic,
+ burnt himself in his bed. And amongst other sad spectacles methought two
+ were very affecting: one of a woman coming alone and weeping by the door
+ where I lived, with a little coffin under her arm, carrying it to the new
+ churchyard. I did judge that it was the mother of the child, and that all
+ the family besides was dead, and she was forced to coffin up and bury with
+ her own hands this her last dead child. Another was of a man at the corner
+ of the Artillery Wall, that as I judge, through the dizziness of his head
+ with the disease, which seized upon him there, had dashed his face against
+ the wall; and when I came by he lay hanging with his bloody face over the
+ rails, and bleeding upon the ground; within half an hour he died in that
+ place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as the pestilence increased, it was found impossible to provide
+ coffins or even separate graves for those who perished. And therefore, in
+ order to bury the deceased, great carts passed through the streets after
+ sunset, attended by linkmen and preceded by a bellman crying in weird and
+ solemn tones, "Bring out your dead." At the intimation of the watchmen
+ stationed before houses bearing red crosses upon their doors, the sad
+ procession would tarry, When coffinless, and oftentimes shroudless, rigid,
+ loathsome, and malodorous bodies were hustled into the carts with all
+ possible speed. Then once more the melancholy cortege took its way adown
+ the dark, deserted street, the yellow glare of links falling on the
+ ghastly burden they accompanied, the dirge-like call of the bellman
+ sounding on the ears of the living like a summons from the dead. And so,
+ receiving additional freight upon its way, the cart proceeded to one of
+ the great pits dug in the parish churchyards of Aldgate and Whitechapel,
+ or in Finsbury Fields close by the Artillery Ground. These, measuring
+ about forty feet in length, eighteen in breadth, and twenty in depth, were
+ destined to receive scores of bodies irrespective of creed or class. The
+ carts being brought to these dark and weirdsome gulphs, looking all the
+ blacker from the flickering lights of candles and garish gleams of
+ lanterns placed beside them, the bodies, without rite or ceremony, were
+ shot into them, and speedily covered with clay. For the accomplishment of
+ this sad work night was found too brief. And what lent additional horror
+ to the circumstances of these burials was, that those engaged in this duty
+ would occasionally drop lifeless during their labour. So that it sometimes
+ happened the dead-carts were found without driver, linkman, or bell-man.
+ And it was estimated that the parish of Stepney alone lost one hundred and
+ sixteen gravediggers and sextons within that year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the month of September, the pestilence raged with increased fury;
+ and it now seemed as if the merciless distemper would never cease whilst a
+ single inhabitant remained in the city. The lord mayor, having found all
+ remedies to stay its progress utterly fail, by advice of the medical
+ faculty, ordered that great fires should be kindled in certain districts,
+ by way of purifying the air, Accordingly, two hundred chaldrons of coal,
+ at four pounds a chaldron, were devoted to this purpose. At first the
+ fires were with great difficulty made to burn, through the scarcity, it
+ was believed, of oxygen in the atmosphere; but once kindled, they
+ continued blazing for three days and three nights, when a heavy downpour
+ of rain falling they were extinguished. The following night death carried
+ off four thousand souls, and the experiment of these cleansing fires was
+ discontinued. All through this month fear and tribulation continued; the
+ death rate, from the 5th of September to the 3rd of October, amounting to
+ twenty-four thousand one hundred and seventy-one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During October, the weather being cool and dry, the pestilence gave
+ promise of rapid decrease. Hope came to the people, and was received with
+ eager greeting. Once more windows were unshuttered, doors were opened, and
+ the more venturous walked abroad. The great crisis had passed. In the
+ middle of the month Mr. Pepys travelled on foot to the Tower, and records
+ his impressions. "Lord," he says, "how empty the streets are and
+ melancholy, so many poor sick people in the streets full of sores; and so
+ many sad stories overheard as I walk, everybody talking of this dead, and
+ that man sick, and so many in this place, and so many in that. And they
+ tell me that in Westminster there is never a physician and but one
+ apothecary left, all being dead; but that there are great hopes of a
+ decrease this week. God send it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The while, trade being discontinued, those who had lived by commerce or
+ labour were supported by charity. To this good purpose the king
+ contributed a thousand pounds per week, and Dr. Sheldon, Archbishop of
+ Canterbury&mdash;who remained at Lambeth during the whole time&mdash;by
+ letters to his bishops, caused great sums to be collected throughout the
+ country and remitted to him for this laudable purpose. Nor did those of
+ position or wealth fail in responding to calls made upon them at this
+ time; their contributions being substantial enough to permit the lord
+ mayor to distribute upwards of one hundred thousand pounds a week amongst
+ the poor and afflicted for several months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In October the death rate fell to nine thousand four hundred and
+ forty-four; in November to three thousand four hundred and forty-nine; and
+ in December to less than one thousand. Therefore, after a period of
+ unprecedented suffering, the people took courage once more, for life is
+ dear to all men. And those who had fled the plague-stricken city returned
+ to find a scene of desolation, greater in its misery than words can
+ describe. But the tide of human existence having once turned, the capital
+ gradually resumed its former appearance. Shops which had been closed were
+ opened afresh; houses whose inmates had been carried to the grave became
+ again centres of activity; the sound of traffic was heard in streets long
+ silent; church bells called the citizens to prayer; marts were crowded;
+ and people wore an air of cheerfulness becoming the survivors of a
+ calamity. And so all things went on as before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mortality bills computed the number of burials which took place in
+ London during this year at ninety-seven thousand three hundred and six, of
+ which sixty-eight thousand five hundred find ninety-six were attributed to
+ the plague. This estimate has been considered by all historians as
+ erroneous. For on the first appearance of the distemper, the number of
+ deaths set down was far below that which truth warranted, in order that
+ the citizens might not be affrighted; and when it was at its height no
+ exact account of those shifted from the dead-carts into the pits was
+ taken. Moreover, many were buried by their friends in fields and gardens.
+ Lord Clarendon, an excellent authority, states that though the weekly
+ bills reckoned the number of deaths at about one hundred thousand, yet
+ "many who could compute very well, concluded that there were in truth
+ double that number who died; and that in one week, when the bill mentioned
+ only six thousand, there had in truth fourteen thousand died."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A cry of fire by night.&mdash;Fright and confusion.&mdash;The lord mayor is
+ unmanned.&mdash;Spread of the flames.&mdash;Condition of the streets.&mdash;Distressful
+ scenes.&mdash;Destruction of the Royal Exchange.&mdash;Efforts of the king and
+ Duke of York.&mdash;Strange rumours and alarms.&mdash;St. Paul's is doomed.&mdash;The
+ flames checked.&mdash;A ruined city as seen by day and night.&mdash;Wretched state
+ of the people.&mdash;Investigation into the origin of the fire.&mdash;A new city
+ arises.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely had the city of London recovered from the dire effects of the
+ plague, ere a vast fire laid it waste. It happened on the 2nd of
+ September, 1666, that at two o'clock in the morning, the day being Sunday,
+ smoke and flames were seen issuing from the shop of a baker named Faryner,
+ residing in Pudding Lane, close by Fish Street, in the lower part of the
+ city. The house being built of wood, and coated with pitch, as were
+ likewise those surrounding it, and moreover containing faggots, dried
+ logs, and other combustible materials, the fire spread with great
+ rapidity: so that in a short time not only the baker's premises, but the
+ homesteads which stood next it on either side were in flames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly, the watchman's lusty cry of "Fire, fire, fire!" which had
+ roused the baker and his family in good time to save their lives, was now
+ shouted down the streets with consternation, startling sleepers from their
+ dreams, and awaking them to a sense of peril. Thereon they rose promptly
+ from their beds, and hastily throwing on some clothes, rushed out to
+ rescue their neighbours' property from destruction, and subdue the
+ threatening conflagration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And speedily was heard the tramp of many feet hurrying to the scene, and
+ the shouting of anxious voices crying for help; and presently the bells of
+ St. Margaret's church close by, ringing with wild uneven peals through the
+ darkness, aroused all far and near to knowledge of the disaster. For
+ already the flames, fanned by a high easterly wind, and fed by the dry
+ timber of the picturesque old dwellings huddled close together, had spread
+ in four directions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of these being Thames Street, the consequence was terrible, for the
+ shops and warehouses of this thoroughfare containing inflammable
+ materials, required for the shipping trade, such as oil, pitch, tar, and
+ rosin, the houses at one side the street were immediately wrapped, from
+ basement to garret, in sheets of angry flame. And now flaunting its yellow
+ light skywards, as if exulting in its strength, and triumphing in its
+ mastery over men's efforts, the fire rushed to the church of St. Magnus, a
+ dark solid edifice standing at the foot of London Bridge. The frightened
+ citizens concluded the conflagration must surely end here; or at least
+ that whilst it endeavoured to consume a dense structure such as this, they
+ might succeed in subduing its force; but their hopes were vain. At first
+ the flames shot upwards to the tower of the building, but not gaining
+ hold, retreated as if to obtain fresh strength for new efforts; and
+ presently darting forward again, they seized the woodwork of the belfry
+ windows. A few minutes later the church blazed at every point, and was in
+ itself a colossal conflagration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this the fire darted to the bridge, burning the wooden houses built
+ upon it, and the water machines underneath, and likewise creeping up
+ Thames Street, on that side which was yet undemolished. By this time the
+ bells of many churches rang out in sudden fright, as if appealing to
+ heaven for mercy on behalf of the people; and the whole east end of the
+ town rose up in alarm. The entire city seemed threatened with destruction,
+ for the weather having long been dry and warm, prepared the homesteads for
+ their fate; and it was noted some of them, when scorched by the
+ approaching fire, ignited before the flames had time to reach them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Thomas Bludworth, the lord mayor, now arrived in great haste, but so
+ amazed was he at the sight he beheld, and so bewildered by importunities
+ of those who surrounded him, that he was powerless to act. Indeed, his
+ incapacity to direct, and inability to command, as well as his lack of
+ moral courage, have been heavily and frequently blamed. Bring a weak man,
+ fearful of outstepping his authority, he at first forebore pulling down
+ houses standing in the pathway of the flames, as suggested to him, a means
+ that would assuredly have prevented their progress; but when urged to this
+ measure would reply, he "durst not, without the consent of the owners."
+ And when at last, after great destruction had taken place, word was
+ brought him from the king to "spare no house, but pull them down
+ everywhere before the fire," he cried out "like a fainting woman," as
+ Pepys recounts, "Lord! what can I do? I am spent; people will not obey
+ me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, great bodies of the citizens of all classes had been at work;
+ some upon the cumbrous engines, others carrying water, others levelling
+ houses, but all their endeavours seemed powerless to quell the raging
+ flames. And it was notable when first the pipes in the streets were
+ opened, no water could be found, whereon a messenger was sent to the works
+ at Islington, in order to turn on the cocks, so that much time was lost in
+ this manner. All through Sunday morning the flames extended far and wide,
+ and in a few hours three hundred houses were reduced to ashes. Not at
+ midday, nor yet at night, did they give promise of abatement. The strong
+ easterly wind continuing to blow, the conflagration worked its way to
+ Cannon Street, from thence gradually encompassing the dwellings which lay
+ between that thoroughfare and the Thames, till the whole seemed one vast
+ plain of raging fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The streets now presented a scene of the uttermost confusion and distress.
+ The affrighted citizens, whose dwellings were momentarily threatened with
+ destruction, hurried to and fro, striving to save those of their families
+ who by reason of infancy, age or illness were unable to help themselves.
+ Women on the eve of child-birth were carried from their beds; mothers with
+ infants clinging to their naked breasts fled from homes which would
+ shelter them no more; the decrepit were borne away on the shoulders of the
+ strong. The narrow thoroughfares were moreover obstructed by furniture
+ dragged from houses, or lowered from windows with a reckless speed that
+ oftentimes destroyed what it sought to preserve. Carts, drays, and horses
+ laden with merchandise jostled each other in their hurried way towards the
+ fields outside the city walls. Men young and vigorous crushed forward with
+ beds or trunks upon their backs; children laboured under the weight of
+ bundles, or rolled barrels of oil, wine, or spirits before them. And the
+ air, rendered suffocating by smoke and flame, was moreover confused by the
+ crackling of consuming timber, the thunder of falling walls, the crushing
+ of glass, the shrieks of women, and the imprecations of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And those who lived near the waterside, or in houses on the bridges,
+ hurried their goods and chattels into boats, barges, and lighters, in
+ which they likewise took refuge. For the destruction of wharfs and
+ warehouses, containing stores of most inflammable nature, was brief and
+ desperate. The Thames, now blood-red from reflection of the fierce sky,
+ was covered with craft of all imaginable shape and size. Showers of sparks
+ blown by the high wind fell into the water with hissing sounds, or on the
+ clothes and faces of the people with disastrous and painful effects; and
+ the smoke and heat were hard to bear. And it was remarked that flocks of
+ pigeons, which for generations had found shelter in the eaves and roofs of
+ wooden houses by the riverside, were loath to leave their habitations; and
+ probably fearing to venture afar by reason of the unwonted aspect of the
+ angry sky, lingered on the balconies and abutments of deserted houses,
+ until in some cases, the flames enwrapping them, they fell dead into the
+ waters below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Sunday evening Gracechurch Street was on fire; and the flames spread
+ onwards till they reached, and in their fury consumed, the Three Cranes in
+ the Vintry. Night came, but darkness had fled from the city; and for forty
+ miles round all was luminous. And there were many who in the crimson hue
+ of the heavens, beheld an evidence of God's wrath at the sins of the
+ nation, which it was now acknowledged were many and great.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout Sunday night the fire grew apace, and those who, in the morning
+ had carried their belongings to parts of the city which they believed
+ would by distance ensure safety, were now obliged to move them afresh, the
+ devastation extending for miles. Therefore many were compelled to renew
+ their labours, thereby suffering further fatigue; and they now trusted to
+ no protection for their property save that which the open fields afforded.
+ Monday morning came and found the flames yet raging. Not only Gracechurch
+ Street, but Lombard Street, and part of Fenchurch street, were on fire.
+ Stately mansions, comfortable homes, warehouses of great name, banks of
+ vast wealth, were reduced to charred and blackened walls or heaps of
+ smoking ruins. Buildings had been pulled down, but now too late to render
+ service; for the insatiable fire, yet fed by a high wind, had everywhere
+ marched over the dried woodwork and mortar as it lay upon the ground, and
+ communicated itself to the next block of buildings; so that its
+ circumvention was regarded as almost an impossibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During Monday the flames attacked Cornhill, and then commenced to demolish
+ the Royal Exchange. Having once made an entrance in this stately building
+ it revelled in triumph; climbing up the walls, roaring along the courts
+ and galleries, and sending through the broken windows volleys of smoke and
+ showers of sparks, which threatened to suffocate and consume those who
+ approached. Then the roof fell with a mighty crash, which seemed for a
+ time to subdue the powerful conflagration; the walls cracked, parted, and
+ fell; statues of kings and queens were flung from their niches; and in a
+ couple of hours this building, which had been the pride and glory of
+ British Merchants, was a blackened ruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The citizens were now in a state of despair. Upwards of ten thousand
+ houses were in a blaze, the fire extending, according to Evelyn, two miles
+ in length and one in breadth, and the smoke reaching near fifty miles in
+ length. Mansions, churches, hospitals, halls, and schools crumbled into
+ dust as if at blighting touch of some most potent and diabolical magician.
+ Quite hopeless now of quenching the flames, bewildered by loss, and
+ overcome by terror, the citizens, abandoning themselves to despair, made
+ no further effort to conquer this inappeasable fire; but crying aloud in
+ their distraction, behaved as those who had lost their wits. The king and
+ the Duke of York, who on Sunday had viewed the conflagration from the
+ Thames, now alarmed at prospect of the whole capital being laid waste,
+ rode into the city, and by their presence, coolness and example roused the
+ people to fresh exertions. Accordingly, citizens and soldiers worked with
+ renewed energy and courage; whilst his majesty and his brother, the
+ courtiers and the lord mayor, mixed freely with the crowd, commanding and
+ directing them in their labours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now a new terror rose up amongst the citizens, for news spread that
+ the Dutch and French&mdash;with whom England was then at war&mdash;and
+ moreover the papists, whom the people then abhorred, had conspired to
+ destroy the capital. And the suddenness with which the flames had appeared
+ in various places, and the rapidity with which they spread, leading the
+ distracted inhabitants to favour this report, a strong desire for
+ immediate revenge took possession of their hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly all foreigners were laid hold of, kicked, beaten, and abused
+ by infuriated mobs, from which they were rescued only to be flung into
+ prison. And this conduct was speedily extended to the catholics, even when
+ such were known to be faithful and well-approved good citizens. For though
+ at first it spread as a rumour, it was now received as a certainty that
+ they, in obedience to the wily and most wicked Jesuits, had determined to
+ lay waste an heretical city. Nor were there wanting many ready to bear
+ witness they had seen these dreaded papists fling fire-balls into houses
+ of honest citizens, and depart triumphing in their fiendish deeds. So that
+ when they ventured abroad they were beset by great multitudes, and their
+ lives were imperilled. And news of this distraction, which so forcibly
+ swayed the people, reaching the king, he speedily despatched the members
+ of his privy council to several quarters of the city, that in person they
+ might guard such of his subjects as stood in danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Hollis and Lord Ashley were assigned Newgate Market and the streets
+ that lie around, as parts where they were to station themselves. And it
+ happened that riding near the former place they saw a vast number of
+ people gathered together, shouting with great violence, and badly using
+ one who stood in their midst. Whereon they hastened towards the spot and
+ found the ill-treated man to be of foreign aspect. Neither had he hat,
+ cloak, nor sword; his face was covered with blood, his jerkin was torn in
+ pieces, and his person was bedaubed by mud. And on examination it was
+ found he was unable to speak the English tongue; but Lord Hollis, entering
+ into conversation with him in the French language, ascertained that he was
+ a servant of the Portuguese ambassador, and knew not of what he was
+ accused, or why he had been maltreated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereon a citizen of good standing pressed forward and alleged he had truly
+ seen this man put his hand in his pocket and throw a fire-ball into a
+ shop, upon which the house immediately took flame; whereon, being on the
+ other side of the street, he called aloud that the people might stop this
+ abominable villain. Then the citizens had seized upon him, taking away his
+ sword, and used him according to their will. My Lord Hollis explaining
+ this to the foreigner, he was overcome by amazement at the charge; and
+ when asked what he had thrown into the house, made answer he had not flung
+ anything. But he remembered well, whilst walking in the street, he saw a
+ piece of bread upon the ground, which he, as was the custom in his country
+ took up. Afterwards he laid it upon a shelf in a neighbouring house, which
+ being close by, my Lords Hollis and Ashley, followed by a dense crowd,
+ conducted him thither, and found the bread laid upon a board as he had
+ stated. It was noted the next house but one was on fire, and on inquiry it
+ was ascertained that the worthy citizen, seeing a foreigner place
+ something inside a shop without tarrying, and immediately after perceiving
+ a dwelling in flames, which in his haste he took to be the same, he had
+ charged the man with commission of this foul deed. But even though many
+ were convinced of his innocence, my Lord Hollis concluded the stranger's
+ life would be in safer keeping if he were committed to prison, which was
+ accordingly done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the fire continued; and on Monday night and Tuesday raged with
+ increasing violence. The very heart of the city was now eaten into by this
+ insatiable monster: Soper Lane, Bread Street, Friday Street, Old Change,
+ and Cheapside being in one blaze. It was indeed a spectacle to fill all
+ beholding it with consternation; but that which followed was yet more
+ terrible, for already St. Paul's Cathedral was doomed to destruction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Threatened on one side by the flames devastating Cheapside, and on the
+ other from those creeping steadily up from Blackfriars to this great
+ centre, it was now impossible to save the venerable church, which Evelyn
+ terms "one of the most ancient pieces of early Christian piety in the
+ world." Seen by this fierce light, and overhung by a crimson sky, every
+ curve of its dark outline, every stone of its pillars and abutments, every
+ column of its incomparable portico, stood clearly defined, so that never
+ had it looked so stately and magnificent, so vast and majestic, as now
+ when beheld for the last time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Too speedily the fire advanced, watched by sorrowful eyes; but even before
+ it had reached the scaffolding now surrounding the building, the vaulted
+ roof, ignited by showers of sparks, burst into flames. Then followed a
+ scene unspeakably grand, yet melancholy beyond all telling. In a few
+ moments a pale yellow light had crept along the parapets, sending faint
+ clouds of smoke upwards, as if more forcibly marking the course of
+ destruction. Then came the crackling, hissing sounds of timber yielding to
+ the fire, and soon a great sheet of lead which covered the roof, and was
+ said to measure six acres, melting by degrees, down came on every side a
+ terrible rain of liquid fire that seamed and burned the ground, and
+ carried destruction with it in its swift course towards the Thames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now, by reason of the fearful heat, great projections of Portland
+ stone, cornices, and capitals of columns, flew off before the fire had
+ time to reach them. Windows melted in their frames, pillars fell to the
+ ground, ironwork bent as wax; nay, the very pavements around glowed so
+ that neither man nor horse dared tread upon them. And the flames,
+ gradually gaining ground, danced fantastically up and down the
+ scaffolding, and covered the edifice as with one blaze; whilst inside
+ transom beams were snapped asunder, rafters fell with destruction, and the
+ fire roaring through chapels and aisles as in a great furnace, could be
+ heard afar. And that which had been a Christian shrine was now, a smoking
+ ruin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Raging onward in their fierce career, the flames darted towards such
+ buildings in the neighbourhood as had been previously untouched, so that
+ Paternoster Row, Newgate Street, the Old Bailey and Ludgate Hill were soon
+ in course of destruction. And from the latter spot the conflagration,
+ urged by the wind, rapidly rushed onwards towards Fleet Street. On the
+ other hand, it extended from Cheapside to Ironmongers' Lane, Old Jewry,
+ Lawrence Lane, Milk Street, Wood Street, Gutter Lane, and Foster Lane; and
+ again spreading from Newgate Street, it surrounded and destroyed Christ
+ Church, burned through St. Martin's-le-Grand towards Aldgate, and
+ threatened to continue its triumphant march to the suburbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For several miles nothing but raging fire and smoking ruins was visible,
+ for desolation had descended on the city. It was now feared the flames
+ would reach the Palace of Whitehall, and extend towards Westminster Abbey,
+ a consideration which caused much alarm to his majesty, who prized the
+ sacred fane exceedingly. And now the king was determined the orders he had
+ already issued should be obeyed, and that houses standing in direct path
+ of the fire should be demolished by gunpowder; so that, a greater gap
+ being effected than any previously made by pulling them down, the
+ conflagration might have no further material wherewith to strengthen and
+ feed its further progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This plan, Evelyn states, had been proposed by some stout seamen early
+ enough to have saved nearly the whole city; "but this some tenacious and
+ avaricious men, aldermen, etc., would not permit, because their houses
+ would have been the first." Now, however, this remedy was tried, and with
+ greater despatch, because the fire threatened the Tower and the powder
+ magazine it contained. And if the flames once reached this, London Bridge
+ would assuredly be destroyed, the vessels in the river torn and sunk, and
+ incalculable damage to life and property effected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly Tower Street, which had already become ignited, was, under
+ supervision of the king, blown up in part, and the fire happily brought to
+ an end by this means in that part of the town. Moreover, on Wednesday
+ morning the east wind, which had continued high from Sunday night, now
+ subsided, so that the flames lost much of their vehemence, and by means of
+ explosions were more easily mastered at Leadenhall and in Holborn, and
+ likewise at the Temple, to which places they had spread during Wednesday
+ and Thursday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During these latter days, the king and the Duke of York betrayed great
+ vigilance, and laboured with vast activity; the latter especially, riding
+ from post to post, by his example inciting those whose courage had
+ deserted them, and by his determination overcoming destruction. On
+ Thursday the dread conflagration, after raging for five consecutive days
+ and nights, was at length conquered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Friday morning the sun rose like a ball of crimson fire above a scene
+ of blackness, ruin, and desolation. Whole streets were levelled to the
+ ground, piles of charred stones marked where stately churches had stood,
+ smoke rose in clouds from smouldering embers. With sorrowful hearts many
+ citizens traversed the scene of desolation that day; amongst others Pepys
+ and Evelyn. The latter recounts that "the ground and air, smoke and fiery
+ vapour, continu'd so intense, that my haire was almost sing'd, and my
+ feete unsuffurably surbated. The people who now walk'd about ye ruines
+ appear'd like men in some dismal desert, or rather in some greate citty
+ laid waste by a cruel enemy; to which was added that stench that came from
+ some poore creatures' bodies, beds, and other combustible goods."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would have been impossible to trace the original course of the streets,
+ but that some gable, pinnacle, or portion of walls, of churches, halls, or
+ mansions, indicated where they had stood. The narrower thoroughfares were
+ completely blocked by rubbish; massive iron chains, then used to prevent
+ traffic at night in the streets, were melted, as were likewise iron gates
+ of prisons, and the hinges of strong doors. Goods stored away in cellars
+ and subterranean passages of warehouses yet smouldered, emitting foul
+ odours; wells were completely choked, fountains were dried at their
+ sources. The statues of monarchs which had adorned the Exchange, were
+ smashed; that of its founder, Sir Thomas Gresham, alone remaining entire.
+ The ruins of St. Paul's, with its walls standing black and cheerless,
+ presented in itself a most melancholy spectacle. Its pillars were embedded
+ in ashes, its cornices irretrievably destroyed, its great bell reduced to
+ a shapeless mass of metal; whilst its general air of desolation was
+ heightened by the fact that a few monuments, which had escaped
+ destruction, rose abruptly from amidst the charred DEBRIS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if the ruins of the capital looked sad by day, their appearance was
+ more appalling when seen by light of the moon, which rose nightly during
+ the week following this great calamity. From the city gates, standing
+ gaunt, black, and now unguarded, to the Temple, the level waste seemed
+ sombre as a funeral pall; whilst the Thames, stripped of wharves and
+ warehouses, quaintly gabled homes, and comfortable inns&mdash;wont to cast
+ pleasant lights and shadows on its surface&mdash;now swept past the
+ blackened ruins a melancholy river of white waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In St. George's Fields, Moorfields, and far as Highgate for several miles,
+ citizens of all degrees, to the number of two hundred thousand, had
+ gathered: sleeping in the open fields, or under canvas tents, or in wooden
+ sheds which they hurriedly erected. Some there were amongst them who had
+ been used to comfort and luxury, but who were now without bed or board, or
+ aught to cover them save the clothes in which they had hastily dressed
+ when fleeing from the fire. And to many it seemed as if they had only been
+ saved from one calamity to die by another: for they had nought wherewith
+ to satisfy their hunger, yet had too much pride to seek relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And whilst yet wildly distracted by their miserable situation, weary from
+ exhaustion, and nervous from lack of repose, a panic arose in their midst
+ which added much to their distress. For suddenly news was spread that the
+ French, Dutch and English papists were marching on them, prepared to cut
+ their throats. At which, broken-spirited as they were, they rose up, and
+ leaving such goods that they had saved, rushed towards Westminster to seek
+ protection from their imaginary foes. On this, the king sought to prove
+ the falsity of their alarm, and with infinite difficulty persuaded them to
+ return to the fields: whence he despatched troops of soldiers, whose
+ presence helped to calm their fears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the king having, moreover, tender compassion for their wants, speedily
+ sought to supply them. He therefore summoned a council that it might
+ devise means of relief; and as a result, it published a proclamation
+ ordering that bread and all other provisions, such as could be furnished,
+ should be daily and constantly brought, not only to the markets formerly
+ in use, but also to Clerkenwell, Islington, Finsbury Fields, Mile End
+ Green, and Ratcliffe, for greater convenience of the citizens. For those
+ who were unable to buy provisions, the king commanded the victualler of
+ his navy to send bread into Moorfields, and distribute it amongst them.
+ And as divers distressed people had saved some of their goods, of which
+ they knew not where to dispose, he ordered that churches, chapels,
+ schools, and such like places in and around Westminster, should be free
+ and open to receive and protect them. He likewise directed that all cities
+ and towns should, without contradiction or opposition, receive the
+ citizens and permit them free exercise of their manual labours: he
+ promising, when the present exigency had passed away, to take care the
+ said persons should be no burden to such towns as received them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people were therefore speedily relieved. Many of them found refuge
+ with their friends and relatives in the country, and others sought homes
+ in the districts of Westminster and Southwark: so that in four days from
+ the termination of the fire, there was scarce a person remaining in the
+ fields, where such numbers had taken refuge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first hardships consequent to the calamity having passed away, people
+ were anxious to trace the cause of their sufferings, which they were
+ unwilling to consider accidental. A rumour therefore sprang up, that the
+ great fire resulted from a wicked plot, hatched by Jesuits, for the
+ destruction of an heretical city. At this the king was sorely troubled;
+ for though there was no evidence which led him to place faith in the
+ report, yet a great body of the citizens and many members of his council
+ held it true. Therefore, in order to appease such doubts as arose in his
+ mind, and likewise to satisfy the people, he appointed his privy council
+ to sit morning and evening to inquire into the matter, and examine
+ evidences set forth against those who had been charged with the outrage
+ and cast into prison during the conflagration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in order that the investigation might be conducted with greater rigour
+ he sent into the country for the lord chief justice, who was dreaded by
+ all for his unflinching severity. The lord chancellor, in his account of
+ these transactions, assures us many of the witnesses who gave evidence
+ against those indicted with firing the capital "were produced as if their
+ testimony would remove all doubts, but made such senseless relations of
+ what they had been told, without knowing the condition of the persons who
+ told them, or where to find them, that it was a hard matter to forbear
+ smiling at their declarations." Amongst those examined was one Roger
+ Hubert, who accused himself of having deliberately set the city on fire.
+ This man, then in his twenty-fifth year, was son of a watchmaker residing
+ in Rouen. Hubert had practised the same trade both in that town and in
+ London, and was believed by his fellow workmen to be demented. When
+ brought before the chief justice and privy council, Hubert with great
+ coolness stated he had set the first house on fire: for which act he had
+ been paid a year previously in Paris. When asked who had hired him to
+ accomplish this evil deed, he replied he did not know, for he had never
+ seen the man before: and when further questioned regarding the sum he had
+ received, he declared it was but one pistole, but he had been promised
+ five pistoles more when he should have done his work. These ridiculous
+ answers, together with some contradictory statements he made, inclined
+ many persons, amongst whom was the chief justice, to doubt his confession.
+ Later on in his examinations, he was asked if he knew where the house had
+ stood which he set on fire, to which he replied in the affirmative, and on
+ being taken into the city, pointed out the spot correctly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the eyes of many this was regarded as proof of his guilt; though others
+ stated that, having lived in the city, he must necessarily become
+ acquainted with the position of the baker's shop. Opinion was therefore
+ somewhat divided regarding him. The chief justice told the king "that all
+ his discourse was so disjointed that he did not believe him guilty." Yet
+ having voluntarily accused himself of a monstrous deed, and being
+ determined as it seemed to rid himself of life, he was condemned to death
+ and speedily executed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lord Clarendon says: "Neither the judges nor any present at the trial did
+ believe him guilty; but that he was a poor distracted wretch, weary of his
+ life, and chose to part with it in this way. Certain it is that upon the
+ strictest examination that could be afterwards made by the king's command,
+ and then by the diligence of the House, that upon the jealousy and rumour
+ made a committee, that was very diligent and solicitous to make that
+ discovery, there was never any probable evidence (that poor creature's
+ only excepted) that there was any other cause of that woful fire than the
+ displeasure of God Almighty: the first accident of the beginning in a
+ baker's house, where there was so great a stock of faggots, and the
+ neighbourhood of such combustible matter, of pitch and rosin, and the
+ like, led it in an instant from house to house, through Thames Street,
+ with the agitation of so terrible a wind to scatter and disperse it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But belief that the dreaded papists had set fire to the city, lingered in
+ the minds of many citizens. When the city was rebuilt, this opinion found
+ expression in an inscription cut over the doorway of a house opposite the
+ spot where the fire began, which ran as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here, by the permission of heaven, hell broke loose on this protestant
+ city from the malicious hearts of barbarous papists, by the hand of their
+ agent Hubert, who confessed, and on the ruins of this place declared the
+ fact, for which he was hanged. Erected in the mayoralty of Sir Patience
+ Ward, Knight."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The loss caused by this dreadful conflagration was estimated at ten
+ million sterling. According to a certificate of Jonas Moore and Ralph
+ Gatrix, surveyors appointed to examine the ruins, the fire overrun 373
+ acres within the walls, burning 13,200 houses, 89 parish churches,
+ numerous chapels, the Royal Exchange, Custom House, Guildhall, Blackwell
+ Hall, St. Paul's Cathedral, Bridewell, fifty-two halls of the city
+ companies, and three city gates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As speedily as might be, the king and his parliament then sitting at
+ Oxford, sought to restore the city on a scale vastly superior to its
+ former condition. And the better to effect this object, an act of
+ parliament was passed that public buildings should be rebuilt with public
+ money, raised by a tax on coals; that the churches and the cathedral of
+ St. Paul's should be reconstructed from their foundations; that bridges,
+ gates and prisons should be built anew; the streets made straight and
+ regular, such as were steep made level, such as were narrow made wide;
+ and, moreover, that every house should be built with party walls, such
+ being of stone or brick, and all houses raised to equal height in front.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And these rules being observed, a stately and magnificent city rose
+ phoenix-like from ruins of the old; so that there was naught to remind the
+ inhabitants of their great calamity save the Monument. This, designed by
+ Sir Christopher Wren, and built at a cost of fourteen thousand five
+ hundred pounds, was erected near where the fire broke out, the better to
+ perpetuate a memory of this catastrophe in the minds of future
+ generations, which purpose it fulfils unto this day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The court repairs to Oxford.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine's son.&mdash;Their majesties
+ return to Whitehall.&mdash;The king quarrels with his mistress.&mdash;Miss Stuart
+ contemplates marriage.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine attempts revenge.&mdash;Charles
+ makes an unpleasant discovery.&mdash;The maid of honour elopes.&mdash;His majesty
+ rows down the Thames.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine's intrigues.&mdash;Fresh quarrels at
+ court.&mdash;The king on his knees.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The while such calamities befell the citizens, the king continued to
+ divert himself in his usual fashion. On the 29th of June, 1665, whilst
+ death strode apace through the capital, reaping full harvests as he went,
+ their majesties left Whitehall for Hampton Court, From here they repaired
+ to Salisbury, and subsequently to Oxford, where Charles took up his
+ residence in Christchurch, and the queen at Merton College.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Removed from harrowing scenes of ghastliness and distress, the court made
+ merry. Joined by fair women and gallant men, their majesties played at
+ bowls and tennis in the grassy meads of the college grounds; rode abroad
+ in great hawking parties; sailed through summer days upon the smooth
+ waters of the river Isis; and by night held revelry in the massive-beamed
+ oak-panelled halls, from which scarce five-score candles served to chase
+ all gloom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened whilst life thus happily passed, at pleasant full-tide flow,
+ my Lady Castlemaine, who resided in the same college with her majesty,
+ gave birth on the 28th of December to another son, duly baptized George
+ Fitzroy, and subsequently created Duke of Northumberland. By this time,
+ the plague having subsided in the capital, and all danger of infection
+ passed away, his majesty was anxious to reach London, yet loth to leave
+ his mistress, whom he visited every morning, and to whom he exhibited the
+ uttermost tenderness. And his tardiness to return becoming displeasing to
+ the citizens, and they being aware of its cause, it was whispered in
+ taverns and cried in the streets, "The king cannot go away till my Lady
+ Castlemaine be ready to come along with him," which truth was found
+ offensive on reaching the royal ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Towards the end of January, 1666, he returned to Whitehall, and a month
+ later the queen, who had been detained by illness, joined him. Once more
+ the thread of life was taken up by the court at the point where it had
+ been broken, and woven into the motley web of its strange history.
+ Unwearied by time, unsatiated by familiarity, the king continued his
+ intrigue with the imperious Castlemaine, and with great longing likewise
+ made love to the beautiful Stuart. But yet his pursuit of pleasure was not
+ always attended by happiness; inasmuch as he found himself continually
+ involved in quarrels with the countess, which in turn covered him with
+ ridicule in the eyes of his courtiers, and earned him contempt in the
+ opinions of his subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of these disturbances, which occurred soon after his return from
+ Oxford, began at a royal drawing-room, in presence of the poor slighted
+ queen and ladies of the court. It happened in the course of conversation
+ her majesty remarked to the countess she feared the king had taken cold by
+ staying so late at her lodgings; to which speech my Lady Castlemaine with
+ some show of temper answered aloud, "he did not stay so late abroad with
+ her, for he went betimes thence, though he do not before one, two, or
+ three in the morning, but must stay somewhere else." The king, who had
+ entered the apartment whilst she was speaking, came up to her, and
+ displeased with the insinuations she expressed, declared she was a bold,
+ impertinent woman, and bade her begone from the court, and not return
+ until he sent for her. Accordingly she whisked from the drawing-room, and
+ drove at once to Pall Mall, where she hired apartments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her indignation at being addressed by Charles in such a manner before the
+ court, was sufficiently great to beget strong desires for revenge; when
+ she swore she would be even with him and print his letters to her for
+ public sport. In cooler moments, however, she abandoned this idea; and in
+ course of two or three days, not hearing from his majesty, she despatched
+ a message to him, not entreating pardon, but asking permission to send for
+ her furniture and belongings. To this the monarch, who had begun to miss
+ her presence and long for her return, replied she must first come and view
+ them; and then impatient for reconciliation, he sought her, and they
+ became friends once more. And by way of sealing the bond of pacification,
+ the king soon after agreed to pay her debts, amounting to the sum of
+ thirty thousand pounds, which had been largely incurred by presents
+ bestowed by her upon her lovers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His majesty was not only rendered miserable by the constant caprices and
+ violent temper of the countess, but likewise by the virtue and coldness
+ Miss Stuart betrayed since her return from Oxford. The monarch was sorely
+ troubled to account for her bearing, and attributing it to jealousy,
+ sought to soothe her supposed uneasiness by increasing his chivalrous
+ attentions. Her change of behaviour, however, proceeded from another
+ cause. The fair Stuart, though childlike in manner, was shrewd at heart;
+ and was moreover guided invariably by her mother, a lady who reaped wisdom
+ from familiarity with courts. Therefore the maid of honour, seeing she had
+ given the world occasion to think she had lost her virtue, declared she
+ was ready to "marry any gentleman of fifteen hundred a year that would
+ have her in honour."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This determination she was obliged to keep-secret from the king, lest his
+ anger should fall upon such as sought her, and so interfere with her
+ matrimonial prospects. Now with such intentions in her mind she pondered
+ well on an event which had happened to her, such as no woman who has had
+ like experience ever forgets; namely, that amongst the many who professed
+ to love her, one had proposed to marry her. This was Charles Stuart,
+ fourth Duke of Richmond, a man possessed of neither physical gifts nor
+ mental abilities; who was, moreover, a widower, and a sot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ However, the position which her union with him would ensure was all she
+ could desire, and he renewing his suit at this time, she consequently
+ consented to marry him. Now though it was probable she could keep her
+ design from knowledge of her royal lover, it was scarcely possible she
+ could hide it from observation of his mistress. And the latter, knowing
+ the extent to which fair Frances Stuart shared his majesty's heart, and
+ being likewise aware of the coldness with which his protestations were by
+ her received, scorned the king and detested the maid. Lady Castlemaine
+ therefore resolved to use her knowledge of Miss Stuart's contemplated
+ marriage, for purpose of enraging the jealousy of the one, and destroying
+ the influence of the other. In order to accomplish such desirable ends she
+ quietly awaited her opportunity. This came in due time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened one evening when his majesty had been visiting Frances Stuart
+ in her apartments, and had returned to his own in a condition of
+ ill-humour and disappointment, the countess, who had been some days out of
+ favour, suddenly presented herself before him, and in a bantering tone,
+ accompanied by ironical smiles, addressed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope," said she, "I may be allowed to pay you my homage, although the
+ angelic Stuart has forbidden you to see me at my own house. I will not
+ make use of reproaches and expostulations which would disgrace myself;
+ still less will I endeavour to excuse frailties which nothing can justify,
+ since your constancy for me deprives me of all defence, considering I am
+ the only person you have honoured with your tenderness, who has made
+ herself unworthy of it by ill-conduct. I come now, therefore, with no
+ other intent than to comfort and condole with you upon the affliction and
+ grief into which the coldness or new-fashioned chastity of the inhuman
+ Stuart has reduced your majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having delivered herself of this speech she laughed loud and heartily, as
+ if vastly amused at the tenour of her words; and then before the impatient
+ monarch had time to reply, continued in the same tone, with quickening
+ breath and flashing eyes, "Be not offended that I take the liberty of
+ laughing at the gross manner in which you are imposed upon; I cannot bear
+ to see that such particular affection should make you the jest of your own
+ court, and that you should be ridiculed with such impunity. I know that
+ the affected Stuart has sent you away under pretence of some
+ indisposition, or perhaps some scruple of conscience; and I come to
+ acquaint you that the Duke of Richmond will soon be with her, if he is not
+ there already. I do not desire you to believe what I say, since it might
+ be suggested either through resentment or envy. Only follow me to her
+ apartment, either that, no longer trusting calumny and malice you may
+ honour her with a just preference, if I accuse her falsely; or, if my
+ information be true, you may no longer be the dupe of a pretended prude,
+ who makes you act so unbecoming and ridiculous a part."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king, overwhelmed with astonishment, was irresolute in action; but
+ Lady Castlemaine, determined on not being deprived of her anticipated
+ triumph, took him by the hand and forcibly pulled him towards Miss
+ Stuart's apartments. The maid of honour's servants, surprised at his
+ majesty's return, were unable to warn their mistress without his
+ knowledge; whilst one of them, in pay of the countess, found means of
+ secretly intimating to her that the Duke of Richmond was already in Miss
+ Stuart's chamber. Lady Castlemaine, having with an air of exultation led
+ the king down the gallery from his apartments to the threshold of Miss
+ Stuart's door, made him a low courtesy savouring more of irony than
+ homage, bade him good-night, and with a subtle smile promptly retired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scene which followed is best painted by Hamilton's pen. "It was near
+ midnight; the king on his way met the chambermaids, who respectfully
+ opposed his entrance, and, in a very low voice, whispered his majesty that
+ Miss Stuart had been very ill since he left her; but that being gone to
+ bed, she was, God be thanked, in a very fine sleep. 'That I must see,'
+ said the king, pushing her back, who had posted herself in his way. He
+ found Miss Stuart in bed, indeed, but far from being asleep; the Duke of
+ Richmond was seated at her pillow, and in all probability was less
+ inclined to sleep than herself. The perplexity of the one party, and the
+ rage of the other, were such as may easily be imagined upon such a
+ surprise. The king, who of all men was one of the most mild and gentle,
+ testified his resentment to the Duke of Richmond in such terms as he had
+ never before used. The duke was speechless and almost petrified; he saw
+ his master and his king justly irritated. The first transports which rage
+ inspires on such occasions are dangerous. Miss Stuart's window was very
+ convenient for a sudden revenge, the Thames flowing close beneath it; he
+ cast his eyes upon it, and seeing those of the king more incensed than
+ fired with indignation than he thought his nature capable of, he made a
+ profound bow, and retired without replying a single word to the vast
+ torrent of threats and menaces that were poured upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Miss Stuart having a little recovered from her first surprise, instead of
+ justifying herself, began to talk in the most extravagant manner, and said
+ everything that was most capable to inflame the king's passion and
+ resentment: that if she were not allowed to receive visits from a man of
+ the Duke of Richmond's rank, who came with honourable intentions, she was
+ a slave in a free country; that she knew of no engagement that could
+ prevent her from disposing of her hand as she thought proper; but,
+ however, if this were not permitted her in his dominions, she did not
+ believe that there was any power on earth that could hinder her from going
+ over to France, and throwing herself into a Convent, to enjoy there that
+ tranquillity which was denied her in his court. The king, sometimes
+ furious with anger, sometimes relenting at her tears, and sometimes
+ terrified at her menaces, was so greatly agitated that he knew not how to
+ answer either the nicety of a creature who wanted to act the part of
+ Lucretia under his own eye, or the assurance with which she had the
+ effrontery to reproach him. In this suspense love had almost entirely
+ vanquished all his resentments, and had nearly induced him to throw
+ himself upon his knees, and entreat pardon for the injury he had done her,
+ when she desired him to retire, and leave her in repose, at least for the
+ remainder of that night, without offending those who had either
+ accompanied him, or conducted him to her apartments, by a longer visit.
+ This impertinent request provoked and irritated him to the highest degree:
+ he went out abruptly, vowing never to see her more, and passed the most
+ restless and uneasy night he had ever experienced since his restoration."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next morning, his majesty sent orders to the Duke of Richmond to quit the
+ court, and never appear again in his presence. His grace, however, stayed
+ not to receive this message, having betaken himself with all possible
+ speed into the country. Miss Stuart, who likewise feared the king's
+ resentment, hastened to the queen, and throwing herself at her majesty's
+ feet, entreated forgiveness for the pain and uneasiness she had caused her
+ in the past, and besought her care and protection in the future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She then laid bare her intentions of marrying the Duke of Richmond, who
+ had loved her long, and was anxious to wed her soon; but since the
+ discovery of his addresses had caused his banishment, and created
+ disturbances prejudicial to her good name, she begged the queen would
+ obtain his majesty's consent to her retiring from the vexations of a court
+ to the tranquillity of a convent. The queen raised her up, mingled her
+ tears with those of the troubled maid, and promised to use her endeavours
+ towards averting the king's displeasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On consideration, however, the fair Stuart did not wait to hear his
+ majesty's reproaches, or receive his entreaties; for the duke, being
+ impatient to gain his promised bride, quietly returned to town, and
+ secretly communicated with her. It was therefore agreed between them she
+ should steal away from the palace, meet him at the "Bear at the Bridge
+ Foot," situated on the Southwark side of the river, where he would have a
+ coach awaiting her, in order they might ride away to his residence at
+ Cobham Hall, near Gravesend, and then be legally and happily united in the
+ holy bonds of matrimony. And all fell out as had been arranged: the time
+ being the month of March, 1667.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now when the king discovered her flight, his anger knew no bounds, though
+ it sought relief in uttering many violent threats against the duke, and in
+ sending word to the duchess he would see her no more. In answer to this
+ message, she, with some show of spirit, returned him the jewels he had
+ given her, principal amongst which were a necklace of pearls, valued at
+ over a thousand pounds, and a pair of diamond pendants of rare lustre.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither she nor her husband paid much heed to the royal menaces, for
+ before a year elapsed they both returned to town, and took up their
+ residence at Somerset House. Here, as Pepys records, she kept a great
+ court, "she being visited for her beauty's sake by people, as the queen is
+ at nights: and they say also she is likely to go to court again and there
+ put my Lady Castlemaine's nose out of joint. God knows that would make a
+ great turn." But to such proposals as were made regarding her return to
+ Whitehall, her husband would not pay heed, and she therefore remained a
+ stranger to its drawing-rooms for some time longer. And when two years
+ later she appeared there, her beauty had lost much of its famed lustre,
+ for meantime she was overtaken by smallpox, a scourge ever prevalent in
+ the capital. During her illness the king paid her several visits, and was
+ sorely grieved that the loveliness he so much prized should be marred by
+ foul disease. But on her recovery, the disfigurement she suffered scarce
+ lessened his admiration, and by no means abated his love; which seemed to
+ have gained fresh force from the fact of its being interrupted awhile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This soon became perceptible to all, and rumour whispered that the young
+ duchess would shortly return to Whitehall in a position which she had
+ declined before marriage. And amongst other stories concerning the king's
+ love for her, it was common talk that one fair evening in May, when he had
+ ordered his coach to be ready that he might take an airing in the park,
+ he, on a sudden impulse, ran down the broad steps leading from his palace
+ gardens to the riverside. Here, entering a boat alone, he rowed himself
+ adown the placid river now crossed by early shadows, until he came to
+ Somerset House, where his lady-love dwelt; and finding the garden-door
+ locked, he, in his impatience to be with her, clambered over the wall and
+ sought her. Two months after the occurrence of this incident, the young
+ duchess was appointed a lady of the bedchamber to the queen, and therefore
+ had apartments at Whitehall. There was little doubt now entertained she
+ any longer rejected his majesty's love; and in order to remove all
+ uncertainties on the point which might arise in her husband's mind, the
+ king one night, when he had taken over much wine, boasted to the duke of
+ her complaisancy. Lord Dartmouth, who tells this story, says this happened
+ "at Lord Townshend's, in Norfolk, as my uncle told me, who was present."
+ Soon after his grace accepted an honourable exile as ambassador to
+ Denmark, in which country he died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the absence of the Duchess of Richmond, my Lady Castlemaine, then
+ in the uninterrupted possession of power, led his majesty a sorry life.
+ Her influence, indeed, seemed to increase with time, until her victim
+ became a laughing-stock to the heartless, and an object of pity to the
+ wise. Mr. Povy, whose office as a member of the Tangier Commission brought
+ him into continual contact with the court, and whose love of gossip made
+ him observant of all that passed around him, in telling of "the horrid
+ effeminacy of the king," said that "upon any falling out between my Lady
+ Castlemaine's nurse and her woman, my lady hath often said she would make
+ the king make them friends, and they would be friends and be quiet&mdash;which
+ the king had been fain to do." Nor did such condescension on his majesty's
+ part incline his mistress to treat him with more respect; for in the
+ quarrels which now became frequent betwixt them she was wont to term him a
+ fool, in reply to the kingly assertion that she was a jade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The disturbances which troubled the court were principally caused by her
+ infidelities to him, and his subsequent jealousies of her. Chief among
+ those who shared her intrigues at this time was Harry Jermyn, with whom
+ she renewed her intimacy from time to time, without the knowledge of his
+ majesty. The risks she frequently encountered in pursuit of her amours
+ abounded in comedy. Speaking of Harry Jermyn, Pepys tells us the king "had
+ like to have taken him abed with her, but that he was fain to creep under
+ the bed into the closet." It being now rumoured that Jermyn was about to
+ wed my Lady Falmouth, the countess's love for one whom she might for ever
+ lose received a fresh impulse, which made her reckless of concealment. The
+ knowledge of her passion, therefore, coming to Charles's ears, a bitter
+ feud sprang up between them, during which violent threats and abusive
+ language were freely exchanged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this time my lady was far gone with child, a fact that soon came
+ bubbling up to the angry surface of their discourse; for the king avowed
+ he would not own it as his offspring. On hearing this, her passion became
+ violent beyond all decent bounds. "God damn me, but you shall own it!"
+ said she, her cheeks all crimson and her eyes afire; and moreover she
+ added, "she should have it christened in the Chapel Royal, and owned as
+ his, or otherwise she would bring it to the gallery in Whitehall, and dash
+ its brains out before his face."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After she had hectored him almost out of his wits, she fled in a state of
+ wild excitement from the palace, and took up her abode at the residence of
+ Sir Daniel Harvey, the ranger of Richmond Park. News of this scene spread
+ rapidly through the court, and was subsequently discussed in the
+ coffee-houses and taverns all over the town, where great freedom was made
+ with the lady's name, and great sport of the king's passion. And now it
+ was said the monarch had parted with his mistress for ever, concerning
+ which there was much rejoicement and some doubt. For notwithstanding the
+ king had passed his word to this effect, yet it was known though his
+ spirit was willing his flesh was weak. Indeed, three days had scarcely
+ passed when, mindful of her temper, he began to think his words had been
+ harsh, and, conscious of her power, he concluded his vows had been rash.
+ He therefore sought her once more, but found she was not inclined to
+ relent, until, as Pepys was assured, this monarch of most feeble spirit,
+ this lover of most ardent temper, "sought her forgiveness upon his knees,
+ and promised to offend her no more."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The kingdom in peril.&mdash;The chancellor falls under his majesty's
+ displeasure.&mdash;The Duke of Buckingham's mimicry.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine's
+ malice.&mdash;Lord Clarendon's fall.&mdash;The Duke of Ormond offends the royal
+ favourite.&mdash;She covers him with abuse.&mdash;Plots against the Duke of
+ York.&mdash;Schemes for a royal divorce.&mdash;Moll Davis and Nell Gwynn.&mdash;The
+ king and the comedian.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine abandons herself to great
+ disorders.&mdash;Young Jack Spencer.&mdash;The countess intrigues with an
+ acrobat.&mdash;Talk of the town.&mdash;The mistress created a duchess.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At this time the kingdom stood in uttermost danger, being brought to that
+ condition by his majesty's negligence towards its concerns. The peril was,
+ moreover, heightened from the fact of the king being impatient to rid
+ himself of those who had the nation's credit at heart, and sought to
+ uphold its interests. To this end he was led in part by his own
+ inclinations, and furthermore by his friends' solicitations. Foremost
+ amongst those with whose services he was anxious to dispense, were the
+ chancellor, my Lord Clarendon, and the lord lieutenant of Ireland, his
+ grace the Duke of Ormond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king's displeasure against these men, who had served his father
+ loyally, himself faithfully, and their country honestly, was instigated
+ through hatred borne them by my Lady Castlemaine. From the first both had
+ bewailed the monarch's connection with her, and the evil influence she
+ exercised over him. Accordingly, after the pattern of honest men, they had
+ set their faces against her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not only, as has already been stated, would the chancellor refuse to let
+ any document bearing her name pass the great seal, but he had often
+ prevailed with the king to alter resolutions she had persuaded him to
+ form. And moreover had his lordship sinned in her eyes by forbidding his
+ wife to visit or hold intercourse with her. These were sufficient reasons
+ to arouse the hatred and procure the revenge of this malicious woman, who
+ was now virtually at the head of the kingdom. For awhile, however,
+ Charles, mindful of the services the chancellor had rendered him, was
+ unwilling to thrust him from his high place. But as time sped, and the
+ machinations of a clique of courtiers in league with the countess were
+ added to her influence, the chancellor's power wavered. And finally, when
+ he was suspected of stepping between his majesty and his unlawful
+ pleasures&mdash;concerning which more shall be said anon&mdash;he fell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the head and front of the body which plotted against Lord Clarendon,
+ pandered to Lady Castlemaine, and, for its own purposes&mdash;politically
+ and socially&mdash;sought to control the king, was his grace the Duke of
+ Buckingham. This witty courtier and his friends, when assembled round the
+ pleasant supper table spread in the countess's apartments, and honoured
+ almost nightly by the presence of the king, delighted to vent the force of
+ their humour upon the chancellor, and criticize his influence over the
+ monarch until Charles smarted from their words. In the height of their
+ mirth, if his majesty declared he would go a journey, walk in a certain
+ direction, or perform some trivial action next day, those around him would
+ lay a wager he would not fulfil his intentions; and when asked why they
+ had arrived at such conclusions, they would reply, because the chancellor
+ would not permit him. On this another would remark with mock gravity, he
+ thought there were no grounds for such an imputation, though, indeed, he
+ could not deny it was universally believed abroad his majesty was
+ implicitly governed by Lord Clarendon. The king, being keenly sensitive to
+ remarks doubting his authority, and most desirous of appearing his own
+ master, would exclaim on such occasions that the chancellor "had served
+ him long, and understood his business, in which he trusted him; but in any
+ other matter than his business, he had no more credit with him than any
+ other man." And presently the Duke of Buckingham&mdash;who possessed
+ talents of mimicry to a surpassing degree&mdash;would arise, and, screwing
+ his face into ridiculous contortions, and shaking his wig in a manner that
+ burlesqued wisdom to perfection, deliver some ludicrous speech brimming
+ with mirth and indecencies, assuming the grave air and stately manner of
+ the chancellor the while. And finally, to make the caricature perfect, Tom
+ Killigrew, hanging a pair of bellows before him by way of purse, and
+ preceded by a friend carrying a fireshovel to represent a mace, would walk
+ round the room with the slow determined tread peculiar to Lord Clarendon.
+ At these performances the king, his mistress, and his courtiers would
+ laugh loud and long in chorus, with which was mingled sounds of chinking
+ glasses and flowing wine. ["Came my lord chancellor (the Earl of
+ Clarendon) and his lady, his purse and mace borne before him, to visit me"&mdash;Evelyn's
+ "Diary."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this manner was the old man's power undermined; but a circumstance
+ which hastened his fall occurred in the early part of 1667. In that year
+ Lady Castlemaine had, for a valuable consideration, disposed of a place at
+ court, which ensured the purchaser a goodly salary. However, before the
+ bargain could finally be ratified, it was necessary the appointment should
+ pass the great seal. This the chancellor would not permit, and accompanied
+ his refusal by remarking, "he thought this woman would sell every thing
+ shortly." His speech being repeated to her, she, in great rage, sent him
+ word she "had disposed of this place, and had no doubt in a little time to
+ dispose of his." And so great was the malice she bore him, that she railed
+ against him openly and in all places; nor did she scruple to declare in
+ the queen's chamber, in the presence of much company, "that she hoped to
+ see his head upon a stake, to keep company with those of the regicides on
+ Westminster Hall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And some political movements now arising, the history of which lies not
+ within the province of this work, the king seized upon them as an excuse
+ for parting with his chancellor. The monarch complained that my Lord
+ Clarendon "was so imperious that he would endure no contradiction; that he
+ had a faction in the House of Commons that opposed everything that
+ concerned his majesty's service, if it were not recommended to them by
+ him; and that he had given him very ill advice concerning the parliament,
+ which offended him most."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore there were rumours in the air that the chancellor's fall was
+ imminent; nor were the efforts of his son-in-law, the Duke of York, able
+ to protect him, for the friends of my Lady Castlemaine openly told his
+ majesty "it would not consist with his majesty's honour to be hectored out
+ of his determination to dismiss the chancellor by his brother, who was
+ wrought upon by his wife's crying." It therefore happened on the 26th of
+ August, 1667, as early as ten o'clock in the morning, Lord Clarendon
+ waited at Whitehall on the king, who presently, accompanied by his
+ brother, received him with characteristic graciousness. Whereon the old
+ man, acknowledging the monarch's courtesy, said he "had no suit to make to
+ him, nor the least thought to dispute with him, or to divert him from the
+ resolution he had taken; but only to receive his determination from
+ himself, and most humbly to beseech him to let him know what fault he had
+ committed, that had drawn this severity upon him from his majesty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In answer to this Charles said he must always acknowledge "he had served
+ him honestly and faithfully, and that he did believe never king had a
+ better servant; that he had taken this resolution for his good and
+ preservation, as well as for his own convenience and security; that he was
+ sorry the business had taken so much air, and was so publicly spoken of,
+ that he knew not how to change his purpose." To these words of fair
+ seeming the troubled chancellor replied by doubting if the sudden
+ dismissal of an old servant who had served the crown full thirty years,
+ without any suggestion of crime, but rather with a declaration of
+ innocence, would not call his majesty's justice and good nature into
+ question. He added that men would not know how to serve him, when they
+ should see it was in the power of three or four persons who had never done
+ him any notable service to dispose him to ungracious acts. And finally, he
+ made bold to cast some reflections upon my Lady Castlemaine, and give his
+ majesty certain warnings regarding her influence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this the king, not being well pleased, rose up, and the interview,
+ which had lasted two hours, terminated. Lord Clarendon tells us so much
+ concerning his memorable visit, to which Pepys adds a vivid vignette
+ picture of his departure. When my lord passed from his majesty's presence
+ into the privy garden, my Lady Castlemaine, who up to that time had been
+ in bed, "ran out in her smock into her aviary looking into Whitehall&mdash;and
+ thither her woman brought her nightgown&mdash;and stood joying herself at
+ the old man's going away; and several of the gallants of Whitehall, of
+ which there were many staying to see the chancellor return, did talk to
+ her in her birdcage&mdash;among others Blaneford, telling her she was the
+ bird of paradise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days after this occurrence the king sent Secretary Morrice to the
+ chancellor's house, with a warrant under a sign manual to require and
+ receive the great seal. This Lord Clarendon at once delivered him with
+ many expressions of duty which he bade the messenger likewise convey his
+ majesty. And no sooner had Morrice handed the seals to the king, than
+ Baptist May, keeper of the privy purse, and friend of my Lady Castlemaine,
+ sought the monarch, and falling upon his knees, kissed his hand and
+ congratulated him on his riddance of the chancellor. "For now." said he,
+ availing himself of the liberty Charles permitted his friends, "you will
+ be king&mdash;what you have never been before." Finally, the chancellor
+ was, through influence of his enemies, impeached in the House of Commons;
+ and to such length did they pursue him, that he was banished the kingdom
+ by act of parliament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His grace the Duke of Ormond was the next minister whom my Lady
+ Castlemaine, in the strength of her evil influence, sought to undermine.
+ By reason of an integrity rendering him too loyal to the king to pander to
+ his majesty's mistress, he incurred her displeasure in many ways; but
+ especially by refusing to gratify her cupidity. It happened she had
+ obtained from his majesty a warrant granting her the Phoenix Park, Dublin,
+ and the mansion situated therein, which had always been placed at service
+ of the lords lieutenants, and was the only summer residence at their
+ disposal. The duke, therefore, boldly refusing to pass the warrant,
+ stopped the grant. [According to O'Connor's "Bibliotheca Stowensis," Lady
+ Castlemaine soon after received a grant of a thousand pounds per annum in
+ compensation for her loss of Phoenix Park.] This so enraged the countess,
+ that soon after, when his grace returned to England, she, on meeting him
+ in one of the apartments in Whitehall, greeted him with a torrent of
+ abusive language and bitter reproaches, such as the rancour of her heart
+ could suggest, or the license of her tongue utter, and concluded by hoping
+ she might live to see him hanged. The duke heard her with the uttermost
+ calmness, and when she had exhausted her abusive vocabulary quietly
+ replied, "Madam, I am not in so much haste to put an end to your days; for
+ all I wish with regard to you is, that I may live to see you grow old."
+ And, bowing low, the fine old soldier left her presence. It may be added,
+ though the duke was deprived of the lord lieutenancy, the countess's pious
+ wish regarding him was never fulfilled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It now occurred to those who had relentlessly persecuted the chancellor,
+ that though they were safe as long as Charles reigned, his death would
+ certainly place them in peril. For they sufficiently knew the Duke of
+ York's character to be aware when he ascended the throne he would
+ certainly avenge the wrongs suffered by his father-in-law. Accordingly
+ these men, prominent amongst whom were the Duke of Buckingham, Sir Thomas
+ Clifford, Lords Arlington, Lauderdale, and Ashley, and Baptist May,
+ resolved to devise means which would prevent the Duke of York ever
+ attaining the power of sovereignty. Therefore scarce a year had gone by
+ since Lord Clarendon's downfall, ere rumours were spread abroad that his
+ majesty was about to put away the queen, This was to be effected, it was
+ said, by the king's acknowledgment of a previous marriage with Lucy
+ Walters, mother of the Duke of Monmouth, or by obtaining a divorce on
+ ground of her majesty's barrenness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of Buckingham, who was prime mover in this plot, aware of the
+ king's pride in, and fondness for the Duke of Monmouth, favoured the
+ scheme of his majesty's admission of a marriage previous to that which
+ united him with Catherine of Braganza. And according to Burnet, Buckingham
+ undertook to procure witnesses who would swear they had been present at
+ the ceremony which united him with the abandoned Lucy Walters. Moreover,
+ the Earl of Carlisle, who likewise favoured the contrivance, offered to
+ bring this subject before the House of Lords. However, the king would not
+ consent to trifle with the succession in this vile manner, and the idea
+ was promptly abandoned. But though the project was unsuccessful, it was
+ subsequently the cause of many evils; for the chances of sovereignty,
+ flashing before the eyes of the Duke of Monmouth, dazzled him with hopes,
+ in striving to realize which, he, during the succeeding reign, steeped the
+ country in civil warfare, and lost his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king's friends, ever active for evil, now sought other methods by
+ which he might rid himself of the woman who loved him well, and therefore
+ be enabled to marry again, when, it was trusted, he would have heirs to
+ the crown. It was suggested his union might, through lack of some
+ formality, be proved illegal; but as this could not be effected without
+ open violation of truth and justice, it was likewise forsaken. The Duke of
+ Buckingham now besought his majesty that he would order a bill to divorce
+ himself from the queen to be brought into the House of Commons. The king
+ gave his consent to the suggestion, and the affair proceeded so far that a
+ date was fixed upon for the motion. However, three days previous, Charles
+ called Baptist May aside, and told him the matter must be discontinued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even yet my Lord Buckingham did not despair of gaining his wishes.
+ And, being qualified by his character for the commission of abominable
+ deeds, and fitted by his experience for undertaking adventurous schemes,
+ he proposed to his majesty, as Burnet states, that he would give him leave
+ to abduct the queen, and send her out of the kingdom to a plantation,
+ where she should be well and carefully looked to, but never heard of more.
+ Then it could be given out she had deserted him, upon which grounds he
+ might readily obtain a divorce. But the king, though he permitted such a
+ proposal to be made him, contemplated it with horror, declaring "it was a
+ wicked thing to make a poor lady miserable only because she was his wife
+ and had no children by him, which was no fault of hers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ultimately these various schemes resolved themselves into a proposition
+ which Charles sanctioned. This was that the queen's confessor should
+ persuade her to leave the world, and embrace a religious life. Whether
+ this suggestion was ever made to her majesty is unknown, for the Countess
+ of Castlemaine, hearing of these schemes, and foreseeing she would be the
+ first sacrificed to a new queen's jealousy, opposed them with such vigour
+ that they fell to the ground and were heard of no more. The fact was, the
+ king took no active part in these designs, not being anxious, now the
+ Duchess of Richmond had accepted his love, to unite himself with another
+ wife. Whilst her grace had been unmarried, the idea had indeed occurred to
+ him of seeking a divorce that he might be free to lay his crown at the
+ feet of the maid of honour. And with such a view in mind he had consulted
+ Dr. Sheldon, Archbishop of Canterbury, as to whether the Church of England
+ "would allow of a divorce, when both parties were consenting, and one of
+ them lay under a natural incapacity of having children." Before answering
+ a question on which so much depended, the archbishop requested time for
+ consideration, which, with many injunctions to secrecy, was allowed him.
+ "But," says Lord Dartmouth, who vouches for truth of this statement, "the
+ Duke of Richmond's clandestine marriage, before he had given an answer,
+ made the king suspect he had revealed the secret to Clarendon, whose
+ creature Sheldon was known to be; and this was the true secret of
+ Clarendon's disgrace." For the king, believing the chancellor had aided
+ the duke in his secret marriage, in order to prevent his majesty's union
+ with Miss Stuart, and the presumable exclusion of the Duke and Duchess of
+ York and their children from the throne, never forgave him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though the subject of the royal divorce was no longer mentioned, the
+ disturbances springing from it were far from ended; for the Duke of
+ Buckingham, incensed at Lady Castlemaine's interference, openly quarrelled
+ with her, abused her roundly, and swore he would remove the king from her
+ power. To this end he therefore employed his talents, and with such tact
+ and assiduity that he ultimately fulfilled his menaces. The first step he
+ took towards accomplishing his desires, was to introduce two players to
+ his majesty, named respectively Moll Davis and Nell Gwynn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The former, a member of the Duke of York's troupe of performers, could
+ boast of goodly lineage, though not of legitimate birth, her father being
+ Thomas Howard, first Earl of Berkshire. She had, early in the year 1667,
+ made her first appearance at the playhouse, and had by her comely face and
+ shapely figure challenged the admiration of the town. Her winsome ways,
+ pleasant voice, and graceful dancing soon made her a favourite with the
+ courtiers, who voted her an excellent wench; though some of her own sex,
+ judging harshly of her, as is their wont towards each other, declared her
+ "the most impertinent slut in the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the Duke of Buckingham knowing her well, it seemed to him no woman was
+ more suited to fulfil his purpose of thwarting the countess; for if he
+ succeeded in awaking the king's passion for the comedian, such a
+ proceeding would not only arouse my lady's jealousy, but likewise humble
+ her pride. Therefore, when this court Mephistopheles accompanied his
+ majesty to the playhouse, he was careful to dwell on Moll Davis's various
+ charms, the excellency of her figure, the beauty of her face, the piquancy
+ of her manner. So impressed was the monarch by Buckingham's descriptions,
+ that he soon became susceptible to her fascinations. The amour once begun
+ was speedily pursued; and she was soon enabled to boast, in presence of
+ the players, that the king&mdash;whose generosity was great to fallen
+ women&mdash;had given her a ring valued at seven hundred pounds, and was
+ about to take, and furnish most richly, a house in Suffolk Street for her
+ benefit and abode. Pepys heard this news in the first month of the year
+ 1668; and soon afterwards a further rumour reached him that she was
+ veritably the king's mistress, "even to the scorn of the world."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This intrigue affected Lady Castlemaine in a manner which the Duke of
+ Buckingham had not expected. Whilst sitting beside Charles in the
+ playhouse, she noticed his attention was riveted upon her rival, when she
+ became melancholy and out of humour, in which condition she remained some
+ days. But presently rallying her spirits, she soon found means to divert
+ her mind and avenge her wrongs, of which more shall be recorded hereafter.
+ Meanwhile, the poor queen, whose feelings neither the king nor his
+ courtiers took into consideration, bore this fresh insult with such
+ patience as she could summon to her aid, on one occasion only protesting
+ against her husband's connection with the player. This happened when the
+ Duke of York's troupe performed in Whitehall the tragedy of "Horace,"
+ "written by the virtuous Mrs. Phillips." The courtiers assembled on this
+ occasion presented a brilliant and goodly sight. Evelyn tells us "the
+ excessive gallantry of the ladies was infinite, those jewels especially on
+ Lady Castlemaine esteemed at forty thousand pounds and more, far
+ outshining ye queene." Between each act of the tradgedy a masque and
+ antique dance was performed. When Moll Davis appeared, her majesty,
+ turning pale from sickness of heart, and trembling from indignation at the
+ glaring insult thrust upon her, arose and left the apartment boisterous
+ with revelry, where she had sat a solitary sad figure in its midst. As a
+ result of her intimacy with the king, Moll Davis bore him a daughter, who
+ subsequently became Lady Derwentwater. But the Duke of Buckingham's
+ revenge upon my Lady Castlemaine was yet but half complete; and therefore
+ whilst the monarch carried on his intrigue with Moll Davis, his grace,
+ enlarging upon the wit and excellency of Nell Gwynn, besought his majesty
+ to send for her. This request the king complied with readily enough, and
+ she was accordingly soon added to the list of his mistresses. Nell Gwynn,
+ who was at this period in her eighteenth year, had joined the company of
+ players at the king's house, about the same time as Moll Davis had united
+ her fortunes with the Duke of York's comedians. Her time upon the stage
+ was, however, but of brief duration; for my Lord Buckhurst, afterwards
+ Earl of Dorset, a witty and licentious man, falling in love with her,
+ induced her to become his mistress, quit the theatre, and forsake the
+ society of her lover, Charles Hart, a famous actor and great-nephew of
+ William Shakespeare. And she complying with his desires in these matters,
+ he made her an allowance of one hundred pounds a year, on which she
+ returned her parts to the manager, and declared she would act no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly in the month of July, 1667, she was living at Epsom with my
+ Lord Buckhurst and his witty friend Sir Charles Sedley, and a right merry
+ house they kept for a time. But alas, ere the summer had died there came a
+ day when charming Nell and his fickle lordship were friends no more, and
+ parting from him, she was obliged to revert to the playhouse again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Nell Gwynn being not only a pretty woman, but moreover an excellent
+ actress, her return was welcomed by the town. Her achievements in light
+ comedy were especially excellent, and declared entertaining to a rare
+ degree. Pepys, who witnessed her acting "a comical part," in the "Maiden
+ Queen," a play by Dryden, says he could "never hope to see the like done
+ again by man or woman. So great performance of a comical part," he
+ continues, "was never, I believe, in the world before as Nell do this,
+ both as a mad girle, then most and best of all when she comes in like a
+ young gallant; and hath the motions and carriage of a spark the most that
+ ever I saw any man have. It makes me, I confess, admire her." In the part
+ of Valeria, in "Tyrannic Love," she was also pronounced inimitable;
+ especially in her delivery of the epilogue. The vein of comedy with which
+ she delivered the opening lines, addressed to those about to bear her dead
+ body from the stage, was merry beyond belief. "Hold!" she cried out to one
+ of them, as she suddenly started to life&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ "Hold! are you mad? you damned confounded dog!
+ I am to rise and speak the epilogue."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Before the year 1667 ended, she had several times visited his majesty at
+ Whitehall. The king was now no less assured of her charms as a woman, than
+ he had previously been convinced of her excellence as an actress. In due
+ time, her intimacy with the monarch resulted in the birth of two sons; the
+ elder of which was created Duke of St. Albans, from whom is descended the
+ family now bearing that title: the second died young and unmarried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through influence of these women, my Lady Castlemaine's power over the
+ king rapidly diminished, and at last ceased to exist; seeing which, as
+ Burnet says, "She abandoned herself to great disorders; one of which by
+ the artifice of the Duke of Buckingham was discovered by the king in
+ person, the party concerned leaping out of the window." The gallant to
+ whom the worthy bishop refers was John Churchill, afterwards the great
+ Duke of Marlborough, at this time a handsome stripling of eighteen
+ summers. In his office as page to the Duke of York, he frequently came
+ under notice of her ladyship, who, pleased with the charms of his boyish
+ face and graceful figure, intimated his love would not prove unacceptable
+ to her. Accordingly he promptly made love to the countess, who, in the
+ first fervour of her affection, presented him with five thousand pounds.
+ With this sum he purchased a life annuity of five hundred pounds, which,
+ as Lord Chesterfield writes, "became the foundation of his subsequent
+ fortune." Nor did her generosity end here: at a cost of six thousand
+ crowns she obtained for him the post of groom of the bedchamber to the
+ Duke of York, and was instrumental in subsequently forwarding his
+ advancements in the army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My Lady Castlemaine was by no means inclined to spend her days in misery
+ because the royal favour was no longer vouchsafed her; and therefore, by
+ way of satisfying her desires for revenge, conducted intrigues not only
+ with John Churchill and Harry Jermyn, but likewise with one Jacob Hall, a
+ noted acrobat. This man was not only gifted with strength and agility, but
+ likewise with grace and beauty: so that, as Granger tells us, "The ladies
+ regarded him as a due composition of Hercules and Adonis." His dancing on
+ the tight rope at Bartholomew Fair was "a thing worth seeing and mightily
+ followed;" whilst his deeds of daring at Southwark Fair were no less
+ subjects of admiration and wonder. The countess was so charmed by the
+ performance of this athlete in public, that she became desirous of
+ conversation with him in private; and he was accordingly introduced to her
+ by Beck Marshall, the player. The countess found his society so
+ entertaining that she frequently visited him, a compliment he courteously
+ returned. Moreover, she allowed him a yearly salary, and openly showed her
+ admiration for him by having their portraits painted in one picture: in
+ which she is represented playing a fiddle, whilst he leans over her,
+ touching the strings of a guitar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her amours in general, and her intimacy with the rope-dancer in
+ particular, becoming common talk of the town, his majesty became incensed;
+ and it grieved him the more that one who dwelt in his palace, and was yet
+ under his protection, should divide her favours between a king and a
+ mountebank. Accordingly bitter feuds arose between her and the monarch,
+ when words of hatred, scorn, and defiance were freely exchanged. His
+ majesty upbraiding her with a love for the rope-dancer, she replied with
+ much spirit, "it very ill became him to throw out such reproaches against
+ her: that he had never ceased quarrelling unjustly with her, ever since he
+ had betrayed his own mean low inclinations: that to gratify such a
+ depraved taste as his, he wanted the pitiful strolling actresses whom he
+ had lately introduced into their society." Then came fresh threats from
+ the lips of the fury, followed by passionate storms of tears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king, who loved ease greatly, and valued peace exceedingly, became
+ desirous of avoiding such harrowing scenes. Accordingly, he resolved to
+ enter into a treaty with his late mistress, by which he would consent to
+ grant her such concessions as she desired, providing she promised to
+ discontinue her intrigues with objectionable persons, and leave him to
+ pursue his ways without reproach. By mutual consent, his majesty and the
+ countess selected the Chevalier de Grammont to conduct this delicate
+ business; he being one in whose tact and judgment they had implicit
+ confidence. After various consultations and due consideration, it was
+ agreed the countess should abandon her amours with Henry Jermyn and Jacob
+ Hall, rail no more against Moll Davis or Nell Gwynn, or any other of his
+ majesty's favourites, in consideration for which Charles would create her
+ a duchess, and give her an additional pension in order to support her
+ fresh honours with becoming dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And as the king found her residence in Whitehall no longer necessary to
+ his happiness, Berkshire House was purchased for her as a suitable
+ dwelling This great mansion, situated at the south-west corner of St.
+ James's Street, facing St. James's Palace, was surrounded by pleasant
+ gardens devised in the Dutch style, and was in every way a habitation
+ suited for a prince. This handsome gift was followed by a grant of the
+ revenues of the Post Office, amounting to four thousand seven hundred
+ pounds a year, which was at first paid her in weekly instalments. On the
+ 3rd of August, 1670, Barbara, Countess of Castlemaine, was created
+ Baroness Nonsuch, of Nonsuch Park, Surrey; Countess of Southampton; and
+ Duchess of Cleveland in the peerage of England. The reasons for crowding
+ these honours thick upon her were, as the patent stated, "in consideration
+ of her noble descent, her father's death in the service of the crown, and
+ by reason of her personal virtues."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor did his majesty's extravagant favours to her end here. She was now, as
+ Mr. Povy told his friend Pepys, "in a higher command over the king than
+ ever&mdash;not as a mistress, for she scorns him, but as a tyrant, to
+ command him." In consequence of this power, she was, two months after her
+ creation as duchess, presented by the monarch with the favourite hunting
+ seat of Henry VIII., the magnificent palace and great park of Nonsuch, in
+ the parishes of Cheam and Malden, in the county of Surrey. And yet a year
+ later, she received fresh proofs of his royal munificence by the gift of
+ "the manor, hundred, and advowson of Woking, county Surrey; the manor and
+ advowson of Chobham, the hundred of Blackheath and Wootton, the manor of
+ Bagshot (except the park, site of the manor and manor-house, and the
+ Bailiwick, and the office of the Bailiwick, called Surrey Bailiwick,
+ otherwise Bagshot Bailiwick), and the advowson of Bisley, all in the same
+ county."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her wealth, the more notable at a time when the king was in debt, and the
+ nation impoverished from expenditure necessary to warfare, was enormous.
+ Andrew Marvell, writing in August, 1671, states: "Lord St. John, Sir R.
+ Howard, Sir John Bennet, and Sir W. Bicknell, the brewer, have farmed the
+ customs. They have signed and sealed ten thousand pounds a year more to
+ the Duchess of Cleveland; who has likewise near ten thousand pounds a year
+ out of the new farm of the country excise of Beer and Ale; five thousand
+ pounds a year out of the Post Office; and they say, the reversion of all
+ the King's Leases, the reversion of places all in the Custom House, the
+ green wax, and indeed what not? All promotions spiritual and temporal pass
+ under her cognizance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Louise de Querouaille.&mdash;The Triple Alliance.&mdash;Louise is created Duchess
+ of Portsmouth.&mdash;Her grace and the impudent comedian.&mdash;Madam Ellen moves
+ in society.&mdash;The young Duke of St. Albans.&mdash;Strange story of the
+ Duchess of Mazarine.&mdash;Entertaining the wits at Chelsea.&mdash;Luxurious
+ suppers.&mdash;Profligacy and wit.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Duchess of Cleveland having shared the fate common to court
+ favourites, her place in the royal affections was speedily filled by a
+ mistress whose influence was even more baneful to the king, and more
+ pernicious to the nation. This woman was Louise de Querouaille, the
+ descendant of a noble family in Lower Brittany. At an early age she had
+ been appointed maid of honour to Henrietta, youngest sister of Charles
+ II., soon after the marriage of that princess, in 1661, with the Duke of
+ Orleans, brother to Louis XIV. Fate decreed that Mademoiselle de
+ Querouaille should be brought into England by means of a political
+ movement; love ordained she should reign mistress of the king's
+ affections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened in January, 1668, that a Triple Alliance had been signed at
+ the Hague, which engaged England, Sweden, and the United Provinces to join
+ in defending Spain against the power of France. A secret treaty in this
+ agreement furthermore bound the allies to check the ambition of Louis
+ XIV., and, if possible, reduce his encroaching sway. That Charles II.
+ should enter into such an alliance was galling to the French monarch, who
+ resolved to detach his kinsman from the compact, and bind him to the
+ interests of France. To effect this desired purpose, which he knew would
+ prove objectionable to the British nation, Louis employed Henrietta,
+ Duchess of Orleans, to visit England on pretext of pleasure and affection,
+ and secretly persuade and bribe her brother to the measures required.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young duchess, though an English princess, had at heart the interests
+ of the country in which she had been reared, and which on her marriage she
+ had adopted as her own. She therefore gladly undertook this mission,
+ confident of her success from the fact that of all his family she had ever
+ been the most tenderly beloved by Charles. Therefore she set out from
+ France, and in the month of May, 1670, arrived at Dover, to which port the
+ king, Queen, and court hastened, that they might greet and entertain her.
+ For full ten days in this merry month, high revelry was held at Dover,
+ during which time Henrietta skilfully and secretly effected the object of
+ her visit. And her delight was now the greater, inasmuch as one item which
+ this agreement entrusted her to make, engaged that Charles would, as soon
+ as he could with safety, follow the example of his brother the Duke of
+ York, and become a Catholic. In carrying out this purpose Louis promised
+ him substantial aid and sure protection. Likewise, it may be mentioned,
+ did the French king engrage to grant him a subsidy equal to a million a
+ year, if Charles joined him in an attack on Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prospect of his sister's return filled the king with sorrow, which
+ increased as the term of her visit drew to an end. "He wept when he parted
+ with her," wrote Monsieur Colbert, the French ambassador, who
+ significantly adds, "whatever favour she asked of him was granted."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Louis knowing the weakness of the English monarch's character, and
+ aware of his susceptibility to female loveliness, had despatched
+ Mademoiselle de Querouaille in the train of Henrietta. Satisfied that
+ Charles could not resist her charms, the French monarch had instructed
+ this accomplished woman, who was trusted in his councils, to accept the
+ royal love, which it was surmised would be proffered her; so that by the
+ influence which she would consequently obtain, she might hold him to the
+ promises he might make the Duchess of Orleans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As had been anticipated, the king became enamoured of this charming woman,
+ who, before departing with the princess, faithfully promised to return and
+ become his mistress. In his desire to possess her the merry monarch was
+ upheld by his grace of Buckingham, who, continuing in enmity with the
+ Duchess of Cleveland, resolved to prevent her regaining influence over the
+ king by adding the beautiful Frenchwoman to the number of his mistresses.
+ He therefore told Charles, in the sarcastic manner it was occasionally his
+ wont to use, "it was a decent piece of tenderness for his sister to take
+ care of some of her servants;" whilst on being sent into France, he
+ assured Louis "he could never reckon himself sure of the king, but by
+ giving him a mistress that should be true to his interests." But neither
+ king required urging to a resolution on which both had separately
+ determined; and soon Mademoiselle Querouaille was ready for her journey to
+ England. A yacht was therefore sent to Dieppe to convey her, and presently
+ she was received at Whitehall by the lord treasurer, and her arrival
+ celebrated in verse by Dryden. Moreover, that she might have apartments in
+ the palace, the king at once appointed her a maid of honour to her
+ majesty, this being the first of a series of favours she was subsequently
+ to receive. Evelyn, writing in the following October, says it was
+ universally reported a ceremonious espousal, devoid of the religious rite,
+ had taken place between his majesty and Mademoiselle Querouaille at Lord
+ Arlington's house at Euston. "I acknowledge," says this trustworthy
+ chronicler "she was for the most part in her undresse all day, and that
+ there was fondnesse and toying with that young wanton; nay, 'twas said I
+ was at the former ceremony, but 'tis utterly false; I neither saw nor
+ heard of any such thing whilst I was there, tho' I had ben in her chamber,
+ and all over that apartment late enough, and was myself observing all
+ passages with much curiosity."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She now became a central figure in the brilliant court of the merry
+ monarch, being loved by the king, flattered by the wits, and tolerated by
+ the queen, to whom&mdash;unlike the Duchess of Cleveland&mdash;she
+ generally paid the greatest respect. Her card tables were thronged by
+ courtiers eager to squander large sums for the honour of playing with the
+ reigning sultana; her suppers were attended by wits and gallants as merry
+ and amorous as those who had once crowded round my Lady Castlemaine in the
+ zenith of her power. No expense was too great for his majesty to lavish
+ upon her; no honour too high with which to reward her affection. The
+ authority just mentioned says her apartments at Whitehall were luxuriously
+ furnished "with ten times the richnesse and glory beyond the Queene's;
+ such massy pieces of plate, whole tables and stands of incredible value."
+ After a residence of little more than three years at court she was raised
+ by King Charles to the peerage as Baroness of Petersfield, Countess of
+ Farnham, and Duchess of Portsmouth; whilst the French king, as a mark of
+ appreciation for the services she rendered France, conferred upon her the
+ Duchy of Aubigny, in the province of Berri in France, to which he added
+ the title and dignity of Duchess and Peeress of France, with the revenues
+ of the territory of Aubigny. And two years later King Charles, prodigal of
+ the honours he conferred upon her, ennobled the son she had borne him in
+ 1672. The titles of the Duke of Richmond and Lennox having lately reverted
+ to the crown by the death of Frances Stuart's husband, who was last of his
+ line, the bastard son of the French mistress was created Duke of Richmond
+ and Earl of March in England, and Duke of Lennox and Earl of Darnley in
+ Scotland. To these proud titles the present head of the noble house of
+ Richmond and Lennox&mdash;by virtue of the grant made by Louis XIV. to his
+ ancestress likewise adds that of Duc d'Aubigny in the peerage of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though honoured by the king, and flattered by the court, the Duchess
+ of Portsmouth was far from enjoying uninterrupted happiness; inasmuch as
+ her peace was frequently disturbed by jealousy. The principal cause of her
+ uneasiness during the first five years of her reign was the king's
+ continued infatuation for Nell Gwynn; now, by reason of the elevated
+ position she enjoyed, styled Madam Ellen. This "impudent comedian," as
+ Evelyn calls her, was treated by his majesty with, extreme indulgence and
+ royal liberality. In proof of the latter statement, it may be mentioned
+ that in less than four years from the date of her first becoming his
+ mistress, he had wantonly lavished sixty thousand pounds upon her, as
+ Burnet affirms. Moreover, he had purchased as a town mansion for her "the
+ first good house on the left-hand side of St. James's Square, entering
+ Pall Mall," now the site of the Army and Navy Club; had given her likewise
+ a residence situated close by the Castle at Windsor; and a summer villa
+ located in what was then the charming village of Chelsea. To such
+ substantial gifts as these he added the honour of an appointment at court:
+ when the merry player was made one of the ladies of the privy chamber to
+ the queen. Samuel Pegg states this fact, not generally known, and assures
+ us he discovered it "from the book in the lord chamberlain's office."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From her position as the king's mistress, Madam Ellen moved on terms of
+ perfect equality with the Duchess of Portsmouth's friends&mdash;supping
+ with my Lady Orrery, visiting my Lord Cavendish, and establishing a
+ friendship with the gay Duchess of Norfolk. This was a source of deep
+ vexation to the haughty Frenchwoman; but Nell Gwynn's familiarity with the
+ king was a cause of even greater mortification. Sir George Etherege
+ records in verse when the monarch was "dumpish" Nell would "chuck the
+ royal chin;" and it is stated that, mindful of her former conquests over
+ Charles Hart and Charles Lord Buckley, it was her habit to playfully style
+ his majesty "Charles the Third." Her wilfulness, wit, and beauty enabled
+ her to maintain such a strong hold upon the king's heart, that he shared
+ his time equally between her and the Duchess of Portsmouth. Indignant that
+ a woman from the playhouse should receive such evidences of the royal
+ affection, her grace lost no opportunity of insulting Nell, who responded
+ by mimicry and grimaces, which threw those who witnessed the comedy into
+ fits of laughter, and covered the wrathful duchess with confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though the light-hearted actress frequently treated disdain with
+ ridicule, she could occasionally analyze the respective positions held by
+ herself and the duchess with seriousness, Madame de Sevigne tells us, Nell
+ would reason in this manner: "This duchess pretends to be a person of
+ quality: she affirms she is related to the best families in France, and
+ when any person of distinction dies she puts herself in mourning. If she
+ be a lady of such quality, why does she demean herself to be a courtesan?
+ She ought to die with shame. As for me, it is my profession. I do not
+ pretend to anything better. The king entertains me, and I am constant to
+ him at present. He has a son by me; I contend that he ought to acknowledge
+ him&mdash;and I am well assured that he will, for he loves me as well as
+ the duchess."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To have her son ennobled, and by this means raise him to an equality with
+ the offspring of her grace, became the desire of Nell Gwynn's life. To her
+ request that this favour might be granted, the king had promised
+ compliance from time to time, but had as frequently postponed the
+ fulfilment of his word. At last, weary of beseeching him, she devised a
+ speech which she trusted might have the desired effect. Accordingly, when
+ the monarch came to see her one day, he found her in a pensive mood,
+ playing with her pretty boy; and the lad, being presently set upon his
+ feet, he promptly tottered down the room, whereon she cried out to him,
+ "Come here, you little bastard!" Hearing this word of evil import applied
+ to his son, the monarch begged she would not use the expression, "I am
+ sorry," said she regretfully, "but, alas, I have no other name to give
+ him!" His majesty took the hint, and soon after bestowed on him that of
+ Charles Beauclerk, and created him Baron of Heddington, in Oxon, and Earl
+ of Burford in the same county; and finally, when he had reached the age of
+ ten years, raised him to the dignity of Duke of St. Albans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a reign of five years in the court of the merry monarch, her Grace
+ of Portsmouth was destined to encounter a far more formidable rival than
+ Nell Gwynn, in the person of the Duchess of Mazarine. This lady, on her
+ arrival in England in 1675, possessed most of the charms which had
+ rendered her notable in youth. To the attraction they lent was added an
+ interest arising from her personal history, in which King Charles had once
+ figured, and to which fate had subsequently added many pages of romance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hortensia Mancini, afterwards Duchess of Mazarine, was descendant of a
+ noble Roman family, and niece of the great Julius Mazarine, cardinal of
+ the church, and prime minister of France. Her parents dying whilst she,
+ her sister and brother were young, they had been reared under the care of
+ his eminence. According to the memoirs of the duchess, the cardinal's
+ peace must have frequently been put to flight by his charges, whose
+ conduct, he declared, exhibited neither piety nor honour. Mindful of this,
+ he placed his nieces under the immediate supervision of Madame de Venelle,
+ who was directed to have the closest guard over them. A story related by
+ the duchess shows in what manner this lady's duty was carried out, and
+ what unexpected results attended it on one occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the court visited Lyons, in the year 1658, the cardinal's nieces and
+ their governess lodged in a commodious mansion in one of the public
+ squares. "Our chamber windows, which opened towards the market-place,"
+ writes Hortensia, "were low enough for one to get in with ease. Madame de
+ Venelle was so used to her trade of watching us, that she rose even in her
+ sleep to see what we were doing. One night, as my sister lay asleep with
+ her mouth open, Madame de Venelle, after her accustomed manner, coming,
+ asleep as she was, to grope in the dark, happened to thrust her finger
+ into her mouth so far that my sister, starting out of her sleep, made her
+ teeth almost meet in her finger. Judge you the amazement they both were in
+ to find themselves in this posture when they were thoroughly awake. My
+ sister was in a grievous fret. The story was told the king the next day,
+ and the court had the divertisement of laughing at it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the great minister's nieces were yet extremely young, Louis XIV.
+ fell passionately in love with the elder, Maria, and his marriage with her
+ was frustrated only by the united endeavours of the queen mother and the
+ cardinal. A proposal to raise Hortensia to the nominal dignity of queen
+ was soon after made on behalf of Charles II., who sought her as his bride.
+ But he being at the time an exile, banished from his kingdom, and with
+ little hope of regaining his throne, the offer was rejected by Cardinal
+ Mazarine as unworthy of his favourite niece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His eminence was, however, anxious to see her married, and accordingly
+ sought amongst the nobility of France a husband suitable to her merits and
+ equal to her condition, she being not only a beautiful woman but, through
+ his bounty, the richest heiress in Christendom. It happened the cardinal's
+ choice settled upon one who had fallen in love with Hortensia, and who had
+ declared, with amorous enthusiasm, that if he had but the happiness of
+ being married to her, it would not grieve him to die three months
+ afterwards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young noble was Armand Charles de la Porte, Duke de Meilleraye, who
+ had the sole recommendation of being one of the richest peers of France.
+ On condition that he and his heirs should assume the name of Mazarine and
+ arms of that house, the cardinal consented to his becoming the husband of
+ his niece. And the great minister's days rapidly approaching their end,
+ the ceremony was performed which made Hortensia, then at the age of
+ thirteen, Duchess of Mazarine. A few months later the great cardinal
+ expired, leaving her the sum of one million six hundred and twenty-five
+ thousand pounds sterling. Alas that she should have died in poverty, and
+ that her body should have been seized for debt!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarce had the first weeks of her married life passed away, when the young
+ wife found herself mated to one wholly unsuited to her character. She was
+ beautiful, witty, and frivolous; he jealous, dull, and morose. The
+ incompatibility of their dispositions became as discernible to him, as
+ they had become intolerable to her; and, as if to avenge the fate which
+ had united them, he lost no opportunity of thwarting her desires, by such
+ means striving to bend her lissom quality to the gnarled shape of his
+ unhappy nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With such a purpose in view no opportunity was neglected to curb her
+ pleasures or oppose her inclinations. He continually forced her to leave
+ Paris, and even when her condition required rest and care, compelled her
+ to accompany him on long and weary journeys, undertaken by him in
+ consequence of his diplomatic missions. If she received two successive
+ visits from one man, he was instantly forbidden the house. If she called
+ her carriage, the coachman received orders not to obey. If she betrayed a
+ preference for one maid more than another, the favourite was instantly
+ dismissed, moreover, the duchess was surrounded by spies, her movements
+ being rigorously watched, and invariably reported. Nor would the duke
+ vouchsafe an explanation to his young wife regarding the cause of this
+ severe treatment, but continued the even course of such conduct without
+ intermission or abatement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After displaying these eccentricities for some years, they suddenly
+ associated themselves with religion, when he became a fanatic. Her
+ condition was now less endurable than before; his whims more ludicrous and
+ exasperating. With solemnity he declared no one could in conscience visit
+ the theatre; that it was a sin to play blind man's buff, and a heinous
+ crime to retire to bed late. And presently, his fanaticism increasing, he
+ prohibited the woman who nursed his infant to suckle it on Fridays or
+ Saturdays; that instead of imbibing milk, it might, in its earliest life,
+ become accustomed to fasting and mortification of the flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young duchess grew hopeless of peace. All day her ears were beset by
+ harangues setting forth her wickedness, by exortations calling her to
+ repentance, and by descriptions of visions vouchsafed him. By night her
+ condition was rendered scarcely less miserable. "No sooner," says St.
+ Evremond, "were her eyes closed, than Monsieur Mazarine (who had the devil
+ always present in his black imagination) wakes his best beloved, to make
+ her partaker&mdash;you will never be able to guess of what&mdash;to make
+ her partaker of his nocturnal visions. Flambeaux are lighted, and search
+ is made everywhere; but no spectre does Madame Mazarine find, except that
+ which lay by her in the bed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The distresses to which she was subjected were increased by the knowledge
+ that her husband was squandering her vast fortune. In what manner the
+ money was spent she does not state. "If" she writes, "Monsieur Mazarine
+ had only taken delight in overwhelming me with sadness and grief, and in
+ exposing my health and my life to his most unreasonable caprice, and in
+ making me pass the best of my days in an unparalleled slavery, since
+ heaven had been pleased to make him my master, I should have endeavoured
+ to allay and qualify my misfortunes by my sighs and tears. But when I saw
+ that by his incredible dilapidations and profuseness, my son, who might
+ have been the richest gentleman in France, was in danger of being the
+ poorest, there was no resisting the force of nature; and motherly love
+ carried it over all other considerations of duty, or the moderation I
+ proposed to myself. I saw every day vast sums go away: moveables of
+ inestimable prices, offices, and all the rich remains of my uncle's
+ fortune, the fruits of his labours, and the rewards of his services. I saw
+ as much sold as came to three millions, before I took any public notice of
+ it; and I had hardly anything left me of value but my jewels, when
+ Monsieur Mazarine took occasion to seize upon them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She therefore sought the king's interference, but as the duke had interest
+ at court, she received but little satisfaction. Then commenced disputes,
+ which, after months of wrangling, ended by the duchess escaping in male
+ attire out of France, in company with a gay young cavalier, Monsieur de
+ Rohan. After various wanderings through Italy and many adventures in
+ Savoy, she determined on journeying to England. That her visit was not
+ without a political motive, we gather from St. Evremond; who, referring to
+ the ascendancy which the Duchess of Portsmouth had gained over his
+ majesty, and the uses she made of her power for the interests of France,
+ tells us, "The advocates for liberty, being excluded from posts and the
+ management of affairs, contrived several ways to free their country from
+ that infamous commerce; but finding them ineffectual, they at last
+ concluded that there was no other course to take than to work the Duchess
+ of Portsmouth out of the king's favour, by setting up against her a rival
+ who should be in their interest. The Duchess of Mazarine was thought very
+ fit for their purpose, for she outshined the other, both in wit and
+ beauty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles de St. Denis, Seigneur de St. Evremond, was a soldier,
+ philosopher, and courtier, who had distinguished himself by his bravery,
+ learning, and politeness. Having fallen under the displeasure of the
+ French court, he had, in the year 1662, sought refuge in England, where he
+ had been welcomed with the courtesy due to his rank, and the esteem which
+ befitted his merits. Settling in the capital, he mixed freely in the
+ companionship of wits, gallants, and courtiers who constituted its
+ society; and delighted with London as a residence, he determined on making
+ England his country by adoption. An old friend and fervent admirer of the
+ Duchess of Mazarine, he had received the news of her visit with joy, and
+ celebrated her arrival in verse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reputation of her loveliness and the history of her life having
+ preceded her, the court became anxious to behold her; the king, mindful of
+ the relationship he had once sought; with the duchess, grew impatient to
+ welcome her. After a few days' rest, necessary to remedy the fatigue of
+ her journey, she appeared at Whitehall. By reason of her beauty, now
+ ripened rather than impaired by time, and those graces which attracted the
+ more from the fascination they had formerly exercised, she at once gained
+ the susceptible heart of the monarch. St. Evremond tells us her person
+ "contained nothing that was not too lovely." In the "Character of the
+ Duchess of Mazarine," which he drew soon after her arrival in London, he
+ has presented a portrait of her worth examining not only for sake of the
+ object it paints, but for the quaint workmanship it contains. "An
+ ill-natured curiosity," he writes, "makes me scrutinize every feature in
+ her face, with a design either to meet there some shocking irregularity,
+ or some disgusting disagreeableness. But how unluckily do I succeed in my
+ design. Every feature about her has a particular beauty, that does not in
+ the least yield to that of her eyes, which, by the consent of all the
+ world, are the finest in the universe. One thing there is that entirely
+ confounds me: her teeth, her lips, her mouth, and all the graces that
+ attend it, are lost amongst the great variety of beauties in her face and
+ what is but indifferent in her, will not suffer us to consider what is
+ most remarkable in others. The malice of my curiosity does not stop here.
+ I proceed to spy out some defect in her shape; and I find I know not what
+ graces of nature so happily and so liberally scattered in her person, that
+ the genteelness of others only seems to be constraint and affectation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king&mdash;to whom the presence of a beautiful woman was as sunshine
+ to the earth&mdash;at once offered her his affections, the gallants
+ tendered their homage, the ladies of the court volunteered the flattery
+ embodied in imitation. And by way of practically proving his admiration,
+ his majesty graciously allotted her a pension of four thousand pounds a
+ year, with apartments in St. James's Palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sovereignty which the Duchess of Portsmouth had held for five years
+ over the monarch's heart was now in danger of downfall; and probably would
+ have ended, but for Madame Mazarine's indiscretions. It happened a few
+ months after her arrival in London, the Prince of Monaco visited the
+ capital. Young in years, handsome in person, and extravagant in
+ expenditure, he dazzled the fairest women at court; none of whom had so
+ much power to please him in all as the Duchess of Mazarine.
+ Notwithstanding the king's generosity, she accepted the prince's
+ admiration; and resolved to risk the influence she had gained, that she
+ might freely love where she pleased. Her entertainment of a passion, as
+ sudden in development as fervid in intensity, enraged the king; but his
+ fury served only to increase her infatuation, seeing which, his majesty
+ suspended payment of her pension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gay Prince of Monaco in due time ending his visit to London, and
+ leaving the Duchess of Mazarine behind him, she, through the interposition
+ of her friends, obtained his majesty's pardon, was received into favour,
+ and again allowed her pension.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She now ruled, not only mistress of the king's heart, but queen of a
+ brilliant circle of wits and men of parts, whose delight it became to heed
+ the epigrams and eccentricities which fell from her lips. Her rooms at St.
+ James's, and her house in Chelsea, became the rendezvous of the most
+ polite and brilliant society in England. In the afternoons, seated amongst
+ her monkeys, dogs, parrots, and pets, she discoursed on philosophy, love,
+ religion, politics, and plays; whilst at night her saloons were thrown
+ open to such as delighted in gambling. Then the duchess, seated at the
+ head of the table, her dark eyes flashing with excitement, her red lips
+ parted in expectation, followed the fortunes of the night with anxiety:
+ all compliments being suspended and all fine speeches withheld the while,
+ nought being heard but the rustle of cards and the chink of gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dainty and luxurious suppers followed, when rare wines flowed, and wit
+ long suppressed found joyous vent. Here sat Charles beside his beautiful
+ mistress, happy in the enjoyment of the present, careless of the needs of
+ his people; and close beside him my Lord of Buckingham, watchful of his
+ majesty's face, hatching dark plots whilst he turned deft compliments.
+ There likewise were my Lord Dorset, the easiest and wittiest man living;
+ Sir Charles Sedley, one learned in intrigue; Baptist May, the monarch's
+ favourite; Tom Killigrew who jested on life's follies whilst he enjoyed
+ them; the Countess of Shrewsbury, beautiful and amorous; and Madam Ellen,
+ who was ready to mimic or sing, dance or act, for his majesty's diversion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so, whilst a new day stole upon the world without, tapers burned low
+ within the duchess's apartments; and the king, his mistress, and a brave
+ and gallant company ate, drank, and made merry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A storm threatens the kingdom.&mdash;The Duke of York is touched in his
+ conscience.&mdash;His interview with Father Simons.&mdash;The king declares his
+ mind.&mdash;The Duchess of York becomes a catholic.&mdash;The circumstances of her
+ death.&mdash;The Test Act introduced.&mdash;Agitation of the nation.&mdash;The Duke
+ of York marries again.&mdash;Lord Shaftesbury's schemes.&mdash;The Duke of
+ Monmouth.&mdash;William of Orange and the Princess Mary.&mdash;Their marriage and
+ departure from England.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whilst the surface life of the merry monarch sped onward in its careless
+ course, watchful eyes took heed of potent signs boding storms and strife.
+ The storm which shook the kingdom to its centre came anon; the strife
+ which dethroned a monarch was reserved for the succeeding reign. These
+ were not effected by the king's profligacy, indolence, or extravagance,
+ but because of a change in the religious belief of the heir-apparent to
+ the crown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cloud, no bigger than a man's hand, which presently spread and
+ overcast the political horizon, was first observed towards the beginning
+ of the year 1669. The Rev. J. S. Clarke, historiographer to George III.,
+ chaplain to the royal household, and librarian to the Prince Regent, in
+ his "Life of James II., collected out of Memoirs writ of his own hand,"
+ tells us that about this time the Duke of York "was sensibly touched in
+ his conscience, and began to think seriously of his salvation."
+ Accordingly, the historian states, "he sent for one Father Simons, a
+ Jesuit, who had the reputation of a very learned man, to discourse with
+ him upon that subject; and when he came, he told him the good intentions
+ he had of being a catholic, and treated with him concerning his being
+ reconciled to the church. After much discourse about the matter, the
+ Jesuit very sincerely told him, that unless he would quit the communion of
+ the Church of England, he could not be received into the Catholic Church.
+ The duke then said he thought it might be done by a dispensation from the
+ pope, alleging the singularity of his case, and the advantage it might
+ bring to the catholic religion in general, and in particular to those of
+ it in England, if he might have such dispensation for outwardly appearing
+ a protestant, at least till he could own himself publicly to be a
+ catholic, with more security to his own person and advantage to them. But
+ the father insisted that even the pope himself had not the power to grant
+ it, for it was an unalterable doctrine of the Catholic Church, not to do
+ ill that good might follow. What this Jesuit thus said was afterwards
+ confirmed to the duke by the pope himself, to whom he wrote upon the same
+ subject. Till this time his royal highness believed (as it is commonly
+ believed, or at least said by the Church of England doctors) that
+ dispensations in any such cases are by the pope easily granted; but Father
+ Simons's words, and the letter of his holiness, made the duke think it
+ high time to use all the endeavours he could, to be at liberty to declare
+ himself, and not to live in so unsafe and so uneasy a condition."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Inasmuch as what immediately followed touches a point of great delicacy
+ and vast importance, the words of the historian, mainly taken from the
+ "Stuart Papers," are best given here, "His royal highness well-knowing
+ that the king was of the same mind, and that his majesty had opened
+ himself upon it to Lord Arundel of Wardour, Lord Arlington, and Sir Thomas
+ Clifford, took an occasion to discourse with him upon that subject about
+ the same time, and found him resolved as to his being a catholic, and that
+ he intended to have a private meeting with those persons above named at
+ the duke's closet, to advise with them about the ways and methods fit to
+ be taken for advancing the catholic religion in his dominions, being
+ resolved not to live any longer in the constraint he was under. The
+ meeting was on the 25th of January. When they were met according to the
+ king's appointment, he declared his mind to them on the matter of
+ religion, and said how uneasy it was to him not to profess the faith he
+ believed; and that he had called them together to have their advice about
+ the ways and methods fittest to be taken for the settling of the catholic
+ religion in his kingdoms, and to consider of the time most proper to
+ declare himself, telling them withal that no time ought to be lost; that
+ he was to expect to meet with many and great difficulties in bringing it
+ about, and that he chose rather to undertake it now, when he and his
+ brother were in their full strength and able to undergo any fatigue, than
+ to delay it till they were grown older and less fit to go through with so
+ great a design. This he spoke with great earnestness, and even with tears
+ in his eyes; and added, that they were to go about it as wise men and good
+ catholics ought to do. The consultation lasted long, and the result was,
+ that there was no better way for doing this work than to do it in
+ conjunction with France, and with the assistance of his Most Christian
+ majesty." Accordingly the secret treaty with France was entered into, as
+ already mentioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No further movement towards professing the catholic religion was made by
+ the king or his brother for some time. The tendencies of the latter
+ becoming suspected, his actions were observed with vigilance, when it was
+ noted, that although he attended service as usual with the king, he no
+ longer received the sacrament. It was also remarked the Duchess of York,
+ whose custom it had been to communicate once a month, soon followed his
+ example. Her neglect of this duty was considered the more conspicuous as
+ she had been bred a staunch protestant, and ever appeared zealous in her
+ support of that religion. Moreover, it was noted that, from the beginning
+ of the year 1670, she was wont to defend the catholic faith from such
+ errors as it had been charged withal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These matters becoming subjects of conversation at court soon reached the
+ ears of Bishop Morley, who had acted as her confessor since her twelfth
+ year, confession being then much practised in the English Church. Thereon
+ he hastened to her, and spoke at length of the inferences which were drawn
+ from her neglect of receiving the sacrament, in answer to which she
+ pleaded business and ill-health as sufficient excuses. But he, suspecting
+ other causes, gave her advice, and requested she would send for him in
+ case doubts arose in her mind concerning the faith she professed. Being
+ now free from all uncertainties, she readily promised compliance with his
+ desire, and added, "No priest had ever taken the confidence to speak to
+ her on those matters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact that she no longer communicated becoming more noticed as time
+ passed, the king spoke to his brother concerning the omission, when the
+ duke told him she had become a catholic. Hearing this, Charles requested
+ him to keep her change of faith a secret, which was accordingly done, none
+ being aware of the act but Father Hunt, a Franciscan friar, Lady Cranmer,
+ one of her women of the bedchamber, and Mr. Dupuy, servant to the duke. In
+ a paper she drew up relative to her adoption of the catholic religion,
+ preserved in the fifth volume of the "Harleian Miscellany," she professes
+ being one of the greatest enemies that faith ever had. She likewise
+ declares no man or woman had said anything, or used the least persuasion
+ to make her change her religion. That had been effected, she adds, by a
+ perusal of Dr. Heylin's "History of the Reformation;" after which she
+ spoke severally to Dr. Sheldon, Archbishop of Canterbury and Dr.
+ Blandford, Bishop of Worcester, who told her "there were many things in
+ the Roman Church which it was very much to be wished they had kept&mdash;as
+ confession, which was no doubt commanded by God; and praying for the dead,
+ which was one of the ancient things in Christianity&mdash;that for their
+ parts they did it daily, though they would not own to it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The duchess pondered over what she had read and heard, and being a woman
+ accustomed to judge for herself, and act upon her decisions, she, in the
+ month of August, 1670 became a member of the Catholic Church, in which
+ communion she died seven months later. For fifteen months previous to her
+ demise she had been suffering from a complication of diseases, with which
+ the medical skill of that day was unable to cope, and these accumulating,
+ in March, 1671, ended her days. The "Stuart Papers" furnish an interesting
+ account of her death. Seeing the hour was at hand which would sever her
+ from all earthly ties, she besought her husband not to leave her whilst
+ life remained. She likewise requested that in case Dr. Blandford or any
+ other of the bishops should come to visit her, he would tell them she had
+ become a member of the Catholic Church; but if they insisted on seeing her
+ she was satisfied to admit them, providing they would not distress her by
+ arguments or controversy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after she had expressed these desires, Bishop Blandford arrived, and
+ begged permission to see her, hearing which the duke went into the
+ drawing-room, where his lordship waited, and delivered the message with
+ which the duchess had charged him. Thereon the bishop said, "he made no
+ doubt but that she would do well since she was fully convinced, and had
+ not changed out of any worldly end." He then went into the room, and
+ having made "a short Christian exhortation suitable to the condition she
+ was in," took his departure. Presently the queen came and sat by the dying
+ woman, with whom she had borne many wrongs in common; and later on, the
+ Franciscan friar being admitted, the duchess "received all the last
+ sacraments of the Catholick Church, and dyed with great devotion and
+ resignation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though no mystery was now made concerning the faith in which she died, the
+ duke, from motives of prudence, continued to preserve the secret of his
+ having embraced the same religion. He still publicly attended service on
+ Sundays with the king, but continued to absent himself from communion. At
+ last, the Christmastide of the year 1672 being at hand, his majesty
+ besought Lord Arundel and Sir Thomas (now Lord) Clifford to persuade the
+ duke to take the sacrament with him, "and make him sensible of the
+ prejudice it would do to both of them should he forbear so to do, by
+ giving the world so much reason to believe he was a catholick." To this
+ request these honest gentlemen replied it would be difficult to move the
+ duke to his majesty's desires; but even if they succeeded, it would fail
+ to convince the world his royal highness was not a catholic. With these
+ answers Charles seemed satisfied; but again on Christmas Eve he urged Lord
+ Clifford to advise the duke to publicly communicate on the morrow. His
+ royal highness, not being so unscrupulous as the king, refused compliance
+ with his wishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following Easter he likewise refrained from communicating. Evelyn
+ tells us that "a most crowded auditorie" had assembled in the Chapel Royal
+ on this Sunday; possibly it had been drawn there to hear the eloquence of
+ Dr. Sparrow, Bishop of Exeter&mdash;probably to observe the movements of
+ the king's brother. "I staied to see," writes Evelyn, "whether, according
+ to costome, the Duke of York received the communion with the king; but he
+ did not, to the amazement of everybody. This being the second year he had
+ forborn and put it off, and within a day of the parliament sitting, who
+ had lately made so severe an act against ye increase of poperie, gave
+ exceeding griefe and scandal to the whole nation, that the heyre of it,
+ and ye sonn of a martyr for ye Protestant religion, should apostatize.
+ What the consequence of this will be God only knows, and wise men dread."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the nation might no longer remain in uncertainty concerning the
+ change the duke was suspected to have made, a bill, commonly called the
+ "Test Act," was, at the instigation of Lord Shaftesbury, introduced into
+ the House of Commons, on its reassembling. In substance this set forth,
+ that all persons holding office, or place of trust, or profit, should take
+ the oaths of supremacy and allegiance in a public court; receive the
+ sacrament according to the Church of England in some parish church on the
+ Lord's Day; and deliver a certificate of having so received communion,
+ signed by the respective ministers and church-wardens, and proved by two
+ credible witnesses on oath. After prolonged debates upon this singular
+ bill, it was passed through both houses of parliament, and received a
+ reluctant consent from the king. [This act continued in force until the
+ reign of George IV.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great commotion followed the passing of this Act. Immediately the Duke
+ of York resigned his post of lord high admiral of England. Suspicion now
+ became certainty; he was truly a papist. His enemies were elated with
+ triumph, his friends dejected by regret. Before public feeling had time to
+ subside, it was thoroughly startled by the news that Lord Clifford, who
+ was supposed to be a staunch protestant, had delivered up his staff of
+ office as lord treasurer; and Lord Bellasis and Sir Thomas Strickland,
+ papists both, "though otherwise men of quality and ability," had
+ relinquished their places at court. The king was perplexed, the parliament
+ divided into factions, the nation disturbed. No man knew who might next
+ proclaim himself a papist. As days passed, excitement increased; for
+ hundreds who held positions in the army, or under the crown&mdash;many of
+ whom had fought for the king and his father&mdash;by tendering their
+ resignations, now proved themselves slaves of what a vigorous writer calls
+ the "Romish yoke: such a thing," he adds, "as cannot, but for want of a
+ name to express it, be called a religion."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Public agitation steadily rose. Evelyn tells us, "he dare not write all
+ the strange talk of the town." Distrust of the king, fear of his brother,
+ hatred of popery and papists, filled men's minds and blinded their reason
+ with prejudice. That the city had seven years ago been destroyed by fire,
+ in accordance with a scheme of the wicked Jesuits, was a belief which once
+ more revived: the story of the gunpowder plot was again detailed. Fearful
+ suspicions sprang up and held possession of the vulgar mind, that the
+ prosecutions suffered by protestants under Queen Mary might be repeated in
+ the reign of the present monarch, or of his brother. That heaven might
+ defend the country from being overrun by popery, the House of Commons
+ besought his majesty to order a day of fasting and humiliation. And by way
+ of adding fury to the gathering tempest, the bishops, Burnet states,
+ "charged the clergy to preach against popery, which alarmed the court as
+ well as the city, and the whole nation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king therefore complained to Dr. Sheldon, Archbishop of Canterbury,
+ that the discourse heard in every pulpit throughout the capital and the
+ kingdom was "calculated to inflame the people, and alienate them from him
+ and his government." Upon which Dr. Sheldon called the bishops together,
+ that he might consult with them as to what answer he had best make.
+ Whereon these wise men declared "since the king himself professed the
+ protestant religion, it would be a thing without a precedent that he
+ should forbid his clergy to preach in defence of a religion, while he
+ himself said he was of it." The next action which served to inflame public
+ prejudice against catholicism, was the marriage of the Duke of York to a
+ princess professing that faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon after the death of his wife, it was considered wise and well his
+ royal highness should marry again. Of the four sons and four daughters the
+ duchess had borne him, three sons and one daughter had died before their
+ mother, and the surviving son and another daughter quickly followed her to
+ the tomb; therefore, out of eight children but two survived, Mary and
+ Anne, at this time respectively aged nine and seven. It being desirable
+ there should be a male heir-presumptive to the crown, the king was anxious
+ his brother should take unto himself a second wife. And that a lady might
+ be found worthy of the exalted station to which such a union would raise
+ her, the Earl of Peterborough was sent incognito to report on the manners
+ and appearance of the princesses of the courts of Neuburg and of Modena.
+ Not being impressed by the merits of those belonging to the former, he
+ betook himself to the latter, where, seeing the young Princess d'Este,
+ then in her fifteenth year, he came to the conclusion no better choice
+ could be made on behalf of the duke than this fair lady. On communicating
+ this opinion to his royal highness and to his majesty, the king
+ commissioned him to demand the hand of the princess in marriage for his
+ brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Difficulties regarding this desired union now arose. The young lady,
+ having been bred in great simplicity and ignorance, had never heard of
+ such a country as England, or such a person as the Duke of York; and
+ therefore had no mind to adventure herself in a distant land, or wed a man
+ of whom she knew nought. Moreover, she had betrayed an inclination to
+ spend her days in the seclusion of a convent, and had no thought of
+ marriage. Her mother, the Duchess of Modena, then regent, by reason of her
+ husband's death and her son's minority, was anxious for so advantageous an
+ alliance. And being unable to gain her daughter's consent, she sought the
+ interference of the pope, who wrote to the young princess, that compliance
+ with her mother's request would "most conduce to the service of God and
+ the public good." On this, Mary Beatrice Eleonora, Princess d'Este,
+ daughter of the fourth Duke of Modena, consented to become Duchess of
+ York. Whereon the Earl of Peterborough made a public entry into Modena, as
+ ambassador extraordinary of Charles II.; and having agreed to all the
+ articles of marriage, wedded her by proxy for the royal duke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, news that the heir to the crown was about to wed a papist
+ spread with rapidity throughout the kingdom, carrying alarm in its course.
+ If sons were born of the union, they would, it was believed, undoubtedly
+ be reared in the religion of their parents, and England in time became
+ subject to a catholic king. The possibility of such a fate was to the
+ public mind fraught with horror; and the House of Commons, after some
+ angry debates on the subject, presented an address to the king, requesting
+ he would abandon this proposed marriage. To this he was not inclined to
+ listen, his honour being so far involved in the business; but
+ notwithstanding his unwillingness, his councillors urged him to this step,
+ and prayed he would stop the princess, then journeying through France on
+ her way to England. This so incensed him that he immediately prorogued
+ parliament, and freed himself from further interference on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 21st of November, 1673, the future duchess landed at Dover, where
+ the duke awaited her, attended by a scant retinue. For the recent
+ protestations, made in the House of Commons against the marriage, having
+ the effect of scaring the courtiers, few of the nobility, and but one of
+ the bishops, Dr. Crew of Oxford, ventured to accompany him, or greet his
+ bride. On the day of her arrival the marriage was celebrated, "according
+ to the usual form in cases of the like nature." The "Stuart Papers" give a
+ brief account of the ceremony. "The Duke and Duchess of York, with the
+ Duchess of Modena her mother, being together in a room where all the
+ company was present, as also my Lord Peterborough, the bishop asked the
+ Duchess of Modena and the Earl of Peterborough whether the said earl had
+ married the Duchess of York as proxy of the duke? which they both
+ affirming, the bishop then declared it was a lawful marriage."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This unpopular union served to strengthen the gathering storm; Protests
+ against popery were universally heard; an article in the marriage
+ settlement, which guaranteed the duchess a public chapel, was broken; and
+ the duke was advised by Lord Berkshire to retire into the country, "where
+ he might hunt and pray without offence to any or disquiet to himself."
+ This counsel he refused to heed. Until his majesty should command him to
+ the contrary, he said, he would always attend upon him, and do such
+ service as he thought his duty and the king's security required of him.
+ His enemies became more wrathful at this reply, more suspicious of popery,
+ and more fearful of his influence with the king, They therefore sought to
+ have him removed from his majesty's councils and presence by act of
+ parliament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Consequently, when both Houses assembled on the 7th of January, 1674, the
+ lords presented an address to the monarch, praying he would graciously
+ issue a proclamation, requiring all papists, or reputed papists, within
+ five miles of London, Westminster, or Southwark, to depart ten miles from
+ these respective cities, and not return during this session of Parliament.
+ A few days afterwards an act was introduced into the House of Commons
+ proposing a second test, impossible for catholics to accept, the refusal
+ of which would not only render them incapable of holding any office, civil
+ or military, or of sitting in either House of Parliament, but "of coming
+ within five miles of the court." This unjust bill, to which, if it passed
+ both houses, Charles dared not refuse assent, threw the court and country
+ into a state of renewed excitement. Knowing it was a blow levelled at the
+ duke, his friends gathered round him, determined to oppose it by might and
+ main; and after great exertions caused a clause to be inserted excepting
+ his royal highness from the test. This was ultimately carried by a
+ majority of two votes, which, says Clarke, "put the little Earl of
+ Shaftesbury so out of humour, that he said he did not care what became of
+ the bill, having that proviso in it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This noble earl, who was chief among the royal duke's enemies, was a
+ prominent figure in the political history of the time. Mr. Burnet tells us
+ his lordship's strength lay in the knowledge of England, and of all
+ considerable men. "He understood," says the bishop, "the size of their
+ understandings and their tempers; and he knew how to apply himself to them
+ so dexterously, that though by his changing sides so often it was very
+ visible how little he was to be depended on, yet he was to the last much
+ trusted by all the discontented party. He had no regard to truth or
+ justice." As rich in resources as he was poor in honour, he renewed a plan
+ for depriving the Duke of York from succession to the crown; which, though
+ it had failed when formerly attempted, he trusted might now succeed. This
+ was to declare the Duke of Monmouth the king's legitimate son and heir to
+ the throne of England, a scheme which the ambitious son of Lucy Walters
+ was eager to forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His majesty's affection for him had strengthened with time, and his
+ favours had been multiplied by years. On the death of the Duke of
+ Albemarle, Captain General of the Forces, Monmouth had been appointed to
+ that high office; and some time later had been made General of the Kingdom
+ of Scotland, posts of greatest importance. Relying on the monarch's love
+ and the people's admiration for this illegitimate scion of royalty, Lord
+ Shaftesbury hoped to place him on the throne. As the first step necessary
+ in this direction was to gain his majesty's avowal of a union with Lucy
+ Walters, he ventured on broaching the subject to the king; at which
+ Charles was so enraged that he declared, "much as he loved the Duke of
+ Monmouth, he had rather see him hanged at Tyburn than own him as his
+ legitimate son." There was, however, another man engaged in a like design
+ to the noble earl, who, if not less scrupulous, was more daring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was one Ross, a Scotsman, who had been made governor of the young
+ duke on his first coming into England, and who had since acted as his
+ friend and confidant. Now Ross, who had not failed to whisper ambitious
+ thoughts into his pupil's head, at this time sought Dr. Cosin, Bishop of
+ Durham, and according to the "Stuart Papers," told him "he might do a
+ great piece of service to the Church of England in keeping out popery, if
+ he would but sign a certificate of the king's marriage to the Duke of
+ Monmouth's mother, with whom that bishop was acquainted in Paris. Ross
+ also told the bishop, to make the thing more easy to him, that during his
+ life the certificate should not be produced or made use of." The same
+ papers state that, as a bishop's certificate is a legal proof of marriage,
+ Dr. Cosin's compliance would have been invaluable to the duke and his
+ friends. His lordship, however, rejected the proposition, and laid the
+ matter before the king, who expelled Ross from court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Horror of popery and fear of a papist sovereign increased with time, care
+ having been taken by my Lord Shaftesbury and his party that the public
+ mind, once inflamed, should be kept ignited. For this purpose he spread
+ reports abroad that the Irish were about to rise in rebellion, backed by
+ the French; and that the papists in London had entered into a vile
+ conspiracy to put their fellow citizens to the sword on the first
+ favourable opportunity. To give this latter statement a flavour of reality
+ he, assuming an air of fright, betook himself one night to the city, and
+ sought refuge in the house of a fanatic, in order, he said, that he might
+ escape the catholics, who had planned to cut his throat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tempest, dark and dangerous, was gathering fast, which the court felt
+ powerless to subdue. The king's assurance to parliament that "he would
+ endeavour to satisfy the world of his steadfastness for the security of
+ the protestant religion," had little avail in soothing the people. Many of
+ them suspected him to be a catholic at heart; others knew he had accepted
+ the bounty of a country feared and detested by the nation. Deeds, not
+ words, could alone dispel the clouds of prejudice which came between him
+ and his subjects; and accordingly he set about the performance of such
+ acts as might bring reconciliation in their train.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first of these was the confirmation, according to the Protestant
+ Church, of the Lady Mary, eldest daughter of the Duke of York, and after
+ him heir presumptive to the crown; the second and more important was the
+ marriage of that princess to William of Orange. This prince was son of the
+ king's eldest sister, and therefore grandson of Charles I. As a hero who,
+ by virtue of his statesmanship and indomitable courage, had rescued
+ Holland from the hateful power of France, he was regarded not only as the
+ saviour of his country, but as the protector of protestantism. Already a
+ large section of the English nation turned their eyes towards him as one
+ whom they might elect some day to weald the sceptre of Great Britain.
+ Subtle, ambitious, and determined, a silent student of humanity, a grave
+ observer of politics, a sagacious leader in warfare, he had likewise begun
+ to look forward towards the chances of succeeding his uncle in the
+ government of England&mdash;in hopes of which he had been strengthened by
+ the private overtures made him by Shaftesbury, and sustained by the public
+ prejudices exhibited against the Duke of York.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proposed union between him and the heiress presumptive to the crown
+ was regarded by the nation with satisfaction, and by the prince as an act
+ strongly favouring the realization of his desires for sovereignty. Cold
+ and grave in temperament, sickly and repulsive in appearance, blunt and
+ graceless in manner, he was by no means an ideal bridegroom for a fair
+ princess; but neither she nor her father had any choice given them in a
+ concern so important to the pacification of the nation. She, it was
+ whispered at court, had previously given her heart to a brave young
+ Scottish laird; and her father, it was known, had already taken an
+ instinctive dislike to the man destined to usurp his throne. In October,
+ 1677, the Prince of Orange came to England, ostensibly to consult with
+ King Charles regarding the establishment of peace between France and the
+ Confederates; but the chief motive of his visit was to promote his
+ marriage, which had some time before been proposed, and owing to political
+ causes had been coolly received by him. Now, however, his anxiety for the
+ union was made plain to the king, who quickly agreed to his desires.
+ "Nephew," said he to the sturdy Dutchman, "it is not good for man to be
+ alone, and I will give you a help meet for you; and so," continues Burnet,
+ "he told him he would bestow his niece on him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same afternoon the monarch informed his council that "the Prince of
+ Orange, desiring a more strict alliance with England by marriage with the
+ Lady Mary, he had consented to it, as a thing he looked on as very proper
+ to unite the family, and which he believed would be agreeable to his
+ people, and show them the care he had of religion, for which reason he
+ thought it the best alliance he could make." When his majesty had
+ concluded this speech, the Duke of York stepped forward, and declared his
+ consent to the marriage. He hoped "he had now given a sufficient testimony
+ of his right intentions for the public good, and that people would no more
+ say he designed altering the government in church or state; for whatever
+ his opinion on religion might be, all that he desired was, that men might
+ not be molested merely for conscience' sake."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The duke then dined at Whitehall with, the king, the Prince of Orange, and
+ a noble company; after which he returned to St. James's, where he then
+ resided. Dr. Edward Luke, at this time tutor to the Lady Mary, and
+ subsequently Archdeacon of Exeter, in his interesting manuscript diary,
+ informs us that on reaching the palace, the duke, with great tenderness
+ and fatherly affection, took his daughter aside, "and told her of the
+ marriage designed between her and the Prince of Orange; whereupon her
+ highness wept all that afternoon and the following day." Her tears had not
+ ceased to flow when, two days after the announcement of her marriage, Lord
+ Chancellor Finch, on behalf of the council, came to congratulate her; and
+ Lord Chief Justice Rainsford, on the part of the judges, complimented her
+ in extravagant terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This union, which the bride regarded with so much repugnance, was
+ appointed to take place on the 4th of November, that date being the
+ bridegroom's birthday, as likewise the anniversary of his mother's
+ nativity. Dr. Luke gives a quaint account of the ceremony. "At nine
+ o'clock at night," he writes, "the marriage was solemnized in her
+ highness's bedchamber. The king; who gave her away, was very pleasant all
+ the while; for he desired that the Bishop of London would make haste lest
+ his sister [the Duchess of York] should be delivered of a son, and so the
+ marriage be disappointed. And when the prince endowed her with all his
+ worldly goods [laying gold and silver on the book], he willed to put all
+ up in her pockett, for 'twas clear gains. At eleven o'clock they went to
+ bed, when his majesty came and drew the curtains, saying, 'Hey! St. George
+ for England!'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a time both court and town seemed to forget the trouble and strife
+ which beset them. Bonfires blazed in the streets, bells rang from church
+ towers, the populace cheered lustily; whilst at Whitehall there were many
+ brilliant entertainments. These terminated with a magnificent ball, held
+ on the 15th instant, the queen's birthday; at the conclusion of this
+ festivity the bride and bridegroom were to embark in their yacht, which
+ was to set sail next morning for Holland. For this ball the princess had
+ "attired herself very richly with all her jewels;" but her whole
+ appearance betrayed a sadness she could not suppress in the present, and
+ which the future did not promise to dispel. For already the bridegroom,
+ whom the maids of honour had dubbed the "Dutch monster" and "Caliban," had
+ commenced to reveal glimpses of his unhandsome character; "and the court
+ began to whisper of his sullennesse or clownishnesse, that he took no
+ notice of his princess at the playe and balle, nor came to see her at St.
+ James', the day preceding that designed for their departure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wind being easterly, they were detained in England until the 19th,
+ when, accompanied by the king, the Duke of York, and several persons of
+ quality, they went in barges from Whitehall to Greenwich. The princess was
+ sorely grieved, and wept unceasingly. When her tutor "kneeled down and
+ kissed her gown" at parting, she could not find words to speak, but turned
+ her back that she might hide her tears; and, later on, when the queen
+ "would have comforted her with the consideration of her own condition when
+ she came into England, and had never till then seen the king, her highness
+ replied, 'But, madam, you came into England; but I am going out of
+ England.'"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The threatened storm bursts.&mdash;History of Titus Oates and Dr. Tonge.&mdash;A
+ dark scheme concocted.&mdash;The king is warned of danger.&mdash;The narrative of
+ a horrid plot laid before the treasurer.&mdash;Forged letters.&mdash;Titus Oates
+ before the council.&mdash;His blunders.&mdash;A mysterious murder.&mdash;Terror of the
+ citizens.&mdash;Lord Shaftesbury's schemes.&mdash;Papists are banished from the
+ capital.&mdash;Catholic peers committed to the Tower.&mdash;Oates is encouraged.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The marriage of the Lady Mary, though agreeable to the public mind, by no
+ means served to distract it from the turmoil by which it was beset. Hatred
+ of catholicism, fear of the Duke of York, and distrust of the king,
+ disturbed the nation to its core. Rumours were now noised abroad, which
+ were not without foundation, that the monarch and his brother had renewed
+ the treaty with France, by which Louis engaged to send troops into England
+ to support Charles, when the latter saw fit to lay aside duplicity, and
+ proclaim himself a catholic. And, notwithstanding the rigorous Test Acts,
+ it was believed many high positions at court were held by those who were
+ papists at heart. Occasion was therefore ripe for the invention of a
+ monstrous fraud, the history of which has been transmitted under the title
+ of the Popish Plot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief contrivers of this imposture were Titus Oates and Dr. Tonge. The
+ first of these was son of a ribbon-weaver, who, catching the fanatical
+ spirit of the Cromwellian period, had ranted as an Anabaptist preacher.
+ Dissent, however, losing favour under the restoration, Oates, floating
+ with the current of the times, resolved to become a clergyman of the
+ Church of England, He therefore took orders at Cambridge, officiated as
+ curate in various parishes, and served as chaplain on board a man-of-war.
+ The time he laboured as spiritual shepherd to his respective flocks was
+ necessarily brief; for his grossly immoral practices becoming notable, he
+ was in every case ousted from his charge. The odium attached to his name
+ was moreover increased by the fact, that his evidence in two cases of
+ malicious prosecution had been proved false; for which he had been tried
+ as a perjurer. Deprived of his chaplaincy for a revolting act of
+ profligacy, driven from congregations he had scandalized, homeless and
+ destitute, he in an evil hour betook himself to Dr. Ezrael Tonge, to whom
+ he had long been known, and besought compassion and relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Rev, Dr. Tonge, rector of St. Michael's, Wood Street, was a confirmed
+ fanatic and political alarmist. For some years previous to this time, he
+ had published quarterly treatises dealing with such wicked designs of the
+ Jesuits as his heated brain devised. These he had printed and freely
+ circulated, in order, as he acknowledged, "to arouse and awaken his
+ majesty and the parliament" to a sense of danger. He had begun life as a
+ gardener, but left that honest occupation that he might cultivate flowers
+ of rhetoric for the benefit of Cromwell's soldiers. Like Titus Oates, he
+ had become suddenly converted to orthodox principles on return of the
+ king, and had, through interest, obtained the rectorship of St. Michael's.
+ Bishop Burnet considered him "a very mean divine, (who) seemed credulous
+ and simple, and was full of projects and notions."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another historian who lived in those days, the Rev. Laurence Eachard,
+ Archdeacon of Stowe, states Dr. Tonge was "a man of letters, and had a
+ prolific head filled with all the Romish plots and conspiracies since the
+ reformation." According to this author, Tonge took Oates into his house,
+ provided him with lodging, diet, and clothes; and when the latter
+ complained he knew not where to get bread, the rector told him "he would
+ put him in a way." After this, finding Oates a man of great ingenuity and
+ cunning, "he persuaded him," says Archdeacon Eachard, "to insinuate
+ himself among the papists, and get particular acquaintance with them;
+ which being effected, he let him understand that there had been several
+ plots in England to bring in popery, and that if he would go beyond sea
+ among the Jesuits, and strictly observe their ways, it was possible there
+ might be one at present; and if he could make that out, it would be his
+ preferment for ever; but, however, if he could get their names, and some
+ information from the papists, it would be very easy to rouse people with
+ the fears of popery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hungering for gold, and thirsting for notoriety, Oates quickly agreed to
+ the scheme laid before him. Accordingly he became acquainted with, and was
+ received into the Catholic Church by, Father Berry, a Jesuit, and in May,
+ 1677, was sent by the Jesuits to study in one of their seminaries,
+ situated in Valladolid, in Spain. Oates, however, though he had proved
+ himself an excellent actor, could not overcome his evil propensities, and
+ before seven months had passed, he was expelled from the monastery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Returning to England, he sought out Dr. Tonge, to whom he was unable to
+ recount the secret of a single plot. Confident, however, that wicked
+ schemes against the lives and properties of innocent protestants were
+ being concocted by wily Jesuits, the fanatical divine urged Oates to
+ present himself once more before them, bewail his misconduct, promise
+ amendment, and seek readmission to their midst. Following his advice,
+ Oates was again received by the Jesuits, and sent to their famous seminary
+ at St. Omer's; where, though he had reached the age of thirty years, he
+ was entered among the junior students. For six months he remained here,
+ until his vices becoming noted, he was turned away in disgrace. Again he
+ presented himself before the rector of St. Michael's, knowing as little of
+ popish plots as he did on his previous return. But Tonge, though
+ disappointed, was not disheartened; if no scheme existed, he would invent
+ one which should startle the public, and save the nation. Such proposals
+ as he made towards the accomplishment of this end were readily assented to
+ by Oates, in whose breast wounded pride and bitter hate rankled deep.
+ Therefore, after many consultations they resolved to draw up a "Narrative
+ of a Horrid Plot." This was repeatedly changed and enlarged, until
+ eventually it assumed the definite shape of a deposition, consisting of
+ forty-three distinct articles, written with great formality and care, and
+ embodying many shocking and criminal charges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The narrative declared that in April, 1677, the deponent was employed to
+ carry letters from the Jesuits in London to members of their order in
+ Spain; these he broke open on the journey, and discovered that certain
+ Jesuits had been sent into Scotland to encourage the presbyterians to
+ rebel. Arrived in Valladolid, he heard one Armstrong, in a sermon
+ delivered to students, charge his majesty with most foul and black-mouthed
+ scandals, and use such irreverent, base expressions as no good subjects
+ could repeat without horror. He then returned to England, and was soon
+ after sent to St. Omer with fresh letters, in which was mentioned a design
+ to stab or poison his majesty&mdash;Pere la Chaise, the French king's
+ confessor, having placed ten thousand pounds at the disposal of the
+ Jesuits that they might, by laying out such a sum, the more successfully
+ accomplish this deed. While abroad the deponent had read many letters,
+ relating to the execution of Charles II., the subverting of the present
+ government, and the establishment of the Romish religion. Returning again
+ to England, he became privy to a treaty with Sir George Wakeham, the
+ queen's physician, to poison the king; and likewise with an agreement to
+ shoot him, made between the Jesuits and two men, named Honest William and
+ Pickering. He had heard a Jesuit preach a sermon to twelve persons of
+ quality in disguise, in which he asserted "that protestants and other
+ heretical princes were IPSO FACTO deposed because such; and that it was as
+ lawful to destroy them as Oliver Cromwell or any other usurper." He also
+ became aware that the dreadful fire had been managed by Strange, the
+ provincial of the Jesuits, who employed eighty-six men in distributing
+ seven hundred fire-balls to destroy the city; and that notwithstanding his
+ vast expenses, he gained fourteen thousand pounds by plunder carried on
+ during the general confusion, a box of jewels, consisting of a thousand
+ carat weight of diamonds, being included in the robbery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The document containing these remarkable statements was finished in
+ August, 1678. It now remained to have it brought before the king or the
+ council. Tonge was resolved this should be done in a manner best
+ calculated to heighten the effect of their narrative; at the same time he
+ was careful to guard the fact that he and Oates had an intimate knowledge
+ of each other. Not knowing any one of interest at court, he sought out
+ Christopher Kirby, a man employed in the king's laboratory, of whom he had
+ some slight knowledge, and, pledging him to the strictest secrecy, showed
+ him the "Narrative of the Horrid Plot," and besought his help in bringing
+ it under the notice of his majesty in as private a manner as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This aid was freely promised; and next day, the date being the 13th of
+ August, when the monarch was about to take his usual airing in the park,
+ Kirby drew near, and in a mysterious tone bade his majesty take care, for
+ his enemies had a design against his life, which might be put into
+ execution at any moment. Startled by such words, the king asked him in
+ what manner was it intended his life should be taken; to which he replied,
+ "It might be by pistol; but that to give a more particular account of the
+ matter, required greater privacy." The monarch, who quickly recovered his
+ first surprise, resolved to take his usual exercise; and, subduing his
+ curiosity, he bade Kirby attend him on his return from the park, and tell
+ him what he knew of the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the time arrived, Kirby saw his majesty alone, and related to him in
+ brief that two men waited but an opportunity to shoot him; and Sir George
+ Wakeham had been hired to poison him; which news, he concluded, had been
+ imparted to him by a worthy man living close at hand, who would attend his
+ majesty's pleasure when that was manifested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bewildered by such intelligence, yet suspicious of its veracity, the king
+ ordered Kirby to summon his informant that evening by eight o'clock. When
+ that hour came his majesty repaired to the Red Room, and there met Dr.
+ Tonge, who delivered his narrative into his hands. The rector was
+ convinced the great moment he had so long awaited, in which he would
+ behold the monarch aroused to a sense of his danger, had arrived. He was
+ doomed to bitter disappointment. His majesty coolly took the narrative,
+ and without opening it, said it should be examined into. On this Tonge
+ begged it might be kept safe and secret, "lest the full discovery should
+ otherwise be prevented and his life endangered." The monarch replied that,
+ before starting with the court to-morrow for Windsor, he would place it in
+ the hands of one he could trust, and who would answer for its safety. He
+ then bade him attend on the Lord Treasurer Danby next morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In obedience to this command, Tonge waited on his lordship at the
+ appointed time, and by the character of his replies helped to develop his
+ story of the plot. When asked if the document he had given his majesty was
+ the original of the deponent, Tonge admitted it was in his own
+ handwriting. On this, Lord Danby expressed a desire to see the original,
+ and likewise become acquainted with its author. Nothing abashed, the
+ rector replied the manuscript was in his house, and accounted for its
+ possession by stating that, singularly enough, it had been thrust under
+ his door&mdash;he did not know by whom, but fancied it must be by one who,
+ some time before, had discussed with him on the subject of this
+ conspiracy. Whereon his lordship asked him if he knew the man, and was
+ answered he did not, but he had seen him lately two or three times in the
+ streets, and it was likely he should see him soon again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being next questioned as to whether he had any knowledge of Honest
+ William, or Pickering, the villains who sought the king's life, he
+ answered he had not. Immediately, however, he remembered it was their
+ habit to walk in St. James's Park, and said, if any man was appointed to
+ keep him company, he was almost certain he would have opportunities of
+ letting that person see these abominable wretches. Finally, Lord Danby
+ asked him if he knew where they dwelt, for it was his duty to have them
+ arrested at once; but of their abode Tonge was completely ignorant, though
+ he was hopeful he should speedily be able to obtain the required
+ information.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was therefore dismissed, somewhat to his satisfaction, being unprepared
+ for such particular examination; but in a couple of days he returned to
+ the charge, determined his tale should not be discredited for lack of
+ effrontery, On this occasion he said he had met the man he suspected of
+ being author of the document, who owned himself as such, and stated that
+ his name was Titus Oates, but requested Tonge would keep it a strict
+ secret, "because the papists would murder him if they knew what he was
+ doing." Moreover, Oates had given him a second paper full of fresh horrors
+ concerning this most foul plot. Taking this with him, the lord treasurer
+ hastened to Windsor, that he might consult the king, having first left a
+ servant with Tonge, in hopes the latter might catch sight of Honest
+ William and Pickering in their daily walk through the park, and have them
+ arrested. On Danby recounting Tonge's statements to the king, his majesty
+ was more convinced than before the narrative was wholly without
+ foundation, and refused to make it known to his council or the Duke of
+ York. Therefore the lord-treasurer, on conclusion of a brief visit, left
+ Windsor for his country residence, situated at Wimbledon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For some days no fresh disclosure was made concerning this horrid plot,
+ until late one night, when Dr. Tonge arrived in great haste at Lord
+ Danby's house, and informed him some of the intended regicides had
+ resolved on journeying to Windsor next morning, determined to assassinate
+ the king. He added, it was in his power to arrange that the earl's servant
+ should ride with them in their coach, or at least accompany them on
+ horseback, and so give due notice of their arrival, in order that they
+ might be timely arrested. Alarmed by this intelligence, Danby at once
+ hastened to Windsor, and informed the king of what had come to his
+ knowledge. Both endured great suspense that night, and next day their
+ excitement was raised to an inordinate pitch by seeing the earl's servant
+ ride towards the castle with all possible speed. When, however, the man
+ was brought into his majesty's presence, he merely delivered a message
+ from Dr. Tonge, stating the villains "had been prevented from taking their
+ intended journey that day, but they proposed riding to Windsor next day,
+ or within two days at farthest." Before that time had arrived, another
+ message came to say, "one of their horses being slipped in the shoulder,
+ their trip to Windsor was postponed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking these foolish excuses, as well as Dr. Tonge's prevaricating answers
+ and mysterious statements, into consideration, the king was now convinced
+ the "Narrative of a Horrid Plot" was an invention of a fanatic or a rogue.
+ He was, therefore; desirous of letting the subject drop into obscurity;
+ but Lord Danby, foreseeing in the sensation which its avowal would create,
+ a welcome cloud to screen the defects of his policy, which parliament
+ intended to denounce, urged his majesty to lay the matter before his privy
+ council. This advice the king refused to accept, saying, "he should alarm
+ all England, and put thoughts of killing him into people's heads, who had
+ no such ideas before." Somewhat disappointed, the lord treasurer returned
+ once more to Wimbledon, the king remaining at Windsor, and no further news
+ of the plot disturbed the even tenour of their lives for three days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of that time Dr. Tonge, now conscious of the false steps he had
+ taken, conceived a fresh scheme by which his story might obtain credence,
+ and he gain wealth and fame. Accordingly he wrote to Danby, informing him
+ a packet of letters, written by the Jesuits and concerning the plot,
+ would, on a certain date, be sent to Mr. Bedingfield, chaplain to the
+ Duchess of York. Such information was most acceptable to Danby at the
+ moment; he at once started for Windsor, and laid this fresh information
+ before the king. To his lordship's intense surprise, his majesty handed
+ him the letters. These, five in number, containing treasonable expressions
+ and references to the plot, had been some hours before handed by Mr.
+ Bedingfield to the Duke of York, saying, he "feared some ill was intended
+ him by the same packet, because the letters therein seemed to be of a
+ dangerous nature, and that he was sure they were not the handwriting of
+ the persons whose names were subscribed to the letters." On examination,
+ they were proved to be most flagrant forgeries. Written in a feigned hand,
+ and signed by different names, they were evidently the production of one
+ man; the same want of punctuation, style of expression, and peculiarities
+ of spelling being notable in all. The Duke of York, foreseeing malice was
+ meant by them, forcibly persuaded the king to place the epistles before
+ the privy council. Accordingly, they were handed to Sir William Jones,
+ attorney general, and Sir Robert Southwell, who stated, upon comparing
+ them with Dr. Tonge's narrative, they were convinced both were written by
+ the same hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Tonge and Oates, aware of the coldness and doubt with which his
+ majesty had received the "Narrative of the Horrid Plot," and ignorant of
+ the fact he had placed the letters before his privy council, resolved to
+ make their story public to the world. It therefore happened on the 6th of
+ September they presented themselves before Sir Edmondbury Godfrey, a
+ justice of the peace, in the parish of St. Martin's, who, not without
+ considerable persuasion, consented to receive a sworn testimony from Titus
+ Oates regarding the truth of his narrative, which had now grown from
+ forty-three to eighty-one articles. This action prevented further secrecy
+ concerning the so-called plot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days later the court returned to town for the winter, when the Duke
+ of York besought the privy council to investigate the strange charges made
+ in the declaration. Accordingly, on the 28th of the month, Tonge and Oates
+ were summoned before it, when the latter, making many additions to his
+ narrative, solemnly affirmed its truth. Aghast at so horrible a relation,
+ the council knew not what to credit. The evil reputation Oates had borne,
+ the baseness of character he revealed in detailing his actions as a spy,
+ the mysterious manner in which the fanatical Tonge accounted for his
+ possession of the document, tended to make many doubt; whilst others,
+ believing no man would have the hardihood to bring forward such charges
+ without being able to sustain them by proof, contended it was their duty
+ to sift them to the end. Believing if he had been entrusted with secret
+ letters and documents of importance, he would naturally retain some of
+ them in order to prove his intended charges, the council asked Oates to
+ produce them; but of these he had not one to show. Nor, he confessed,
+ could he then furnish proof of his words, but promised if he were provided
+ with a guard, and given officers and warrants, he would arrest certain
+ persons concerned in the plot, and seize secret documents such as none
+ could dispute. These being granted him, he immediately caused eight
+ Jesuits to be apprehended and imprisoned. Then he commenced a search for
+ treasonable letters, not only in their houses, but in the homes of such
+ catholics as were noted for their zeal. His investigations were awaited
+ with impatience; nor were they without furnishing some pretext for his
+ accusations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the first dwellings which Titus Oates investigated was that of
+ Edward Coleman. This gentleman, the son of an English divine, had early in
+ life embraced catholicity, for the propagation of which he thenceforth
+ became most zealous. Coming under notice of the court, he became the
+ confidant of the Duke of York, and by him was made secretary to the
+ duchess. A man of great mental activity, religious fervour, and
+ considerable ambition, he had, about four years previous to this time,
+ entered into a correspondence with the confessor of the French king and
+ other Jesuits, regarding the hopes he entertained of Charles II.
+ professing catholicity. Knowing him to be bold in his designs and
+ incautious in his actions, the duke had discharged him from his post as
+ secretary to the duchess, but had retained him in his dependence. This
+ latter circumstance, together with a suspicion of the confidence which had
+ existed between him and his royal highness, prompted Oates to have him
+ arrested, and his house searched. Coleman, having received notice of this
+ design, fled from his home, incautiously leaving behind him some old
+ letters and copies of communications which had passed between him and the
+ Jesuits. These were at once seized, and though not containing one
+ expression which could be construed as treasonable, were, from
+ expectations they set forth of seeing catholicity re-established in
+ England, considered by undiscerning judges, proofs of the statements made
+ by Oates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the strength of his discovery, Oates hastened to Sir Edmondbury
+ Godfrey, and swore false informations; becoming aware of which, Coleman,
+ conscious of his innocence, delivered himself up, in hopes of meeting a
+ justice never vouchsafed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Privy council now sat morning and evening, in order to examine Oates,
+ whose evidence proved untrustworthy and contradictory to a bewildering
+ degree. When it was pointed out to him the five letters, supposed to come
+ from men of education, contained ill-spelling, bad grammar, and other
+ faults, he, with much effrontery, declared it was a common artifice among
+ the Jesuits to write in that manner, in order to avoid recognition; but
+ inasmuch as real names were attached to the epistles, that argument was
+ not considered just. The subject was not mentioned again. When an agent
+ for these wicked men in Spain, he related, he had been admitted into the
+ presence of Don John, and had seen him counting out large sums of money,
+ with which he intended to reward Sir George Wakeham when he had poisoned
+ the king. Hearing this, his majesty inquired what kind of person Don John
+ was. Oates said he was tall, lean, and black; whereas the monarch knew him
+ to be small, stout, and fair. And on another occasion, when asked where he
+ had heard the French king's confessor hire an assassin to shoot Charles,
+ he replied, "At the Jesuits' monastery close by the Louvre;" at which the
+ king, losing patience with the impostor, cried out, "Tush, man! the
+ Jesuits have no house within a mile of the Louvre!" Presently Oates named
+ two catholic peers, Lord Arundel of Wardour and Lord Bellasis, as being
+ concerned in the plot, when the king again spoke to him, saying these
+ lords had served his father faithfully, and fought his wars bravely, and
+ unless proof were clear against them, he would not credit they sought him
+ ill. Then Oates, seeing he had gone too far, said they did not know of the
+ conspiracy, but it had been intended to acquaint them with it in good
+ time. Later on he swore falsely against them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the wildest sensation was caused by the revelations of this
+ "hellish plot and attempt to murder the king." The public mind, long
+ filled with hatred of papacy, was now inflamed to a degree of fury which
+ could only be quenched by the blood of many victims. To the general
+ sensation which obtained, a new terror was promptly added by the
+ occurrence of a supposed horrible and mysterious murder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the evening of Saturday, the 12th of October, Sir Edmondbury Godfrey
+ was missing from his home in the parish of St. Martin's. The worthy
+ magistrate was an easy going bachelor of portly appearance, much given to
+ quote legal opinions in his discourse, and to assert the majesty of the
+ law as represented in his person. He was alike respected for his zeal by
+ the protestants, and esteemed for his lenity by the catholics. Bishop
+ Burnet records the worthy knight "was not apt to search for priests or
+ mass-houses;" and Archdeacon Eachard affirms "he was well known to be a
+ favourer rather than a prosecutor of the papists." Accordingly, his
+ disappearance at first begot no evil suspicions; but as he did not return
+ on Monday, his servants became alarmed at the absence of a master whose
+ regularity was proverbial. His brothers were of opinion he was in debt,
+ and sought escape from his creditors; whilst his friends, after their
+ kind, were ready to name certain houses of doubtful repute in which they
+ were certain he had taken temporary lodgings. On his papers being
+ examined, it was found he had set his affairs in order, paid all his
+ debts, and destroyed a quantity of his letters and documents. It was then
+ remembered he had been occasionally susceptible to melancholia&mdash;a
+ disease he inherited from his father, who had perished by his own hand. It
+ was noted some days before that on which he was missed, he had appeared
+ listless and depressed. It was known the imprisonment of his friend
+ Coleman had weighed heavily on his spirits. A terrible fear now taking
+ possession of his relatives and friends, thorough search was made for him,
+ which proved vain until the Thursday following his disappearance, when he
+ was accidentally discovered lying in a ditch, a cloth knotted round his
+ neck, and a sword passed through his body, "at or near a place called
+ Primrose Hill, in the midway between London and Hampstead."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If he had been murdered, no motive appeared to account for the deed;
+ neither robbery nor revenge could have prompted it. His rings and money,
+ gloves and cane, were found on and near his body; and it was known he had
+ lived in peace with all men. Nor did an inquest lasting two days throw any
+ light upon the mystery. If it were proved he had died by his own hand, the
+ law of that day would not permit his brothers to inherit his property,
+ which was found to be considerable. It was therefore their interest to
+ ignore the fact that strangulation pointed to FELO DE SE, and to assume he
+ had been murdered. Accordingly they prohibited the surgeons from opening
+ the body, lest examination should falsify conclusions at which they
+ desired to arrive. A verdict was ultimately returned "that he was murdered
+ by certain persons unknown to the jurors, and that his death proceeded
+ from suffocation and strangling by a certain piece of linen cloth of no
+ value."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Occurring at such a moment, his death was at once attributed to the
+ papists, who, it was said, being incensed that the magistrate had received
+ the sworn testimonies of Oates, had sought this bloody revenge. Fear now
+ succeeded bewilderment; desires of vengeance sprang from depths of horror.
+ For two days the mangled remains of the poor knight were exposed to public
+ view, "and all that saw them went away inflamed." They were then interred
+ with all the pomp and state befitting one who had fallen a victim to
+ catholicism, a martyr to protestantism. The funeral procession, which took
+ its sad way through the principal thoroughfares from Bridewell to St.
+ Martin's-in-the-Fields, numbered seventy-two divines, and over twelve
+ hundred persons of quality and consideration. Arriving at the church, Dr.
+ Lloyd, a clergyman remarkable for his fine abhorrence of papists, ascended
+ the pulpit, where, protected by two men of great height and strength, he
+ delivered a discourse, pointing to the conclusion that Sir Edmondbury
+ Godfrey had been sacrificed to the catholic conspiracy, and instigating
+ his hearers to seek revenge. Sir Roger North tells us the crowd in and
+ about the church was prodigious, "and so heated, that anything called
+ papist, were it cat or dog, had probably gone to pieces in a moment. The
+ catholics all kept close in their houses and lodgings, thinking it a good
+ composition to be safe there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole city was terror-stricken. "Men's spirits were so sharpened,"
+ says Burnet, "that it was looked on as a very great happiness that the
+ people did not vent their fury upon the papists about the town." Tonge and
+ Oates went abroad protected by body guards, arresting hundreds of
+ catholics; cannon were mounted around Whitehall and St. James's; patrols
+ paraded the streets by day and night; the trained bands were ready to fall
+ in at a moment's notice; preparations were made for barricading the
+ principal thoroughfares; the city gates were kept closed so that admission
+ could be only had through the wickets; and the Houses of Parliament
+ demanded a guard should keep watch on the vaults over which they sat, lest
+ imitators of Guy Fawkes might blow them to pieces. Moreover, it was not
+ alone the safety of the multitude, but the protection of the individual
+ which was sought to be secured. In the dark confusion which general terror
+ produced, each man felt he might be singled out as the next victim of this
+ diabolical plot, and therefore devised means to guard his life from the
+ hands of murderous papists. North, in his "Examen," speaking of this
+ period, tells us: "There was much recommendation of silk armour, and the
+ prudence of being provided with it against the time the Protestants were
+ to be massacred. And, accordingly, there were abundance of those silken
+ back, breast, and headpots made and sold, that were pretended to be pistol
+ proof; in which any man dressed up was as safe as in a house, for it was
+ impossible anyone could go to strike him for laughing; so ridiculous was
+ the figure, as they say, of hogs in armour. This was the armour of
+ defence; but our sparks were not altogether so tame as to carry their
+ provision no further, for truly they intended to be assailants upon fair
+ occasion, and had for that end recommended also to them a certain pocket
+ weapon, which for its design and efficacy had the honour to be called a
+ protestant flail. It was for street and crowd work; and the engine lurking
+ perdue in a coat pocket, might readily sally out to execution, and so, by
+ clearing a great hall, or piazza or so, carry an election by a choice of
+ polling called knocking down. The handle resembled a farrier's blood
+ stick, and the fall was joined to the end by a strong nervous ligature,
+ that in its swing fell just short of the hand, and was made of LIGNUM
+ VITAE, or rather, as the poet termed it, MORTIS."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, whilst the town was in this state of consternation, Tonge sent
+ for Dr. Burnet, who hastened to visit him in the apartments allotted him
+ and Oates at Whitehall. The historian says he found Tonge "so lifted up
+ that he seemed to have lost the little sense he had. Oates came in," he
+ continues, "and made me a compliment that I was one that was marked out to
+ be killed. He had before said the same to Stillingfleet of him. But he had
+ made that honour which he did us too cheap, when he said Tonge was to be
+ served in the same manner, because he had translated 'The Jesuits' Morals'
+ into English. He broke out into great fury against the Jesuits, and said
+ he would have their blood. But I, to divert him from that strain, asked
+ him what were the arguments that prevailed on him to change his religion
+ and to go over to the Church of Rome? He upon that stood up, and laid his
+ hands on his breast, and said, 'God and His holy angels knew that he had
+ never changed, but that he had gone among them on purpose to betray them.'
+ This gave me such a character of him, that I could have no regard to
+ anything he said or swore after that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The agitation now besetting the public mind had been adroitly fanned into
+ flame by the evil genius of Lord Shaftesbury. Eachard states that if he
+ was not the original contriver of this disturbance, "he was at least the
+ grand refiner and improver of all the materials. And so much he seemed to
+ acknowledge to a nobleman of his acquaintance, when he said, 'I will not
+ say who started the game, but I am sure I had the full hunting of it.'" In
+ the general consternation which spread over the land he beheld a means
+ that might help the fulfilment of his strong desires. Chief among these
+ were the exclusion of the Duke of York from the throne, and the
+ realization of his own inordinate ambition. A deist in belief, he abhorred
+ catholicism; a worshipper of self, he longed for power. He had boasted
+ Cromwell had wanted to crown him king, and he narrated to Burnet that a
+ Dutch astrologer had predicted he would yet fill a lofty position. He had
+ long schemed and dreamed, and now it seemed the result of the one and
+ fulfilment of the other were at hand. The pretended discovery of this plot
+ threatened to upheave the established form of government, for the king was
+ one at heart with those about to be brought to trial and death. A quarter
+ of a century had not passed since a bold and determined man had risen up
+ and governed Great Britain. Why should not history repeat itself in this
+ respect? the prospect was alluring. Possessing strong influence, great
+ vanity, and an unscrupulous character, Shaftesbury resolved to stir the
+ nation to its centre, at the expense of peace, honour, and bloodshed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 21st of October, Parliament assembled, when Lord Danby, much
+ against his majesty's inclination, brought the subject of the plot before
+ the Commons. This was a movement much appreciated by the House, which,
+ fired by the general indignation, resolved to deal out vengeance with a
+ strong hand. As befitted such intention, they began by requesting his
+ majesty would order a day of general fasting and prayer, to implore the
+ mercy of Almighty God. The king complying with this desire, they next, "in
+ consideration of the bloody and traitorous designs," besought him to issue
+ a proclamation "commanding all persons being popish recusants, or so
+ reputed," to depart ten miles from the city. Accordingly, upwards of
+ thirty thousand citizens left London before the 7th of the following
+ month, "with great lamentations leaving their trades and habitations."
+ Many of them in a little while secretly returned again. A few days before
+ this latest petition was presented to the monarch, Oates had been examined
+ before the House for over six hours; and so delighted was he by the
+ unprejudiced manner in which his statements were received, that he added
+ several items to them. These were not only interesting in themselves, but
+ implicated peers and persons of quality to the number of twenty-six. The
+ former, including Lords Stafford, Powis, Petre, Bellasis, and Arundel of
+ Wardour, were committed to the Tower, the latter to Newgate prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of his examination he was several times asked if he knew more
+ of the plot, or of those concerned with it, to which he emphatically
+ replied he did not. Three days later he remembered a further incident
+ which involved many persons not previously mentioned by him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both Houses now sat in the forenoon and afternoon of each day; excitement
+ was not allowed to flag. Oates seldom appeared before the Commons without
+ having fresh revelations to make; but the fertility of his imagination by
+ no means weakened the strength of his evidence in the opinions of his
+ hearers. "Oates was encouraged," writes John Evelyn, "and everything he
+ affirmed taken for gospel." Indignation against the papists daily
+ increasing in height, the decrees issued regarding them became more
+ rigorous in severity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 2nd of November the king, in obedience to his Parliament, offered a
+ reward of twenty pounds for the discovery of any officer or soldier who,
+ since the passing of the Test Act, "hath been perverted to the Romish
+ religion, or hears mass." Two days later a bill was framed "for more
+ effectually preserving the king's person and government, by disabling
+ papists from sitting in either House of Parliament." As it was feared a
+ clause would be inserted in this, excluding the Duke of York, the enemies
+ of his royal highness more plainly avowed their object by moving that an
+ address be presented to the king, praying his brother should "withdraw
+ himself from his majesty's person and counsels." This was the first step
+ towards the Bill of Exclusion from Succession which they hoped
+ subsequently to obtain. The monarch, however, determined to check such
+ designs whilst there was yet time; and accordingly made a speech to the
+ peers, in which he said to them, "Whatever reasonable bills you shall
+ present to be passed into laws, to make you safe in the reign of my
+ successor, so they tend not to impeach the right of succession, nor the
+ descent of the crown in the true line, shall find from me a ready
+ concurrence."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The intended address was therefore abandoned for the present; but the bill
+ for disabling catholics from sitting in either House of Parliament, having
+ a clause which excepted the Duke of York from that indignity, passed on
+ the 30th of November.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reward for the discovery of murderers.&mdash;Bedlow's character
+ and evidence.&mdash;His strange story.&mdash;Development of the "horrid
+ plot."&mdash;William Staley is made a victim.&mdash;Three Jesuits hung.&mdash;Titus
+ Oates pronounced the saviour of his country.&mdash;Striving to ruin the
+ queen.&mdash;Monstrous story of Bedlow and Oates.&mdash;The king protects
+ her majesty.&mdash;Five Jesuits executed.&mdash;Fresh rumours concerning
+ the papists.&mdash;Bill to exclude the Duke of York.&mdash;Lord Stafford is
+ tried.&mdash;Scene at Tower Hill.&mdash;Fate of the conspirators.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Before the remains of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey were laid to rest, a
+ proclamation was issued by the king, offering a reward of five hundred
+ pounds for discovery of the murderers. If one of the assassins betrayed
+ those who helped him in the deed, he should receive, not only the sum
+ mentioned, but likewise a free pardon, and such protection for his
+ security as he could in reason propose. Two days after this had been made
+ public, a man named William Bedlow put himself in communication with Sir
+ William Coventry, Secretary of State, declaring he had a certain knowledge
+ of the murder in question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Archdeacon Eachard tells us this man "was one of a base birth and worse
+ manners, who from a poor foot-boy and runner of errands, for a while got
+ into a livery in the Lord Bellasis's family; and having for his villainies
+ suffered hardships and want in many prisons in England, he afterwards
+ turned a kind of post or letter carrier for those who thought fit to
+ employ him beyond sea. By these means he got the names and habitations of
+ men of quality, their relations, correspondents, and interests; and upon
+ this bottom, with a daring boldness, and a dexterous turn of fancy and
+ address, he put himself into the world. He was skilful in all the arts and
+ methods of cheating; but his masterpiece was his personating men of
+ quality, getting credit for watches, coats, and horses; borrowing money,
+ bilking vintners and tradesmen, lying and romancing to the degree of
+ imposing upon any man of good nature. He lived like a wild Arab upon prey,
+ and whether he was in Flanders, France, Spain, or England, he never failed
+ in leaving the name of a notorious cheat and impostor behind him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 7th of November, Bedlow was brought before the king, and examined
+ by two Secretaries of State. Here he made the extraordinary declaration
+ that he had seen the body of the murdered magistrate lying at Somerset
+ House&mdash;then the residence of the queen; that two Jesuits, named La
+ Faire and Walsh, told him they, with the assistance of an attendant in the
+ queen's chapel, had smothered Sir Edmondbury Godfrey between two pillows;
+ that he had been offered two thousand guineas if he would safely remove
+ the body, which on his refusal was carried away, a couple of nights after
+ the murder, by three persons unknown to him, who were servants of the
+ queen's household. Hearing this statement, Sir William Coventry asked him
+ if he knew anything of the popish plot, when he affirmed on oath he was
+ entirely ignorant regarding it; he likewise swore he knew no such man as
+ Titus Oates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night he was lodged in Whitehall, in company with Tonge and Oates;
+ and next morning appeared before the House of Lords, when it was evident
+ his memory had wonderfully improved since the previous day. His story now
+ assumed a more concise form. In the beginning of October, he stated, he
+ had been offered the sum of four thousand pounds, to be paid by Lord
+ Bellasis, provided he murdered a man whose name was withheld from him,
+ This he refused. He was then asked to make the acquaintance and watch the
+ movements of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey. With this he complied. Soon after
+ dusk on the 12th of October, the magistrate had been dragged into the
+ court of Somerset House by the Jesuits, and asked if he would send for the
+ documents to which Oates had sworn. On his refusal he had been smothered
+ with a piece of linen cloth; the story of suffocation by pillows, being at
+ variance with the medical evidence, was now abandoned. One of the Jesuits,
+ La Faire, had asked Bedlow to call at Somerset House that night at nine
+ o'clock; and on presenting himself, he was conducted through a gloomy
+ passage into a spacious and sombre room, where a group of figures stood
+ round a body lying on the floor. Advancing to these, La Faire turned the
+ light of a lantern he carried on the face of the prostrate man, when
+ Bedlow recognised Sir Edmondbury Godfrey. He was then offered two thousand
+ guineas if he would remove the body, which was allowed to remain there
+ three days. This he promised to accomplish, but afterwards, his conscience
+ reproving him, he resolved to avoid the assassins; and rather than accept
+ the sum proffered, he had preferred discovering the villainy to the
+ Government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This improbable story obtained no credit with the king, nor indeed with
+ those whose minds were free from prejudice. "His majesty," writes Sir John
+ Reresby, "told me Bedlow was a rogue, and that he was satisfied he had
+ given false evidence concerning the death of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey." Many
+ circumstances regarding the narrator and his story showed the viciousness
+ of the one and the falsity of the other. The authority just mentioned
+ states, when Bedlow "was taxed with having cheated a great many merchants
+ abroad, and gentlemen at home, by personating my Lord Gerard and other men
+ of quality, and by divers other cheats, he made it an argument to be more
+ credited in this matter, saying nobody but a rogue could be employed in
+ such designs." Concerning the murder, it chanced the king had been at
+ Somerset House visiting the queen, at the time when, according to Bedlow,
+ the deed had been committed. His majesty had been attended by a company of
+ guards, and sentries had been placed at every door; yet not one of them
+ had witnessed a scuffle, or heard a noise. Moreover, on the king sending
+ Bedlow to Somerset House, that he might indicate the apartment in which
+ the magistrate's remains had lain three days, he pointed out a room where
+ the footman waited, and through which the queen's meals were daily
+ carried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the dishonesty of his character and falsity of his statements by no
+ means prevented the majority of his hearers from believing, or pretending
+ to believe, his statements; and therefore, encouraged by the ready
+ reception they met, he ventured to make fresh and startling revelations.
+ Heedless of the oath he had taken on the first day of his examination,
+ regarding his ignorance of the popish plot, he now asserted he was well
+ acquainted with all its details. For some four years he had been in the
+ secret employment of the wicked Jesuits, and knew they intended to stab
+ and poison his majesty, establish catholicity in England, and make the
+ pope king. So far, indeed, had their evil machinations been planned, that
+ several popish peers already held commissions for posts they expected to
+ fill in the future. Lord Bellasis and Lord Powis were appointed commanders
+ of the forces in the north and south; whilst Lord Arundel of Wardour had
+ permission to grant such positions as he pleased. Then the Dukes of
+ Buckingham, Ormond, and Monmouth, with Lords Shaftesbury and Ossory,
+ together with many others, were to be murdered by forty thousand papists,
+ who were ready to rise up all over the country at a moment's notice. "Nor
+ was there," he added, "a Roman Catholic of any quality or credit but was
+ acquainted with these designs and had received the sacrament from their
+ father confessors to be secret in carrying it out."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It by no means pleased Oates that Bedlow should surpass him in his
+ knowledge of this hellish plot. Therefore, that he might not lose in
+ repute as an informer, he now declared he was also aware of the
+ commissions held by popish peers. He, however, assigned them in a
+ different order. Arundel was to be made chancellor; Powis, treasurer;
+ Bellasis general of the army; Petre, lieutenant-general; Ratcliffe,
+ major-general; Stafford, paymaster-general; and Langhorn,
+ advocate-general. Nay, his information far outstripped Bedlow's, for he
+ swore that to his knowledge Coleman had given four ruffians eighty guineas
+ to stab the king, and Sir George Wakeham had undertaken to poison his
+ majesty for ten thousand pounds. When, however, he was brought face to
+ face with these men, he was unable to recognise them, a fact he accounted
+ for by stating he was exhausted by prolonged examination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All England was scared by revelations so horrible; "the business of life,"
+ writes Macpherson, "was interrupted by confusion, panic, clamour, and
+ dreadful rumours." In London, two thousand catholics were cast into
+ prison; houses were daily searched for arms and treasonable documents; and
+ in good time merciless executions filled up the sum of bitter
+ persecutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the first victims of this so-called plot was William Staley, a
+ catholic banker of fair renown. The manner in which his life was
+ sacrificed will serve as an example of the injustice meted to those
+ accused. One day, William Staley happened to enter a pastrycook's shop in
+ Covent Garden, opposite his bank, where there chanced to stand at the time
+ a fellow named Carstairs; one of the infamous creatures who, envious of
+ the honours and riches heaped on Oates and Bedlow, resolved to make new
+ discoveries and enjoy like rewards. At this time he was, as Bishop Burnet
+ states, "looking about where he could find a lucky piece of villainy."
+ Unfortunately the banker came under his notice, and Bedlow and an
+ associate pretended to have heard Staley say the king was a rogue and a
+ persecutor of the people whom he would stab if no other man was found to
+ do the deed. These words Carstairs wrote down, and next morning called on
+ the banker, showed him the treasonable sentence, and said he would swear
+ it had been uttered by him, unless he, Staley, would purchase his silence.
+ Though fully aware of his danger, he refused to do this; whereon Carstairs
+ had him instantly arrested and committed for trial. Hearing of his
+ situation, and knowing the infamous character of his accusers, Dr. Burnet
+ thought it his duty to let the lord chancellor and the attorney-general
+ know "What profligate wretches these witnesses were." His interference was
+ received with hostility. The attorney-general took it ill that he should
+ disparage the king's evidence; Lord Shaftesbury avowed those who sought to
+ undermine the credit of witnesses were to be looked on as public enemies;
+ whilst the Duke of Lauderdale said Burnet desired to save Staley because
+ of the regard he had for anyone who would murder his majesty. Frightened
+ by such remarks at a time when no man's life or credit was safe, Burnet
+ shrank from further action; but rumour of his interference having got
+ noised abroad, it was resented by the public to such an extent, that he
+ was advised not to stir abroad for fear of public affronts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within five days of his arrest, William Staley was condemned to death. In
+ vain he protested his innocence, pointed out the improbability of his
+ using such words in a public room, and referred to his character as a
+ loyal man and worthy citizen. He was condemned and executed as a traitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next victim was Coleman. He denied having hired assassins to murder
+ his majesty, or entertained desires for his death; but honestly stated he
+ had striven to advance his religion, not by bloodshed, but by tolerance.
+ Whilst lying in chains at Newgate prison under sentence of death members
+ of both Houses of Parliament visited him, and offered him pardon if he
+ confessed a knowledge of the plot; but, in answer to all persuasions and
+ promises, he avowed his innocence; protesting which, he died at Tyburn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little later, three Jesuits, named Ireland, Whitehead, and Fenwick, and
+ two attendants of the queen's chapel, named Grove and Pickering, were
+ executed on a charge of conspiracy to kill the king. Oates and Bedlow
+ swore these Jesuits had promised Grove fifteen hundred pounds as price of
+ the murder; Pickering chose as his reward to have thirty thousand masses,
+ at a shilling a mass, said for him. Three times they had attempted this
+ deed with a pistol; but once the flint was loose, another time there was
+ no powder in the pan, and again the pistol was charged only with bullets.
+ These five men died denying their guilt to the last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Dr. Tonge, the ingenious inventor of the plot, had sunk into
+ insignificance by comparison with his audacious pupil. Not only did the
+ latter have apartments at Whitehall allotted him, and receive a pension of
+ twelve hundred a year, but he was lauded as the saviour of his country,
+ complimented with the title of doctor of divinity, honoured in public, and
+ entertained in private. Eachard mentions "a great supper in the city,"
+ given in compliment to Oates by "twenty eminent rich citizens;" and Sir
+ John Reresby writes of meeting him at the dinner-table of Dr. Gunning,
+ Bishop of Ely. Nothing could exceed the insolence and arrogance of the
+ impostor. He appeared in a silk gown and cassock, a long scarf, a broad
+ hat with satin band and rose, and called himself a doctor of divinity. No
+ man dared contradict or oppose him, lest he should be denounced as a
+ conniver of the plot, and arrested as a traitor. "Whoever he pointed at
+ was taken up and committed," says North. "So that many people got out of
+ his way as from a blast, and glad they could prove their last two years'
+ conversation. The very breath of him was pestilential, and if it brought
+ not imprisonment, it surely poisoned reputation." Sir John, speaking of
+ him at the bishop's dinner-table, says "he was blown up with the hopes of
+ running down the Duke of York, and spoke of him and his family after a
+ manner which showed himself both a fool and a knave. He reflected not only
+ on him personally, but upon her majesty; nobody daring to contradict him,
+ for fear of being made a party to the plot. I at least did not undertake
+ to do it, when he left the room in some heat. The bishop told me this was
+ his usual discourse, and that he had checked him formerly for taking so
+ indecent a liberty, but he found it was to no purpose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The impostor's conversation on this occasion furnishes the key-note of a
+ vile plot now contrived to intercept the lawful succession, either by
+ effectually removing the queen, and thereby enabling the king to marry
+ again; or otherwise excluding the Duke of York by act of parliament from
+ lawful right to the crown. Though Shaftesbury's hand was not plainly seen,
+ there can be no doubt it was busily employed in working out his favourite
+ design.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blow was first aimed at her majesty by Bedlow, who, on the 25th of
+ November, accused her of conspiring to kill her husband. About eighteen
+ months previously, he said, there had been a consultation in the chapel
+ gallery at Somerset House, which had been attended by Lord Bellasis, Mr.
+ Coleman, La Faire, Pritchard, Latham, and Sheldon, four Jesuits, and two
+ Frenchmen whom he took to be abbots, two persons of quality whose faces he
+ did not see, and lastly by her majesty. The Jesuits afterwards confided in
+ him as a person of trust, that the queen wept at a proposal to murder the
+ king which had been made, but subsequently yielding to arguments of the
+ French abbots, had consented to the design. Indeed, Bedlow, who was in the
+ sacristy when her majesty passed through at the termination of this
+ meeting, noticed her face had much changed. Here his story ended; but, as
+ was now usual, it was taken up and concluded by Oates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Appearing at the Bar of the House of Commons, this vile impostor cried
+ out, "Aye, Taitus Oates, accause Caatharine, Quean of England, of haigh
+ traison." Then followed his audacious evidence. In the previous July, Sir
+ George Wakeham, in writing to a Jesuit named Ashby, stated her majesty
+ would aid in poisoning the king. A few days afterwards, Harcourt and four
+ other Jesuits having been sent for, attended the queen at Somerset House.
+ On that occasion Oates waited on them; they went into a chamber, he stayed
+ without. Whilst there he heard a woman's voice say she would endure her
+ wrongs no longer, but should assist Sir George Wakeham in poisoning the
+ king. He was afterwards admitted to the chamber, and saw no woman there
+ but her majesty; and he heard the same voice ask Harcourt, whilst he was
+ within, if he had received the last ten thousand pounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The appetite of public credulity seeming to increase by that on which it
+ fed, this avowal was readily believed. That the accusation had not been
+ previously made; that Oates had months before sworn he knew no others
+ implicated in the plot beyond those he named; that the queen had never
+ interfered in religious matters; that she loved her husband exceeding
+ well, were facts completely overlooked in the general agitation.
+ Parliament "was in a rage and flame;" and next day the Commons drew up an
+ address to the king, stating that "having received information of a most
+ desperate and traitorous design against the life of his sacred majesty,
+ wherein the queen is particularly charged and accused" they besought him
+ that "she and all her family, and all papists and reputed papists, be
+ forthwith removed from his court." Furthermore, the House sent a message
+ to the Peers, desiring their concurrence in this request; but the Lords
+ made answer, before doing so they would examine the witnesses against her
+ majesty. This resolution was loudly and indecently protested against by
+ Lord Shaftesbury and two of his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The king had discredited the story of the plot from the first; but
+ remembering the unhappy consequences which had resulted upon the
+ disagreement of the monarch and his parliament in the previous reign, he
+ weakly resolved to let himself be carried away by the storm, other than
+ offer it resistance. On the condemnation of the Jesuits, he had appeared
+ unhappy and dissatisfied; "but," says Lord Romney, "after he had had a
+ little advice he kept his displeasure to himself." The Duke of York
+ states, in the Stuart Papers, that "the seeming necessity of his affairs
+ made his majesty think he could not be safe but by consenting every day to
+ the execution of those he knew in his heart to be most innocent." Now,
+ however, when foul charges were made against the queen, calculated not
+ merely to ruin her honour but destroy her life, he resolved to interfere.
+ He therefore requested she would return to Whitehall, where she should be
+ safe under his protection; and feeling assured Oates had received
+ instructions from others more villainous than their tool, he ordered a
+ strict guard to be kept upon him. This he was, however, obliged to remove
+ next day at request of the Commons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the examination before the House of Lords of Oates and Bedlow, their
+ evidence proved so vague and contradictory that it was rejected even by
+ the most credulous. When Bedlow was asked "why he had not disclosed such a
+ perilous matter in conjunction with his previous information touching the
+ murder of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey," he coolly replied, "it had escaped his
+ memory." On Oates being sent to point out the apartment in which he had
+ seen her majesty and the Jesuits, he first selected the guard-room, and
+ afterwards the privy chamber, places in which it would have been
+ impossible to have held secret consultation. Aware that the king was
+ resolved to protect her majesty, and conscious the evidence of her
+ accusers was more wildly improbable than usual, the Lords refused to
+ second the address of the Commons, when the charge against this hapless
+ woman was abandoned, to the great vexation of my Lord Shaftesbury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though the queen happily escaped the toils of her enemies, the reign of
+ terror was by no means at an end. At request of the king, the Duke of York
+ left England and took refuge in Brussels; the catholic peers imprisoned in
+ the Tower were impeached with high treason; Hill, Green, and Berry,
+ servants of her majesty, charged with the murder of Sir Edmondbury
+ Godfrey, were, without a shadow of evidence, hurried to the scaffold, as
+ were soon after Whitebread, Fenwick, Harcourt, Gavan and Turner, Jesuits
+ all, and Langhorn, a catholic lawyer, for conspiring to murder the king.
+ On the morning when these unfortunate men stood ignominiously bound to the
+ gallows at Tyburn, the instruments of death before their eyes, the angry
+ murmurs of the surging mob ringing in their ears, suddenly the sound of a
+ voice crying aloud, "A pardon! a pardon!" was heard afar off, and
+ presently a horseman appeared riding at full speed. The soldiers with some
+ difficulty making way for him through a line of excited people, he
+ advanced to the foot of the scaffold, and handed a roll of paper bearing
+ the king's seal to the sheriff, who, opening it, read a promise of pardon
+ to those now standing face to face with death, provided "they should
+ acknowledge the conspiracy, and lay open what they knew thereof." To this
+ they replied they knew of no plot, and had never desired harm to the king;
+ and, praying for those who had sought their lives, they died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The firmness and patience with which the victims of judicial murder had
+ one and all met death, refusing bribes, and resisting persuasions to own
+ themselves guilty, could not fail in producing some effect upon the public
+ mind; and towards the middle of the year 1679 the first signs of reaction
+ became visible, when three Benedictine monks and the queen's physician
+ were tried for conspiracy "to poison the king, subvert the government, and
+ introduce popery." During the examination, Evelyn tells us, "the bench was
+ crowded with the judges, lord mayor, justices, and innumerable
+ spectators." After a tedious trial of nine hours, the jury brought the
+ prisoners in not guilty, "without," says Evelyn, "sufficient disadvantage
+ and reflection on witnesses, especially on Oates and Bedlow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As my Lord Shaftesbury had not yet succeeded in his desired project of
+ excluding the Duke of York from succession, the symptoms of change in
+ public opinion were thoroughly distasteful to him. He therefore resolved
+ to check them immediately, and stimulate the agitation and fear that had
+ for many months reigned paramount through out the nation. For this purpose
+ he had recourse to his former method of circulating wild and baseless
+ reports. Accordingly a rumour was soon brought before the House of Commons
+ of a horrible plot hatched by the papists to burn London to the ground.
+ This, it was alleged, would be effected by a servant-maid setting a
+ clothes-press on fire in the house of her master, situated in Fetter Lane.
+ Two vile Irishmen were to feed the flames, and meanwhile the catholics
+ would rise in rebellion, and, assisted by an army of sixty thousand French
+ soldiers, kill the king, and put all protestants to the sword. Though this
+ tale was in due time discredited, yet it served its purpose in the
+ present. The violent alarm it caused had not subsided when another
+ terrible story, started on the excellent authority of Lord Shaftesbury's
+ cook, added a new terror. This stated the Duke of York had placed himself
+ at the head of the French troops, with intention of landing in England,
+ murdering the king and forcing papacy on his subjects. The scare was
+ sufficiently effectual to cause Parliament to petition his majesty that he
+ might revoke all licenses recently granted catholic householders to reside
+ in the capital; and order the execution of all priests who administered
+ sacraments or celebrated mass within the kingdom. Soon after this address,
+ Lord Russell was sent by the Commons to the Peers, requesting their
+ concurrence in the statement that "the Duke of York's being a papist, the
+ hope of his coming to the crown had given the greatest countenance and
+ encouragement to the conspiracies and designs of the papists." And now, in
+ May, 1679, the condition of popular feeling promising well for its
+ success, the Bill of Exclusion was introduced, ordaining that "James, Duke
+ of York should be incapable of inheriting the crowns of England and
+ Ireland; that on the demise of his majesty without heirs of his body, his
+ dominions should devolve, as if the Duke of York were also dead, on that
+ person next in succession who had always professed the protestant religion
+ established by law." This passed the House of Commons by a majority of
+ seventy-nine votes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alarmed by this bill, Charles resolved to show signs of resentment, and at
+ the same time check the increasing power of the Commons, by a sudden and
+ decisive movement. Therefore, without previously hinting at his
+ intentions, he prorogued parliament before the bill was sent to the House
+ of Lords. This was a keen surprise to all, and a bitter disappointment to
+ Shaftesbury, who vowed those who advised the king to this measure should
+ answer for it with their heads. Owing to various delays, the Bill of
+ Exclusion was not brought before the Peers until eighteen months later.
+ Its introduction was followed by a debate lasting six hours, in which
+ Shaftesbury distinguished himself by his force and bitterness. At nine
+ o'clock at night the House divided, when the measure was rejected by a
+ majority of thirty-three votes, amongst which were those of the fourteen
+ bishops present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mortified by this unexpected decision, the violent passions of the
+ defeated party hurried them on to seek the blood of those peers lodged in
+ the Tower. Of the five, William Howard, Viscount Stafford&mdash;youngest
+ son of the Earl of Arran, and nephew of the Duke of Norfolk&mdash;was
+ selected to be first put upon his trial; inasmuch as, being over sixty
+ years, and a sufferer from many infirmities, it was judged he would be the
+ least capable of making a vigorous defence. Three perjured witnesses swore
+ he had plotted against the king's life, but no proof was forthcoming to
+ support their evidence. Notwithstanding this was "bespattered and
+ falsified in almost every point," it was received as authentic by the
+ judges, who made a national cause of his prosecution, and considered no
+ punishment too severe for a papist. After a trial of five days sentence of
+ death was pronounced upon him, and on the 29th of December, 1680, he was
+ beheaded on Tower Hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like those who had suffered from similar charges, he protested his
+ innocence to the last; but his words met with a reception different from
+ theirs. Their dying speeches had been greeted by groans, hisses, and signs
+ of insatiable fury; but his declarations fell upon silent and sympathizing
+ hearts. When he had made denial of the crimes of which he was accused, a
+ great cry rose from the mob, "We believe you&mdash;we believe you, my
+ lord;" and then a single voice calling out "God bless you!" the words were
+ taken up and repeated by a vast throng, so that the last sounds he heard
+ on earth were those of prayer. He died with a firmness worthy of his
+ caste. Having laid his head upon the block, the executioner brandished his
+ axe in the air, and then set it quietly down at his feet. Raising his
+ head, Lord Stafford inquired the cause of delay; the executioner replied
+ he awaited a sign. "Take your time," said he who stood at the verge of
+ eternity; "I shall make no sign." He who held the axe in his hand
+ hesitated a second, and then said in a low and troubled voice, "Do you
+ forgive me, sir?" To which Lord Stafford made brief answer, "I do." Then
+ he laid his head again upon the blood-stained block. Once more the glitter
+ of steel flashed through the air, a groan arose from the crowd, and Lord
+ Stafford's head was severed from his body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A reaction now set in, and gained strength daily. The remaining peers were
+ in due time liberated; the blood of innocent victims was no longer shed;
+ and the Duke of York was recalled. Such was the end of the popish plot,
+ which, says Archdeacon Eachard, "after the strictest and coolest
+ examinations, and after a full length of time, the government could find
+ very little foundation to support so vast a fabrick, besides downright
+ swearing and assurance; not a gun, sword, nor dagger, not a flask of
+ powder or dark lanthorn, to effect this strange villainy, and with the
+ exception of Coleman's writings, not one slip of an original letter of
+ commission among those great numbers alledged to uphold the reputation of
+ the discoveries."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Concerning those through whose malice such disturbance was wrought, and so
+ much blood shed, a few words may be added. Within twelve months of Lord
+ Stafford's execution, Shaftesbury was charged with high treason, but
+ escaping condemnation, fled from further molestation to Holland, where,
+ after a residence of six weeks, he died. Tonge departed this life in 1680,
+ unbenefited by the monstrous plot he had so skilfully devised; and in the
+ same year Bedlow was carried to the grave after an illness of four days.
+ Oates survived to meet a share of the ignominy and punishment due to his
+ crimes. After a residence of three years in Whitehall, he was driven out
+ of the palace on account of "certain misdemeanors laid to his charge," and
+ deprived of his salary. Two years later, in May, 1683, he was accused of
+ calling the Duke of York a traitor, and using scandalous words towards his
+ royal highness. Upon hearing of the case the jury fined him one hundred
+ thousand pounds. Unable to pay the sum, he was cast into prison, where he
+ remained six years, until liberated in the reign of William and Mary, His
+ punishment was not, however, at an end. At the Michaelmas term of 1684 he
+ was accused of having wilfully perjured himself at the late trials. As he
+ pleaded not guilty, his case was appointed to be heard at the King's Bench
+ Court. His trial did not take place until May, 1685, on which occasion the
+ lord chief justice, in summing up the evidence, declared, "There does not
+ remain the slightest doubt that Oates is the blackest and most perjured
+ villain on the face of the earth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a quarter of an hour's absence from court, the jury returned a
+ verdict of guilty, and sentence was pronounced against him. He was
+ stripped of his canonical habit; forced to walk through all the courts of
+ Westminster Hall proclaiming his crimes; to stand an hour on the pillory
+ opposite Westminster Hall gate on Monday; an hour on the pillory at the
+ Royal Exchange on Tuesday; and on Wednesday he was tied to a cart and
+ whipt at the hands of the common hangman from Aldgate to Newgate, in the
+ presence, says Eachard, "of innumerable spectators, who had a more than
+ ordinary curiosity to see the sight."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ London under Charles II.&mdash;Condition and appearance of the
+ thoroughfares.&mdash;Coffee is first drunk in the capital.&mdash;Taverns and
+ their frequenters.&mdash;The city by night.&mdash;Wicked people do creep
+ about.&mdash;Companies of young gentlemen.&mdash;The Duke of Monmouth kills
+ a beadle.&mdash;Sir Charles Sedley's frolic.&mdash;Stately houses of the
+ nobility.&mdash;St. James's Park.&mdash;Amusement of the town.&mdash;At Bartholomew
+ Fair.&mdash;Bull, bear, and dog fights.&mdash;Some quaint sports.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ During the first six years of the merry monarch's reign, London town, east
+ of Temple Bar, consisted of narrow and tortuous streets of quaintly gabled
+ houses, pitched roofed and plaster fronted. Scarce four years had passed
+ after the devastating fire which laid this portion of the capital in
+ ashes, when a new and stately city rose upon the ruins of the old.
+ Thoroughfares lying close by the Thames, which were wont to suffer from
+ inundations, were raised; those which from limited breadth had caused
+ inconvenience and bred pestilence were made wide; warehouses and dwellings
+ of solid brick and carved stone, with doors, window-frames, and
+ breastsummers of stout oak, replaced irregular though not unpicturesque
+ habitations; whilst the halls of companies, eminent taverns, and abodes of
+ great merchants, were now built "with fair courtyards before them, and
+ pleasant gardens behind them, and fair spacious rooms and galleries in
+ them, little inferior to some princes' palaces." Moreover, churches
+ designed by the genius of Christopher Wren, adorned with spires, steeples,
+ and minarets, intersected the capital at all points.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This new, handsome, and populous city presented an animated, ever
+ changing, and merry scene. From "the high street which is called the
+ Strand," far eastwards, great painted signs, emblazoned with heraldic
+ arms, or ornamented with pictures of grotesque birds and animals, swung
+ above shop-doors and taverns. Stalls laden with wares of every
+ description, "set out with decorations as valuable as those of the stage,"
+ extended into the thoroughfares. In the new Exchange, built by the
+ worshipful company of mercers at a cost of eight thousand pounds, and
+ adorned by a fair statue of King Charles II. in the habit of a Roman
+ emperor, were galleries containing rows of very rich shops, displaying
+ manufactures and ornaments of rare description, served by young men known
+ as apprentices, and likewise by comely wenches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At corners and nooks of streets, under eaves of churches and great
+ buildings, and other places of shelter, sat followers of various trades
+ and vendors of divers commodities, each in the place which had become his
+ from daily association and long habit. These good people, together with
+ keepers of stalls and shops, extolled their wares in deafening shouts;
+ snatches of song, shouts of laughter, and the clang of pewter vessels came
+ in bursts of discord from open tavern doors; women discoursed with or
+ abused each other, according to their temper and inclination as they
+ leaned from the jutting small-paned windows and open balconies of their
+ homesteads; hackney coaches or "hell carts," as they drove by, cast filth
+ and refuse lying in kennels upon the clothes of passengers; the carriers
+ of sedan-chairs deposited their burthens to fight for right of way in
+ narrow passages and round crowded corners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through the busy concourse flowing up and down the thoroughfares from dawn
+ to dusk, street-criers took their way, bearing wares upon their heads in
+ wicker baskets, before them on broad trays, or slung upon their backs in
+ goodly packs. And as they passed, their voices rose above the general din,
+ calling "Fair lemons and oranges, oranges and citrons!" "Cherries, sweet
+ cherries, ripe and red!" "New flounders and great plaice; buy my dish of
+ great eels!" "Rosemary and sweet briar; who'll buy my lavender?" "Fresh
+ cheese and cream!" "Lily-white vinegar!" "Dainty sausages!" which calls,
+ being frequently intoned to staves of melody, fell with pleasant sounds
+ upon the ear. [These hawkers so seriously interfered with legitimate
+ traders, that in 1694 they were forbidden to sell any goods or merchandise
+ in any public place within the city or liberties, except in open markets
+ and fairs, on penalty of forty shillings for each offence, both to buyers
+ and sellers.] Moreover, to these divers sights and sounds were added
+ ballad singers, who piped ditties upon topics of the day; quacks who sold
+ nostrums and magic potions; dancers who performed on tight-ropes;
+ wandering musicians; fire-eaters of great renown; exhibitors of dancing
+ dolls, and such like itinerants "as make show of motions and strange
+ sights," all of whom were obliged to have and to hold "a license in red
+ and black letters, under the hand and seal of Thomas Killigrew, Esq.,
+ master of the revels to his sacred majesty Charles II."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adown the Strand, Fleet Street, and in that part of the city adjoining the
+ Exchange, coffee-houses abounded in great numbers. Coffee, which in this
+ reign became a favourite beverage, was introduced into London a couple of
+ years before the restoration. It had, however, been brought into England
+ at a much earlier period. John Evelyn, in the year 1638, speaks of it
+ being drunk at Oxford, where there came to his college "one Nathaniel
+ Conoposis out of Greece, from Cyrill the patriarch of Constantinople, who,
+ returning many years after, was made Bishop of Smyrna." Twelve good years
+ later, a coffee-house was opened at Oxford by one Jacobs, a Jew, where
+ this beverage was imbibed "by some who delighted in novelty." It was,
+ however, according to Oldys the antiquarian, untasted in the capital till
+ a Turkey merchant named Edwards brought to London a Ragusan youth named
+ Pasqua Rosee, who prepared this drink for him daily. The eagerness to
+ taste the strange beverage drawing too much company to his board, Edwards
+ allowed the lad, together with a servant of his son-in-law, to sell it
+ publicly; whence coffee was first sold in St. Michael's Alley in Cornhill
+ by Pasqua Rosee, "at the sign of his own head," about the year 1658.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though coffee-drinkers first met with much ridicule from wits about town,
+ and writers of broadsheet ballads, the beverage became gradually popular,
+ and houses for its sale quickly multiplied. Famous amongst these, in the
+ reign of the merry monarch, besides that already mentioned, was Garraway's
+ in Exchange Alley; the Rainbow, by the Inner Temple Gate; Dick's, situated
+ at No. 8, Fleet Street; Jacobs', the proprietor of which moved in 1671
+ from Oxford to Southampton Buildings, Holborn; the Grecian in the Strand,
+ "conducted without ostentation or noise;" the Westminster, noted as a
+ resort of peers and members of parliament; and Will's, in Russell Street,
+ frequented by the poet Dryden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These houses, the forerunners of clubs, were, according to their situation
+ and convenience, frequented by noblemen and men of quality, courtiers,
+ foreign ministers, politicians, members of learned professions, wits,
+ citizens of various grades, and all who loved to exchange greetings and
+ gossip with their neighbours and friends. Within these low-ceilinged
+ comfortable coffee-house rooms, fitted with strong benches and oak chairs,
+ where the black beverage was drunk from handless wide brimmed cups, Pepys
+ passed many cheerful hours, hearing much of the news he so happily
+ narrates, and holding pleasant discourse with many notable men. It was in
+ a coffee-house he encountered Major Waters, "a deaf and most amorous
+ melancholy gentleman, who is under a despayer in love, which makes him bad
+ company, though a most good-natured man." And in such a place he listened
+ to "some simple discourse about quakers being charmed by a string about
+ their wrists;" and saw a certain merchant named Hill "that is a master of
+ most sorts of musique and other things, the universal character, art of
+ memory, counterfeiting of hands, and other most excellent discourses."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In days before newspapers came into universal circulation, and general
+ meetings were known, coffee-houses became recognised centres for exchange
+ of thought and advocacy of political action. Aware of this, the
+ government, under leadership of Danby, not desiring to have its motives
+ too freely canvassed, in 1675 issued an order that such "places of resort
+ for idle and disaffected persons" should be closed. Alarmed by this
+ command, the keepers of such houses petitioned for its withdrawal, at the
+ same time faithfully promising libels should not be read under their
+ roofs. They were therefore permitted to carry on their business by
+ license.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next in point of interest to coffee-houses were taverns where men came to
+ make merry, in an age when simplicity and good fellowship largely
+ obtained. As in coffee-houses, gossip was the order of the day in such
+ places, each tavern being in itself "a broacher of more news than
+ hogsheads, and more jests than news." Those of good standing and fair
+ renown could boast rows of bright flagons ranged on shelves round panelled
+ walls; of hosts, rotund in person and genial in manner; and of civil
+ drawers, who could claim good breeding. The Bear, at the bridge-foot,
+ situated at the Southwark side, was well known to men of gallantry and
+ women of pleasure; and was, moreover, famous as the spot where the Duke of
+ Richmond awaited Mistress Stuart on her escape from Whitehall. The Boar's
+ Head, in Eastcheap, which gained pleasant mention in the plays of William
+ Shakespeare, when rebuilt, after the great fire, became a famous resort.
+ The Three Cranes, in the Vintry, was sacred to the shade of rare Ben
+ Jonson. The White Bear's Head, in Abchurch Lane, where French dinners were
+ served from five shillings a head "to a guinea, or what sum you pleased,"
+ was the resort of cavaliers, The Rose Tavern, in the Poultry, was famous
+ for its excellent ale, and no less for its mighty pretty hostess, to whom
+ the king had kissed hands as he rode by on his entry. The Rummer was
+ likewise of some note, inasmuch as it was kept by one Samuel Prior, uncle
+ to Matthew Prior, the ingenious poet. On the balcony of the Cock, near
+ Covent Garden, Sir Charles Sedley had stood naked in a drunken frolic; and
+ at the King's Head, over against the Inner Temple Gate, Shaftesbury and
+ his friends laid their plots, coming out afterwards on the double balcony
+ in front, as North describes them, "with hats and no peruques, pipes in
+ their mouths, merry faces and dilated throats, for vocal encouragement of
+ the canaglia below."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All day long the streets were crowded by those whom business or diversion
+ carried abroad; but when night fell apace, the keepers of stalls and shops
+ speedily secured their wares and fastened their doors, whilst the honest
+ citizen and his family kept within house. For the streets being unlighted,
+ darkness fell upon them, relieved only as some person of wealth rode
+ homewards from visiting a friend, or a band of late revellers returned
+ from a feast, when the glare of flambeaux, carried by their attendants,
+ for a moment brought the outlines of houses into relief, or flashed red
+ light upon their diamond panes, leaving all in profound gloom on
+ disappearing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The condition of the thoroughfares favouring the inclination of many loose
+ persons, they wandered at large, dealing mischief to those whose duty took
+ them abroad. From the year 1556, in the reign of Queen Mary, "fit persons
+ with suitable strength" had been appointed to walk the streets and watch
+ the city by night; to protect those in danger, arrest suspected persons,
+ warn householders of danger by fire and candle, help the poor, pray for
+ the dead, and preserve the peace. These burly individuals were known as
+ watch or bell men; one was appointed for each ward, whose duty it was to
+ pass through the district he guarded ringing his bell, "and when that
+ ceaseth," says Stow, "he salutes his masters and mistresses with his
+ rhymes, suitable to the seasons and festivals of the year, and bids them
+ look to their lights."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the third year of the reign of King Charles II., whilst Sir John
+ Robinson was mayor of London town, divers good orders were made by him and
+ his common council for the better service of these watches. The principal
+ of these set forth that each should be accompanied by a constable and a
+ beadle selected from the inhabitants of their respective wards, who should
+ be required in turn to render voluntary service in guarding the city, from
+ nine of the clock at night till seven in the morning, from Michaelmas to
+ the 1st of April; and from that date until the 31st of March, from ten at
+ night till five in the morning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These rules were not, however, vigorously carried out; the volunteers were
+ frequently unwilling to do duty, or when, fearful of fine, they went
+ abroad, they usually spent their time in tippling in ale-houses, so that,
+ as Delaune remarks, "a great many wicked persons capable of the blackest
+ villainies do creep about, as daily and sad experience shows." It was not
+ only those who, with drawn swords, darted from some deep porch or
+ sheltering buttress, in hopes of enriching themselves at their neighbour's
+ expense, that were to be dreaded. It was a fashion of the time for
+ companies of young gentlemen to saunter forth in numbers after route or
+ supper, when, being merry with wine and eager for adventure, they were
+ brave enough to waylay the honest citizen and abduct his wife, beat the
+ watch and smash his lantern, bedaub signboards and wrench knockers,
+ overturn a sedan-chair and vanquish the carriers, sing roystering songs
+ under the casements of peaceful sleepers, and play strange pranks to which
+ they were prompted by young blood and high spirits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among those who made prominent figures in such unholy sports was the
+ king's eldest son, my Lord Duke of Monmouth. He and his young grace of
+ Albemarle&mdash;son to that gallant soldier now deceased, who was
+ instrumental in restoring his majesty&mdash;together with some seven or
+ eight young gentlemen, whilst on their rounds one Sunday morning
+ encountered a beadle, whose quaint and ponderous figure presented itself
+ to their blithe minds as a fit object for diversion in lieu of better.
+ Accordingly they accosted him with rough words and unceremonious usage,
+ the which he resenting, they came to boisterous threats and many blows,
+ that ended only when the poor fellow lay with outstretched limbs stark
+ dead upon the pavement. Sir Charles Sedley and Lord Brockhurst were also
+ notable as having been engaged in another piece of what has been called
+ "frolick and debauchery," when "they ran up and down all night almost
+ naked through the streets, at last fighting and being beaten by the watch,
+ and clapped up all night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not until the last years of the merry monarch's reign that there
+ was introduced "an ingenious and useful invention for the good of this
+ great city, calculated to secure one's goods, estates, and person; to
+ prevent fires, robberies and housebreakings, and several accidents and
+ casualties by falls to which man is liable by walking in the dark" This
+ was a scheme for lighting the streets, by placing an oil-lamp in front of
+ every tenth house on each side of the way, from Michaelmas to Lady-day,
+ every night from six of the clock till twelve, beginning the third night
+ after every full moon, and ending on the sixth night after every new moon;
+ one hundred and twenty nights in all. The originator of this plan was one
+ Edward Hemming, of London, gentleman. His project was at first ridiculed
+ and opposed by "narrow-souled and self-interested people," who were no
+ doubt children of darkness and doers of evil deeds; but was eventually
+ hailed with delight by all honest men, one of whom, gifted with
+ considerable imagination, declared these poor oil-lamps "seemed but one
+ great solar light that turned nocturnal shades to noonday."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this reign the city proper was confined eastward of Temple Bar; to the
+ west lay the palaces of Somerset House and Whitehall, the stately parks,
+ and great houses of the nobility surrounded by wide gardens and wooded
+ grounds. Monsieur Sorbiere, who in this reign made a journey into England,
+ an account of which he subsequently published "to divert a person of
+ quality who loved him extremely," resided close by Covent Garden during
+ his stay. It was usual, he writes, for people in the district to say, "I
+ go to London," for "indeed 'tis a journey for those who live near
+ Westminster. 'Tis true," he adds, "they may sometimes get thither in a
+ quarter of an hour by water, which they cannot do in less than two hours
+ by land, for I am persuaded no less time will be necessary to go from one
+ end of its suburb to the other." For a crown a week this ingenious and
+ travelled gentleman had lodgings in Covent Garden, not far removed from
+ Salisbury House, a vicinity which he avows was "certainly the finest place
+ in the suburbs." Covent Garden itself has been described by John Strype,
+ native of the city of London, as "a curious large and airy square enclosed
+ by rails, between which railes and houses runs a fair street." The square,
+ or, as it was commonly called, garden, was well gravelled for greater
+ accommodation of those who wished to take the air; and that its surface
+ might more quickly dry after rain, it was raised by an easy ascent to the
+ centre, where stood a sundial fixed on a black marble pillar, at the base
+ of which were stone steps, "whereon the weary' might rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The west side of the square was flanked by the handsome portico of St.
+ Paul's Church, erected at the expense of Francis, Earl of Bedford, from
+ designs by Mr. Inigo Jones; the south side opened to Bedford Gardens,
+ "where there is a small grotto of trees, most pleasant in the summer
+ season." Here, on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, a market was held,
+ well stocked with roots, fruits, herbs, and flowers. On the north and east
+ sides stood large and stately houses of persons of quality and
+ consideration, the fronts of which, being supported by strong pillars,
+ afforded broad walks, known as the Piazza, and found convenient in wet and
+ sultry weather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here amongst other houses was that of my Lord Brouncker, where Mr. Pepys
+ enjoyed a most noble French dinner and much good discourse, in return for
+ which he gave much satisfaction by the singing of a new ballad, to wit,
+ Lord Dorset's famous song, "To all ye ladies now on land." Not far
+ distant, its face turned to the Strand, was the stately residence of the
+ Duke of Bedford, a large dark building, fronted by a great courtyard, and
+ backed by spacious gardens enclosed by red-brick walls. Likewise in the
+ Strand stood Arundel House, the residence of Henry Frederick Howard, Earl
+ of Arundel and Surrey, and Earl Marshal of England; Hatfield House, built
+ by Thomas Hatfield, Bishop of Durham, as a town residence for himself and
+ his heirs lawfully begotten; York House, richly adorned with the arms of
+ Villiers and Manners&mdash;one gloomy chamber of which was shown as that
+ wherein its late noble owner, George, first Duke of Buckingham, was
+ stabbed by Felton; Worcester House, at one time occupied by Lord
+ Chancellor Clarendon; and Essex House, situated near St. Clement Danes,
+ the town residence of Arthur Capel, Earl of Essex, "a sober, wise,
+ judicious, and pondering person, not illiterate beyond the rate of most
+ noblemen of this age."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were also many other noble mansions lying westward, amongst them
+ being those of the Dukes of Ormond and Norfolk in St. James's Square,
+ which was built at this time; Berkeley House, which stood on the site now
+ occupied by Berkeley Square, a magnificent structure containing a
+ staircase of cedar wood, and great suites of lofty rooms; Leicester House,
+ situated in Leicester Fields, subsequently known as Leicester Square,
+ behind which stretched a goodly common; Goring House, "a very pretty villa
+ furnished with silver jars, vases, cabinets, and other rich furniture,
+ even to wantonnesse and profusion," on the site of which Burlington Street
+ now stands; Clarendon House, a princely residence, combining "state, use,
+ solidity, and beauty," surrounded by fair gardens, that presently gave
+ place to Bond Street; Southampton House, standing, as Evelyn says, in "a
+ noble piazza&mdash;a little town," now known as Bloomsbury Square, whose
+ pleasant grounds commanded a full view of the rising hills of Hampstead
+ and Highgate; and Montagu House, described as a palace built in the French
+ fashion, standing on the ground now occupied by the British Museum, which
+ in this reign was backed by lonely fields, the dread scenes of "robbery,
+ murder, and every species of depravity and wickedness of which the heart
+ can think."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides the grounds and gardens surrounding these stately mansions, a
+ further aspect of space and freshness was added to the capital by public
+ parks. Foremost amongst these was St. James's, to which the merry monarch
+ added several fields, and for its greater advantage employed Monsieur La
+ Notre, the famous French landscape-gardener. Amongst the improvements this
+ ingenious man effected were planting trees of stately height, contriving a
+ canal one hundred feet broad and two hundred and eighty feet long, with a
+ decoy and duck island, [The goodnatured Charles made Monsieur St. Evremond
+ governor of Duck Island, to which position he attached a salary much
+ appreciated by the exile. The island was removed in 1790 to make room for
+ fresh improvements.] and making a pleasant pathway bordered by an aviary
+ on either side, usually called Bird Cage Walk. An enclosure for deer was
+ formed in the centre of the park; not far removed was the famous Physic
+ Garden, where oranges were first seen in England; and at the western end,
+ where Buckingham Palace has been erected, stood Arlington House, described
+ as "a most neat box, and sweetly seated amongst gardens, enjoying the
+ prospect of the park and the adjoining fields."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great attraction of St. James's Park was the Mall, which Monsieur
+ Sorbiere tells us was a walk "eight hundred and fifty paces in length,
+ beset with rows of large trees, and near a small wood, from whence you may
+ see a fine mead, a long canal, Westminster Abbey, and the suburbs, which
+ afford an admirable prospect." This path was skirted by a wooded border,
+ and at the extreme end was set with iron hoops, "for the purpose of
+ playing a game with a ball called the mall." ["Our Pall Mall is, I
+ believe, derived from paille maille, a game somewhat analogous to cricket,
+ and imported from France in the reign of the second Charles. It was
+ formerly played in St. James's Park, and in the exercise of the sport a
+ small hammer or mallet was used to strike the ball. I think it worth
+ noting that the Malhe crest is a mailed arm and hand, the latter grasping
+ a mallet."&mdash;NOTES AND QUERIES, 1st series, vol. iii. p. 351.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In St. James's Park Samuel Pepys first saw the Duke of York playing at
+ "pelemele"; and likewise in 1662 witnessed with astonishment people skate
+ upon the ice there, skates having been just introduced from Holland; on
+ another occasion he enjoyed the spectacle of Lords Castlehaven and Arran
+ running down and killing a stout buck for a wager before the king. And one
+ sultry July day, meeting an acquaintance here, the merry soul took him to
+ the farther end, where, seating himself under a tree in a corner, he sung
+ him some blithesome songs. It was likewise in St. James's Park the Duke of
+ York, meeting John Milton one day, asked him if his blindness was not to
+ be regarded as a just punishment from heaven, due to his having written
+ against the martyred king. "If so, sir," replied the great poet and
+ staunch republican, "what must we think of his majesty's execution upon a
+ scaffold?" To which question his royal highness vouchsafed no reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a favourite custom of his majesty, who invariably rose betimes, to
+ saunter in the park whilst the day was young and pass an hour or two in
+ stroking the heads of his feathered favourites in the aviary, feeding the
+ fowls in the pond with biscuits, and playing with the crowd of spaniels
+ ever attending his walks. For his greater amusement he had brought
+ together in the park a rare and valuable collection of birds and beasts;
+ amongst which were, according to a quaint authority, "an onocratylus, or
+ pelican, a fowl between a stork and a swan&mdash;a melancholy water-fowl
+ brought from Astracan by the Russian ambassador." This writer tells us,
+ "It was diverting to see how the pelican would toss up and turn a flat
+ fish, plaice or flounder, to get it right into its gullet at its lower
+ beak, which being filmy stretches to a prodigious wideness when it devours
+ a great fish. Here was also a small water-fowl, not bigger than a
+ more-hen, that went almost quite erect like the penguin of America. It
+ would eate as much fish as its whole body weighed, yet ye body did not
+ appear to swell the bigger. The Solan geese here are also great devourers,
+ and are said soon to exhaust all ye fish in a pond. Here was a curious
+ sort of poultry not much exceeding the size of a tame pidgeon, with legs
+ so short as their crops seemed to touch ye earth; a milk-white raven; a
+ stork which was a rarity at this season, seeing he was loose and could fly
+ loftily; two Balearian cranes, one of which having had one of his leggs
+ broken, and cut off above the knee, had a wooden or boxen leg and thigh,
+ with a joint so accurately made that ye creature could walke and use it as
+ well as if it had ben natural; it was made by a souldier. The park was at
+ this time stored with numerous flocks of severall sorts of ordinary and
+ extraordinary wild fowle breeding about the decoy, which, looking neere so
+ greate a citty, and among such a concourse of souldiers and people, is a
+ singular and diverting thing. There are also deere of several countries,
+ white, spotted like leopards; antelopes, an elk, red deere, roebucks,
+ staggs, Guinea goates, Arabian sheepe, etc. There are withy-potts or nests
+ for the wild fowle to lay their eggs in, a little above ye surface of ye
+ water."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hyde Park, lying close by, likewise afforded a pleasant and convenient
+ spot for recreation. Here, in a large circle railed off and known as the
+ Ring, the world of quality and fashion took the air in coaches. The king
+ and queen, surrounded by a goodly throng of maids of honour and gentlemen
+ in waiting, were wont to ride here on summer evenings, whilst courtiers
+ and citizens looked on the brilliant cavalcade with loyal delight. Horse
+ and foot races were occasionally held in the park, as were reviews
+ likewise, Cosmo, Grand Duke of Tuscany, "a very jolly and good comely
+ man," whilst visiting England in 1669, was entertained by his majesty with
+ a military parade held here one Sunday in May.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On arriving at Hyde Park, he found a great concourse of people and
+ carriages waiting the coming of his majesty, who presently appeared with
+ the Duke of York and many lords and gentlemen of the court. Having
+ acknowledged an enthusiastic greeting, Charles retired under shade of some
+ trees, in order to protect himself from the sun, and then gave orders for
+ the troops to march past. "The whole corps," says the Grand Duke,
+ "consisted of two regiments of infantry, and one of cavalry, and of three
+ companies of the body-guard, which was granted to the king by parliament
+ since his return, and was formed of six hundred horsemen, each armed with
+ carabines and pistols, all well mounted and dressed, which are uniform in
+ every thing but colour. When they had marched by, without firing either a
+ volley or a salve, his majesty dismounted from his horse, and entering his
+ carriage, retired to Whitehall."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides such diversions as were enjoyed in the parks, the people had
+ various other sources of public amusement; amongst these puppet-shows,
+ exhibitions of strength and agility, bear-baiting, cock-fighting, and
+ dancing obtained. Until the restoration, puppet-shows had not been seen
+ for years; for these droll dolls, being regarded as direct agents of
+ Satan, were discountenanced by the puritans. With the coming of his
+ majesty they returned in vast numbers, and were hailed with great delight
+ by the people. One of these exhibitions which found special favour with
+ the town, and speedily drew great audiences of gallants and ladies of
+ quality, was situated within the rails of Covent Garden. And so perfect
+ were the marionettes of this booth in the performance of divers sad
+ tragedies and gay comedies, that they had the honour of receiving a royal
+ command to play before their majesties at Whitehall. Amongst the most
+ famous tumblers, or, as they were then styled, posturemakers, of this
+ reign were Jacob Hall the friend of my Lady Castlemaine, and Joseph
+ Clarke, beloved by the citizens. Though the latter was "a well-made man
+ and rather gross than thin," we are told he "exhibited in the most natural
+ manner almost every species of deformity and dislocation; he could
+ dislocate his vertebrae so as to render himself a shocking spectacle; he
+ could also assume all the uncouth faces he had seen at a quaker's meeting,
+ at the theatre, or any public place. He was likewise the plague of all the
+ tailors about town. He would send for one of them to take measure of him,
+ but would so contrive it as to have a most immoderate rising in one of his
+ shoulders; when his clothes were brought home and tried upon him, the
+ deformity was removed into the other shoulder, upon which the tailor
+ begged pardon for the mistake, and mended it as fast as he could; but on
+ another trial found him as straight-shouldered a man as one would desire
+ to see, but a little unfortunate in a hump back. In fact, this wandering
+ tumour puzzled all the workmen about town, who found it impossible to
+ accommodate so changeable a customer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Florian Marchand, "the water-spouter," was another performer who enjoyed
+ considerable fame. Such was the dexterity of this conjurer that, "drinking
+ only fountaine-water, he rendered out of his mouth in severall glasses all
+ sorts of wine and sweete waters." A Turk, who walked up an almost
+ perpendicular line by means of his toes, danced blindfold on a tight rope
+ with a boy dangling from his feet, and stood on his head on the top of a
+ high mast, shared an equal popularity with Barbara Vanbeck, the bearded
+ woman, and "a monstrous beast, called a dromedary." These wondrous sights,
+ together with various others of a like kind, which were scattered
+ throughout the town and suburbs during the greater part of the year,
+ assembled in full strength at the fairs of St. Margaret, Southwark, and
+ St. Bartholomew, in Smithfield. These gatherings, which usually lasted a
+ fortnight, were looked forward to with considerable pleasure, and
+ frequented not only by citizens bent on sport, but by courtiers in search
+ of adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nay, even her majesty was tempted on one occasion to go a-fairing, as we
+ gather from a letter addressed to Sir Robert Paston, contained in Ives's
+ select papers. "Last week," says the writer thereof, "the queen, the
+ Duchess of Richmond, and the Duchess of Buckingham had a frolick to
+ disguise themselves like country lasses, in red petticoates, waistcoates,
+ etc., and so goe see the faire. Sir Bernard Gascoign, on a cart jade, rode
+ before the queen; another stranger before the Duchess of Buckingham, and
+ Mr. Roper before Richmond. They had all so overdone it in their disguise,
+ and look'd so much more like antiques than country volk, that as soon as
+ they came to the faire, the people began to goe after them; but the queen
+ going to a booth to buy a pair of yellow stockins for her sweethart, and
+ Sir Bernard asking for a pair of gloves, sticht with blew, for his
+ sweethart, they were soon, by their gebrish, found to be strangers, which
+ drew a bigger flock about them. One amongst them [who] had seen the queen
+ at dinner, knew her, and was proud of her knowledge. This soon brought all
+ the faire into a crowd to stare at the queen. Being thus discovered, they
+ as soon as they could got to their horses; but as many of the faire as had
+ horses, got up with their wives, children, sweetharts, or neighbours
+ behind them, to get as much gape as they could till they brought them to
+ the court gate. Thus by ill conduct was a merry frolick turned into a
+ penance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On another occasion my Lady Castlemaine went to Bartholomew fair to see
+ the puppets play "Patient Grissel;" and there was the street "full of
+ people expecting her coming out," who, when she appeared, "suffered her
+ with great respect to take the coach." Not only the king's mistress, but
+ likewise the whole court went to St. Margaret's fair to see "an Italian
+ wench daunce and performe all the tricks on the high rope to admiration;
+ and monkies and apes do other feates of activity." "They," says a quaint
+ author, "were gallantly clad A LA MODE, went upright, saluted the company,
+ bowing and pulling off their hats, with as good a grace as if instructed
+ by a dancing master. They turned heels over head with a basket having eggs
+ in it, without breaking any; also with lighted candles on their heads,
+ without extinguishing them; and with vessells of water without spilling a
+ drop."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cruel sport of bull and bear baiting was also commonly practised.
+ Seated round an amphitheatre, the people witnessed these unfortunate
+ animals being torn to pieces by dogs, the owners of which frequently
+ jumped into the arena to urge them to their sanguinary work, on the result
+ of which great wagers depended. Indignation arising against those who
+ witnessed such sights may be somewhat appeased by the knowledge that
+ infuriated bulls occasionally tossed the torn and bleeding carcases of
+ their tormentors into the faces and laps of spectators. Pepys frequently
+ speaks of dense crowds which assembled to witness this form of cruelty,
+ which he designates as good sport; and Evelyn speaks of a gallant steed
+ that, under the pretence that he had killed a man, was baited by dogs, but
+ fought so hard for his life "the fiercest of them could not fasten on him
+ till he was run through with swords." Not only bull and bear baiting, cock
+ and dog fighting were encouraged, but prize combats between man and man
+ were regarded as sources of great diversion. Pepys gives a vivid picture
+ of a furious encounter he, in common with a great and excited crowd,
+ witnessed at the bear-garden stairs, at Bankside, between a butcher and a
+ waterman. "The former," says he, "had the better all along, till by-and-by
+ the latter dropped his sword out of his hand; and the butcher, whether not
+ seeing his sword dropped I know not, but did give him a cut over the
+ wrist, so as he was disabled to fight any longer. But Lord! to see how in
+ a minute the whole stage was full of watermen to revenge the foul play,
+ and the butchers to defend their fellow, though most blamed him; and then
+ they all fell to it to knocking down and cutting many on each side. It was
+ pleasant to see, but that I stood in the pit, and feared that in the
+ tumult I might get some hurt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the more healthy sports which obtained during the reign were
+ horse-racing, tennis, and bowling. The monarch had, at vast expense, built
+ a house and stables at Newmarket, where he and his court regularly
+ repaired, to witness racing. Here likewise the king and "ye jolly blades
+ enjoyed dauncing, feasting, and revelling, more resembling a luxurious and
+ abandoned route than a Christian court." He had likewise a tennis-court
+ and bowling green at Whitehall, where at noonday and towards eve, blithe
+ lords, and ladies in brave apparel, might be seen at play. Bowling was a
+ game to which the people were much devoted, every suburban tavern having
+ its green, where good friends and honest neighbours challenged each
+ other's strength and skill. And amongst other pleasant sports and customs
+ were those practised on May-day, when maids rose betimes to bathe their
+ faces in dew, that they might become sweet-complexioned to men's sight;
+ and milk-maids with garlands of spring flowers upon their pails, and
+ posies in their breasts, danced to the merry music of fiddles adown the
+ streets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Court customs in the days of the merry monarch.&mdash;Dining in public.&mdash;The
+ Duke of Tuscany's supper to the king.&mdash;Entertainment of guests by
+ mountebanks.&mdash;Gaming at court.&mdash;Lady Castlemaine's losses.&mdash;A fatal
+ duel.&mdash;Dress of the period.&mdash;Riding-habits first seen.&mdash;His majesty
+ invents a national costume.&mdash;Introduction of the penny post.&mdash;Divorce
+ suits are known.&mdash;Society of Antiquaries.&mdash;Lord Worcester's
+ inventions.&mdash;The Duchess of Newcastle.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Few courts have been more brilliant than that of the merry monarch. All
+ the beauty of fair women, the gallantry of brave men, and the gaiety of
+ well-approved wits could compass, perpetually surrounded his majesty,
+ making the royal palace a lordly pleasure house. Noble banquets,
+ magnificent balls, and brilliant suppers followed each other in quick
+ succession. Three times a week&mdash;on Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays&mdash;the
+ king and queen dined publicly in ancient state, whilst rare music was
+ discoursed, and many ceremonies observed, amongst these being that each
+ servitor of the royal table should eat some bread dipped in sauce of the
+ dish he bore. On these occasions meats for the king's table were brought
+ from the kitchen by yeomen of the guard, or beef-eaters. These men,
+ selected as being amongst the handsomest, strongest, and tallest in
+ England, were dressed in liveries of red cloth, faced with black velvet,
+ having the king's cipher on the back, and on the breast the emblems of the
+ Houses of York and Lancaster. By them the dishes were handed to the
+ gentlemen in waiting, who served royalty upon their knees. "You see," said
+ Charles one day to the Chevalier de Grammont, "how I am waited on." "I
+ thank your majesty for the explanation," said the saucy Frenchman; "I
+ thought they were begging pardon for offering you so bad a dinner." [This
+ mode of serving the sovereign continued unto the coming of George I.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The costliness and splendour of some royal entertainments require the
+ description of an eye-witness to be fully realized. Evelyn, speaking of a
+ great feast given to the Knights of the Garter in the banqueting-hall,
+ tells us "the king sat on an elevated throne, at the upper end of the
+ table alone, the knights at a table on the right hand, reaching all the
+ length of the roome; over against them a cupboard of rich gilded plate; at
+ the lower end the musick; on the balusters above, wind musick, trumpets,
+ and kettle-drums. The king was served by the lords and pensioners who
+ brought up the dishes. About the middle of the dinner the knights drank
+ the king's health, then the king theirs, when the trumpets and musick
+ plaid and sounded, the guns going off at the Tower. At the banquet came in
+ the queene and stood by the king's left hand hand, but did not sit. Then
+ was the banquetting stuff flung about the roome profusely. In truth the
+ crowd was so great that I now staied no longer than this sport began for
+ fear of disorder. The cheere was extraordinary, each knight having forty
+ dishes to his messe, piled up five or six high."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Concerning the habit mentioned by Evelyn, of mobs rushing into
+ banquet-halls, in order to possess themselves of all on which they could
+ lay hands, many instances are mentioned. The Duke of Tuscany, amongst
+ other authorities, narrates the inconvenience it caused at a supper he
+ gave the king. When his majesty drove to the duke's residence he was
+ preceded by trumpeters and torch-bearers, attended by the horse-guards and
+ a retinue of courtiers, and accompanied by a vast crowd. On alighting from
+ the coach the Duke of Tuscany, together with the noblemen and gentlemen of
+ his household, received and conducted him through passages lighted by
+ torches to the banquet-hall. From the ceiling of this saloon was suspended
+ a chandelier of rock crystal, blazing with tapers; beneath it stood a
+ circular table, at the upper end of which was placed a chair of state for
+ the king. The whole entertainment was costly and magnificent. As many as
+ eighty dishes were set upon the table; foreign wines, famous for great age
+ and delicate flavour, sparkled in goblets of chased gold; and finally, a
+ dessert of Italian fruits and Portuguese sweetmeats was served. But scarce
+ had this been laid upon the board, when the impatient crowd which had
+ gathered round the house and forced its way inside to witness the banquet,
+ now violently burst into the saloon and carried away all that lay before
+ them. Neither the presence of the king nor the appearance of his soldiers
+ guarding the entrance with carbines was sufficient to prevent entrance or
+ hinder pillage. Charles, used to such scenes, left the table and retired
+ into the duke's private apartments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A quaint and curious account of a less ceremonious and more convivial
+ feast, also graced by the king's presence, was narrated by Sir Hugh
+ Cholmely to a friend and gossip. This supper was given by Sir George
+ Carteret, a man of pleasant humour, and moreover treasurer of the navy. By
+ the time the meats were removed, the king and his courtiers waxed
+ exceedingly merry, when Sir William Armorer, equerry to his majesty, came
+ to him and swore, "'By God, sir,' says he, 'you are not so kind to the
+ Duke of York of late as you used to be.' 'Not I?' says the king. 'Why so?'
+ 'Why,' says he, 'if you are, let us drink his health.' 'Why, let us,' says
+ the king. Then he fell on his knees and drank it; and having done, the
+ king began to drink it. 'Nay, sir,' says Armorer; 'by God, you must do it
+ on your knees!' So he did, and then all the company; and having done it,
+ all fell acrying for joy, being all maudlin and kissing one another, the
+ king the Duke of York, the Duke of York the king; and in such a maudlin
+ pickle as never people were."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout this reign the uttermost hospitality and good-fellowship
+ abounded. Scarce a day passed that some noble house did not throw open its
+ doors to a brilliant throng of guests; few nights grew to dawn that the
+ vicinities of St. James's and Covent Garden were not made brilliant by the
+ torches of those accompanying revellers to their homes. The fashionable
+ hour for dinner was three of the clock, and for greater satisfaction of
+ guests it now became the mode to entertain them after that meal with
+ performances of mountebanks and musicians, Various diaries inform us of
+ this custom. When my Lord Arlington had bidden his friends to a feast, he
+ subsequently diverted them by the tricks of a fellow who swallowed a knife
+ in a horn sheath, together with several pebbles, which he made rattle in
+ his stomach, and produced again, to the wonder and amusement of all who
+ beheld him. [At a great dinner given by this nobleman, Evelyn, who was
+ present, tells us that Lord Stafford, the unfortunate nobleman afterwards
+ executed on Tower Hill, "rose from the table in some disorder, because
+ there were roses stuck about the fruite when the descert was set on the
+ table; such an antipathie it seems he had to them, as once Lady St. Leger
+ also had, and to that degree, that, as Sirr Kenelm Digby tell us, laying
+ but a rose upon her cheeke when she was asleepe, it raised a blister; but
+ Sir Kenelm was a teller of strange things."] The master of the mint,
+ worthy Mr. Slingsby, a man of finer taste, delighted his guests with the
+ performances of renowned good masters of music, one of whom, a German,
+ played to great perfection on an instrument with five wire strings called
+ the VOIL D'AMORE; whilst my Lord Sunderland treated his visitors to a
+ sight of Richardson, the renowned fire eater, who was wont to devour
+ brimstone on glowing coals; melt a beer-glass and eat it up; take a live
+ coal on his tongue, on which he put a raw oyster, and let it remain there
+ till it gaped and was quite broiled; take wax, pitch and sulphur, and
+ drink them down flaming; hold a fiery hot iron between his teeth, and
+ throw it about like a stone from hand to hand, and perform various other
+ prodigious feats.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Other means of indoor amusement were practised in those days, which seem
+ wholly incompatible with the gravity of the nation in these latter times.
+ Pepys tells us that going to the court one day he found the Duke and
+ Duchess of York, with all the great ladies, sitting upon a carpet on the
+ ground playing "I love my love with an A, because he is so-and-so; and I
+ hate him with an A, because of this and that;" and some of the ladies were
+ mighty witty, and all of them very merry. Grown persons likewise indulged
+ in games of blind man's buff, and amusements of a like character; whilst
+ at one time, the king, queen, and the whole court falling into much
+ extravagance, as Burnet says, "went about masked, and came into houses
+ unknown, and danced there with a great deal of wild frolic. In all this
+ they were so disguised, that without being in the secret, none could
+ distinguish them. They were carried about in hackney chairs. Once the
+ queen's chairmen, not knowing who she was, went from her; so she was alone
+ and was much disturbed, and came to Whitehall in a hackney coach; some say
+ it was in a cart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dancing was also a favourite and common amusement amongst all classes.
+ Scarce a week went by that Whitehall was not lighted up for a ball, at
+ which the king, queen, and courtiers danced bransles, corants, and French
+ figures; [The bransle, or brawl, had all the characteristics of a
+ country-dance; several persons taking part in it, and all at various times
+ joining hands. The corant was a swift lively dance, in which two persons
+ only took part, and was not unlike our modern galop.] and no night passed
+ but such entertainments were likewise held in the city. Billiards and
+ chess were also played, whilst gambling became a ruling passion. The
+ queen, Duchess of York, and Duchess of Cleveland had each her card-table,
+ around which courtiers thronged to win and lose prodigious sums. The
+ latter being a thorough rake at heart, delighted in the excitement which
+ hazard afforded; and the sums changing owners at her hoard were sometimes
+ enormous. Occasionally she played for a thousand, or fifteen hundred
+ pounds at a cast, and in a single night lost as much as twenty-five
+ hundred guineas. It is related that once when playing basset she lost all
+ her money; but, being unwilling to retire, and hopeful of regaining her
+ losses, she asked young Churchill, on whom she had bestowed many favours,
+ to lend her twenty pieces. Though the wily youth had a thousand before him
+ on the table, he coolly refused her request, on the plea that the bank&mdash;which
+ he was then keeping&mdash;never lent. "Not a person in the place," says
+ the narrator of this anecdote, "but blamed him; as to the duchess, her
+ resentment burst out into a bleeding at her nose, and breaking of her
+ lace, without which aid it is believed her vexation had killed her on the
+ spot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The courtly Evelyn speaks of a certain Twelfth-night, when the king opened
+ the revels in his privy chamber by throwing dice, and losing one hundred
+ pounds; and Pepys describes the groom-porters' rooms where gambling
+ greatly obtained, and "where persons of the best quality do sit down with
+ people of any, though meaner." Cursing and swearing, grumbling and
+ rejoicing, were heard here to an accompanying rattle of guineas; the whole
+ causing dense confusion. And amongst the figures crouching round the
+ tables of this hell, that of my Lord St. Albans was conspicuous. So great,
+ indeed, was his passion for gambling, that when approaching his eightieth
+ year, and quite blind, he was unable to renounce his love for cards, but
+ with the help of a servant who named them to him, indulged himself in this
+ way as of yore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As may be expected, disputes, frequently ending in duels, continually
+ arose betwixt those who gambled. Although the king had, on his
+ restoration, issued a proclamation against this common practice,
+ threatening such as engaged in it with displeasure, declaring them
+ incapable of holding any office in his service, and forbidding them to
+ appear at court, yet but little attention was paid his words, and duels
+ continually took place, Though most frequently resorted to as a means of
+ avenging outraged honour, they were occasionally the result of
+ misunderstanding. A pathetic story is told of a fatal encounter, caused by
+ a trifle light as air, which took place in the year 1667 at Covent Garden,
+ between Sir Henry Bellasis and Tom Porter&mdash;the same witty soul who
+ wrote a play called "The Villain," which was performed at the Duke's
+ Theatre, and described as "a pleasant tragedy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These worthy gentlemen and loyal friends loved each other exceedingly. One
+ fatal day, both were bidden to dine with Sir Robert Carr, at whose table
+ it was known all men drank freely; and having feasted, they two talked
+ apart, when bluff Sir Henry, giving words of counsel to honest Tom, from
+ force of earnestness spoke louder than his wont. Marvelling at this, some
+ of those standing apart said to each other, "Are they quarrelling, that
+ they talk so high?" overhearing which the baronet replied in a merry tone,
+ "No, I would have you know I never quarrel but I strike; and take that as
+ a rule of mine." At these words Tom Porter, being anxious, after the
+ manner of those who have drunk deep, to apprehend offence in speech of
+ friend or foe, cried out he would like to see the man in England that
+ durst give him a blow. Accepting this as a challenge, Sir Henry dealt him
+ a stroke on the ear, which the other would have returned in anger but that
+ they were speedily parted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And presently Tom Porter, leaving the house full of resentment for the
+ injury he had received, and of resolution to avenge it, met Mr. Dryden the
+ poet, to whom he recounted the story. He concluded by requesting he might
+ have his boy to bring him word which way Sir Henry Bellasis would drive,
+ for fight he would that night, otherwise he felt sure they should be
+ friends in the morning, and the blow would rest upon him. Dryden complying
+ with his request, Tom Porter, still inflamed by fury, went to a
+ neighbouring coffee-house, when presently word arrived Sir Harry's coach
+ was coming that way. On this Tom Porter rushed out, stopped the horses,
+ and bade the baronet alight. "Why," said the man, who but an hour before
+ had been his best friend, "you will not hurt me in coming out, will you?"
+ "No," answered the other shortly. Sir Henry then descended, and both drew
+ their swords. Tom Porter asked him if he were ready, and hearing he was,
+ they fought desperately, till of a sudden a sharp cry was heard; Sir
+ Henry's weapon fell upon the ground, and he placed one hand to his side,
+ from which blood flowed freely. Then calling his opponent to him, he
+ looked in his face reproachfully, kissed him lovingly, and bade him seek
+ safety. "For, Tom," said he, struggling hard to speak, "thou hast hurt me;
+ but I will make shift to stand upon my legs till thou mayest withdraw, and
+ the world not take notice of you, for," continued he, with much
+ tenderness, "I would not have thee troubled for what thou hast done." And
+ the little crowd who had gathered around carried him to his coach and
+ twenty days later they followed him to his grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout this merry reign, many fantastic changes took place in the
+ costumes of courtiers and their followers. At the restoration, the dress
+ most common to women of all ranks consisted of a gown with a laced
+ stomacher and starched neckerchief, a sad-coloured cloak with a French
+ hood, and a high-crowned hat. Such habiliments, admitting of little
+ variety and less ornament, found no favour in the eyes of those who
+ returned from foreign courts with the king, and therefore a change was
+ gradually effected. The simple gown of wool and cotton gave place to loose
+ and flowing draperies of silk and satin; the stiff neckerchief was removed
+ to display fair shoulders and voluptuous breasts; the hat was bedecked by
+ feathers of rare plumage and rich colour; the cloaks changed hues from sad
+ to gay; the hoods being of "yellow bird's eye," and other bright tints.
+ Indeed, the prodigal manner in which ladies of quality now exposed their
+ bosoms, though pleasing to the court, became a matter of grave censure to
+ worthy men. One of these in a pamphlet, entitled "A Just and Seasonable
+ Reprehension of Naked Breasts and Shoulders," charges women of fashion
+ with "overlacing their gown bodies, and so thrusting up their breasts in
+ order that they might show them half-naked." It was not only at balls and
+ in chambers of entertainment, he avowed, they appeared in this manner, but
+ likewise at church, where their dress was "not only immodest, but
+ sometimes impudent and lascivious;" for they braved all dangers to have
+ the satisfaction of being seen, and the consolation of giving pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The riding-habit, first introduced in 1664 caused considerable notice, and
+ no small amount of mirth. The garb, as it was called, consisted of a
+ doublet buttoned up the breast, a coat with long skirts, a periwig and
+ tall hat, so that women clad in this fashion might be mistaken for men, if
+ it were not for the petticoat which dragged under the coat. At the
+ commencement of the reign, ladies of the court wore their hair after the
+ French fashion, cut short in front and frizzed upon the forehead. When the
+ queen arrived, her hair was arranged A LA NEGLIGENCE, a mode declared
+ mighty pretty; but presently a fashion came in vogue of wearing "false
+ locks set on wyres to make them stand at a distance from the head; as
+ fardingales made the clothes stand out in Queen Elizabeth's reign."
+ Painting the face, which had been practised during the Commonwealth,
+ became fashionable; as did likewise the use of patches and vizards or
+ masks; which from the convenience they afforded wearers whilst witnessing
+ an immoral play, or conducting a delicate intrigue, came greatly into use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to Randal Holmes's notes on dress, in the Harleian Library, the
+ male costume at the restoration consisted of "a short-waisted doublet, and
+ petticoat breeches&mdash;the lining, being lower than the breeches, is
+ tied above the knees. The breeches are ornamented with ribands up to the
+ pocket, and half their breadth upon the thigh; the waistband is set about
+ with ribands, and the shirt hanging out over them." This dress gradually
+ increased in richness and ornamentation: the doublet and breeches being
+ changed from cloth to velvet and satin, the hat trimmed with plumes of gay
+ feathers, and the neck adorned with bands of cambric, trimmed with
+ Flanders and Brussels lace. The perfection and costliness to which the
+ costume eventually reached is best shown by a description of Sir Richard
+ Fanshaw ambassador of the king, as presented in the diary of his spouse.
+ "Sir Richard was dressed," she writes, "in a very rich suit of clothes of
+ a dark FILLEMONTE brocade, laced with silver and gold lace&mdash;nine
+ laces&mdash;every one as broad as my hand, and a little silver and gold
+ lace laid between them, both of very curious workmanship; his suit was
+ trimmed with scarlet taffety ribbon; his stockings of white silk upon long
+ scarlet silk ones; his shoes black, with scarlet shoestrings and gaiters;
+ his linen very fine, laced with rich Flanders lace; a black beaver
+ buttoned on the left side with a jewel of twelve hundred pounds' value, a
+ rich curious wrought gold chain, made in the Indies at which hung the king
+ his master's picture, richly set with diamonds; on his fingers he wore two
+ rich rings; his gloves trimmed with the same ribbon as his clothes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The uttermost extravagance and luxury in dress now obtained; indeed, to
+ such a passion and pride did it reach that the monarch resolved on giving
+ it some check by inventing a suit of plainer pretensions, which should
+ become the national costume, and admit no change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This determination he solemnly declared to his council in October, 1666,
+ and on the 14th of the month appeared clad in a long vest slashed with
+ white silk, reaching the knee, having the sword girt over it, a loose
+ coat, straight Spanish breeches ruffled with black ribbons, and buskins
+ instead of shoes and stockings. Though the habit was pronounced decent and
+ becoming to his majesty, and was quickly adopted by the courtiers, there
+ were those amongst his friends who offered him a wager he would not
+ persist in wearing it long. At this the king stated his resolution afresh
+ of never changing; but before the month was out he had made an alteration,
+ for inasmuch as the vest being slashed with white, was said by a wag to
+ make the wearers look like magpies, his majesty changed the colour of the
+ silk to black. This "manly and comely habit" might have become permanently
+ the fashion, if the King of France, by way of ridiculing the merry
+ monarch, had not caused his footmen to be clad in like manner. Therefore,
+ in less than two years, this mode gave place to others more fantastical.
+ The vest was retained, but the shape and material were altered; the
+ surcoat of cloth was discarded for velvet and rich plush, adorned with
+ buckles of precious stones and chains of gold; the Spanish leather boots
+ were laid aside for high-heeled shoes with rosettes and silver buckles.
+ Towards the close of the reign the costume became much plainer. Through
+ all these varying fashions the periwig, introduced in 1663, held its own,
+ increasing in length and luxuriance with time. On its first coming into
+ general use, the clergy had cried out against it as ministering to the
+ vanity and extravagance of the age; but in a while many of them adopted
+ its use, for, as Granger remarks, "it was observed that a periwig procured
+ many persons a respect and even veneration which they mere strangers to
+ before, and to which they had not the least claim from their personal
+ merit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst other strange innovations and various improvements known in this
+ reign, the introduction of a penny post may be considered the most useful.
+ King James I., of happy memory, had, in imitation of like regulations in
+ other countries, established a general post for foreign parts; King
+ Charles I. had given orders to Thomas Witherings, Esquire, his
+ postmaster-general, to settle "a running post or two, to run night and day
+ between Edinburgh, in Scotland, and the city of London, to go thither and
+ back in six days;" but the organization of a penny post, for the
+ conveyance of letters and parcels throughout the capital and suburbs, was
+ reserved for the reign of the merry monarch. This beneficial scheme was
+ originated by an upholsterer named Murray, who communicated it to one
+ William Dockwra, a man who for over ten years had laboured with fidelity
+ in the Custom House. Uniting their efforts, they, with great labour and
+ vast expense, carried the plan into execution in the year 1680.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The principal office was stationed at the residence of William Dockwra, in
+ Lime Street; seven sorting-houses and as many as four hundred
+ receiving-houses were speedily established in the cities of London,
+ Westminster, and the suburbs; and a great number of clerks and messengers
+ were employed to collect, enter, and deliver parcels and letters not
+ exceeding one pound in weight nor ten pounds in value. Stamps were used as
+ an acknowledgment that postage was paid, and likewise to mark the hours
+ when letters were sent out from the offices, by which, in case of delay,
+ its cause might be traced to the messengers; and deliveries took place ten
+ times in the vicinity of the Exchange and Inns of Court, and four times in
+ the suburbs daily. All persons were requested to post their communications
+ before six o'clock in the winter, and seven in the summer, on Saturday
+ nights, "that the many poor men employed may have a little time to provide
+ for their families against the Lord's Day." And it was moreover intimated
+ that upon three days at Christmas, and two at Easter and Whitsuntide, as
+ likewise upon the 30th of January, the post would not be delivered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the first this scheme promised success, the manner in which it was
+ carried out being wholly admirable; yet there were many who raised their
+ voices against it persistently. Porters and messengers declared it took
+ away their means of subsistence; whilst those of higher grade were
+ confident it was a contrivance of the papists, which enabled them to carry
+ out their wicked schemes with greater security. But these illusions
+ vanished with time; and the penny post became such a success that
+ Government laid claim to it as a branch of the General Post Office, and
+ annexed its revenues to the Crown. [In the year 1703 Queen Anne bestowed a
+ grant on Elizabeth, Dowager countess of Thanet, to erect a penny
+ post-office in Dublin, similar to that in existence in London.]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another innovation in this interesting reign were stage-coaches, described
+ as affording "admirable commodiousness both for men and women of better
+ rank, to travel from London and to almost all the villages near this great
+ city, that the like hath not been known in the world, wherein one may be
+ transported to any place, sheltered from foul weather and foul ways, free
+ from endamaging one's health or body by hard jogging or over-violent
+ emotion, and this not only at a low price, as about a shilling for every
+ five miles in a day; for the stage-coaches called flying coaches make
+ forty or fifty miles in a day, as from London to Cambridge or Oxford, and
+ that in the space of twelve hours, not counting the time for dining,
+ setting forth not too early, nor coming in too late."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Likewise were divorce suits introduced whilst Charles II. sat upon the
+ throne for the first time&mdash;if the case of Henry VIII. be excepted&mdash;when
+ my Lord Rosse, in consequence of the misconduct of his lady, had a bill
+ brought into the House of Lords for dissolving his marriage and enabling
+ him to wed again. There being at this period, 1669, a project for
+ divorcing the king from the queen, it was considered Lord Rosse's suit, if
+ successful, would facilitate a like bill in favour of his majesty. After
+ many and stormy debates his lordship gained his case by a majority of two
+ votes. It is worth noting that two of the lords spiritual, Dr. Cosin,
+ Bishop of Durham, and Dr. Wilkins, Bishop of Chester, voted in favour of
+ the bill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The social history of this remarkable reign would be incomplete without
+ mention of the grace and patronage which Charles II. extended towards the
+ Society of Antiquaries. This learned body, according to Stow, had been in
+ existence since the days of Elizabeth; but for lack of royal
+ acknowledgment of its worth and lore, was permitted to languish in neglect
+ and finally become extinct. However, under the commonwealth the society
+ had revived, from the fact that numbers of the nobility being unemployed
+ in affairs of state, and having no court to attend, applied themselves
+ whilst in retirement to the study of chemistry, mathematics, mechanism,
+ and natural philosophy. The Duke of Devonshire, Marquis of Worcester,
+ Viscount Brouncker, Honourable Robert Boyle, and Sir Robert Murray, built
+ laboratories, made machines, opened mines, and perfected inventions. When
+ the temper of the times permitted, these men, with various others of like
+ tastes, drew together, held weekly meetings at Gresham College in
+ Bishopsgate Street, discoursed on abstruse subjects, and heard erudite
+ lectures, from Dr. Petty on chemistry, from Dr. Wren on astronomy, from
+ Mr. Laurence Rooke on geometry; so that the Society of Antiquaries may be
+ said to have been founded in the last years of the republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Charles II., having some knowledge of chemistry and science, looked
+ upon the society with favourable eyes; and in the first year of his
+ restoration desired to become one of its members; expressed satisfaction
+ it had been placed upon a proper basis in his reign; represented the
+ difficulty of its labours; suggested certain investigations, and declared
+ his interest in all its movements. Moreover, in the year 1662 he bestowed
+ on the society a charter in which he styled himself its founder and
+ patron; presented it with a silver mace to be borne before the president
+ on meeting days; and gave it the use of the royal arms for a seal. Nor did
+ his concern for its welfare cease here. He was frequently present at its
+ meetings, and occasionally witnessed, and assisted "with his own hands,"
+ in the performance of experiments. Some of these were of a singularly
+ interesting character; amongst which may be mentioned infusion of the
+ blood of an animal into the veins of a man. This took place in the year
+ 1667, the subject being one Arthur Coga, a minister poor in worldly
+ substance, who, in exchange for a guinea, consented to have the operation
+ performed on him. Accordingly two surgeons of great skill and learning,
+ named Lower and King, on a certain day injected twelve ounces of sheep's
+ blood into his veins. After which he smoked an honest pipe in peace, drank
+ a glass of good canary with relish, and found himself no worse in mind or
+ body. And in two days more fourteen ounces of sheep's blood were
+ substituted for eight of his own without loss of virility to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nor were experiments in vivisection unknown to the Royal Society, as it
+ was called, for the "Philosophical Transactions" speak of a dog being tied
+ through the back above the spinal artery, thereby depriving him of motion
+ until the artery was loosened, when he recovered; and again, it is
+ recorded that Dr. Charleton cut the spleen out of a living dog with good
+ success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weighty discourses of the learned men who constituted the society
+ frequently delighted his majesty; though it must be confessed he sometimes
+ laughed at them, and once sorely puzzled them by asking the following
+ question. "Supposing," said Charles, assuming a serious expression, and
+ speaking in a solemn tone, "two pails of water were placed in two
+ different scales and weighed alike, and that a live bream or small fish
+ was put into one, now why should not the pail in which it was placed weigh
+ heavier than the other?" Most members were troubled to find the king a
+ fitting reply, and many strange theories were advanced by way of
+ explaining why the pail should not be found heavier, none of them being
+ thought satisfactory. But at last a man sitting far down the table was
+ heard to express an opinion, when those surrounding him laughed; hearing
+ which the king, who had not caught his words, asked him to repeat them.
+ "Why, your majesty," said he boldly, "I do believe the pail would weigh
+ heavier." "Odds-fish!" cried Charles, bursting out into laughter, "you are
+ right, my honest fellow!" and so the merriment became general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Royal Society was composed of men of quality with a genius for
+ investigation, and men of learning eager for further knowledge. Persons of
+ all nationalities, religions, and professions were admitted members; and
+ it was continually enriched by the addition of curiosities, amongst which
+ in particular were an herb which grew in the stomach of a thrush; the skin
+ of a Moor tanned, with the beard and hair white; a clock, having movements
+ directed by loadstone; an ostrich, whose young had been born alive;
+ mummies; strange fish; and the hearts and livers of vipers. Likewise was
+ the society endowed with gifts, amongst the most notable being the
+ valuable library of Henry Howard, afterwards Duke of Norfolk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fostered by this society, science received its first impulse towards the
+ astounding progress it has since achieved. Nay, in this reign the germs of
+ some inventions were sown, which, subsequently springing into existence,
+ have startled the world by their novelty, utility, and power, Monsieur
+ Sorbiere, when in England, was shown a journal kept by Montconis,
+ concerning the transactions of the Royal Society, in which several new
+ devices, "which scarce can be believed unless seen," were described.
+ Amongst these were an instrument for showing alterations in the weather,
+ whether from heat, cold, wind, or rain; a method for blowing up ships; a
+ process for purifying salt water, so that it could be drunk; and an
+ instrument by which those ignorant of drawing could sketch and design any
+ object. He also states Dr. Wallis had taught one born deaf and dumb to
+ read.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1663, "the right honourable (and deservedly to be praised and admired)
+ Edward Somerset, Marquis of Worcester," published a quaint volume entitled
+ "A Century of the Names and Scantlings of such Inventions as at present I
+ can call to mind to have tried and perfected, which (my former notes being
+ lost) I have, at the instance of a powerful friend, endeavoured to set
+ down in such a way as may sufficiently instruct me to put any of them in
+ practice." Amongst these are enumerated false decks, such as in a moment
+ should kill and take prisoners as many as should board the ship, without
+ blowing her up, and in a quarter of an hour's time should recover their
+ former shape without discovering the secret; a portable fortification,
+ able to contain five hundred men, which in the space of six hours might be
+ set up, and made cannon-proof; a dexterous tinder-box which served as a
+ pistol, and was yet capable of lighting a fire or candle at any hour of
+ the night without giving its possessor the trouble of stretching his hand
+ from bed; a lock, the ways of opening which might be varied ten millions
+ of times, but which on a stranger touching it would cause an alarm that
+ could not be stopped, and would register what moneys had been taken from
+ its keeping; a boat which would work against wind and tide; with various
+ other discoveries to the number of one hundred, all arrived at from
+ mathematical studies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The means of propelling a boat against such disadvantages, to which the
+ Marquis of Worcester alludes, was in all probability by steam-power. This
+ he described as "an admirable and most forcible way to drive up water by
+ fire," the secret of which he is believed to have first discovered.
+ [Before the century was concluded, Captain Savery contrived a steam-engine
+ which was certainly the first put to practical uses. It has been stated
+ that he owed the knowledge of this invention to hints conveyed in Lord
+ Worcester's little volume.] In the preface to his little book, the marquis
+ states he had sacrificed from six to seven hundred thousand pounds in
+ bringing his various inventions to perfection; after which it is
+ satisfactory to find he derived some profit from one of them, conceived,
+ as he says, "by heavenly inspiration." This was a water-engine for drying
+ marsh-lands and mines, requiring neither pump, suckers, barrels, bellows,
+ nor external nor additional help, save that afforded from its own
+ operations. This engine Sorbiere describes as one of the most curious
+ things he had a mind to see, and says one man by the help of this machine
+ raised four large buckets full of water in an instant forty feet high,
+ through a pipe eight inches long. An act of parliament was passed enabling
+ the marquis to reap the benefit and profit from this invention, subject to
+ a tenth part which was reserved for the king and his heirs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Royal Society soon became one of the foremost objects of interest in
+ the city. Foreigners of distinction were conducted to its rooms that they
+ might behold the visible signs of knowledge it could proudly boast; and
+ women of culture were admitted to hear the lectures its members delivered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst these latter may be mentioned the eccentric Duchess of Newcastle;
+ a lady who dressed her footmen in velvet coats, habited herself in antique
+ gowns, wrote volumes of plays and poetry, desired the reputation of
+ learning, and indulged in circumstances of pomp and state. Having
+ expressed her desire to be present at one of the meetings of the Royal
+ Society, the council prepared to receive her, not, it must be admitted,
+ without some fear her extravagance would expose them to the ridicule of
+ the town, and place them fit the mercy of ballad-mongers. So it happened
+ one fair May-day, in the year 1667 a vast concourse of people had
+ assembled to witness her arrival at Arundel House in the Strand, where the
+ society held its meetings for some years after the burning of Gresham
+ College. And she in good time reaching there, surrounded by her maids of
+ honour, gentlemen in waiting, and lackeys, was met by the president,
+ Viscount Brouncker, having his mace carried before him, and was conducted
+ to the great room. When the meeting was over, various experiments were
+ tried for her satisfaction; amongst others a piece of roasted mutton was
+ turned into pure blood. The while she witnessed these sights, crowds of
+ gallants gathered round her that they might catch and retain such fine
+ things as fell from her lips; but she only cried out her wonder and
+ admiration at all she saw; and at the end of her visit was conducted in
+ state to her coach by several noble lords, notable amongst whom was a
+ vastly pretty young man, Francis Seymour, fifth Duke of Somerset.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A period rich in literature.&mdash;John Milton's early life.&mdash;Writing
+ "Paradise Lost."&mdash;Its publication and success.&mdash;His later works and
+ death.&mdash;John Dryden gossips with wits and players.&mdash;Lord Rochester's
+ revenge.&mdash;Elkanah Settle.&mdash;John Crowne.&mdash;Thomas Otway rich in
+ miseries.&mdash;Dryden assailed by villains.&mdash;The ingenious Abraham
+ Cowley.&mdash;The author of "Hudibras."&mdash;Young Will Wycherley and Lady
+ Castlemaine&mdash;The story of his marriage.&mdash;Andrew Marvell, poet and
+ politician.&mdash;John Bunyan.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The men of genius who lived in the days of the merry monarch have rendered
+ his reign, like that of Elizabeth, illustrious in the annals of
+ literature. The fact of "Paradise Lost," the "Pilgrim's Progress,"
+ "Hudibras," and "Alexander's Feast" being given to the world whilst
+ Charles II. occupied the throne, would have sufficiently marked the epoch
+ as one exceeding in intellectual brilliancy; but besides these works, an
+ abundance of plays, poems, satires, treatises, and histories added fresh
+ lustre to this remarkable age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the period of the restoration, John Milton had reached his fifty-second
+ year. He had studied in the University of Cambridge; published the "Masque
+ of Comus;" likewise a treatise against the Established Church; taught
+ school at Aldersgate Street; married a wife and advocated divorce; printed
+ a pamphlet to compose the minds of those disturbed by the murder of
+ Charles I.; as also a defence of his murderers, justifying the monarch's
+ execution, for which the author was awarded a thousand pounds; had become
+ secretary to Cromwell, whom he stooped to flatter; and had even, on the
+ advent of his majesty's return, written and set forth "A Ready and Easy
+ Way to establish a Free Commonwealth." ["To your virtue," writes John
+ Milton to Oliver Cromwell, "overpowering and resistless, every man gives
+ way, except some who, without equal qualifications, aspire to equal
+ honours, who envy the distinctions of merit greater than their own, and
+ who have yet to learn that, in the coalition of human society, nothing is
+ more pleasing to God, or more agreeable to reason, than that the highest
+ mind should have the sovereign power. Such, sir, are you, by general
+ confession: such are the things achieved by you, the greatest and most
+ glorious of our countrymen, the director of our public councils, the
+ leader of unconquered armies the father of your country; for by that title
+ does every good man hail you with sincere and voluntary praise."]
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the landing of Charles II. Milton withdrew to the privacy afforded by a
+ residence in Bartholomew Close, near West Smithfield. For a time he was
+ apprehensive of punishment. His pamphlet justifying the late king's
+ execution was, with others of a like kind, burned by the common hangman;
+ but though parliament ordered the attorney-general would prosecute the
+ authors of these works, Milton was neither seized nor brought to trial.
+ Soon after his arrival, Charles published an act of grace promising free
+ pardon to those instrumental in overthrowing his father's government, with
+ the exception of such as had contrived his death; and inasmuch as Milton
+ had but justified that monstrous act after it had taken place, he escaped
+ condemnation. Moreover, he received a special pardon, which passed the
+ privy seal in December, 1660. His escape has been attributed to his friend
+ Davenant. This loyal soldier had, when taken by Cromwell's troopers in the
+ civil war, been condemned to speedy death; from which, by Milton's
+ intercession, he escaped; an act of mercy Davenant now repaid in kind, by
+ appealing to his friends in behalf of the republican's safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having secured his freedom, Milton lived in peace and obscurity in Jewin
+ Street, near Aldersgate Street. During the commonwealth his first wife,
+ the mother of his three children, had died; on which he sought solace and
+ companionship in a union with Catherine Woodcock, who survived her
+ marriage but twelve months; and being left free once more, he, in the year
+ of grace 1661, entered into the bonds of holy matrimony for a third time,
+ with Elizabeth Minshul, a lady of excellent family and shrewish temper,
+ who rendered his daughters miserable in their father's lifetime, and
+ defrauded them after his death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In order to support his family he continued to keep a school, and likewise
+ employed himself in writing "Paradise Lost" the composition of which he
+ had begun five years previously. From his youth upwards he had been
+ ambitious to furnish the world with some important work; and prevision of
+ resulting fame had given him strength and fortitude in periods of
+ difficulty and depression. And now the time had arrived for realization of
+ his dream, though stricken by blindness, harassed by an unquiet wife, and
+ threatened by poverty, he laboured sore for fame. The more fully to enjoy
+ quiet necessary to his mental condition, he removed to a house in
+ Artillery Walk, Bunhill Fields. His life was one of simplicity. He rose as
+ early as four o'clock in summer and five in winter, and being "smit with
+ the love of sacred song," had a chapter of the Bible read to him; studied
+ until twelve, dined frugally at one, and afterwards held discourse with
+ such friends as came to visit him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of these was Thomas Elwood, a quaker much esteemed amongst good men,
+ who, in order that he might enjoy the advantages of the poet's
+ conversation, read Latin to him every afternoon save Sunday. The whilst
+ his voice rose and fell in regular monotony, the blind man drank his words
+ with thirsty ears; and so acute were the senses remaining to him, that
+ when Elwood read what he did not understand, Milton perceived it by the
+ inflection of his voice, and stopped him to explain the passage. In fair
+ weather the poet wandered abroad, enjoying the fragrance of sweet pasture
+ land, and the warmth of glad sunlight he might not behold. And anon,
+ seated in a high-backed chair without his door, his straight pale face
+ full of repose and dignity, his light brown hair falling in curls upon his
+ shoulders, his large grey eyes, "clear to outward view of blemish or of
+ spot," fixed on vacancy, his figure clad in coarse cloth&mdash;he received
+ those who sought his society.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In their absence the poet spent solitary hours conning over as many lines
+ of the great poem as his memory could store, until one of his friends
+ arrived, and relieved him by taking the staazas down. Frequently his
+ nephew, Edward Philips, performed this task for him. To him Milton was in
+ the habit of showing his work as it advanced, and Philips states he found
+ it frequently required correction in orthography and punctuation, by
+ reason of the various hands which had written it. As summer advanced, he
+ was no longer favoured by a sight of the poem; inquiring the reason of
+ which, Milton told him "his vein never happily flowed but from the
+ autumnal equinox to the vernal; and that whatever he attempted at other
+ times was never to his satisfaction, though he courted his fancy never so
+ much."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1665 "Paradise Lost" was completed, but no steps were taken
+ towards its publication, as the author, in company with his neighbours,
+ fled from the dreaded plague. The following year the citizens were
+ harassed by losses sustained from the great fire, so that Milton did not
+ seek to dispose of his poem until 1667; when, on the 27th of April, it was
+ sold to Samuel Simmons, a publisher residing in Aldersgate Street. The
+ agreement entered into stated Milton should receive an immediate payment
+ of five pounds, with the stipulation that he should be given an equal sum
+ on sale of thirteen hundred copies of the first edition, and five pounds
+ on disposal of the same number of the second edition, and yet five pounds
+ more after another such sale of the third edition. Each edition was to
+ number fifteen hundred books. Two years after the publication of "Paradise
+ Lost," its author received the second payment of five pounds; five years
+ later a third payment was made him; before the fourth fell due his life
+ had been set free from care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the first his poem had come in contact with a few receptive minds,
+ and borne the blessed fruit of appreciation. Richardson recounts that Sir
+ John Denham, a poet and man of culture, one morning brought a sheet of the
+ great epic fresh from the press to his friend Sir George Hungerford. "Why,
+ what have you there?" asked the latter. "Part of the noblest poem that was
+ ever written in any, language or in any age," said Sir John, as he laid
+ the pages before him. And a few weeks later my Lord Dorset, looking over a
+ bookstall in Little Britain, found a copy of this work, which he opened
+ carelessly at first, until he met some passages which struck him with
+ surprise and filled him with admiration: observing which the honest
+ bookseller besought him to speak in favour of the poem, for it lay upon
+ his hands like so much waste-paper. My lord bought a copy, carried it
+ home, read and sent it to Dryden, who, in due time returning the volume,
+ expressed his opinion of its merits in flattering terms. "The author,"
+ said he, "cuts us all out&mdash;aye, even the ancients too."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such instances as these were, however, few in number. That the work did
+ not meet with wider appreciation and quicker sale is not surprising when
+ it is called to mind that from 1623 to 1664 but two editions of
+ Shakespeare's works, comprising in all about one thousand copies, had been
+ printed. In an age when learning was by no means universal, and polite
+ reading uncommon, it was indeed a scource of congratulation, rather than a
+ topic for commiseration, that the work of a republican had in two years
+ reached a sale of thirteen hundred copies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before a third edition was required his fame had spread. The house in
+ which he had been born, in Bread Street, was shown with pride to foreign
+ visitors; parents sent their sons to read to him, that they might reap the
+ benefit of his remarks. The latter testimony to his genius was a tribute
+ the blind poet appreciated. But it happened there were times and seasons
+ when these obliging youths were not at hand, or when it was inconvenient
+ for him to receive them. On such occasions he demanded that his daughters
+ should read him the books he required, though these were frequently
+ written in Hebrew, Greek, Latin, Italian, and Spanish&mdash;languages of
+ which they were wholly ignorant. The torment this inflicted on those
+ striving to pronounce unaccustomed words which had no meaning to their
+ ears, and the torture endured by him, may readily be conceived.
+ Expressions of complaint on the one side, and of pain on the other,
+ continually interrupted the readings, which were eventually wholly
+ abandoned; the poet sending his children, whose education was so limited
+ that they were unable to write, to learn "ingenious sorts of manufacture
+ proper for women, particularly embroideries in gold and Silver."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When in 1665 Milton had shown his poem to Elwood, the good quaker
+ observed, "Thou hast said a great deal upon Paradise Lost: what hast thou
+ to say upon Paradise Found?" This question resting in the poet's mind, in
+ due time produced fruit; for no sooner had his first poem been published
+ than he set about composing the latter, which, under the name of "Paradise
+ Regained," was given to the world in 1670 "This," said he to Elwood, "is
+ owing to you; for you put it into my head by the question which you put to
+ me, which otherwise I had not thought of." This poem, he believed, had
+ merits far superior to those of "Paradise Lost," which he could not bear
+ to hear praised in preference to "Paradise Regained." In the same year he
+ published "Samson Agonistes," and two years later a treatise on "Logic,"
+ and another on "True Religion, Heresy, Schism, Toleration, and the Best
+ Methods to Prevent the Growth of Popery." In this, the mind which had
+ soared to heaven and descended to hell in its boundless flight, argues
+ that catholics should not be allowed the right of public or private
+ worship. In the last year of his life he republished his "Juvenile Poems,"
+ together with "Familiar Epistles in Latin."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had now reached his sixty-sixth year. His life had been saddened by
+ blindness, his health enfeebled by illness, his domesticity troubled by
+ his first marriage and his last, his desires disappointed by the result of
+ political events. So that when, on the 10th of November, 1674, death
+ summoned him, he departed without regret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst those who visited Milton was John Dryden, whom the author of
+ "Paradise Lost" regarded as "a good rhymester, but no poet," an opinion
+ with which posterity has not held. At the restoration, John Dryden was in
+ his twenty-ninth year. The son of Sir Erasmus Dryden, Baronet, of Canons
+ Ashby, he enjoyed an income of two hundred pounds a year, a sum then
+ considered sufficient to defray the expenses of a young man of good
+ breeding. He had passed through Westminster School, taken a degree at
+ Cambridge, written a eulogistic stanza on the death of Cromwell, and a
+ joyous poem on the happy restoration of the merry monarch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three years after the arrival of his majesty, Dryden's comedy entitled
+ "The Wild Gallant" was produced, this being the first of twenty-eight
+ plays which followed. In the year 1668 he had the honour to succeed Sir
+ William Davenant as poet laureate, the salary attached to which office was
+ one hundred pounds a year and a tierce of wine. His dignity was moreover
+ enhanced, though his happiness was by no means increased, by his marriage
+ with the Lady Elizabeth Howard, daughter of the Earl of Berkshire. For my
+ lady's temper sorely marred the poet's peace, and left such impressions
+ upon his mind, that to the end of his days his invectives against the
+ bonds of matrimony were bitter and deep. In justice it must be mentioned
+ the Lady Elizabeth's mental condition was supposed to be unsettled; a
+ conjecture which was proved true by a madness which befell her, subsequent
+ to her husband's death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dryden was now a well known figure in town, consorting with men of the
+ highest quality and parts, and gossiping with wits and players who
+ frequented Will's coffee-house. Here, indeed, a special chair was
+ appropriated to his use; which being placed by the fire in winter, and on
+ the balcony in summer, he was pleased to designate as his winter and his
+ summer seat. At Will's he was wont to hold forth on the ingenuity of his
+ plays, the perfection of his poems, and the truth of astrology. It was
+ whilst leaving this coffee house one night a memorable occurrence befell
+ the poet, of which more anon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It happened at one time the brilliant, poetical, and mercurial Earl of
+ Rochester extended his favour and friendship towards Dryden, gratified by
+ which, the poet had, after the manner of those days, dedicated a play to
+ him, "Marriage a la Mode." This favour his lordship received with
+ graciousness, and no doubt repaid with liberality. After a while, Dryden,
+ led by choice or interest, sought a new patron in the person of the Earl
+ of Mulgrave. For this nobleman Rochester had long entertained a bitter
+ animosity, which had arisen from rivalry, and had been intensified from
+ the fact that Rochester, refusing to fight him, had been branded as a
+ coward. Not daring to attack the peer, Rochester resolved to avenge
+ himself upon the poet. In order to effect his humiliation, the earl at
+ once bestowed his favour on Elkanah Settle, a playwright and poet of mean
+ abilities. He had originally been master of a puppet-show, had written
+ verses to order for city pageants, and produced a tragedy in heroic verse,
+ entitled "Cambyses, King of Persia."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His patron being at this time in favour with the king, introduced Settle
+ to the notice of the court, and induced the courtiers to play his second
+ tragedy, "The Empress of Morocco," at Whitehall, before their majesties.
+ This honour, which Dryden, though poet laureate, had never received, gave
+ Elkanah Settle unmerited notoriety; the benefit of which was apparent by
+ the applause his tragedy received when subsequently produced at the Duke's
+ Theatre in Dorset Gardens. Nor did the honour and profit which "The
+ Empress of Morocco" brought him end here; it was published by William
+ Cademan, and had the distinction of being the first English play ever
+ illustrated, or sold for the price of two shillings. It was scarce to be
+ expected, in an age when men ventilated their merest grievances by the
+ publication of pamphlets, Dryden could refrain from pointing out to the
+ public the mistake into which they had fallen by honouring this man. Nor
+ was he singular in his feelings of animosity. The poets Shadwell and
+ Crowne, believing themselves ignored and neglected, whilst their rival was
+ enriched and exalted, joined Dryden in writing a merciless criticism upon
+ Settle's tragedy. This was entitled "The Empress of Morocco, or some few
+ erratas to be printed instead of the sculptures
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the Second Edition of The Play. "This Settle Was Described As "an
+ Animal of a Most Deplored Intellect, Without Reading and Understanding;'
+ Whilst his Play Was Characterized As 'a Tale Told by an Idiot, Full of
+ Noise and Fury Signifying Nothing.' To These Remarks and Others of Like
+ Quality, Settle Replied in the Same Strain, So That the Quarrel Diverted
+ The Town and Even Disturbed The Quiet Of The Universities. Time Did Ample
+ Justice to Both Men; Lowering Settle To Play the Part of a Dragon in A
+ Booth at Bartholomew Fair, And Consecrating Dryden to Immortality."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the clamour resulting from this dispute had ended, Rochester,
+ fickle and eccentric, grew weary of his PROTEGE and consequently abandoned
+ him. He had not, however, tired of humiliating the laureate, and to
+ mortify him the more, introduced a new poet at court, This was John
+ Crowne, a man then little known to the town, and now best remembered as
+ author of "Sir Courtly Nice," a comedy of wit and entertainment. So well
+ did he succeed in obtaining favour at court, through Rochester's
+ influence, that the queen ordered him to write a masque. This command he
+ immediately obeyed, producing "Calisto, or the Chaste Nymph," which was
+ acted at Whitehall by the Duke of York's fair daughters, the Princesses
+ Mary and Anne, together with many gracious ladies and noble lords. Dryden,
+ probably the better to hide the mortification he felt at seeing his office
+ as laureate unceremoniously usurped, offered to write an epilogue for the
+ occasion; but this service was, through Rochester's interference,
+ rejected. The masque proved a brilliant success; "the dancing, singing,
+ and music, which were all in the highest perfection, and the graceful
+ action, incomparable beauty, and splendid habits of those ladies who
+ accompanied them, afforded the spectators extraordinary delight."
+ "Calisto" was therefore performed thirty times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The author's gratitude for his lordship's patronage was only equalled by
+ his disappointment upon its hasty withdrawal. Growing weary of him,
+ Rochester found a more worthy object for his favour in Thomas Otway, a
+ poet rich in all the miseries which afflicted genius in those days. Son of
+ the rector of Woolbeding, pupil at Winchester School, and commoner of
+ Christchurch, Cambridge, he had on his arrival in town vainly sought
+ employment as an actor, and barely earned bread as a play-writer. Before
+ he became a PROTEGE of my Lord Rochester he had written "Alcibiades," a
+ tragedy, he being then, in 1665, in his twenty-fifth year. His next play
+ was "Don Carlos, Prince of Spain," which, through the earl's influence,
+ gained great success. In the preface to this tragedy he acknowledges his
+ unspeakable obligations to my lord, who he says made it his business to
+ establish "Don Carlos" in the good opinion of the king and of his royal
+ highness the Duke of York. Unwarned by the fate of his predecessors, and
+ heedless of the fickleness of his patron, he basked in hope in the
+ present, mercifully unconscious of the cruel death by starvation which
+ awaited him in the future. Alas! Rochester not only forsook him, but
+ loaded him with satire in a poem entitled "Session of the Poets."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In verses which he wrote soon after, entitled "An Allusion to the Tenth
+ Satire," Rochester likewise attacked Dryden; who, in the preface of his
+ "All for Love," replied in like manner. Then there appeared an "Essay on
+ Satire," which ridiculed the king, dealt severely with his mistresses,
+ said uncivil things of the courtiers in general, and of my Lord Rochester
+ in particular. The noble earl was indeed described as being "lewd in every
+ limb," affected in his wit, mean in his actions, and cowardly in his
+ disposition. Now, though this was conceived and brought forth by my Lord
+ Mulgrave, Rochester suspected Dryden of its authorship, and resolved to
+ punish him forthwith. Accordingly on the night of the 18th of December,
+ 1679, when Dryden was passing through Rose Street, Covent Garden, on his
+ homeward way from Will's Coffee House, he was waylaid by some ruffians,
+ and, before he could draw his sword, promptly surrounded and severely
+ beaten.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This occurrence caused considerable sensation throughout the town, and
+ though surmises arose in many minds as to who had hired the bravoes, it
+ was found impossible to prove them. In hope of gaining some clue to the
+ instigator of the attack, Dryden caused the following advertisement to be
+ inserted in the LONDON GAZETTE AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE for three
+ consecutive days: "Whereas John Dryden, Esq., was on Monday, the 18th
+ instant, at night, barbarously assaulted and wounded in Rose Street, in
+ Covent Garden, by divers men unknown; if any person shall make discovery
+ of the said offenders to the said Mr. Dryden, or to any justice of the
+ peace, he shall not only receive fifty pounds, which is deposited in the
+ hands of Mr. Blanchard Goldsmith, next door to Temple Bar, for the said
+ purpose; but if he be a principal or an accessory in the said fact, his
+ majesty is graciously pleased to promise him his pardon for the same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dryden sought no opportunity for revenge; for which restraint, outliving
+ Rochester, and having a noble mind and generous disposition, he was no
+ doubt glad at heart. Not only did he survive the earl, but likewise the
+ king. To the company and conversation of that gracious sovereign the poet
+ was frequently admitted, a privilege which resulted in satisfaction and
+ pleasure to both. One pleasant day towards the end of his majesty's reign,
+ whilst they walked in the Mall, Charles said to him, "If I were a poet,
+ and indeed I think I am poor enough to be one, I would write a satire on
+ sedition." Taking this hint, Dryden speedily set himself to work, and
+ brought a poem on such a subject to his royal master, who rewarded him
+ with a hundred broad pieces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amongst Dryden's friends was the excellent and ingenious Abraham Cowley,
+ whose youth had given the promise of distinction his manhood fulfilled. It
+ is related that when quite a lad, he found in the window recess of his
+ mother's apartment a copy of Spencer's "Faerie Queene." Opening the book,
+ he read it with delight, and his receptive mind reflecting the poet's
+ fire, he resolved likewise to exercise the art of poesy. In 1628, when at
+ the age of ten, he wrote "The Tragic History of Pyramus and Thisbe;" five
+ years later he published a volume of poems; and whilst yet a schoolboy
+ wrote his pastoral comedy, "Love's Riddle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When at St. John's College, Oxford, he gave proof of his loyalty by
+ writing a poem entitled the "Puritan and the Papist," which gained him the
+ friendship of courtiers. On the Queen of Charles I. taking refuge in
+ France, he soon followed her, and becoming secretary to the Earl of St.
+ Albans, conducted the correspondence between her majesty and the king,
+ ciphering and deciphering their letters, and such as were sent or received
+ by those immediately concerned in the cause of royalty. In this situation
+ he remained until four years previous to the restoration, when he was sent
+ into England for the purpose of observing the condition of the nation, and
+ reporting the same. Scarce had he set foot in London when he was seized,
+ examined, and only liberated on a friend offering bail for him to the
+ amount of one thousand pounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The better to disguise the object of his visit, and lull suspicions of
+ republicans, he took out the degree of Doctor of Physic at Oxford; after
+ which he retired into Kent, where he devoted a great portion of his time
+ to the study of botany and the composition of poetry. On Cromwell's death
+ he hastened to France, and remained there until the king's return; which
+ he celebrated by a song of triumph. Like hundreds of others who had served
+ Charles in his exile, he looked forward to gratitude and reward, but met
+ disappointment and neglect. Amongst the numerous places and employments
+ the change of government opened in court and state, not one was offered
+ the loyal poet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nay, his hardships did not end here; for having, in 1663, produced his
+ merry comedy, "Cutter of Coleman Street," it was treated with severity as
+ a censure upon the king. Feeling over-nervous to witness the result of its
+ first representation, the poet absented himself from the playhouse; but
+ thither his friends Dryden and Sprat sped, hoping they might be able to
+ bear him tidings of its triumph. When they returned to him at night and
+ told him of its fate, "he received the news of its ill success," says
+ Sprat, "not with so much firmness as might have been expected from so
+ great a man." Of all intent to satirize the king he was entirely innocent&mdash;a
+ fact he set before the public in the preface to his play on its
+ publication. Having, he argues, followed the fallen fortunes of the royal
+ family so long, it was unlikely he would select the time of their
+ restoration to quarrel with them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Feeling his grievances acutely, he now published a poem called "The
+ Complaint," which met with but little success; whereon, depressed by
+ ill-fortune and disgusted by ingratitude, he sought consolation in the
+ peace of a country life. Through the influence of his old friend, Lord St.
+ Albans, and the Duke of Buckingham, he obtained a lease of the queen's
+ lands at Chertsey, which produced him an income of about three hundred
+ pounds a year&mdash;a sum sufficient for his few wants and moderate
+ desires. He resided here but two years, when he died, on the 28th of July,
+ 1667. Milton, on hearing of his death, was troubled. The three greatest
+ English poets, he declared, were Spenser, Shakespeare, and Cowley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ungrateful neglect with which he was treated in life was sought to be
+ atoned for by useless honours paid him after death. His remains were first
+ conveyed to Wallingford House, then a residence of the Duke of Buckingham,
+ from whence they were carried in a coach drawn by six horses, and followed
+ by all the men of letters and wits of the town, divers stately bishops,
+ courtiers, and men of quality, whose carriages exceeded one hundred in
+ number, to Westminster Abbey. Here the Poet was laid at rest beside
+ Geoffrey Chaucer, and not far removed from gentle Spenser, whose words had
+ first inspired his happy muse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The literary wealth of this reign was furthermore enhanced by the genius
+ of Butler, the inimitable author of "Hudibras," concerning whom little is
+ known, save that he was born in 1612, and spent his life in poverty. He
+ passed some years as clerk to a justice of the peace; he also served a
+ great man's steward, and acted as secretary to Sir Samuel Luke, one of
+ Cromwell's officers. With those of the commonwealth he held no part; that
+ he was a royalist at heart his great satire indicates. The first part of
+ this was published in the third year of the restoration, and was
+ introduced to the notice of his majesty by my Lord Dorset. So delighted
+ was the monarch by its wit that its lines were continually on his lips, an
+ example speedily followed by the courtiers. It was considered certain a
+ man possessing such brilliant genius and loyal nature would be rewarded
+ with place or pension; but neither boon was bestowed upon him. Resting his
+ hopes on future achievements, the second part of "Hudibras" appeared in
+ 1664; but again his recompense was delayed. Clarendon made him promises of
+ valuable employments, which were never fulfilled; and to soothe his
+ disappointment the king sent him a present of three hundred guineas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indignant at the neglect from which he suffered, his friend Wycherley
+ spoke to the Duke of Buckingham on his behalf, saying it was a shame to
+ the court a man of Butler's parts should be allowed to suffer want. With
+ this his grace readily agreed, and promised to use his influence towards
+ remedying the poet's ill-fortune; but time went by, and his condition
+ remained unaltered. Whereon Wycherley conceived the idea of bringing
+ Butler and the duke together, that the latter might the more certainly
+ remember him. He therefore succeeded in making his grace name an hour and
+ place in which they might meet. So it came to pass they were together one
+ day at the Roebuck Tavern; but scarce had Buckingham opened his lips when
+ a pimp of his acquaintance&mdash;"the creature was likewise a knight"&mdash;passed
+ by with a couple of ladies. To a man of Buckingham's character the
+ temptation was too seductive to be neglected; accordingly, he darted after
+ those who allured him, leaving the needy poet, whom he saw no more. Butler
+ lived until 1680, dying in poverty. Longueville, having in vain solicited
+ a subscription to defray the expenses of the poet's burial in Westminster
+ Abbey, laid him to rest in the churchyard of Covent Garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wycherley, the friend of Butler, though a child of the Muses, was superior
+ to poverty. He was born in the year of grace 1640, and early in life sent
+ for his better education into France. Returning to England soon after the
+ king had come unto his own, young Wycherley entered Queen's College,
+ Oxford, from whence he departed without obtaining a degree. He then betook
+ himself to town, and became a law student. The Temple, however, had less
+ attraction for him than the playhouse. Indeed, before leaving Oxford he
+ had, written a couple of comedies&mdash;to wit, "Love in a Wood," and "The
+ Gentleman Dancing Master," a fact entitling him to be considered a man of
+ parts. Not satisfied with this distinction, he soon developed tastes for
+ pleasures of the town, and became a man of fashion. His wit illuminated
+ choice gatherings of congenial spirits at coffee-houses; his epigrams were
+ repeated by boon companions in the precincts of the court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1672 his comedy "Love in a Wood" was produced. It immediately
+ gained universal favour, and, moreover, speedily attracted the attention
+ of his majesty's mistress, the Duchess of Cleveland. Wycherley was a man
+ well to look upon: her grace was a lady eager for adventure. Desiring his
+ acquaintance, and impatient of delay, she introduced herself to his notice
+ in a manner eminently characteristic of the age. It happened when driving
+ one day through Pall Mall, she encountered Wycherley riding in his coach
+ in an opposite direction. Thrusting her head out of the window of her
+ vehicle, she saluted the author with a title unknown to the conversations
+ of polite society in the present day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fashionable playwright understanding the motive which prompted her
+ remark, hastily ordered his coach to follow hers; and, overtaking her,
+ uncovered and began a speech becoming so ardent a gallant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madam," said he, "you have been pleased to bestow a title on me which
+ belongs only to the fortunate. Will your ladyship be at the play
+ to-night?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," replied her grace, well pleased at this beginning, "what if I am
+ there?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, then," answered he, "I will be there to wait on your ladyship,
+ though I disappoint a fine woman who has made me an assignation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So," said this frail daughter of Eve, greedily swallowing his flattery,
+ "you are sure to disappoint a woman who has favoured you for one who has
+ not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes," quoth he, readily enough, "if the one who has not favoured me is
+ the finer woman of the two. But he who can be constant to your ladyship
+ till he can find a finer, is sure to die your captive."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night her grace sat in the front row of the king's box at Drury Lane
+ playhouse, and sure enough there was handsome Will Wycherley sitting in
+ the pit underneath. The gentleman cast his eyes upwards and sighed; the
+ lady looked down and played with her fan; after which preliminaries they
+ fell into conversation which both found far more interesting than the
+ comedy then being enacted before their eyes. This was the beginning of an
+ intimacy concerning which the court made merry, and of which the town
+ spoke scandal. My lady disguised herself as a country wench, and visited
+ his chambers, Mr. Wycherley dedicated his play, "Love in a Wood," to her
+ in elegant phraseology, He was of opinion that she stood as little in need
+ of flattery as her beauty did of art; he was anxious to let the world know
+ he was the greatest admirer she had; and he was desirous of returning her
+ his grateful acknowledgment for the favours he had received from her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interest of this romance was presently intensified by the introduction
+ of a rival in the person of the Duke of Buckingham. Probably from fear an
+ intrigue with such a prominent figure would, if indulged in, quickly
+ become known to the king, she refused to encourage Buckingham's love. His
+ grace was not only a passionate lover, but likewise a revengeful man;
+ accordingly, he resolved to punish my lady for her lack of good taste. It
+ therefore became his habit to speak of her intrigues before the court, and
+ to name the individuals who received her favours. Now Wycherley, being
+ amongst these, grew fearful his amour with the duchess should become known
+ to the king, from whom at this time he expected an appointment.
+ Accordingly, he besought his good friends, Lord Rochester and Sir Charles
+ Sedley, to remonstrate on his behalf with the duke. These gentlemen
+ undertook that kindly office, and in order to make the rivals acquainted,
+ besought his grace to sup with the playwright. The duke complying with
+ their request, met Wycherley in a friendly spirit, and soon professed
+ himself delighted with his wit; nay, before the feast was over he drank
+ his health in a bumper of red wine, and declared himself Mr. Wycherley's
+ very good friend and faithful servant henceforth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, he was as good as his word; for, being master of the horse, he
+ soon after appointed Wycherley an equerry, and subsequently gave him a
+ commission as captain of a regiment of which he was colonel. Nor did the
+ duke's services to the dramatist end here; for when occasion offered he
+ introduced him to the merry monarch, and so pleased was the king with the
+ author's conversational powers that he admitted him to his friendship. His
+ majesty's regard for Wycherley gradually ripened, and once when he lay ill
+ of fever at his lodgings in Bow Street, Covent Garden, the merry monarch
+ visited him, cheered him with words of kindness, and promised he would
+ send him to Montpelier when he was well enough to travel. For this good
+ purpose Charles sent him five hundred pounds, and Wycherley spent the
+ winter of 1679 abroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Previous to this date he had written, besides his first comedy, three
+ others which had been received with great favour by the town, viz., "The
+ Gentleman Dancing Master," "The Country Wife," and "The Plain Dealer."
+ Soon after his return to England the crisis of his life arrived, and he
+ married. His introduction to the lady whom fate ordained to become his
+ wife is not the least singular episode in a remarkable biography. Being at
+ Tunbridge Wells, then a place of fashion and liberty, he was one day
+ walking with a friend named Fairbeard. And it happened as they were
+ passing a book-stall they overheard a gentlewoman inquire for the "Plain
+ Dealer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Madam," says Mr. Fairbeard, uncovering, "since you are for the 'Plain
+ Dealer,' there he is for you;" whereon he led Wycherley towards her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This lady," says that gentleman, making her a profound bow, "can bear
+ plain speaking; for she appears to be so accomplished, that what would be
+ compliment said to others, spoken to her would be plain dealing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No truly, sir," replied the lady; "I am not without my faults, like the
+ rest of my sex; and yet, notwithstanding all my faults, I love plain
+ dealing, and never am more fond of it than when it points out my errors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then, madam," said Mr. Fairbeard, "you and the plain dealer seem designed
+ by heaven for each other."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These pretty speeches having been delivered and received with every mark
+ of civility, Mr. Wycherley made his exit with the lady, who was none other
+ than the Countess of Drogheda, a young widow gifted with beauty and
+ endowed by fortune. Day by day he waited on her at her lodging,
+ accompanied her in her walks, and attended her to the assemblies. Finally,
+ when she returned to town he married her. It is sad yet true the union did
+ not result in perfect happiness. Mr. Wycherley had a reputation for
+ gallantry, the Countess of Drogheda was the victim of suspicion. Knowing
+ jealousy is beget by love, and mindful of sacrifices she had made in
+ marrying him, Wycherley behaved towards her with much kindness. In
+ compliance with her wishes he desisted visiting the court, a place she
+ probably knew from experience was rife with temptation; and moreover when
+ he cracked a bottle of wine with convivial friends at the Cock Tavern,
+ opposite his lodgings in Bow Street, he, for the greater satisfaction of
+ his wife, would leave the windows open of the room in which he sat, that
+ she might from the vantage ground of her home see there were no hussies in
+ the company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As proof of her love, she, when dying, settled her fortune upon him; but
+ unhappily his just right was disputed by her family. The case therefore
+ went into litigation, for the expenses of which, together with other
+ debts, Wycherley was cast into prison. Here the brilliant wit, clever
+ writer, and boon companion, was allowed to remain seven long years. When
+ released from this vile bondage, another king than the merry monarch
+ occupied the English throne.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The name of Andrew Marvel is inseparably connected with this period. He
+ was born in the year 1620 in the town of Kingston-upon-Hull; his father
+ being a clever school-master, worthy minister, and "an excellent preacher,
+ who never broached what he had never brewed, but that which he had studied
+ some compitent time before." At the age of fifteen, Andrew Marvell was
+ sent to Trinity College, Cambridge. But he had not long been there when he
+ withdrew himself, lured, as some authorities state, by wiles of the wicked
+ Jesuits; repulsed, as others say, by severities of the head of his
+ college. Leaving the university, he set out for London, where his father,
+ who hastened thither in search of him, found him examining some old
+ volumes on a book-stall. He was prevailed to return to his college, where,
+ in 1638, he took his degree as bachelor of arts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the completion of his studies and death of his father, he travelled
+ through Holland, France, and Italy. Whilst abroad he began to produce
+ those satirical verses such as were destined to render him famous. One of
+ his earliest efforts in this direction was aimed at the Abbe de Maniban, a
+ learned ecclesiastic, whose chief fault in Marvell's eyes lay in the fact
+ of his professing to judge characters from handwriting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whilst in Italy, Andrew Marvell met John Milton, and they having many
+ tastes and convictions in common, became fast friends. In 1653, the former
+ returned to England, and for some time acted as tutor to Mistress Fairfax;
+ he being an excellent scholar, and a great master of the Latin tongue. He
+ now led a peaceful and obscure life until 1657. In that year, Milton,
+ "laying aside," as he wrote, "those jealousies, and that emulation which
+ mine own condition might suggest to me," introduced him to Bradshaw; soon
+ after which he was made assistant-secretary to Milton, who was then in the
+ service of Cromwell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had not been long engaged in this capacity, when the usurper died; and
+ Marvell's occupation being gone, the goodly burgesses of the town of Hull,
+ who loved him well, elected him as their representative in parliament, for
+ which service, in accordance with a custom of the time, he was paid. The
+ salary, it is true, was not large, amounting to two shillings a day for
+ borough members; yet when kindly feeling and honest satisfaction mutually
+ existed between elector and representative, as in Marvell's case, the wage
+ was at times supplemented by such acceptable additions as home-cured pork
+ and home-brewed ale, "We must first give you thanks," wrote Marvell on one
+ occasion to his constituents, on the receipt of a cask of beer, "for the
+ kind present you have pleased to send us, which will give occasion to us
+ to remember you often; but the quantity is so great, that it might make
+ sober men forgetful."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He now, in the warfare of political life, made free use of his keen wit
+ and bitter sarcasm as serviceable weapons. These were chiefly employed in
+ exposing measures he considered calculated to ruin the country, though
+ they might gratify the king. However, he had no hatred of monarchy, but
+ would occasionally divert Charles by the sharpness of his satire and
+ brilliancy of his wit. Considering how valuable these would be if employed
+ in service of the court, Charles resolved to tempt Marvell's integrity.
+ For this purpose the Lord Treasurer Danby sought and found him in his
+ chamber, situated in the second floor of a mean house standing in a court
+ off the Strand. Groping his way up the dark and narrow staircase of the
+ domicile, the great minister stumbled, and falling against a door, was
+ precipitated into Marvell's apartment, head foremost. Surprised at his
+ appearance, the satirist asked my Lord Danby if he had not mistaken his
+ way. "No," said the courtier with a bow, "not since I have found Mr.
+ Marvell." He then proceeded to tell him that the king, being impressed by
+ a high sense of his abilities, was desirous of serving him. Apprehending
+ what services were expected in return, Marvell answered that he who
+ accepted favours from the court was bound to vote in its interests. "Nay,"
+ said my lord, "his majesty but desires to know if there is any place at
+ court you would accept." On which Marvell replied he could receive nothing
+ with honour, for either he must treat the king with ingratitude by
+ refusing compliance with court measures, or be a traitor to his country by
+ yielding to them. The only favour he therefore begged was, that his
+ majesty would esteem him a loyal subject; the truer to his interests in
+ refusing his offers than he would be by accepting them. It is stated that
+ Lord Danby, surprised at so much purity in an age of corruption,
+ furthermore tempted him with a bag of gold, which Marvell obstinately
+ refused to accept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He died suddenly in the year 1678, leaving behind him a reputation for
+ humour and satire which has rarely been excelled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides these poets and dramatists, there were other great men, who as
+ prose writers, helped to render the literary history of the period
+ remarkable for its brilliancy. Amongst these were Lord Clarendon, High
+ Chancellor of England, concerning whom much has already been said; and
+ Thomas Hobbs of Malmesbury, better known as author of "The History of the
+ Causes of the Civil War," and of "Human Nature," than as a translator of
+ the Iliad and the Odyssey. Dr. Gilbert Burnet, author of "The History of
+ his Own Times;" and Dr. Ralph Cudworth, author of "The True Intellectual
+ System of the Universe," were likewise men of note. But one whose name is
+ far more familiar than any writer of his time is John Bunyan, author of
+ "The Pilgrim's Progress."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was the son of a tinker, and was born within a mile of Bedford town in
+ the year 1628. He imbibed at an early age the spirit of Puritanism, fought
+ in the civil wars, took to himself a wife, and turned preacher. Six months
+ after the merry monarch landed, Bunyan was flung into Bedford gaol, where,
+ rather than refrain from puritanical discourses, in the utterance of which
+ he believed himself divinely inspired, he remained, with some short
+ intervals of liberty, for twelve years. When offered freedom at the price
+ of silence, he replied, "If you let me out to-day, I will preach
+ to-morrow." Nay, even in his confinement he delivered sermons to his
+ fellow-prisoners; and presently he commenced to write. His convictions
+ leading him to attack the liturgy of the Church of England, and the
+ religion of the Quakers, his productions became popular amongst
+ dissenters. At length, by an act annulling the penal statutes against
+ Protestant Nonconformists and Roman Catholics, passed in 1671, he was
+ liberated. When he left prison he carried with him a portion of his
+ "Pilgrim's Progress," which was soon after completed and published, though
+ at what date remains uncertain. In 1678 a second edition was printed, and
+ such was the growth of its popularity, that six editions were issued
+ within the following four years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now he became famous, his lot was far different from what it had been; his
+ sermons were heard by eager audiences, his counsel was sought by those in
+ trouble, his prayers were regarded as the utterances of inspiration. Once
+ a year he rode, attended by vast crowds, from Bedford Town to London City,
+ that he might preach to those burdened by sin; and from the capital he
+ made a circuit of the country, where he was hailed as a prophet. His life
+ extended beyond the reign of King Charles; his influence lasted till his
+ death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Time's flight leaves the king unchanged.&mdash;The Rye House
+ conspiracy.&mdash;Profligacy of the court.&mdash;The three duchesses.&mdash;The king
+ is taken ill.&mdash;The capital in consternation.&mdash;Dr. Ken questions his
+ majesty.&mdash;A Benedictine monk sent for.&mdash;Charles professes catholicity
+ and receives the Sacraments.&mdash;Farewell to all.&mdash;His last night on
+ earth.&mdash;Daybreak and death.&mdash;He rests in peace.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His majesty's habits changed but little with the flight of time, To the
+ end of his reign the court continued brilliant and profligate. Wits,
+ courtezans, and adventurers crowded the royal drawing-rooms, and conversed
+ without restraint; the monarch pursued his pleasures with unsatiated zest,
+ taking to himself two new mistresses, Lady Shannon and Catherine Peg, who
+ respectively bore him a daughter and a son, duly created Countess of
+ Yarmouth and Earl of Plymouth. For a while, indeed, a shadow fell upon the
+ life of the merry monarch, when, in 1683, he was roused to a sense of
+ danger by discovery of the Rye House conspiracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This foul plot, entered into by the Whigs on failure of the Exclusion
+ Bill, had for its object the murder of his majesty and of the Duke of
+ York. Before arriving at maturity its existence and intentions were
+ revealed by one of the conspirators, when William Lord Russell, the Earl
+ of Essex, and Algernon Sidney, second son of the Earl of Leicester, were
+ arrested and charged with high treason. My Lord Essex died in the Tower by
+ his own hand; Lord Russell was condemned on testimony of one witness, and
+ duly executed; as was likewise Algernon Sidney, whose writings on
+ Republicanism were used as evidence against him. On the revelation of this
+ wicked scheme the country became wildly excited, and the king grievously
+ afflicted. A melancholy seized upon his majesty, who stirred not abroad
+ without double guards; and the private doors of Whitehall and avenues of
+ the park were closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this condition, however, he gradually recovered, and resumed his
+ usual habits. Accordingly, we find him engaged in "luxurious dalliance and
+ prophaneness" with the Duchess of Mazarine, and visiting the Duchess of
+ Portsmouth betimes in her chamber, where that bold and voluptuous woman,
+ fresh risen from bed, sat in loose garments talking to the king and his
+ gallants, the while her maids combed her beautiful hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can never forget," says John Evelyn, writing on the 4th of February,
+ 1685, "the inexpressible luxury and prophaneness, gaming, and all
+ dissoluteness, and as it were total forgetfullnesse of God (it being
+ Sunday evening), which this day se'nnight I was witnesse of, the king
+ sitting and toying with his concubines, Portsmouth, Cleveland, and
+ Mazarine, etc., a French boy singing love songs in that glorious gallery,
+ whilst about twenty of the greate courtiers and other dissolute persons
+ were at basset round a large table, a bank of at least two thousand in
+ gold before them, upon which two gentlemen who were with me made
+ reflexions with astonishment. Six days after was all in the dust."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For now the end of all things had come for Charles Stuart. It happened on
+ the morning of the 2nd of February, 1685, the day being Monday, the king
+ whilst in his bedroom was seized by an apoplectic fit, when crying out, he
+ fell back in his chair, and lay as one dead. Wildly alarmed, his
+ attendants summoned Dr. King, the physician in waiting, who immediately
+ bled him, and had him carried to bed. Then tidings spread throughout the
+ palace, that his majesty hovered betwixt life and death; which should
+ claim him no man might say. Whereon the Duke of York hastened to his
+ bedside, as did likewise the queen, her face blanched, her eyes wild with
+ terror. His majesty after some time recovering consciousness, slowly
+ realized his sad condition. Then he conceived a fear, the stronger as
+ begotten by conviction, that the sands of his life had run their course.
+ Throughout that day and the next he fainted frequently, and showed
+ symptoms of epilepsy. On Wednesday he was cupped and bled in both
+ jugulars; but on Thursday he was pronounced better, when the physicians,
+ anxious to welcome hope, spoke of his probable recovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, alas, the same evening he grew restless, and signs of fever became
+ apparent. Jesuits' powders, then of great repute, were given him, but with
+ no good result. Complaining of a pain in his side, the doctors drew twelve
+ ounces more of blood from him. Exhaustion then set in; all hope of life
+ was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the capital was in a state of consternation. Prayers for his
+ majesty's recovery were offered up in all churches throughout the city;
+ likewise in the royal chapels, where the clergy relieved each other every
+ quarter of an hour. Crowds gathered by day and night without the palace
+ gates, eager to learn the latest change in the king's condition from those
+ who passed to and fro. Inside Whitehall all was confusion. Members of the
+ Privy Council assembled in the room adjoining that where the monarch lay;
+ politicians and ambassadors conversed in whispers in the disordered
+ apartments; courtiers of all degrees flocked through the corridors bearing
+ signs of deep concern upon their countenances.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And amongst others who sought his majesty's presence was the Archbishop of
+ Canterbury, together with the Bishops of London, Durham, Ely, and Bath and
+ Wells; all being anxious to render spiritual services to the king. Of
+ these good men, Charles liked best Dr. Ken, Bishop of Bath and Wells,
+ having most faith in his honesty. For, when his lordship was a prebend of
+ Winchester, it had happened Charles passed through that city, accompanied
+ by Nell Gwynn, when Dr. Ken refused to receive her beneath his roof even
+ at the king's request. This proof of integrity so pleased his majesty,
+ that he gave him the next vacant bishopric by way of reward. And now, his
+ lordship being at hand, he read prayers for the Sick from out the Common
+ Prayer Book for his benefit, until coming to that part where the dying are
+ exhorted to make confession of their sins, when the bishop paused and said
+ such was not obligatory. He then asked his majesty if he were sorry for
+ the iniquities of his life? when the sick man, whose heart was exceeding
+ heavy, replied he was; whereon the bishop pronounced absolution, and asked
+ him if he would receive the Sacrament. To this Charles made no reply,
+ until the same question had been repeated several times, when his majesty
+ answered he would think of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duke of York, who stood by the while, noting the king's answer, and
+ aware of his tendencies towards Catholicism, bade those who had gathered
+ round stand aside; and then, bending over him, asked in a low tone if he
+ might send for a priest. A look of unspeakable relief came into the king's
+ face, and he answered, "For God's sake do, brother, and lose no time."
+ Then another thought flashing across his mind, he said, "But will not this
+ expose you to much danger?" James made answer, "Though it cost me my life
+ I will bring you a priest." He then hurried into the next room, where,
+ among all the courtiers, he could find no man he could trust, save a
+ foreigner, one Count Castelmachlor. Calling him aside, he secretly
+ despatched him in search of a priest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Between seven and eight o'clock that evening, Father Huddleston, the
+ Benedictine friar who had aided the king's escape after the battle of
+ Worcester, awaited at the queen's back stairs the signal to appear in his
+ majesty's presence. The duke being made aware of the fact, announced it to
+ the king, who thereon ordered all in his room to withdraw; but James,
+ mindful that slander might afterwards charge him with killing his brother,
+ begged the Earl of Bath, the lord of the bedchamber then in waiting, and
+ the Earl of Feversham, captain of the guard, might stay&mdash;saying to
+ the king it was not fitting he should be unattended in his weak condition.
+ These gentlemen therefore remained. And no sooner had all others departed
+ than the monk was admitted by a private entrance to the chamber. The king
+ received him with great joy and satisfaction, stating he was anxious to
+ die in the communion of the catholic church, and declaring he was sorry
+ for the wrongs of his past life, which he yet hoped might be pardoned
+ through the merits of Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He then, as we read in the Stuart Papers, "with exceeding compunction and
+ tenderness of heart," made an exact confession of his sins, after which he
+ repeated an act of contrition, and received absolution. He next desired to
+ have the other Sacraments of the church proper to his condition
+ administered to him: on which the Benedictine asked if he desired to
+ receive the Eucharist; eagerly he replied, "If I am worthy pray fail not
+ to let me have it." Then Father Huddleston, after some exhortation,
+ prepared to give him the Sacrament; when the dying man, struggling to
+ raise himself, exclaimed, "Let me meet my heavenly Lord in a better
+ posture than lying in bed." But the priest begged he would not move, and
+ then gave him the Communion, which he received with every sign of fervour.
+ And for some time he prayed earnestly, the monk and the duke kneeling by
+ the while, silence obtaining in the room. This was presently broken by the
+ sad and solemn tones of the priest's voice, reading a commendation of the
+ soul to its Maker: the which being ended, the Benedictine, with tears in
+ his eyes, took leave of his majesty. "Ah," said Charles, "you once saved
+ my body; you have now saved my soul." Then the monk gave him his
+ benediction, and departed as quietly as he had come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then those waiting without were once more admitted to the room, when
+ Charles nerved himself to take a sad farewell of those around him. He
+ first publicly thanked his brother for the services and affection he had
+ ever rendered him through life, and extolled his obedience and submission
+ to his commands. Giving him his keys, he said he had left him all he
+ possessed, and prayed God would bless him with a happy and prosperous
+ reign. Finally, he recommended all his children to him by name, excepting
+ only the Duke of Monmouth then in Holland, and suffering from the king's
+ displeasure; and besought him to extend his kindness towards the Duchesses
+ of Portsmouth and Cleveland; "and do not," said he, "let poor Nelly
+ starve." Whilst these commands were addressed him, the duke had flung
+ himself on his knees by the bedside, and, bursting into tears, kissed his
+ brother's hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The queen, who had scarce left his majesty since the beginning of his
+ illness, was at this time absent, her love and grief not permitting her to
+ endure this afflicting scene. He spoke most tenderly of her; and when
+ presently she sent a message praying he would pardon her absence in regard
+ to her excessive grief, and forgive her withal if at any time she had
+ offended him, he replied, "Alas, poor woman! She beg my pardon?&mdash;I
+ beg hers, with all my heart." He next summoned his children to him, one by
+ one, and addressing them with words of advice, embraced them heartily and
+ blessed them fervently. And he being the Lord's anointed, the bishops
+ present besought he would give them his benediction likewise, and all that
+ were present, and in them the whole body of his subjects; in compliance
+ with which request he, with some difficulty, raised himself, and all
+ falling on their knees, he blessed them fervently. Then they arose and
+ departed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silence fell upon the palace; night wore slowly away. Charles tossed upon
+ his bed racked with pain, but no complaint escaped his lips. Those who
+ watched him in the semi-darkened room heard him ask God to accept his
+ sufferings in atonement for his sins. Then, speaking aloud, he declared
+ himself weary of life, and hoped soon to reach a better world. Courteous
+ to the last, he begged pardon for the trouble he gave, inasmuch as he was
+ long in dying. And anon he slumbered, and quickly woke again in agony and
+ prayed with zeal. Never had time moved with slower passage for him; not
+ hours, but weeks, seemed to elapse between each stroke of the clock; and
+ yet around him was darkness and tardy night. But after much weary waiting,
+ morning was at hand, the time-piece struck six. "Draw the curtains," said
+ the dying man, "that I may once more see day." The grey light of a
+ February dawn, scarce brightened to eastward a cheerless sky; but he
+ hailed this herald of sunrise with infinite relief and terrible regret;
+ relief that he had lived to see another day; regret that no more morns
+ should break for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His soul tore itself from his body with fierce struggles and bitter pain.
+ It was hard for him to die, but he composed himself to enter eternity
+ "with the piety becoming a Christian, and the resolution becoming a king;"
+ as his brother narrates. About ten o'clock on Friday morning, February
+ 6th, 1685, he found relief in unconsciousness; before midday chimed he was
+ dead. He had reached the fifty-fifth year of his life, and the
+ twenty-fifth year of his reign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His illegitimate progeny was numerous, numbering fifteen, besides those
+ who died in infancy. These were the Duke of Monmouth and a daughter
+ married to William Sarsfield, children of Lucy Walters; the Dukes of
+ Southampton, Grafton, and Northumberland, the Countesses of Litchfield and
+ of Sussex, and a daughter Barbara, who became a nun, children of the
+ Duchess of Cleveland; the Duke of Richmond, son of the Duchess of
+ Portsmouth; the Duke of St. Albans, and a son James, children of Nell
+ Gwynn; Lady Derwentwater, daughter of Moll Davis; the Countess of
+ Yarmouth, daughter of Lady Shannon; and the Earl of Plymouth, son of
+ Catherine Peg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For seven days the remains of the late king lay in state; on the eighth
+ they were placed in Westminster Abbey. The ceremony was of necessity
+ conducted in a semi-private manner for by reason of his majesty dying in
+ the Catholic religion, his brother considered it desirable the ceremonies
+ prescribed for the occasion by the English church should be dispensed
+ with. Therefore, in order to avoid disputes or scandal, the king was laid
+ in the tomb without ostentation. At night his remains were carried from
+ the painted chamber in Westminster sanctuary to the abbey. The procession,
+ headed by the servants of the nobility, of James II., and his queen, of
+ the dowager queen, and of the late king, was followed by the barons,
+ bishops, and, peers according to their rank; the officers of the
+ household, and the Archbishop of Canterbury. Then came all that was mortal
+ of his late majesty, borne under a canopy of velvet, supported by six
+ gentlemen of the privy chamber, the pall being held by six earls. Prince
+ George of Denmark&mdash;subsequently husband of Queen Anne&mdash;acted as
+ chief mourner, attended by the Dukes of Somerset and Beaufort, and sixteen
+ earls. One of the kings of Arms carried the crown and cushion, the train
+ being closed by the king's band of gentlemen pensioners, and the yeomen of
+ the guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the abbey entrance the dean and prebendaries, attended by torch
+ bearers, and followed by a surpliced choir, met the remains, and joined
+ the procession, the slow pacing figures of which seemed spectral in this
+ hour and place; then the sad cortege passed solemnly through the grey old
+ abbey, the choir chanting sorrowfully the while, the yellow flare of
+ torches marking the prevailing gloom. And being come to the chapel of
+ Henry VII., the body of the merry monarch was suffered there to rest in
+ peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Royalty Restored, by J. Fitzgerald Molloy
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROYALTY RESTORED ***
+
+***** This file should be named 1879-h.htm or 1879-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/1/8/7/1879/
+
+Produced by An Anonymous Volunteeer, and David Widger
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+http://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at http://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit http://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ http://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>